Pubdate: Tue, 24 Jul 2012 Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA) Copyright: 2012 Hearst Communications Inc. Contact: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/submissions/#1 Website: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/388 Author: Chip Johnson MORE PRESSING ISSUES LOST IN DIN OVER POT The biggest protests in Oakland in recent years have rarely, if ever, reflected the top priorities of its residents - and the pro-marijuana demonstration during President Obama's visit on Monday was no different. Like most Californians, Oakland residents support the 1996 state law that provided access to medical marijuana - and that support is reflected in the city's recent approval to permit more dispensaries in the city. But like most Americans, Oakland residents have bigger fish to fry than whether the state's largest pot dispensaries should be allowed to remain open. It's the larger dispensaries federal officials have said they intend to target. Oakland residents, the ones who couldn't afford a ticket to the Fox Theater event where Obama spoke, are as interested in the nation's next steps toward economic recovery and new job opportunities as an unemployed mechanic in Cleveland. They're anxious to hear about how the federal government will reduce the chances of future massacres like the one in Aurora, Colo. And they're probably more interested than most people in any federal assistance that would help cities reduce violent crime that has spiraled beyond local control. But Oakland's priority issues have been lost in the din of the protest crowd over the years, or hijacked by other groups and folded into their agendas. In a way, Oakland residents have handed over their protest rights to others who claim to speak for them - even when they live in another Bay Area city or even another state. At the height of the city's Occupy protests last fall, protesters regularly packed the chambers during meetings of the Oakland City Council, and there were occasions when they stood up to demand changes in policies. City officials made it easy for Oakland to become the preferred West Coast venue for rowdy protests in recent years. It's perfect. There aren't enough police officers to contain them, government is weak-willed and residents seem to accept it. Through it all, the city's downtown merchants and its public image have suffered most. It's a darn shame that everyday Oakland residents don't take advantage of their right of public protest, because they have a lot to protest about. In the midst of another bloody year in Oakland - and on the heels of another mass shooting, a homegrown demonstration calling on the president to address the nation's gun laws would more adequately address the concerns of besieged Oakland residents. Requesting the president establish a task force and assign federal agents to assist cities like Oakland, whose crime problems obstruct development and business growth, would aid Oakland more than an endorsement of large pot dispensaries. Boosting federal education resources, extending unemployment benefits, increasing oversight of federal funding allocations - all of them would provide a greater benefit to a greater number of people. In short, Oakland is a but a snapshot of civic decline being seen in more than an handful of major cities across the nation, and news of changes in national policy, dialogue and resources to reverse that trend is a much broader message than blowing smoke at a panicked medical marijuana lobby who fervently supports big-box pot stores. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom