Street Speak
Street Speak
Street Speak
Brought to you by the staff of the Street Sheet, the nation's oldest newspaper bringing you the word on the street about homelessness and poverty directly from those who live it. We answer your burning questions about homelessness in San Francisco because we know that homeless people themselves are the experts when it comes to ending poverty.
Episode 12: How A.B.O. Comix is Challenging Prisons Through Art
This podcast is created by the same people who bring you the Street Sheet, San Francisco’s street newspaper.  This year's April Fools Day issue hits the streets of San Francisco full of comics that were compiled and submitted by A.B.O. Comix, a collective of creators and activists who work to amplify the voices of LGBTQ prisoners through art. On today’s episode, we speak with Casper Cendre, the director and a co-founder of A.B.O. Comix,  a project dedicated to supporting queer and trans artists in prison and creating a world beyond our carceral system. A.B.O. Comix 5th comic anthology is available now on their website! This book features accomplished cartoonists and first time doodlers in an effort to amplify the voices of LGBTQ+ prisoners . Proceeds from this anthology go back to the contributors so that they can access commissary & gender affirming items, healthcare and legal support. GET INVOLVED!You can find ways to get involved on the A.B.O. Comix website! You can volunteer to be a penpal to one of the many incarcerated artists the collective works with, or buy some incredible merch to support their work, including comic anthologies, prints, T-shirts, and more. You can also offer up your skills to find out how to best support this project!https://www.abocomix.com/A.B.O. Comix also has a Patreon! When you donate to the Patreon you not only get some awesome perks, but you also know that your money is going directly into commissary accounts for incarcerated artists, as well as toward supporting the visionary work of the collective.https://www.patreon.com/abocomixYou can also offer up your skills to find out how to best support this project! Send them an email at [email protected] REPORTMia Pixley uses her cello, voice, and music performance to study and represent aspects of self and other, community, and the natural world. You heard “Good Taste” off her album Margaret in the Wild. You can see Mia Pixley perform live at Cesar Chavez Memorial Solar Calendar in Berkeley on April 16th at 6pm! To find her music and learn about upcoming shows, visit miapixley.comSUPPORT THE PODCASTSupport for Street Speak comes from our listeners! Please donate to us online at https://coalition.networkforgood.comSupport the show (https://coalition.networkforgood.com/)
Mar 31, 2022
27 min
Episode 11: Street Sheet Poets Speak
Today's episode features some incredible poets reading their pieces aloud. To read these poems and many others, check out our full poetry edition of the Street Sheet, available at streetsheet.orgFeatured Poets:Kevin Madrigal GalindoDetroit RichardsJonah RaskinJudy Joy JonesJohanna ElattarRevolt Right NowVirginia BarrettSubmit Your Writing!Street Sheet is always accepting submissions of poetry, personal stories, and news articles for our bi-monthly newspaper, which supports the survival and well-being of over 100 hundred vendors. To submit your work or to pitch us an idea for a story, visit our website. Support for Street Speak comes from our listeners! Please donate to us online at https://coalition.networkforgood.comSupport the show (https://coalition.networkforgood.com/)
Feb 18, 2022
21 min
Episode 10: What is the Overdose Crisis, and Why Should I Carry Narcan?
The overdose crisis claimed the lives of 700 San Franciscans in 2020—twice the number of COVID-19 deaths during the same period. Poverty, criminalization, and the demonization of people who use drugs has put our community members in greater danger, and the stigma surrounding drug use has stalled meaningful efforts to create services and implement policies that will save lives.We speak with Ashley Fairburn—a harm reduction worker at the San Francisco AIDs Foundation—about what the overdose crisis is, the disparate impact it has on homeless San Franciscans, and how we can practice harm reduction in our own communities.Learn more!The San Francisco AIDs Foundation has so much helpful information about the overdose crisis and many programs to help keep people who use drugs safe. https://www.sfaf.org/Resources:Never Use Alone— call this number to let them know if you're going to use, and they will call back to check on you in a few minutes 1(808)484-3731TED Talk by Dr. Carl Hart— https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C9HMifCoSkoWeather report brought to you by Ivan and The Be Extra Terrestrials (The Be.E.T.s), an American band formed in Riverside, California, in 2005 by singer-songwriter multi-instrumentalist producer Ivan Gomez. The band is currently based in Oakland, CA. The sole member of band, Ivan writes, records, engineers, and produces all tracks except where noted, despite the plural moniker. The fruit of the ear loins of a chronically depressed melancholic loner, Ivan attempts to convey what makes him tick.Support for Street Speak comes from our listeners! Please donate to us online at https://coalition.networkforgood.comSupport the show (https://coalition.networkforgood.com/)
Nov 13, 2021
28 min
Episode 9 - Keep SIP Hotels Open
At the height of the Delta variant spike, the City of San Francisco announced plans to close down the Shelter in Place Hotels that had kept about 2,000 people safe and off the streets over the course of the past year. We spoke with Lina Khoeur, a fourth year medical student at UCSF, and with Naomi Shoenfeld, a medical anthropologist and nurse practitioner who has been working and researching in the SIP hotels. Both of them shared what they have seen of the benefits the SIP hotel program  has offered to tenants, and why they are asking the City to #KeepHotelsOpen.UPDATE: Since the interviews were conducted the City announced a short three month extension of the program thanks to community pressure. But the extension mat not be enough—hotels should stay open until all tenants are placed in safe and permanent housing.Learn more!Presentation on the study of SIP Hotels conducted by Naomi Shoenfeld and Dr Elizabeth Abbs - https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1EV0V765rC9Yk46ZMfpye8hJErbS6Ezbk/Get Involved!Sign up for the Coalition on Homelessness ACTION ALERTS here: https://www.cohsf.org/take-action/Weather report brought to you by Bella Hangnail, off her new album Mask Era. Listen to the full album here: https://bellahangnail.bandcamp.com/Support for Street Speak comes from our listeners! Please donate to us online at https://coalition.networkforgood.comSupport the show (https://coalition.networkforgood.com/)
Oct 29, 2021
46 min
Episode 8: How Business Improvement Districts are Privatizing the Block
This episode features an interview with Paul Boden of Western Regional Advocacy Project, a local organization coordinating a regional response to the criminalization of homeless people. We talk about Business Improvement Districts, the shadowy private entities that are turning neighborhoods across the country into outdoor malls - and determining who has access to spaces that were once public. Get Involved!Western Regional Advocacy Project: https://wraphome.org/Learn more about Business Improvement Districts (AKA Homeless Exclusion Districts): https://wraphome.org/homeless-exclusion-districs/Weather report brought to you by Mega Bloom, a local preschool teacher and musician whose new album is coming out this winter. Hear their first album Music for Little Sprouts here: https://megabloomsmusic.bandcamp.comSupport for Street Speak comes from our listeners! Please donate to us online at https://coalition.networkforgood.com/Support the show (https://coalition.networkforgood.com/)
Sep 30, 2021
27 min
Episode 7: Why Homeless Advocates Should Support Sex Workers
This episode features an interview with Celestina Pearl, the Outreach director at St. James Infirmary. She spoke with Street Speak about the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on sex workers in San Francisco, the history of SESTA/FOSTA, the connections between homelessness and sex work, and the incredible mutual aid work that is sustaining sex workers during this challenging time. Get Involved!St James Infirmary: https://www.stjamesinfirmary.org/RAD Mission Neighbors: https://radmissionneighbors.org/Learn about SB 357 to decriminalize sex work in California: https://sd11.senate.ca.gov/news/20210310-senator-wiener-introduces-legislation-repeal-discriminatory-law-prohibiting-loiteringWeather report brought to you by InoPoGu (Inocente Po Guizar), a Mexican trans queer person who's very outspoken about gentrification, got gentrified out of the bay, and is currently seeing some horrible gentrification and gentrification attempts in New Orleans. They are lightweight homeless/couch surfing, and ask listeners to please share their music and art! https://inopogu.bandcamp.com/Support for Street Speak comes from our listeners! Please donate to us online at https://coalition.networkforgood.com/Support the show (https://coalition.networkforgood.com/)
Apr 21, 2021
36 min
Episode 6: Connecting the Dots - Racism and Homelessness
This episode is a pre-recorded panel hosted by the Housing Justice Workgroup of the Coalition on Homelessness, San Francisco exploring the panelists own experiences with racism and homelessness. The speakers draw connections between racism, structural causes of homelessness such as neoliberalism and the defunding of housing investments for poor communities, the use of homeless people as a political wedge by monied interests as a smokescreen for racism, the disproportionate impact homelessness has on brown and especially black communities and why/how racist policies such as redlining have led to the lack of accumulated wealth in the Black community and where we should go from here. Speakers include Joe Wilson, Director of Hospitality House, long time Housing Justice member Andrea Mayfield, Youth leader Malcolm Mobley, Jameel Patterson, son of late Mother Brown who founded United Council of Human Services. The panel is moderated by Laura Guzman, founder of Mission Neighborhood Resources Center, and currently of the Harm Reduction Coalition. This panel has been shortened for the purposes of our podcast, but the full recording is available on the Coalition's Facebook page here: https://www.facebook.com/140260129335933/videos/461067321688418The weather report is from Equipto & Michael Marshalls album Kim-3. Sigue La Movida. Song called “in their shoes” featuring Tony Robles.Support the show (https://coalition.networkforgood.com/)
Mar 18, 2021
51 min
Episode 5: Inside the Shelter in Place Hotels
This episode dives into the reality of life inside San Francisco's Shelter in Place (SIP) Hotel program. There are 2,400 formerly unhoused people currently staying in SIP hotel rooms in San Francisco, and while the City has committed to housing most of them, the details of where and how that will happen are unclear. We'll hear first from Mary Crisis, a former SIP hotel worker who penned a damning open letter about the conditions in the hotels which you can read on their twitter page @jfchrist. Then we speak with SIP hotel tenant Nicholas Garrett about the necessity of the SIP Hotel program as well as the violations he has witnessed inside. The weather report is brought to you by Ezra Teshome, a singer songwriter out of San Francisco. Their Ethiopian ancestry and exposure to old folk, blues, and electronic music are major influences for their work. Listen to more music by Ezra Teshome on their website: https://www.ezrateshomemusic.com/Want to get answers to your burning questions about poverty and homelessness? Have thoughts and feelings about our show? Let us know at bit.ly/streetspeakSupport the show (https://coalition.networkforgood.com/)
Jan 21, 2021
59 min
Episode 4 - Why Do You Need Housing?
Episode 4 - Why Do You Need Housing?September 22, 2020HOUSING IN THE TIME OF COVID-19, AND WHY IT MATTERSA panel discussion hosted by House the Bay with unhoused San Franciscans speaking about the urgent need for housing. This conversation happened August 13th and the full video can be viewed on House the Bay's Facebook or Instagram. PANELISTS:COUPER ORONAhttps://www.couperwashere.com/Couper is a disabled firefighter and street medic offering care to other unhoused San Franciscans. On May 1st she was part of the home takeover that launched House the Bay, and has since returned to living in her RV and doing outreach in San Francisco. SHY BROWNhttps://www.streetsheet.org/im-a-survivor/Shy is a journalist with the Street Sheet publication and an outreach worker in the Tenderloin. She has spent many years without permanent housing in San Francisco and now lives in an SRO.DONALD A. FRANKLINhttps://pad.riseup.net/p/donaldfranklinDonald is a native San Franciscan and lives with his dog Sasha. He holds numerous degrees, and is a former police officer currently working towards disbanding the SFPD and shutting down its POA. Don is the founder and executive director of the Every Twenty-Eight Foundation, a non-profit focusing on the upliftment, education, well being, and protection of black and brown people.House the Bay is a group of housed and unhoused community members who are tired of waiting for our cities to address the very immediate need for housing. To learn more about House the Bay or to organize with us, visit housethebay.org !-- the Weather Report --Revolt is an "uppity crip"- an SF activist, rapper, singer, illustrator, journalist, and all-around troublemaker who rouses the rabble with the arts that he dabbles in. His brand-new first release "REVILLISION" was crafted with painstaking detail over a period of seven years. It's a grimy, artistic tour de force featuring 14 superb tracks of resilience, heart, and badassery traversing the full gamut of our emotional spectrum. The album can be purchased through www.RevoltRightNow.com and is currently only available as a deluxe full-color package on CD. The album boasts original drawings and collages by the artist himself in a 6-panel Digipak casing with a full color 8-page booklet.  Revolt gives two shits about digital music and wants to empower people with artwork they can actually hold and fully engage with. Copies can be purchased currently for $12.99 however, FREE copies are set aside in solidarity with unhoused neighbors and those on SSI or extremely low income. He is planning on upcoming record release party via Zoom, which will have a live DJ and many amazing hip hop artists throughout the bay! Email [email protected] for infoSupport the show (https://coalition.networkforgood.com/)
Sep 23, 2020
1 hr 19 min
Episode 3: What Are Shelters Like in the Time of COVID-19?
Episode 3: What Are Shelters Like in the Time of COVID-19?August 13, 2020In this episode we speak with Meghan "Roadkill" Johnson and Ben Baczkowski, both Shelter Client Advocates who work at the Eviction Defense Collaborative to protect the rights of people living in San Francisco's shelter system. They offer a brief history and overview of the program before diving into the nitty-gritty details of how COVID-19 has changed everything. The weather report for this episode is brought to you by the Timothy O'Neil Band. Timothy O'Neil is a songwriter from Temecula, California, currently submerged in the Sonoma County Americana scene. Timothy O'Neil Band bares its influences of punk-rock and mixes it into songs, nodding to genres of bluegrass, folk, and singer-songwriter. You heard their original song "Build a Home". Learn more about the Shelter Client Advocacy Program: https://evictiondefense.org/services/shelter-client-advocacy/Support the show (https://coalition.networkforgood.com/)
Aug 13, 2020
41 min
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