Showing posts with label daniel watts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label daniel watts. Show all posts

Friday, May 28, 2010

Bicycles

The Enterprise doesn't let candidates write letters to the editor. Of course, that doesn't stop certain candidates' organized supporters from holding letter-writing parties, gathering for tea in living rooms throughout the town to scribble slight variants of the same theme: "Candidate X is a loyal supporter of schools, public safety, and business. Candidate X is the only choice for the job."

My supporters are far less organized. So when the Enterprise offered to let me take over one of their regular columnist spots, I took the chance to get published. The only catch: the column had to be about bicycles. Easy enough.

DAVIS BICYCLES: Things I learned on the South Davis Bike Path
Davis Enterprise | May 28, 2010
Editor's note: This is the last of five columns on bike-related topics by the candidates for Davis City Council.

Dirt in my eyes again. Knuckles numb with cold. This had become my morning routine.

Forgetting my gloves in winter - that's my own fault. But those leaf blowers - those gas-guzzling machines that kick up dirt on the bike path - those were sent from hell to destroy me.

The bike path was fun. It let me ride from my mobile home in South Davis to the law school, bypassing most obstacles that confound the drivers of Davis. I'd sneak under roads, entirely avoiding downtown, jetting along the Arboretum, and shooting out onto the roundabout in front of Mrak Hall. Pedaling from my 'affordable' prefabricated house to my 9:30 a.m. constitutional law class took only seven minutes if I hurried.

Riding to school never feels like crossing a border, but it is. The campus isn't part of Davis. It's in unincorporated Yolo County, and thousands of students whose daily ride extends only from dorm room to classroom cannot vote in city elections. On the City Council, I'd work to annex the campus, West Village and adjacent areas into the city. It'd take time, but it's important.

The bike path wasn't perfect. On the way to King Hall, I'd dodge jogging housewives, baby ducks, confused pedestrians, homeless people and dusty leaf blowers. When I'm on the City Council, I'll ban those leaf blowers. They're noisy, polluting and they drive the good people at Rakes 'R' Us out of business. Palo Alto banned leaf blowers, and its cyclists and asthmatics are happier for it.

I'd leave the homeless alone, though. They have no place else to go, and as long as they stay off the bike path itself, I don't mind aging hippies sleeping in the bushes.

We're a wealthy city, and we pride ourselves on our concern for the less fortunate; the homeless deserve respect. They certainly don't get much respect from the Davis police or the City Council, and that's unfortunate.

Another biking obstacle students avoid is the infamous Davis bike cop. Like all police in Davis, he's got a bad rap with students. On Halloween, police on foot stopped students at random, violating the Constitution by initiating searches without reasonable suspicion.

At a candidates debate last month, a Davis mother of a teenager walked up to me afterward and told me about her son. He's a teenager and a good kid. But police decided one night they didn't like the look of him, so they followed him, slowly, for seven blocks. If anyone else did that, it'd be stalking. But if police do it, it's an 'investigation.'

Luckily, police on bicycles are less prone to such 'investigations' - bike cops playing stalker just look silly. Maybe all our cops should ride unicycles and juggle kumquats. They'd be too embarrassed to harass students except when absolutely necessary.

To deal with these obstacles, we need a municipal ordinance establishing affirmative rights for Davis residents: Police can't use tasers or physical force unless the subject gets violent, police can't racially profile or stalk students because of their age, and citizens may sleep under bushes if they're not bothering anyone. We could call it a Davis Bill of Rights.

It's unique, sure, but then we'd be known as a haven of civil liberties, and that's loads better than being known as the toad tunnel town.

Not that there's anything wrong with toads, or other scaly, slimy creatures. On my rides home from the law school, my favorite part of the trip was gazing out at Putah Creek. When I managed to escape the law library before nightfall, I'd stop to look for turtles resting on mossy stones in the mud. They'd sit there, silently, for hours on end, doing nothing. Almost as if waiting for someone to tell them what to do.

Kind of like the City Council - at least, until I'm on the dais.

- Daniel Watts used 'Wheel of Fortune' winnings to run for California governor in 2003 against Arnold Schwarzenegger on the single issue of 'lower student fees' for college students. During the course of this City Council campaign, he convinced the council to repeal two unconstitutional municipal ordinances. This summer, he'll intern for the Wikimedia Foundation, which he says will be 'awesome.' E-mail him at
danielwatts@gmail.com

Thursday, May 13, 2010

"It's in everyone's best interests that the students feel happy here."

From the California Aggie:

Although many concepts, such as long-term solutions for Davis' monetary problems, were reiterated throughout the forum, council hopeful and current UC Davis School of Law student, Watts, took a unique approach.

"What I offer is a representative of [UC Davis] students on city council. I could be a voice for them." Watts said. "It's in everyone's best interest that the students feel happy here. [They're] a large population."

Watts and other candidates mentioned tensions between university students and police after the protests earlier this year. The average age for a Davis resident is increasing, which Watts said, should be a reason for community members to take action. If the city wants students to return and raise a family, he advised, it must make the environment more inclusive, starting with the City Council.



http://theaggie.org/article/2010/05/13/davis-league-of-women-voters-hosts-discussion-of-candidates-and-measures

Sunday, May 9, 2010

"Something we need in this city"

We had a debate/forum a couple days ago at city hall, sponsored by the League of Women Voters. My favorite part of the Davis Vanguard's story on the debate wasn't anything the Vanguard wrote, but rather a voter's note in the comments section:

E Roberts Musser

05/08/10 - 10:57 AM
...

IMHO, Daniel Watt did very well in this debate. He wasn't afraid to speak his mind, and used a common sense approach by giving specifics, something we need in this city. Very quick on his feet in a debate. He has shown a proven track record of effecting change in city policies, by getting the city to start the process of repealing its own unconstitutional laws. Thus Daniel already has a certain grasp of how to get things done, a surprising turn of events. He's a little rough around the edges, but he reminds me a bit of Lamar Heystek - young, idealistic, a representative for youth in this town (which is sorely needed) and ready to try to do the right thing for Davisites, without being beholden to special interests. Good job, Daniel...

Read more at the People's Vanguard of Davis: "League Candidates Forum Puts Campaign Into Home Stretch."

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

Banning leaf blowers?

They're noisy. They pollute. They kick up dust, endangering bicyclists, pedestrians, and cars. Gasoline-powered leafblowers are annoying machines that perform a function best left to rakes.

Several residents have asked about banning them. After talking to Davisites, I've come up with a solution based on the experience of Palo Alto, which banned the monstrosities in 2005:

Q. What exactly is banned?
A. Gas-powered leaf blowers may not be used in any residential zones by anyone including residents.

Q. How is "residential area" defined?
A. Residential zones are determined and defined in the Municipal Code.

Click on this link to see the map (use the back button on your browser to return to this page).http://www.cityofpaloalto.org/civica/filebank/blobdload.asp?BlobID=8188

Q. What kind of leaf blowers may be used and when?
A.

  • Residential zones
  • Electric leaf blowers (no internal combustion engines) may be used only during the following hours:
    Monday – Friday 9 am – 5 pm
    Saturday 10 am – 4 pm
    Sundays and Holidays not allowed* (see * below for list of holidays)
  • Non – residential zones
  • Electric and gas-powered blowers may be used only during the following hours:
    Monday – Friday 8 am – 6 pm
    Saturday 10 am – 4 pm
    Sundays and Holidays not allowed
Q. What about City maintenance of parks?
A. City staff will not be using leaf blowers. This will result in less frequent maintenance to the parks and a diminished level of cleanliness since work will be done using rakes/brooms.

If it worked for Palo Alto, it'll work in Davis. When I'm on Council, I'll propose a similar ban.

Sunday, May 2, 2010

Monday, April 12, 2010

"Candidate Watts gets victory"

The Davis Vanguard blog posted a piece on my campaign promise to repeal unconstitutional portions of the Davis Municipal Code. After two representatives from the King Hall ACLU spoke at a City Council meeting in March, the city council will apparently comply.

From the Vanguard:

While Davis Columnist Bob Dunning may rate Mr. Watts as having a 22 billion to one shot at the city council, Mr. Watts has achieved what none of the other candidates have achieved to date, he has changed city law or he will if a consent agenda item passed on Tuesday night that introduces an ordinance repealing Section 26.01.010 of the Davis Municipal Code addressing annoying persons on streets and amending Section 26.01.100 addressing obscene language.

Friday, April 9, 2010

Debating the police -- with the police chief

A few days ago, the Davis Chamber of Commerce sponsored a "candidates' forum." A forum resembles a debate, except slightly more boring. David Greenwald at the Davis Vanguard covered it extensively, and the David Enterprise printed a front-page article on the forum.

I said what the others wouldn't. To quote the Vanguard,
Daniel Watts was rough around the edges but clearly the conscience of the group that was willing to take on the tough issue and let the chips fall where they may. He went after unconstitutional city ordinances, the police who he claims harass students and homeless people, city salaries, the firefighters, landlord-tenant disputes, the Davis Model lease, you name it. Said Mr. Watts, "We don't have an advocate for the voiceless on the city council. I intend to be that advocate."

The Chamber asked how we would sustain enrollment in Davis's schools. I explained how we cannot expect young families to return to Davis, where they spent four years as students, if the city mistreats them when they are students.

"No offense to members of the force in attendance," I said, gesturing to Davis Police Chief Landy Black in the front row, "but the police do not have a good relationship with the students."

During the campus protests, the police -- working with the CHP and UCPD -- beat peaceful protesters with clubs. They tased them, then lied about tasing them, then admitted to the lie when they realized they'd been caught on video.

It's unfortunate.

Friday, March 12, 2010

Campaign announcement!

The Student Voice: www.votewatts.com

Students’ rights - constitutional government - transparency.

Davis city government is broken. I’ll fix it:

Ø Repeal unconstitutional ordinances banning “annoying” conduct and “bawdy” language (Municipal Code Sections 26.01.010 and 26.01.100).

àWhy? To comply with First Amendment.

Ø Require Davis businesses to obey state law, eliminate fees for credit card purchases.

à See Cal. Civ. Code. 1748.1.

Ø Direct Davis Police to release aggregate data on race, gender, age of detained citizens.

àWhy? To address identity-based profiling

Ø Annex UC Davis and adjacent areas into city

à Let students vote in their own city!

Ø Stop Davis PD from beating protesters and blocking non-protesters from observing protests.

Ø Work with students, not against them.

Ø Provide free legal services for students whose landlords violate tenant law

Ø Coordinate with law school, provide legal observers to monitor police abuses during Halloween, Picnic Day, protests

Ø Use City Council pulpit to draw state attention to UC Davis

Ø Install bigger, more visible street signs

Ø Trim trees

Ø Light streets for safety

Experience:

ü 2003: Ran for California governor on “lower student fees” platform

ü 2006-07: Public school teacher in Japan

ü 2007-2008: Public school teacher in San Jose

ü 2008-present: ACLU co-chairman and board member, UC Davis School of Law