NONE SO BLIND AS...
The Germans, or maybe it was the Swiss, used
to tell a fable about a peddler who strayed into a forbidden forest, angering the
troll who guarded those woods. The troll was about to kill the man, but the peddler
begged so hard for his life that the monster took pity and devised another punishment.
“I’ll send you back home on one condition,” the troll said. “You must walk the high
road into town, and every person you see, you must give a gold coin from your sack.
I will follow in the woods behind, and if you break this vow, I will pounce on you
and eat you up in one bite.” The troll thought this was a fit punishment because
he knew that the peddler loved his gold more than he loved his own life. The peddler
agreed to the arrangement and walked out of the woods with the troll close behind,
but when the peddler came out on the high road he stopped and tied a scarf around
his eyes. In that way he walked all the way home, passing many but seeing none, and
keeping all his gold.
One wonders if Mayor Jerry Brown walks through downtown Oakland with his eyes purposely
covered, so that he cannot see the people he insists are just not there.
According to national columnist George Will, the mayor once described downtown Oakland
in the late nineties as consisting of “a concentrated, homogeneous population — the
elderly, parolees, people in drug rehab, from mental hospitals, transients. This
is not the vibrant civic culture some might have in mind.” Since we doubt Mayor Brown
would describe Oakland’s Chinatown as a community full of junkies and criminals,
we can only assume that he has never actually seen that portion of downtown during
the several years he has lived in our city.
So, too, it must be with the mayor and the Alice Arts Center.
First, the mayor. He came into office on a platform that emphasized revitalization
of Oakland’s downtown, saying that it needed an influx of new residents to bring
it back to economic and cultural health. He spoke often of the fact that downtown
Oakland pretty much went dead on weekdays after five, with few places to eat or shop
or gather for casual conversation.
Now, to Alice Arts. The center is a city-owned property just off 14th Street near
the lake — converted in 1993 from an exclusive women’s club. For 10 years it has
been one of Oakland’s success stories. The facility houses several regionally and
nationally recognized dance companies, including (but not limited to) Diamano Coura
and Dimensions (two Afrocentric companies), AXIS Dance (which blends disabled and
non-disabled performers) and the Oakland Ballet. Koncepts Kultural Gallery, which
has offices at Alice, was bringing major jazz talent into the Jack London Square
area as far back as the late 1980s, helping lead the way to that district’s revival
as an entertainment center. Evening and weekend dance classes, sponsored mostly by
Citicentre Dance, bring in thousands of participants a year.
The city’s own Web site describes Café 1428, which sits next door to the Alice
Center auditorium, as “a cozy, intimate cafe reminiscent of those found in New York’s
Soho district.” This is probably an understatement. With a stream of people coming
in and out from the dance classes and other activities at Alice, 1428 is probably
the only place in downtown Oakland where you can drink coffee at an outdoor table,
play chess or hold political discussions in four (or more) languages.
In addition, the Alice building has some 70 apartments on its top floors, which the
city encourages as residential rental space to “local artists, art students and individuals
with careers in the arts.”
But now comes trouble in the camp.
A year ago, helped by a million-and-a-half-dollar renovation financed by the city,
Brown moved his Oakland School For The Arts charter academy into the basement and
unused ground floor office space at the Alice Arts complex. At the time, there was
a lot of community concern that the unstated city plan was for the arts school eventually
to take over the entire building, leaving no room for the present occupants. The
Oakland Tribune, however, reported assurances from city staff back then that the
arts school would “not displace any of the dance, music and performing arts groups
that call the Alice Arts Center home.”
Assurances, assurances.
This week, we learn that the arts school needs more room, and Brown is considering
giving it the whole center, scattering both the Alice Arts residential tenants and
the various performance groups to other parts of the city. Or out of the city, if
they can’t find space in Oakland.
There are presently some 100 ninth-grade students enrolled at the arts school, which
is able to operate only with an annual quarter-of-a-million-dollar city subsidy.
If the school eventually reaches its long-term goal of a ninth- to 12th-grade student
body (which is no certainty), it would reach a maximum enrollment of about 500, coming
downtown each weekday morning, and leaving when the school closes at five.
The arts school could be relocated, with little harm to its programs. Instead, Mayor
Brown is willing to risk the dismantling of a proven Alice Arts Center program, successful
over a 10-year period, that annually brings what the Tribune estimates as “tens of
thousands” of people into the downtown area, daytime, evenings and weekends each
year — what should be a cornerstone of the mayor’s downtown revival.
You think maybe it’s ‘cause he just can’t see it? Or is there something else going
on?