
AAPAC Updates
August 2022

A Note from the Director of AAALI
Greetings Students, Families, Colleagues, and Partners,
Welcome to the 2022-23 school year!
In the spirit of Ujima, the third principle of Kwanzaa, the AAALI Team is honored to serve and collaborate with you another year. Ujima means collective work and responsibility. It means working together to for a common purpose. In the context of an academic school year, that common purpose is the overall achievement and well being of each and everyone of our African-American and Black students in SFUSD.
We’ve got this! Cheers to being brilliant and capable. Cheers to working together hand and hand.
Wishing you all a very happy, healthy, and successful school year.
Laticia Erving,
Director for the African-American Achievement and Leadership Initiative
SFUSD UPDATES
Every Thursday, families who have included their email addresses in ParentVUE will receive the Family Announcement Bulletin (FAB), an email summary of all public website announcements posted in the past week.
Learn how to update your contact information in ParentVUE. Interested community members can also sign up to receive FAB.
This week's FAB includes information about: (click links for more information and additional updates):
Get Required Immunizations for School
Does your student still need to get required immunizations for school? SFHN is hosting immunization clinics from August 20-27. No appointment necessary.
ParentVUE and StudentVUE updates for 2022-23
Happy new school year! Here are all the updates for ParentVUE and StudentVUE you need to know to start the new year.Check out the FAB for more news.
SFUSD High School Student Newsletter - August 2022
Please share the kickoff issue of the SFUSD High School Student Newsletter for the 2022-23 school year!
Potrero Hill Family Day on the Green!
Back to School Foster Care Hair Affair!
Tell us how you really feel! 🗣️
SF Reparations - Public Survey
The San Francisco African American Reparations Advisory Committee ("Committee") needs YOUR help as it embarks on its task to define reparations for historically marginalized Black communities. We want to hear directly from the community to name the harms that we have collectively endured so that the Committee can develop recommendations for the Mayor's office, the Board of Supervisors, and the Human Rights Commission in a draft report due in December 2022. This survey should take no more than 15 minutes of your time, and it will be immensely valuable to the Committee as it goes forward in guiding the City to fulfill its unrealized promises and right past wrongs.
For more information about the conversation surrounding reparations to African Americans, please watch this video: https://youtu.be/oTES5mX9-Co
Please contact reparations@sfgov.org with any specific questions.
Thank you for your time!
SF TRAFFIC STOPS
SFPD is rewriting its rules around ‘pretextual traffic stops,’ or traffic stops that quickly escalate from a check of a minor violation to an investigation that impacts the rights of those involved. SFHRC is leading a series of opportunities for community to weigh in.
Join in this process and share your experience with traffic stops in San Francisco. Meetings are in person and virtual; feedback can also be shared via email, phone, or community survey.
COMMUNITY PARTNERS
African American Reparations Advisory Committee (AARAC)
Per the January 4, 2022 SF Human Rights Commission Media Advisory- The African American Reparations Advisory Committee was established by City ordinance to examine the possibilities of reparations for descendants of enslaved persons in San Francisco, a community impacted by historic and continued harms. Detailing the Committee’s mission and goals, this Report serves as the body’s first milestone, delivered six months after its initial convening.
The AARAC meets on the 2nd Monday of every month at 5:30pm. To tune in, register at bit.ly/SF-Reparations. Public comment is highly encouraged.
K2C is a college savings initiative for kindergartners entering the San Francisco Unified School District. Each eligible child starts kindergarten with a savings account, containing an initial deposit of $50 from the City and County of San Francisco. Children and their families can contribute to the account throughout grade school and high school. Currently, over 22,000 students in all 74 public SFUSD elementary schools have K2C accounts, including all K-3 grade students, and select students in 4th-5th grade at K2C pilot year schools.
Help a child in foster care stay in the city. Click on the above link to learn more about fostering, adopting, hosting or mentoring. For current foster parents, learn your rights.
COVID-19 Resources for the Black Community
Looking for local resources in your community by Black-led Organizations? Browse Covid-19 Black's directory of San Francisco Bay Area Agencies.
Black to the Future is committed to enhancing educational and economic opportunities for our community by instilling the necessary tools to become successful. Black to the Future’s goal is to engage youth and young adults ages 14 to 35 around a continuum of culturally competent services that consider their role in family, community, and the overall landscape of San Francisco. Learn more or complete a family intake by clicking on the above link.
MegaBlack SF is a collective of Black-led organizations and Black individuals fighting for visibility, sovereignty, dignity, and justice for Black San Franciscans. For more information on MegaBlack SF, to be added to their newsletter, or to join the weekly meetings, visit their site linked in the title.
The Dream Keeper Initiative is a new, citywide effort to reinvest $120 million over the next two years from law enforcement into San Francisco’s Black and African American community. This Initiative is part of Mayor London N. Breed’s roadmap for reforming public safety and addressing structural inequities in San Francisco. The Dream Keeper Initiative aims to break the cycle of poverty and involvement in the criminal justice system for the families in City programs and ensure that new investments, including in youth development, economic opportunity, community-led change, arts and culture, workforce, and homeownership, are accessible to San Francisco’s families who are most in need.
Learn more about partner organizations and activities by visiting the linked website.
*AAPAC is an honored partner and recipient of DreamKeeperSF Funds.
Mo’ MAGIC is a collaborative, San Francisco neighborhood-based, nonprofit organization whose mission is to transform the community and youth through the MAGIC of collaboration.
Magic Zone is a comprehensive program for K-12th graders that provides after-school and summer programming that focuses on literacy, STEAM, and sports activities. Also included in the Magic Zone program are our workforce development and job readiness services through the Community Safety Initiative and partnership with Mayor London Breed's Opportunities for All initiative.
BMAGIC is a network of San Francisco neighborhood-based nonprofit organizations whose mission is to facilitate, coordinate and develop community resources and opportunities that support service providers and community members in Bayview Hunters Point (BVHP).
Our neighboring YMCAs offer a variety of resources and opportunities that are free or low-cost to the community. The YMCA offers wellness groups, fitness classes, academic support, and more for the entire family.
Community Advisory Committee for Special Education (CAC)
The purpose of the Community Advisory Committee (CAC) for Special Education is to advocate for effective Special Education programs and services and advise the Board of Education on priorities in the Special Education Local Plan Area (SELPA). CAC meets every 4th Thursday of the month. Visit their linked site for more information.
Grounded in the community schools model/framework, Beacon Centers are committed to a cohesive, comprehensive, and collaborative approach that creates pathways to lifelong learning and transformative experiences for youth and the adults who support them through advocacy, leadership, networking, and program support.
Our mission is to create a cadre of college and career-ready students from San Francisco's underserved communities to begin and complete post-secondary education or vocational training. 100% offers academic support, college readiness resources, leadership opportunities and more. Programming is free. To sign up complete this form.
ABOUT US
Email: aapac@sfusd.edu
Website: sfusd.edu/aapac
Location: 1551 Newcomb Avenue, San Francisco, CA, USA
Phone: (415) 241-6121
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/aapacsf