Give Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf points for planning ahead: the mayoral election is nearly 19 months away, but she announced Monday plans to seek a second term in 2018.
That’s prompting a mixed assessment from arts activists, who’ve been following Schaaf’s administration since the Ghost Ship fire — when 36 people died at a dance party in an Oakland warehouse that was home to many artists, but which had never been fully inspected by fire officials.
Since the tragedy, Schaaf has tried to walk a fine line between tougher safety enforcement and protecting artists from eviction. In announcing her plans for reelection, Schaaf wrote, “I will also fight to protect our small Oakland-grown businesses, artists and non-profit organizations from displacement.”
“Libby has really stepped out on a limb for us,” says Jon Sarriugarte, a commercial artist in West Oakland active in the group We the Artists of the Bay Area. He also serves on a pair of mayoral committees including one on housing retention. “All of us have been grateful, and for her statement in support of balancing art and safety.”
In January, Schaaf issued an executive order aimed at improving safety at unpermitted warehouses, but also offering residents protections, such as requiring a five-day warning to tenants before any inspectors enter the property.