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Raiders Dim 49ers Playoff Hopes After Win

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Oakland, CA – The Raiders played their best game this season by far. Despite a tumultuous year, and a devastating loss to the St. Louis Rams last week where they were embarrassed and shutout. Oakland regained their competitive edge and gave their fans something they’ve been wanting for since 2011. A 24-13 victory over the 49ers in the “Battle of the Bay”.

 

After a 52-0 loss to the Rams, the Raiders took their anger and frustration on a once dominating team. This Bay Area rivalry brings a playoff atmosphere on other side of the Bay Bridge. Oakland dismantled Colin Kaepernick’s offense and ran all over San Francisco’s defense. They gave up one touchdown and forced Phil Dawson to kick three field goals in which he made only two.

 

“I don’t know if we needed any motivation coming into this one,” said DE Justin Tuck. We didn’t let all the hype of this rivalry and the ‘Battle of the Bay’ get us, we just came ready to play. We didn’t play our style of football in St. Louis, so hopefully we learn from this and are able to go next week in Kansas City.”

 

The Raiders defense smothered Kaepernick, he threw his first interception on the first play from scrimmage and was sacked five times. Kaepernick threw his second interception to Charles Woodson late in the fourth to secure Oakland’s victory. He finished with 18 of 33 passes for 174 yards. San Francisco is now two games out of the second wild-card spot with three games remaining in the season.

 

“It was great for us to come off the bye week and perform the way we did today,” S Woodson said. “Coming out early, getting a turnover, the offense being able to drive the ball down field and put up points. It was a great game from start to finish.”

 

Derek Carr threw three touchdown passes and was protected by his offensive line so well he had enough time to travel the world and come back. He completed 22 of 28 passes for 254 yards. Carr had his best performance as a rookie quarterback. He completed all five of his passes for 73 yards on a drive that ended with a 9-yard touchdown pass to Marcel Reece.

 

“When you talk about the way Derek [Carr] played, Marcel [Reece], Mychal [Rivera], those guys played fantastic,” said RB Latavius Murray. “The line, we had a little pound and run game going as well, so I think we were mixing it up. When you mix it in like that, you have success.”

 

The Raiders jumped on the board early scoring on the turnover with a 57-yard field goal from Sebastian Janikowski. The 49ers took the lead when Kaepernick found a uncovered Bruce Miller for the 8-yard touchdown. Oakland used their passing game to setup Carr’s 3-yard touchdown pass to T Donald Penn. An unusual play that brought success to a team years ago was attempted once more with the same results.

 

“It’s a play that Oly [offensive coordinator Greg Olsen] did for me in Tampa a couple of years ago,” Penn said. “I actually scored the first time against San Francisco in San Francisco. It’s a play I’ve been talking about all year and he finally put in a couple of weeks ago.”

 

“That’s a play we’d been working on for a couple of … two-three weeks,” Raiders head coach Tony Sparano said. “We kid him about it all the time because we throw it to him every once in awhile and that guy hasn’t dropped one yet.”

 

Oakland regained the lead 10-7 but the 49ers tied it 10-10 with Dawson’s 52-yard field goal to end the first half. Another filed goal by Dawson would give San Francisco their final lead of the day and that’s when the Raiders took over. They scored in the third making it a 17-13 game. Then Carr’s favorite receiver for the day, Mychal Rivera scored the final touchdown in the fourth.

 

Rivera’s 5-yard touchdown helped thrust his first 100-yard day of his career. He recorded 7 receptions for 109 yards. Carr completed all seven passes to Rivera on each of the Raider’s 80-yard scoring drives in the second half. He’s the first tight end since Brandon Myers to record 100+ yards, Myers had 130 yards receiving against Cleveland in 2012.

 

“When the schedule came out, that was one date I put my finger on and circled the date,” said Rivera. “We came ready to play. If a guy’s smaller than me I just jump and make the catch. We practice it everyday and it finally happened in a game.”

 

Back-to-back losses have dimmed the 49ers chances of making the playoffs. Their final three games are against the Seahawks, Charges and Cardinals. No easy tasks ahead, they’re now three behind Arizona in their division and two behind in the wild-card race. And no one is more stunned by the loss than the actual players.

 

“It’s been an off year,” RB Frank Gore said. “If we were to beat the Raiders, we’d still have a lot of hope. So I feel like this is the lowest point (of the season).”

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City Government

San Pablo Appoints New Economic Development and Housing Manager

Kieron Slaughter has been appointed as the economic development & housing manager for the City of San Pablo. Since 2017, Slaughter has served as chief strategic officer for economic innovation in the City of Berkeley’s Office of Economic Development. Previously, he served in a 2.5-year appointment in the Pacific West Region as one of 10 Urban Fellows in the United States National Park Service.

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Kieron Slaughter. Photo courtesy of the City of San Pablo
Kieron Slaughter. Photo courtesy of the City of San Pablo

The Richmond Standard

Kieron Slaughter has been appointed as the economic development & housing manager for the City of San Pablo.

Since 2017, Slaughter has served as chief strategic officer for economic innovation in the City of Berkeley’s Office of Economic Development. Previously, he served in a 2.5-year appointment in the Pacific West Region as one of 10 Urban Fellows in the United States National Park Service.

Before that he was an associate planner in the City of Richmond’s Planning and Building Services Department from 2007-2015.

San Pablo City Manager Matt Rodriguez lauded Slaughter’s extensive experience in economic development, housing and planning, saying he will add a “valuable perspective to the City Manager’s Office.”

Slaughter, a Berkeley resident, will start in his new role on Nov. 12, with a base annual salary of $164,928, according to the City of San Pablo.

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City Government

Aaron Osorio Rises Up Ranks to Become Richmond’s Fire Chief

For Aaron Osorio, it started with a ride along on a firetruck at age 10. “I thought it was the coolest job,” he said, adding, “I knew being in fire service would make a big difference in the community.” Now a 27-year fire service veteran, Osorio appears to approach his work with the same youthful exuberance. And that’s good for the city as Osorio was recently named chief of the historic Richmond Fire Department.

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Richmond Fire Department Chief Aaron Osorio. Courtesy photo.
Richmond Fire Department Chief Aaron Osorio. Courtesy photo

By Mike Kinney

The Richmond Standard

For Aaron Osorio, it started with a ride along on a firetruck at age 10.

“I thought it was the coolest job,” he said, adding, “I knew being in fire service would make a big difference in the community.”

Now a 27-year fire service veteran, Osorio appears to approach his work with the same youthful exuberance. And that’s good for the city as Osorio was recently named chief of the historic Richmond Fire Department.

Osorio is a San Francisco native who rose up the ranks in the Richmond Fire Department over the last 21 years before being elevated to chief.

He joined the department in 2002 and has served in multiple roles including firefighters, engineer, captain, battalion chief, training director and deputy fire chief. He said he truly loves working in this community.

While it isn’t common for a fire department to hire a chief that came up through its ranks, Osorio was credited by the city for serving Richmond well during uncommon times.

The city lauded him for developing internal policies and vaccination clinics during the initial COVID response, for supporting activation of the emergency operations center in response to a potential mudslide disaster in Seacliff last year, helping to draft mutual aid agreements and working to increase fire response capabilities for industrial incidents.

He’s also led departmental hiring and recruitment since 2018.

Osorio said it is an honor to be hired as chief and has big plans for the department moving forward. He said he wants to continue hiring and promoting for vacant positions, and also completing a strategic plan guiding the direction of the organization.

He also aims to replace and renovate a number of fire department facilities placed on the Capital Improvement Plan and create new ways to recruit that will enhance the diversity of the department.

Osorio said his experience within, and love for, the city of Richmond puts him in a good position to lead the department. He says he knows what is needed and also the challenges that are unique to the city.

“I look forward to utilizing that institutional knowledge to move the fire department forward in a positive direction and enhance the services we provide to the community,” the chief said.

Osorio holds a bachelor of science degree in Fire Administration and is also a California State Fire Marshal-certified chief officer, company officer, and state instructor.

He also holds numerous certifications in fire, rescue, hazardous material, and incident command.

The chief has been married to his wife, Maria, for 26 years and they have two sons, Roman and Mateo.

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Barbara Lee

Congresswoman Barbara Lee Reflects on Historic Moment Less Than One Week from Election Day

Congresswoman Barbara Lee (CA-12) today released a piece on Medium reflecting on Vice President Kamala Harris’ historic presidential campaign 50 years after Lee worked on the presidential campaign of Congresswoman Shirley Chisholm.

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Congresswoman Barbara Lee
Congresswoman Barbara Lee.

Congresswoman Barbara Lee (CA-12) today released a piece on Medium reflecting on Vice President Kamala Harris’ historic presidential campaign 50 years after Lee worked on the presidential campaign of Congresswoman Shirley Chisholm: 

“As Election Day approaches, I’m reflecting on a few dates and numbers that mean something to me.

Zero: the number of Black members in Congress 56 years ago. Next Congress, we hope to swear in over 60 members in the Congressional Black Caucus. 

Three: The number of Black women to ever serve in the United States Senate since the first Congress in 1789.

Two: The number of Black women that will be elected to the Senate this year alone if we do our job.

1972: The first time a Black woman, Congresswoman Shirley Chisholm, ran for president in one of the major political parties of the United States.

Zero: the number of Black women to ever serve as president of the United States. 

IF we do the work, we can change that with President Kamala Harris.

As I reflect on what would be Congresswoman Chisholm’s 100th birthday next month, I could not help but remember that my first official involvement in U.S. politics was working for her presidential campaign in 1972.

Over 50 years later, I have been involved in every single campaign since. Shirley was my mentor — she was a bold visionary, a progressive woman who understood that working together in coalitions was the only way to make life better for everyone, to build an equitable society and democracy that lived up to the creed of “liberty and justice for all.”

The historic moment we are in today is not lost on me. I have had the privilege to have known Vice President Kamala Harris for over three decades. She, after all, is a daughter of the East Bay. She, like Shirley, truly is a fighter for the people.

And I know she can move our country forward in a new way. As a member of her National Advisory Board, I have campaigned across our country to help take her message, her legacy of service, and her “to-do list,” as she says, to voters who were almost starting to feel hopeless, but are now feeling hopeful once again, captured by the politics joy and the bright possibilities brought upon by a possible Harris-Walz administration.

Recently, I visited churches in North Carolina with members of the Congressional Black Caucus. The chair of our CBC political action committee, Chairman Gregory Meeks from New York’s fifth district, eloquently and powerfully presented a vision of what Dr. Maya Angelou wrote in her famous poem, “And Still I Rise:” “I am the dream and the hope of the slave.”

Meeks remarked that on Jan. 20, 2025, we will observe the birthday of our drum major for justice, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

He also described that on Jan. 20, IF we do the work — if we knock on doors, if we make those phone calls, if we spread our message — standing on the podium at the U.S. Capitol will be the first Black speaker of the House of Representatives, Hakeem Jeffries.

In the wings will be over 60 members of the Congressional Black Caucus. Holding Frederick Douglass’ Bible will be the first African American woman appointed to the highest court of the land, Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson.

She will be swearing-in the first Black woman to serve as president, Kamala Harris, in front of the shining white dome of the United States Capitol, built by enslaved Black people.

In front of her and beyond, the tens of millions of Black men and women who voted for her. The world will witness the hope and the dreams of our ancestors ushering in a new way forward.

As I sat in front of the stage this week at the Ellipse in Washington, D.C., as Vice President Harris delivered remarks with the Oval Office behind her, I could not help but feel that our country was ready for this historic moment.

We are not only voting for a Black woman as Commander in Chief of the wealthiest and most powerful country in the world. We are definitively stating that we will not allow the clocks of freedom and justice to be turned back.

We are voting for our ancestors’ hopes and dreams. We are voting for the generations that will come after us, long after we are gone. We are voting for Vice President Kamala Harris.

Let’s get this done.

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