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News & Views Local News & Views A public bank for Oakland

A public bank for Oakland

February 9, 2017
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    Learn all about public banking at a public forum Thursday, Feb. 9, 6pm, Oakland City Hall – details below

    by Emily Wheeler

    Oakland, like several other cities around the country, is currently studying the feasibility of establishing a public bank. This type of banking offers enormous benefits for our local economy. We should move ahead with founding the Public Bank of Oakland as rapidly as possible.

    Public-Bank-of-Oakland-logo-300x300, A public bank for Oakland, Local News & Views Public banking is not a new idea. North Dakota has operated its own public bank since 1919, and it came through the Great Recession of 2007-08 in much better shape than other states. Communities there did not suffer the budget cuts and reduced services that have been so common elsewhere.

    The Public Bank of Oakland will serve the people of Oakland by retaining the bank’s profits as public property to be used for our common good. Through public banking, we can help our own communities thrive rather than enrich the shareholders of Chase, where Oakland’s monies are now deposited, and other private banks.

    Currently, Oakland and other municipalities are sending millions of dollars every year to pay the interest on bonds issued for infrastructure. As one example at the state level, California will end up paying $13 billion dollars for the new Bay Bridge span – half of which is interest. These interest payments go to private banks and individual wealthy investors. To pay off these debts, we slash the budgets of beneficial social programs and impoverish our communities.

    In contrast, when we finance projects through our own bank, we’ll have more funds available for public projects – whether affordable housing, housing the homeless, caring for the sick or enriching our children’s education.

    The Public Bank of Oakland will serve the people of Oakland by retaining the bank’s profits as public property to be used for our common good.

    Our public bank will also benefit the community by making low-cost loans available to local entrepreneurs. While private banks are committed to maximizing shareholder dividends, our bank will consider the common good as part of the bottom line. We will extend credit to viable enterprises that meet community needs and provide jobs.

    We can make the Public Bank of Oakland a reality without raising taxes or cutting expenses. The revenues currently on deposit in the city’s accounts at Chase will be transferred to the new public bank. Oakland has another big source for deposits: the cannabis cash that cannot be kept in private banks due to federal prohibitions.

    Our public bank will also benefit the community by making low-cost loans available to local entrepreneurs.

    The new bank will be the City of Oakland doing business as the Public Bank of Oakland. While the city government will set up the institution, the bank itself will make day-to-day decisions according to its charter, free from the influence of city politicians or officials. In contrast to private banks’ high-risk gambling with public money, the public bank’s sound, conservative practices will balance the mandate to lend for the common good, providing both fair return and societal benefit.

    A thriving local economy is something we all want to see – no controversy there. But we’ve been too quick to accept the prevailing notion that there is a tradeoff between that and providing ourselves with adequate housing, health care or education programs. It’s time to align our fiscal practices with our social ideals. It’s time for the Public Bank of Oakland.

    Public forum on public banking

    The City of Oakland will hold a public forum on the potential of the Public Bank of Oakland on Thursday, Feb. 9, from 6:00 to 8:00 p.m., in Hearing Room 3, City Hall, 14th and Broadway. Presenters are:

    • Marc Armstrong, member, Federal Reserve Faster Payments Task Force, co-founder and past president of the Public Banking Institute, co-founder and president of Commonomics USA;
    • Jesse Arreguin, mayor of Berkeley, former Berkeley City Council member;
    • Tom Sgouros, author of “Checking the Banks: The Nuts and Bolts of Banking for People Who Want to Fix It” (2014), senior policy advisor to Rhode Island treasurer;
    • Nichoe Lichen, member of Santa Fe’s Brass Tacks Team (“public banking facts that stick”), board member of the Public Banking Institute; and
    • Henry Wykowski, past prosecutor for the U.S. Attorney’s Office
 in Northern California, currently Harborside Health Center‘s lead attorney, speaking on cannabis law as it relates to public banking.

    Contact Emily Wheeler at contact@friendsofpublicbankofoakland.org, and learn more at http://friendsofpublicbankofoakland.org. This story first appeared on Indybay.

    • TAGS
    • “Checking the Banks: The Nuts and Bolts of Banking for People Who Want to Fix It”
    • A public bank for Oakland
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    • Tom Sgouros
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 in Northern California
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