City of Oakland Economic Recovery Advisory Council May 18, 2020 - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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City of Oakland Economic Recovery Advisory Council May 18, 2020 - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

City of Oakland Economic Recovery Advisory Council May 18, 2020 September 14, 2020 Monday, Sept 14, 2020 ORAC Meeting Agenda 1 Introductions and Framing 4 Eat.Learn.Play & Oakland Restaurants Michael McAfee, Micah Weinberg,


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May 18, 2020

September 14, 2020

City of Oakland

Economic Recovery Advisory Council

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Monday, Sept 14, 2020

ORAC Meeting Agenda

1

Introductions and Framing

Michael McAfee, Micah Weinberg, Facilitators

4

Eat.Learn.Play & Oakland Restaurants

Jose Corona, Eat. Learn. Play and OERAC Co- Chair

2

City Updates: COVID Disparities, Unemployment and CARES

Alexa Jeffress, Marisa Raya

5

Working Group & Advisory Council Updates – Spend.Stay.Love Campaign

Mark Everton, Visit Oakland

3

Alameda County: Reducing Worker Transmission

AneekaChaudhry, Director, Strategic Initiatives & Public Affairs, Alameda County Health Care Services Agency

6

Discussion and Wrap Up

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Monthly Case Rates by Race/Ethnicity:

Oakland, April-August

200 400 600 800 1000 1200 1400

April May June July August

Case rate per 100,000 pop

Latino/Hispanic Oakland Total African American/Black Asian White

Note: Rates for racial/ethnic groups with ≥10 cases monthly Source: ACPHD, with data from CalREDIE as of 4.1.20 to 8.30.20

City Updates: Progress Reducing Health Disparities

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Case rate per 100,000 April May June July August Hispanic/Latino 255.4 709.8 949.7 1336.0 837.9 Asian 40.6 46.2 White 34.7 119.5 118.6

High-low rate ratio 7.4 17.5 20.6 11.2 7.1

Case Rate Ratio: Highest-to-lowest by race/ethnicity

Oakland, April-August (monthly)

Source: ACPHD, with data from CalREDIE as of 4.1.20 to 8.30.20

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Bi-Monthly Death Rates by Race/Ethnicity:

Alameda County, March-August

Note: Rates for racial/ethnic groups with ≥10 deaths monthly

2 4 6 8 10 12 14

March-April May-June July-Aug

Death rate per 100,000

African American/Black Latino/Hispanic County Total White Asian

Source: ACPHD, with data from CalREDIE as of 3.1.20 to 8.30.20

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Death rate per 100,000 March - April May - June July - Aug Black/African American 11.2 9.9 13.0 Latino/Hispanic 3.0 Asian 2.7 5.2

High-low rate ratio 3.7 3.7 2.5

Death Rate Ratio: Highest-to-lowest by race/ethnicity

Alameda County, March-August (bi-monthly)

Source: ACPHD, with data from CalREDIE as of 3.1.20 to 8.30.20

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200 400 600 800 1000 1200 1400 1600

April May June July August Case rate per 100,000

94601 (Fruitvale) 94621 (Central East Oakland) 94603 (Elmhurst) 94619 94611 (Piedmont/Montclair) 94608 (Emeryville area) 94610 (Grand Lake)

Monthly Case Rates by Zip Code:

Oakland, Highest/Lowest Zips, April-August

Note: Rates for highest zips and lowest zips shown with ≥10 deaths monthly Source: ACPHD, with data from CalREDIE as of 4.1.20 to 8.30.20

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Case Rate Ratio: Highest-to-lowest by zip code

Oakland, April-August (monthly)

Source: ACPHD, with data from CalREDIE as of 4.1.20 to 8.30.20

Case rate per 100,000 April May June July August

94601 680.0 94603 1560.6 94619 321.2 94621 775.6 1077.0 94608 36.8 128.8 94610 35.6 94611 40.1 165.7

High-low rate ratio 8.7 19.1 19.4 9.4 8.4

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Alameda County

Aneeka Chaudhry, HCSA

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Eat.Learn.Play x World Central Kitchen x Restaurants

Jose Corona

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Our inspiration.

We launched Eat. Learn. Play. because we see the tremendous need that exists all around us and want to do what we can to help improve the lives of kids and families in Oakland, the Bay Area, and across the country. Rooted in three of the most vital pillars for a healthy childhood — nutrition, education and physical activity — Eat. Learn. Play. is designed to help ensure an equal road to success for all kids.

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X

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In March 2020, ELP launched a major partnership with World Central Kitchen to use the power of restaurants food to empower communities and rebuild economies. Since March, ELP and WCK have:

  • Engaged 130 Lo

Local Oak aklan and restauran ants, of which 70% are Black, Latinx or Women-owned.

  • Delivered over 1.3 mi

million meals to unhoused, seniors, foster youth, OUSD kids and families and others in need of meals.

  • Infused over $10,200,000 directly into restaurants.
  • Helped restaurants rehire over 825 of their kitchen staf

aff.

  • Partnered with 140 local

cal organizations/institutions to identify families in need of meals. These include the City

  • f Oakland, the Black Cultural Zone, East Oakland

Collective, Unity Council, Peralta Colleges, Homies Empowerment and Good Good Eatz, among others.

  • Delivered over 80,000 fresh far

arm produce boxes to Oakland families.

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Than ank k You.

Future of Restaurants:

  • Restaurants as a

vehicle to continue feeding community members

  • Recognize them as

community assets

Policy Approaches:

  • Tax credit for

providing healthcare.

  • **Because the restaurant

industry touches so many parts of the economy, government assistance will help not just restaurants, but also the broader ecosystem

  • f farms and other suppliers

they work with.

Other Support:

  • Rethinking restaurant

business model that takes into account a potential new labor model

  • Continued rent relief
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Working Group & Advisory Council Updates

Mark Everton, Visit Oakland – Spend.Stay.Love Campaign

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LAST MEETING: October 19th 3-4:30pm Recovery Resource Page:

https://www.oaklandca.gov/resources/re-opening-resources