News

Community Activists to Protest Congresswoman Norma J. Torres' Support for Israel’s Genocide on Gaza

POMONA, CA - On Wednesday, July 24, 2024, community activists will gather to protest Congresswoman Norma J. Torres' recent support for Israeli military actions against Palestinians. This demonstration comes in response to her meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu and advocating for continued U.S. arms shipments to Israel.

Congresswoman Torres, representing District 35, is complicit in the Genocide of the Palestinian people of Gaza & her constituents demand she call for an immediate ceasefire. Constituents will gather to voice strong opposition for actions tantamount to genocide against Palestinians. The protest will coincide with Prime Minister Netanyahu's scheduled speech in Washington, D.C., aiming to send a clear message of dissent against Torres' alignment with Israeli policies.

Protesters will gather at Dudley Street overpass over Interstate 10 and hold large banners denouncing Netanyahu and Torres. The banners will be visible to westbound morning traffic. Wednesday, July 24, 2024, from 6:00 AM to 10:00 AM PST .

Organizers encourage community members to join in solidarity to express their disapproval and demand accountability from their elected representative, Norma Torres. This event aims to highlight concerns over U.S. foreign policy and its implications for the rights of Palestinians. For more information or media inquiries, please contact Arianna, Priscila or Ben at ontariounitedforliberation@gmail.com


Ontario United for Liberation is a community organization from Ontario, California geared toward liberation, equality and justice.

Investigative Report: Did Current City Council Members Victor Preciado and Steve Lustro Properly Disclose the Campaign Contributions they received from Pomona Police Officers' Association in 2018?

During the 2018 election cycle, the Pomona Police Officers Association PAC (PPOA) made campaign contributions to three Pomona City Council candidates for around $9,000 each - Victor Preciado, Steve Lustro, Christina Carrizosa. Preciado and Lustro won their election that year and are currently sitting members of Pomona’s City Council today.

In recent days, it has come to the attention of the Pomonan editorial Board that these campaign contributions were not properly reported.

In the fall of 2018, the PPOA paid more than $41 thousand to the Freedman Public Affairs for mailers to support the campaign of Victor Preciado, Steve Lustro, who won their election, and Christina Carrizosa, who lost hers.

According to CalAccess, District 2 council member Victor Preciado received a total of $9,689.12, and District 5 council member Steve Lustro received $9.396.56 from the PPOA through contributions and late independent expenditures.

Before assuming office on Dec. 3, 2018, both officials filed a California Form 700, also known as Statement of Economic Interests form, but neither reported the amount received from the PPOA. The form is meant to prevent decisions made by public officials from being influenced by their personal financial interests.

Pomona Ordinance No. 4298 states any person holding a position in Government Code Section 87200 needs to file any required Statement of Economic Interests report online or electronically with the City Clerk.

The PPOA made 83 donations to Preciado’s campaign and 72 donations to Lustro’s campaign of different totals ranging from $72.54, $27.67, $26.86, $1,436.07 and $678.59 from Sept. 2018 through Nov. 2018.

On his 700 form, Preciado reported his salary working with the Kellogg Company and from the San Gabriel Valley Conservation Corps as in the range from $1,001 to $10,000, but did not report the amount donated to his campaign by the PPOA.

Lustro did not report any of the donations from the PPOA or any other salary that might influence his decision making. See both Form-700

Under the Pomona City Code, Article II, Sec. 10-34, it stated that a candidate shall not solicit or accept any contribution which will cause the total amount contributed by such person with respect to a single election in support of or opposition to a candidate that exceeds $500.00.

However, Section 10-36 of the same code states that all contributions, including campaign contributions, exceeding $25 needs to be reported.

During the same election, the PPOA also made 72 donations that equated to $9,449.49 to the campaign of Council member Christina Carrizosa of District. Carrizosa was currently on the Council at the time, but lost her position to current Pomona City Council member, Nora Garcia.

The Police Oversight Starts Today (POST), a coalition of Pomona and area residents, filed a complaint with the Fair Political Practices Commission in Aug. 2021 claiming the PPOA caused a conflict of interest when it donated sums of money to certain council members and not equally to every potential candidate.

Council member Preciado, recently contacted, said he wasn’t aware of the money. He also stated that, the form does not need to have that kind of payment on it: 

“While [the PPOA] have to state who they are using it for, they actually can’t legally coordinate or talk to the candidate about it. In this example I wasn’t aware of this expenditure or what they used it for.”

To date, Pomona city council member Lustro has not responded to this reporter’s request for comment.

Pomona Renews Contract with DPOA for Supplemental Police for the Business Improvement District

Pomona PD frisking an unhoused individual at Veterans Park ©2001 Julian Lucas
City of Pomona Circa 1950’s
Illustration Julian Lucas

The city of Pomona approved to renew its contract with the Downtown Pomona Owners Association (DPOA) for supplemental police patrolling for the downtown Pomona Business Improvement District (BID) during the June 3 council meeting.

According to the Los Angeles City Clerk, a BID is a “geographically defined area within the city in which services, activity and programs are paid for through a special assessment which is charged to all members within the district…”

The agreement will provide two police officers to continue patrolling the downtown Pomona BID on top of the private security the DPOA allocates money for. The DPOA will pay $187,288 of the police salary, while the city will pay $337,752, bringing up the total of the contract to $525,040.

The city’s budget for the new fiscal year was adjusted to accommodate for the renewal of the contract with the DPOA. A total of $10.9k was added to the budget.

Tim Sandoval, mayor of Pomona, emphasizes that the renewal wasn’t motivated by anyone on the council, but rather, the city is answering what businesses within the downtown Pomona BID have been calling for. 
“It was really driven by the business owners themselves who have experienced a number of different break-ins, burglaries, broken windows,” Sandoval said. “It's been a challenge for some of them.”

The DPOA revenue consists of a tax that every business within the district pays to help promote the area, keep it clean and provide private security.

The city of Pomona created the Downtown Pomona Unit (DPU) with the DPOA back on June 22, 2022 to help the private security it hired patrol and secure the district. Between the years of 2021-2022, the DPOA spent $306,373 on security for the BID. The city recommended it allocate 49.8% of the city’s budget for the Pomona Police Department for the new fiscal year.

A volunteer of the non-profit bookstore located within the BID, Cafe Con Libros, Ralph Acosta, has seen multiple incidents where help was needed to ease the tension. Acosta describes a moment where he saw unhoused people harassing children from the local school as they were crossing the train track. However, he doesn’t think the continuing policing of the downtown area will solve the problems it faces. “I’m in pro-support of [the] community in different layers,” Acosta said. “But to me, it surpasses more than just the layer of policing. Policing itself is one layer and I don’t see that solving the problem.

Mike Ellis, the chief of police, mentioned the new money isn’t paying for training on how to deal with people going through a crisis. “We just recently trained everyone on de-escalating techniques which can include someone that’s being violent or potentially in a mental health crisis,” Ellis said. “So we have ongoing programs for these types of training that the officers [from] downtown will also participate in.”

The contract renewal comes with the option of extending it past the 2024 fiscal year and into the year 2025. 


EDITORS NOTES
Over the past thirty years, business improvement districts, (BIDs), have been incredibly popular across the nation. On the other hand, not much is actually understood about how they affect communities. Anecdotal and scientific data supporting strongly held beliefs about BIDs is scant. Some claim that BIDs are a creative means for businesses and communities to unite in response to decline in public funding or known as disinvestment which caused abandonment. Some also claim they provide “safety, cleanliness and habitable for residents, and vendors”. While others attest that BIDs are a sham that uproot underprivileged people, criminalize the unwanted, and alter local culture.

”BIDs are geographically bounded areas where local property owners can assess themselves or their tenants a fee to solve problems that are negatively impacting the local business environment.”

BIDS redesign large areas of public realm in our cities [and] become a powerful voice shaping land use, zoning, transportation, and urban redevelopment planning. BIDS are incorporated as non profit organizations, which people may think being a non profit is doing good work for the board. However, we have to ask who sits on the boards of these organizations?
Schaller, Sussana, Business Improvement Districts and The Contradictions of Placemaking; Georgia Press

The majority of BIDs board members are property owners. Moreover, BIDs are a taxing body that assesses properties within the BIDs boundaries. Originally used in assessing commercial properties, residential properties are being assessed more frequently in the present day. Despite the policy language's emphasis on supporting small companies and maintaining a clean and safe environment, the properties are ultimately the subject of the assessment. The assessments are then transferred to small businesses through their leases, which presents a contradiction. Small businesses are currently covering the cost of their lease and the assessment, which raises the value of the property.

On the weekend of March 26, 2024 there were multiple businesses in the downtown arts colony area that were vandalized resulting in store windows being shattered causing thousands of dollars in repair. The BID didn’t prevent this unfortunate crime from happening. In fact vandalism has happened on multiple occasions in the downtown area. So we have to ask the question, do BIDs really provide safety, is the area really secure with having two police officers present? Are the two officers only present during art walks? Why do we need police for art events?


The Pomonan is the cultural structure, empowering visionaries to propel the global society to the future.

UCLA Protest: A Photographic Look at Student Activism on College Campus

In recent weeks, the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) has become a focal point for student activism, with protests igniting conversations both on and off-campus. The demonstration, characterized by its passionate participants, has shed light on the evolving landscape of student activism in higher education institutions.

Wednesday night students continued protests, before police moved in early Thursday morning to disrupt the encampment by tearing down the makeshift barricades, and breaking apart tents to drive demonstrators out of the pro-Palestinian camp. More than 200 people were taken into custody on Thursday morning.


Julian Lucas, is a photographer, a purveyor of books, and writer, but mostly a photographer. Don’t ever ask him to take photos of your event because he will charge you 100,000,000,000. Julian is also the owner and founder of Mirrored Society Book Shop, publisher of The Pomonan, founder of Book-Store, and founder and project director of Print Pomona Art Book Fair.

Pomona College Faculty Responds to the Arrests of Claremont College Students

“The faculty condemns the present and future militarization and use of police on the campus. It insists that the College immediately drop criminal charges and reverse the suspensions and all related consequences against student protesters for their actions of civil disobedience."

Pitzer College’s Faculty Condemns Pomona College’s Suspensions of the Student Protesters

On the afternoon of Friday, April 5, Claremont College students staged a peaceful protest calling for Pomona College to divest its support of Israel and the corporations that send weapons to Israel. As part of the protest, some 20 students occupied the Pomona College President’s Office. When told to leave, they didn’t, and within approximately 20 minutes, the Police, including Claremont Police and police from 3 neighboring cities, arrested 20 students, 19 for occupying the building and one for blocking the entrance. Police zip-tied their hands behind their backs and took them to the jail at the Claremont Police Department on Bonita Avenue in Claremont.

That same day according to the Claremont College newspaper, This Student Life, Pomona College's President Gabrielle G. Starr issued this email:

“I will issue interim suspensions to any Pomona students who may have been arrested today; indeed I directly informed the individuals in my office that this would be the case.”

Pomona College's faculty will be convening on Thursday, April 11, to vote on a resolution condemning the suspensions.

However, on Monday, April 8, Pitzer College’s Executive Committee of the Faculty (FEC) issued their own statement of condemnation, "The FEC. . . strongly condemns Pomona College’s escalatory police response to a peaceful protest that took place on April 5, 2024. We further condemn the decision to suspend and/or bar from Pomona’s campus the students arrested in connection to that protest. Denial of the free exchange of ideas and access to education is antithetical to our mission as an educational institution, and deeply harmful to our community.

We also acknowledge that such a police presence/response created a serious and wholly unnecessary risk and significant distrust for many Pitzer and 5C community members, particularly those of marginalized identities, and those who disproportionately bear the brunt of police brutality. No community members should feel unsafe or be threatened when engaging in peaceful protest.

We offer support to affected students and call on our community to make that support tangible, including, but not limited to: providing space on Pitzer’s campus, where possible, for Pomona’s classes to meet, extending support for students to be able to attend classes and complete their academic work, and offering flexibility and compassion to affected students in terms of deadlines and attendance.”


Julian Lucas, is a photographer, a purveyor of books, and writer, but mostly a photographer, but don’t ever ask him to take photos of events because he will charge you a lot of money. Julian is also the owner and founder of Mirrored Society Book Shop, publisher of The Pomonan, founder of Book-Store, and founder of PPABF.

20 Pomona College Students Demonstrators Arrested and Face Suspension

Photography Julian Lucas ©2024

Updated April 9, 2024 | 3:44pm PT

Claremont, CA —  On Friday afternoon, Claremont Police took 20 student protesters from the Claremont Colleges into custody for occupying Pomona College President Gabrielle Starr's Alexander Hall office on Pomona College’s campus. Reportedly, 18 were charged with misdemeanor trespassing for not leaving the premises even though they had been “given directives” to leave, according to Claremont Police officer Eric Orozco. Police arrested an additional protester for failing to clear the path as police began to enter the Hall. 

Those arrested were part of 100 or so protesters who showed up on Pomona College’s campus to protest Pomona College’s refusal to divest itself from entities connected to Israel’s role in the war in Gaza.

After the arrest of the students, the protesters moved to Claremont’s Police Department offices where they waited in protest until the arrested students were released one by one.  Helicopters from several news sources showed up to document the proceedings.  

Earlier, police agencies from Claremont, Pomona, Azusa, Covina and La Verne had stood in full riot gear in riot formation in the middle of College Ave.

And, in an even earlier action, college administration forcefully removed student artwork, eight days after students at the Claremont Colleges erected a mock apartheid wall on Marston Quad. According to a press release from the student-led advocacy organization, Pomona Divest Apartheid, the students erected the work in order to “'illuminate Pomona College's complicity in the face of an illegal occupation and genocide.”

After questioning a Pomona Police Officer why they were in the city of Claremont, we also asked, doesn’t your presence in Claremont result in a  “shortage of officers in Pomona, in a city with security issues of its own.? The officer's responded, ‘take that up with your city officials.’


Julian Lucas, is a photographer, a purveyor of books, and writer, but mostly a photographer. Don’t ever ask him to take photos of events because he will charge you a lot of money. Julian is also the owner and founder of Mirrored Society Book Shop, publisher of The Pomonan, founder of Book-Store, and founder of PPABF.

Community Group Set to Issue Cease and Desist Letter to Pomona City Council Regarding Pomona Police Department's Unlawful Targeted Actions

POMONA –  Gente Organizada, a community-led non-profit, will deliver a cease and desist letter at the Pomona City Council meeting on April 8, 2024, represented by attorney James Gutierrez. The letter addresses concerns regarding the Pomona Police Department’s (PPD) continued violent targeting of Black and Brown communities and its violation of state and local laws.

The letter highlights several instances where the PPD's actions contradict its stated values of compassion and transparency, eroding public trust in local government and law enforcement. Specific incidents cited include the officer-involved shooting in the Angela Chanslor neighborhood on February 3, 2022, where the officer violated department policy by not having his camera on, and the murder of Andres Avila in 2011. 

“The Pomona Police Department’s actions are in direct violation of Policy #424 and California Assembly Bill 748,” said James Gutierrez, attorney for Gente Organizada. “They’ve been able to violate these local and state laws with impunity because there’s no checks and balances.”

Furthermore, the letter outlines a concerning pattern of the PPD's history of targeting young community members, particularly Black and Brown youth. The lack of transparency and accountability within the PPD, as well as its collaboration with police special interest organizations, are also highlighted as major areas of concern.

Gente Organizada calls on the Pomona City Council and City Manager to demand transparency from the PPD, address patterns of use of force, and launch immediate investigations into the incidents outlined in the letter. Failure to do so may result in legal action against the City Council.

Next week, Gente Organizada will present this letter on April 8, 2024 at 6:30 pm in front of Pomona City Hall before the City Council meeting. 

See Cease and Desist Letter


The Pomonan is the cultural structure, empowering visionaries to propel the global society to the future.

Pomona Unified School District: Associated Pomona Teachers Reach Tentative Agreement

Pomona, CA — On March 18, 2024, Associated Pomona Teachers (APT) reached a tentative agreement for an 8% salary increase retroactive to July 1, 2023; a one-time, 4% increase retroactive to July 1, 2023; and an increase to the health and welfare benefit allotment of $500 for the 2023-24 calendar year. Earlier this year, APT rallied in front of Pomona Unified School District and spoke out at the PUSD school board meeting for a number of reasons, but low pay was at the top of the list. 


On Wednesday morning, March 20th, APT President Wei-Tsu Loh emphasized that "the agreement still has to go through a ratification process by members and the school board. With the 8%, our members will be closer to the salaries of surrounding districts. We will need the district to commit to improving our salaries and benefits in order to attract and retain highly qualified educators as well as classified and administrative staff."

While giving back to their community, a second year PUSD educator and Pomona resident, who remains anonymous stated, “I do not feel that the PUSD salaries are a living wage. With rent increasing, it is nearly impossible to live on your own with the amount paid as a second year teacher. I also have a ton of student loan debt, and unfortunately, I am not able to make payments towards my debt due to having to choose between paying the minimum payment or having funds for living expenses for the month. The 8% salary increase is great; however, I fear it is not enough to pay all that I need to pay in a month and have enough for myself. As it is, I am living paycheck to paycheck, so I am hoping that this 8% increase provides some breathing room while also allowing me to pay my student loan debt. Due to PUSD salaries, I have considered leaving the district, or at the very least leaving my position as a classroom teacher this year.”


Julian Lucas, is a photographer, a purveyor of books, and writer, but mostly a photographer. Don’t ever ask him to take photos of events because he will charge you an astronomical amount. Julian is also the owner and founder of Mirrored Society Book Shop, publisher of The Pomonan, founder of Book-Store, and founder of PPABF.

Pomona’s City Council Approves Ceasefire Resolution in Israel/Palestine

Photography courtesy of Julian Lucas
Mount San Antonio College Protest Fall ©2023

Published Thursday 1/25/2024 | 1:05pm PST

The City Council of the City of Pomona hereby supports Congressional Resolution H.R. 786, and joins other cities in calling on Congress and the Biden administration to demand: an immediate ceasefire; an immediate release of all hostages Hamas took on October 7, 2023; urgent safe passage and delivery of substantial and sufficient humanitarian aid to Gaza; and a lasting political resolution that protects the lives, health, and security of all innocent civilians.


On Monday, the City Council of Pomona voted to approve a resolution calling for a ceasefire in Israel/Palestine in response to a broad coalition of advocates who had begun lobbying the Council at Council meetings starting in mid-December. During this time, advocates for ceasefire had also submitted a petition with over 300 signatures to the City asking for a resolution calling for a ceasefire.

Forty people spoke in favor of the resolution and one spoke against.

Those who spoke in favor included young and old (including one 7 year-old), Arab-Americans, White, Latinx and Black. They identified as Muslim, Jewish, Christian. Some identified themselves as Palestinian, with relatives in either Gaza, the West Bank or both. One man identified as a son of an Israeli national, and a local professor emeritus declared he was the descendant of Holocaust survivors and was aligned with Jewish Voice for Peace. The speakers included professors, teachers, medical doctors, lawyers, mothers and fathers, students, a City Council candidate and the undocumented. Many were associated with Cal Poly Pomona as former alumni or in other capacities. One Latinx speaker spoke about the importance of “brown and brown unity.” Some noted their frustration at sending so much money to bomb Gaza when the need is so great right here in the City. Many spoke about the need to address both Islamophobia and anti-semitism.

A few of the speakers requested that the City contact Congresswoman Norma Torres urging her to also ask for ceasefire on a national level.

The sole speaker who opposed the resolution identified himself as Jewish and stated that the act of singling out Israel/Palestine was anti-semitic since the City had not addressed other wars and conflicts in Northern Africa, the Middle East and Ukraine.

While the vast majority of speakers voiced their gratitude to the City for putting the resolution on the agenda, many stated that the resolution did not go far enough. In response to these public comments, Mayor Sandoval and other Council members asked staff to redraft on the spot. Acting City Manager Anita Guiterrez quickly edited and amended parts of the resolution to satisfy the Council.

The description “many thousands of innocent civilian Israeli and Palestinian lives” was changed to the more specific “over 30,000 innocent Palestinians.” The new draft also noted that 85% of Gaza infrastructure had been damaged, that 1.9 million people had been displaced, and that the toll should be referred to as “collective punishment" by Israel. In addition, the redrafted resolution called for the need for humanitarian aid.

All of the Council members voted to adopt the resolution except for Council member Robert Torres, son of Congress member Norma Torres, who abstained, stating, “I will not be forced into a position.” He mentioned his irritation at comments directed at him on social media. Robert Torres is currently running for a higher office, California State Assembly member for District 53.

In approving this resolution, Pomona joins the cities of San Francisco, Oakland, Richmond, Cudahy and Long Beach in asking for ceasefire.

During the discussion of the resolution, Council member John Nolte, expressed the regret felt by many in the room. “It’s hard to be here and not be able to do a lot,” Nolte said. “We’re doing what we can.”


Julian Lucas is a traditional darkroom photographer, a purveyor of books, and writer, but mostly a photographer. But don’t ever ask him to take photos of weddings, quinceñeras, birthdays. He’ll charge you 100,000,000. Julian is also the owner and founder of Mirrored Society Book Shop, BOOK-STORE, and publisher of The Pomonan.

Pamela Casey Nagler, Pomona-born, is an independent scholar, currently conducting research on California’s indigenous people, focusing on the Spanish, Russian, Mexican and US invasions between 1769 and the 1860s. The point of studying this history is to tell us how we got here from there. 

Anita D. Gutierrez Takes on New Role as Acting City Manager for the City of Pomona

The Pomonan
Published 12/12/2023 | 3:10 Pm PST

POMONA, CA
– The City of Pomona is pleased to announce the appointment of Anita Gutierrez as the Acting City Manager, effective immediately. Gutierrez has spent over 20 years in public service and has been an instrumental part of the City’s leadership team for the last five years. She brings a wealth of experience and a strong commitment to enhancing the community’s quality of life.

Anita Gutierrez has been an exemplary public servant, demonstrating unwavering dedication to the City of Pomona since 2018. Her journey with the City began as the Planning Manager and then Director of Development Services, where she successfully directed and oversaw various Divisions, including Building and Safety, Planning, and Code Enforcement. In this role, Anita managed pivotal Commissions, including Planning, Cultural Arts, and Historic Preservation.

In her latest role as Assistant City Manager, Anita exhibited exceptional leadership, overseeing her Development Services and Public Works Departments with utmost competence and commitment With over two decades of experience in the local, state, and federal government sectors, Anita has an impressive track record of leading teams and communities in transformative work, development, and growth. Her expertise extends across numerous areas within Los Angeles County and the Inland Empire, addressing complex planning, real estate development, land use, regulatory challenges, policy development, and implementation.

Exemplifying Pomona’s core values, Anita’s leadership style is defined by collaboration, inclusivity, innovation, and resourcefulness. She is recognized for her ability to facilitate cooperation among stakeholders with diverse interests, including neighborhood representatives, the development community, and other agency partners. Anita’s dedication to refining Pomona’s development review process, elevating internal review systems, and enhancing external customer service has solidified her reputation for attentive listening, fairness, practicality, and a keen ability to find effective solutions.

Anita holds a Bachelor’s Degree in Political Science from California State University, San Bernardino, and a Master’s in Planning from the University of Southern California (USC). She will complete a Doctorate in Organizational Change and Leadership from USC in May 2024. She is a member of the American Institute of Certified Planners and an active member in the League of California Cities. She is deeply rooted in Southern California, where she has dedicated her career to serving the public and helping the community collectively shape their living environment.

The City of Pomona is confident that Anita’s extensive experience and unwavering commitment to the community will be invaluable as she assumes the role of Acting City Manager. Her leadership and dedication to enhancing the City’s prosperity and well-being are commendable, and we look forward to the positive impact she will continue to make in her new role. “We are fortunate to have Anita stepping in to lead our City team. Her leadership is a pillar of stability for the City. With an unwavering commitment to communication, thoughtful decision-making, and the overall well-being of our City organization and community, we are confident that the City is now under the guidance of an exceptionally capable leader,” said Mayor Tim Sandoval.

“I am deeply passionate about public service, and I am grateful for the opportunity to demonstrate my leadership abilities in service to our city,” Gutierrez said. “The Pomona team is like no other, and I am thankful to be a part of this exceptionally dynamic and dedicated organization.


The Pomonan is the cultural structure, empowering visionaries to propel the global society to the future.

Pomona City Council and the City Manager Agree to a Mutually Acceptable Employment Separation

The Pomonan
Published 12/12/2023 | 3:10 Pm PST

POMONA, CA – The Pomona City Council and City Manager have agreed to a mutually acceptable employment separation for City Manager James Makshanoff effective December 11, 2023.


Mr. Makshanoff was appointed on January 21, 2020. Among his achievements, Mr. Makshanoff led the City of Pomona through the Covid pandemic, produced a balanced budget 4 years in a row, increased budget reserves from 19% to 43%, consolidated waste hauling services to a state-of-the- art waste hauler and produced a state approved housing element.

The City Council thanks Mr. Makshanoff for his dedicated service and his numerous accomplishments that benefited Pomona’s residents, businesses and employees. "On behalf of the entire Council, I want to express our appreciation for Mr. Makshanoff’s dedicated service to our community. Mr. Makshanoff organized an exceptional group of hard working department executives, making it possible for us to have a smooth transition”, said Mayor Tim Sandoval. “It has been a privilege to serve such an outstanding community. I am grateful to the city council, the executive staff, employees, and residents who have given their time and energy to improve the City of Pomona”, said James Makshanoff.


The Pomonan is the cultural structure, empowering visionaries to propel the global society to the future.

Who is Running for Public Office in the City of Pomona, So Far?

The Pomonan
Published 11/22/2023 | 7:25 Am PST

Slowly but surely, the start of the race for public office is drawing near as 2023 draws to a close. We thought it would be vital for the public to know important information, so we shared the names of the candidates we were inquisitive about who was now running for city government.

There are six districts that comprise Pomona’s city council’s governing body. For the 2024 election year, districts one, four and six, including a mayoral seat is up for reelections. The names of those who have "pulled papers" to run for city council are listed below.


Mayor

Tim Sandoval

Barton Culbertson

Veronica Cabrera

 
District 1

John Nolte

Eugenio Diaz

Luis Cano

John Mendoza

District 4

Elizabeth Ontiveros-Cole

Guillermo Gonzalez

Chara Swodeck

 

District 6

Lorraine Canales

Miranda Sheffield

Glenda Barillas


The Pomonan is the cultural structure, empowering visionaries to propel the global society to the future.

Pomona Youth Successfully Organize 12,700 Valid Signatures to Qualify the Pomona Kids First Ballot Initiative

The Pomonan
Published November 16, 2023 | 7:31am PST

POMONA, CA -- On November 20, 2023 at 12:00pm, youth organizers from the Pomona Kids First campaign will submit 12,700 valid signatures from Pomona voters to the Pomona city clerk to qualify the ballot initiative to appear on the November 2024 ballot.

To ensure Pomona’s youth and their families have the same opportunities to thrive and excel, the Pomona Kids First Initiative will amend the City of Pomona Charter to create the Pomona Fund for Children and Youth. This newly created Fund represents an exciting new opportunity to provide increased and dedicated funding for programs and services that address the needs of Pomona’s children, youth, and young adults. The initiative will also create the Department of Children and Youth that will administer the fund.

The Initiative seeks to secure a portion of the City of Pomona’s unrestricted general purpose revenues, to be transferred to the Fund beginning in January 2025. Revenue set aside for the Fund would begin at 2% and would increase to 5% the following year, then incrementally increase over a period of six years. In Fiscal Year 2030-2031 and each subsequent year after that, 10% of the City’s revenue would be set aside for the Fund.

To ensure that resources are available to those young people in Pomona that need it most, the Fund will prioritize funding for three groups: children birth to age 12; youth ages 13 to 17; and disconnected and/or transitional-aged youth ages 18 to 24 who are most impacted by harm, inequity and lack of access to support and services. If passed by voters, Pomona families will be able to enjoy an increase in the following services starting in 2025: childcare, after-school programs, housing support, mental health support, arts and technology programs, domestic violence prevention, and more. 

Youth, Parents, Educators, and other Community Leaders will be hosting a brief celebration as signatures are submitted.

WHEN: Monday, November 20, 2023 at 12pm 
WHERE: Pomona City Hall, 505 S. Garey Ave, Pomona, CA 91766

For more information, download both Pomona Kids First Fact Sheet and Full Ordinance.

The Pomonan is the cultural structure, empowering visionaries to propel the global society to the future.

Investigative: California Banned Private Prisons, but Not Really

Photography Julian Lucas ©2023

By Julian Lucas
Published October 3, 2023 | 9:03am PST

Californians believed they were getting out of the private prison business on January 1, 2020  when A.B. 32 became a law. A.B. 32 prohibits California's Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation from signing or renewing a contract with a private prison company after that date.

However, that is not the case. The state continues to invest heavily in supporting for-profit correctional services. AB32 included exemptions which allowed private prisons to focus on other profitable "community corrections" programs, such as day reporting centers, counseling facilities, halfway houses, rehabilitation centers, medical offices, and mental health facilities.  Currently, these exemptions are worth around $200 million a year.  Included are locations that mimic detention facilities and are run by organizations that also run private prisons in California.

In 1865, at the end of the Civil War, the U.S. Senate passed the 13th amendment. Under its terms, slavery was not abolished, but merely reformed. Anybody convicted of a crime after 1865 could be leased out by the state to private corporations who would extract their labor for little or no pay. According to the Harvard International Review, in certain instances, this created even worse conditions than those that had existed during the days of slavery because private corporations were under no obligation to care for their forced laborers – they provided no healthcare, nutritious food or clothing to the individuals they were exploiting.

This brings us to the issue of present-day private prisons. They  have been in existence for the last 39 years. Reagan ushered in the privatization of prisons with his ’War on Drugs’ in 1984. Because this “war” included harsher sentencing incorporating mandatory minimum sentences, it fueled the rapid and sudden rise in prison populations. This expansion placed a burden on the state - its prisons became overcrowded. In answer to this problem, for-profit private prisons sprang up in many states across the U.S. 

Between 1980 and 2013, the total number of federal inmates increased by 800 percent, according to the Bureau of Prisons. This increase far exceeded the existing prisons’ capacity, and privately-run correctional institutions stepped in to house and absorb the overflow of convicted persons. Even with this expansion, in 2013, both federal and private prisons were seriously overpopulated and the privately-run prisons held about 30,000 ‘excess’  inmates.

The Federal Bureau of Prisons said then that approximately 195,000 people were incarcerated in the Bureau's or private-contract facilities. Today, there are nearly 152,000 people incarcerated federally, with 14,000 housed at privately-managed facilities, according to the Associated Press.

In 2019, private prisons in the United States imprisoned 115,428 individuals, accounting for 8% of the total state and federal prison population. The number of individuals held in private prisons has grown by 32% in the last 21 years, compared to a 3% growth in the general jail population. 

At the beginning of this year, President Joe Biden signed an Executive Order that will begin to phase out the Department of Justice’s use of private prisons.

This Executive Order mirrored efforts to disband private prisons in the Obama era, but Obama’s policy was canceled by the Trump administration in 2017. Biden’s Executive Order goes further than Obama’s by applying the Executive Order to the U.S. Marshall Service as well.

Which brings us to a couple of private corporations, with innocuous names that are in the business of private prisons - the GEO Group and CoreCivic. The GEO Group, a Florida-based company that owns, leases, and operates prisons, immigration detention centers, and residential reentry centers in the U.S., Australia, and South Africa. In 1988, Geo Group was established as a Wackenhut subsidiary. Through an initial public offering, the company became public in July 1994. WCC management raised money in 2003 to repurchase all of G4S's common stock, and in 2004 the business changed its name to The GEO Group, Inc.In 1997, Geo Group opened Taft Correctional Institution, its first privately operated prison, located in Kern County. The 2048 bed facility closed in April of 2020.

CoreCivic, like GEO Group operates reentry centers as they define them as transitional centers. There they state “transitional centers help justice-involved individuals ease into their new life after incarceration, and provide non-residential options like electronic monitoring” They also operate detention facilities which are used to hold immigrants. There are five such facilities in California with a reentry center located in Long Beach, and two detention centers in San Diego and two other correctional facilities in central and northern California. 

According to Zippia, GEO Group’s peak revenue was approximately $2.5 billion in 2019, and in 2021 the GEO Group annual revenue was $2.3 billion -3.98% growth from 2020. The GEO Group annual revenue for 2022 was 2.4 billion, a 5.32% growth from 2021.

As a result of Biden’s Executive Order, private prisons, includeing both GEO Group and CoreCivic, have experienced serious drops in investors. When the President announced his intention, stocks for both companies fell dramatically. While Geo Groups fell 55% in 2021, CoreCivic fell 61% during the same time period.

Time will tell what will happen.

Since their inception, private prisons have posed a constitutional problem for the U.S. Since both the U.S. and state governments are responsible for incarceration, benefiting from mass incarceration is prohibited by the United States Constitution. The government is the only entity that has the authority to contract with private prisons and this has resulted in a very serious lobbying effort on the part of the private prison corporations. These corporations spend millions of dollars on both lobbyists and political candidates promoting their industry and advocating for harsh sentencing policies. They oppose any and all criminal justice reforms, including legislation that would subject prison corporations to public information laws, because it would compromise their ability to make money. 

How does this relate to the City of Pomona?

The GEO Group, operates a Day Reporting Center in Pomona. It opened in 2013. In 2020, I reached out to Monica Hook, GEO’s Vice President of Communication, asking a series of questions regarding GEO’s existence in Pomona, its funding and corporate structure, its partnerships with local agencies, and the reason why there is no visible company signage on the exterior. My questions also included if there was any community awareness - I wondered why the city of Pomona was selected as a site. I asked if Geo Group Administrators were aware of a specific area in Pomona that is known for high amounts of crime, including prostitution - an area often referred to as “The Blade.'' And I asked if local law enforcement is aware that the GEO Group exists and if they have ever been called to the facility. VP Hook declined to answer the majority of my questions. She basically only answered when GEO set up in existence in the city. She did provide me with a very generalized description of the reentry program which can also be found on GEO Group’s Website:

“The Pomona Day Reporting Center (DRC) opened in 2013 in partnership with the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR). CDCR Parole Agents assign moderate to high-risk parolees to the DRC for evidence-based programming and services to assist them with long-term behavior change. Our programs are located in communities where they are most needed and offer a cognitive behavioral change curriculum focused on meeting each participant's risks and needs.

“Through the assessment-based program, participants learn the life skills and coping mechanisms needed to successfully reintegrate into their communities and reduce the likelihood of returning to the criminal justice system. The center offers extensive reentry services designed to provide each participant with the necessary tools to establish a positive lifestyle, take responsibility, and become self-sufficient. At the Pomona DRC, community connections play an important role in helping participants search for jobs or identify community support for a productive reentry. Programming includes substance abuse treatment, anger management, parenting skills, and additional services to promote a pro-social lifestyle in a safe and secure environment.”

After making contact with the city of Pomona, city staff confirmed that Geo Group opened in 2013 in the city of Pomona at 1295 E. Holt Ave. The City claims there are no partnerships with GEO Group, the city of Pomona has also said they have “no agreements with GEO Group” when questioned about any partnerships. When visiting the facility and questioned why there wasn’t visible signage, the worker stated, “We try to keep a low profile and fly under the radar.”


Julian Lucas is a photographer, a purveyor of books, writer in training, and a lecturer, but mostly a photographer.

Update: Art Work Stolen from Gente Organizada A Community-Led social Action Non-Profit Organization

Gente Organizada front of building Holt Ave

Pomona, CA — At 8:30 AM, representatives of Gente Organizada noticed artwork on the front of their building on Holt avenue had been stolen overnight. The artwork was an enlarged photograph taken by Julian Lucas during the 2020 protests in the city of Pomona, during the global Black Lives Matter uprising protesting the police murder of George Floyd. 

The artwork was installed a year ago, but was stolen a week after the the ACLU released a press release announcing they were suing the City of Pomona over code enforcement fines that the City had leveled on Gente Organizada. The ACLU said the City was in violation of Freedom of Speech. ACLU Press Release

Gente Organizada released a statement on an instagram post stating, “Art is supposed to be provocative and political, not stolen off of our building this morning. It seems like pro-police folks are the ones committing the crimes in our neighborhood.”

The artist, Julian Lucas, who has captured Pomona street culture for the last 23 years, took the news as a anazed, but laughed and stated, “It sucks because artists make art and it costs money, time, and effort. It also sucks because what people don’t usually understand is photography creates history, it’s a slice of life that happened in 2020, during the time of the pandemic, which can’t be repeated. Therefore, the image can also be viewed as a part of Pomona’s history for the future to come. On the other hand I’m flattered, the city of Pomona can now stand up and pat itself on the back, because instead of bikes or porch thieves, they now have someone who steals art. I think that this is a step in the right direction when it comes to what we think is valuable, as opposed to an Amazon package from someone’s porch”.


The Pomonan is the cultural structure, empowering visionaries to propel the global society to the future.

ACLU: Gente Organizada A Community Organization Sues Pomona for Denying Right to Free Speech Protest of Police Killings

The City of Pomona is enforcing an unconstitutional sign ordinance against public art. 

The Pomonan News

Photography Courtesy Julian Lucas ©2022

By The ACLU
Published August 24, 2023 4:13 PM PST

LOS ANGELES –  Gente Organizada, a community-led non-profit, displays on its public-facing exterior walls pieces of art that say “end institutional violence” and “defund Pomona police.”  

The City of Pomona, in a violation of the group's First Amendment right to free speech, has inappropriately cited and fined the organization under its zoning ordinance—an ordinance that is also clearly unconstitutional.  

This week, Gente Organizada, represented by the ACLU Foundation of Southern California and Sheppard Mullin Richter & Hampton LLP, sued Pomona for its clear and gross violation of the group's right to free speech.  

“The art and messaging they are trying to erase was a youth-led collaborative effort by Black, Indigenous, and Latinx organizers and artists,” said Jesús Sanchez, co-founder and economic justice director of Gente Organizada. “The City of Pomona is attempting to block our right to free speech, they have threatened our youth center, and have weaponized city code so we cannot exercise our right to artistic expression.”

Photography Julian Lucas ©2020

Contact Sheet Courtesy of Julian Lucas ©2020

Gente Organizada displays three pieces of art on its youth center that convey political messages: (1) an image of a group of individuals marching with a sign that reads “defund Pomona police”; (2) an image that displays a contact sheet of the film which included photographs of protests against biased policing; and (3) an image of some of the group's community partners alongside the message “end institutional violence.” The building also displays a painted sign that includes the group's name and its role as: “A home for: community organizing, youth & parent leadership, wellness, education & arts programs.”   

“Free speech is the bedrock of our Constitution and includes the right to display public art that calls for the reallocation of city resources away from police departments,” said Alyssa Morones, legal fellow at the ACLU SoCal.  “Pomona’s actions constitute an obvious violation of fundamental constitutional rights and the effect in this case is to silence members of the public who wish to communicate messages with which city officials disagree.”  

The decision to cite and fine was erroneously upheld in an administrative hearing conducted by the city.   

“We’re proud to work with the ACLU and Gente Organizada on this important case defending the Constitutional right to free speech and free expression,” said Andrea Feathers, associate at Sheppard Mullin Richter & Hampton LLP. 

The suit challenges the city's sign ordinance in its entirety and asks that the court dismiss the citation against Gente Organizada and require the city to repay the group for unconstitutionally administered fines.  

Read the complaint here


The Pomonan is the cultural structure, empowering visionaries to propel the global society to the future.

Big Trouble in Little Chino: California School Superintendent Tony Thurmond Removed by Chino School District President Sonja Shaw

Photography Courtesy Julian Lucas ©2023

By Julian Lucas
Published 7/24/2023 8:24 Am PST

Chino, CA— PRESS CONFERENCE - JULY 21, 2023 - California State Superintendent of Public Instruction, Tony Thurmond, outside of the Chino Valley Unified School District Boardroom prior to the CVUSD Board’s vote mandating that staff and teachers provide parents and caregivers of any changes in  their student’ gender identification.

On July 21, Superintendent Tony Thurmond addressed the CVUSD Board during his one minute time allotted during the public comment section of the meeting. He told them that he opposes the District’s proposal because he believes it  violates student rights for safety and privacy. Returning to his seat, CVUSD school board President Sonja Shaw began heckling him, at various times raising her voice and shouting. She began,

“Tony Thurmond, I appreciate you being here - tremendously - but here is the problem -we are here because of people like you. You are in Sacramento proposing things that (raises voice) PERVERT CHILDREN. You had a chance to come and talk to me, Tony. By all means - you had a chance to talk with me. Why was it so important for you to walk with my opponent? YOU are the very reason why we are in this.” 

At this point, Tony Thurmond returned to the  podium, saying, “May I have - as a Point of Order, as the Board President . . .”, but the CVUSD President interrupted him, shouting,  talking fast: “ No, this is not your meeting. You can have a seat. Because if I did that to you in Sacramento, you would not accept it. Please sit. . . You are not going to blackmail us. You have already sent us a blackmailing letter on previous . . . You will not bully us here in Chino! Please sit.”

It is against Robert’s Rules of Order for elected school officials to engage with public speakers in any substantive way during the public comment portion of the meeting.

Photography Courtesy Julian Lucas ©2023

Photography Courtesy Julian Lucas ©2023

Photography Courtesy Julian Lucas ©2023

After he was ‘forcibly removed’ from District chambers, Thurmond  held a press conference outside of the District  chambers where he fielded questions from reporters and members of the public. Reporters asked him about what happened during the meeting, three members of the public asked questions relating to their support of the opinions and actions of the CVUSD Board along with their support of  the recent opinions and actions of the Temecula Valley USD Board who recently voted to refuse to teach state-approved LGBTQ+ history lessons.

Photography Courtesy Julian Lucas ©2023

Superintendent Tony Thurmond addressing the public at his press conference: See transcript here

The CVUSD Board ended up voting 4-1 to approve a “parental notification” system that would require school officials to alert parents if a student requests to use “a name or pronoun other than those listed on the student’s birth certificate” or other official records, and to notify parents if their child requests to use bathrooms that “do not align with the gender stated” on their records.


Julian Lucas, is a photographer, a purveyor of books, and writer in training, but mostly a photographer, but don’t ever ask him to take photos of events. Julian is also the owner and founder of Mirrored Society Book Shop.

Famed Author and Poet Luis Rodriguez Receives Certificate of Recognition by the City of Pomona

On April 8, 2023, the City of Pomona honored famed author, poet, memoirist, journalist, mentor, teacher and all around living legend Luis J. Rodriguez. The recognition was given for Mr. Rodriguez’s contributions to "the advancement of the poetic arts." The certificate was presented to Mr. Rodriguez by Mayor Tim Sandoval and Councilmember Norma Garcia at the Pomona Civic Center at the steps of the library. 

This public recognition was a result of collaborative efforts between Pomona’s newest Poet Laureate, Ceasar K. Avelar, and Pomona Library Manager, Anita Torres.

By Matt Sedillo

Courtesy of Matt Sedillo

Published 7:25 AM PST

Speaking on the impact of Luis Rodriguez, Mayor Tim Sandoval focused deeply on a personal history with the author. The Mayor spoke of Luis Rodriguez's commitment to the community at large and Pomona specifically mentioning several high schools Rodriguez had visited in recent years. Sandoval also touched upon formative study groups he had attended hosted by the late professor Trevor Campbell and the specific impact Luis Rodriguez had had on those meetings as they discussed the very nature of the economic system we live under, namely capitalism.

Poet Laureate of Pomona, Cesar Avelar also spoke. Caesar said of Rodriguez that, “Luis has this thing, but it’s our ancestor’s thing, it is in us.” Avelar spoke again not only to the grand artistic contributions of Luis Rodriguez but again touched upon his role as a mentor. Avelar met Rodriguez young in his writing career and as a new father. Avelar spoke not only to the advice Rodriguez had to offer in terms of writing but also of the example he provided in the life he has led.

Luis Rodriguez is the author of Always Running: Mi Vida Loca Gang Days in Los Angeles, the 2nd Poet Laureate of Los Angeles the cofounder of Tia Chucha’s Bookstore and Cultural Center, a teaching artist in the prisons, one of the few Los Angeles authors enshrined in Vroman’s Los Angeles author’s Walk of Fame. Rodriguez has received recognition the world over. Has spoken in prisons and campuses across the globe. Luis Rodriguez is by all accounts a great man, an iconic figure and an inspiration to the Chicano community.  

Always Running is a seminal classic which in many ways founded and defined a field of writing. It has sold hundreds of thousands copies. It has inspired a generation of authors who would not have otherwise been authors. The impact of that book and what it means particularly to criminalized youth in the Chicano community is unparalleled to this day. Yet when asked about what he considers his greatest contribution Luis will often refer to his work at Tia Chucha’s and his work in the prisons.

Courtesy of Matt Sedillo

Courtesy of Matt Sedillo

During Rodriguez’s speech he invited the audience to come to Tia Chucha’s and of the role he has played as a workshop leader to the incarcerated. He spoke of the transformation he had seen in others through the written word, a transformation he knows himself all too well, a transformation he is a living testament too.

“Sometimes you don’t have a choice. You’re born into terrible circumstances”, Rodriguez describes during his enlightening speech. But I tell them at a certain point you have a choice: am I going to curse the world. Or am I going to bless it.”  Luis Rodriguez has clearly chosen the latter and we are all the better for it.

Luis Rodriguez is a magnificent author and artist whose work will stand the test of time. He is a true pillar of the community who builds upon what was there and leaves the place fuller than found. Rodriguez is a great man, a great mentor, a great teacher, who has not only created his own legacy but has provided the tools and example for future generations to do the same.

On April 8th 2023, on the steps of the Library, there in the Civic Center, the City of Pomona honored the great Luis Rodriguez. The sun was shining and it was a beautiful day.  


Matt Sedillo has been described as the "best political poet in America" as well as "the poet laureate of the struggle" by academics, poets, and journalists alike. He has appeared on CSPAN and has been featured in the Los Angeles Times, among other publications.

5 Questions With Pomona's New Poet Laureate Ceasar Avelar

Photography Julian Lucas ©2023

By Matt Sedillo
Photography Julian Lucas
Published 3/14/2023 12:03 Am PST

Recently, I had the honor of sitting down with Ceasar Avelar, who became Pomona’s newest Poet Laureate at the beginning of the year for the city of Pomona.

Tell us about your commitment to what you call blue collar poetry?

When it comes to writing poetry, I write exclusively through the sociological lens of  a blue-collar worker. Writing from this perspective creates a singular form of writing, but this singular form creates a picture of how beautifully complex and juxtaposed proletariat life is. The way I practice this commitment is by invisoning poems using the factory and my identity as a  worker as my stage. A stage that extends itself when I leave and reappears whenever a poem presents itself; so I can bring  my blue-collar social status to the front of my expression. As the majority of the world knows, being a blue collar worker is complex. Not only do we make consumer products but also consume them. This relationship we have with society is extreme, yet normalized to the point where no one talks openly of what they do for a living unless it is to brag or compete. As workers I feel like our reality is based on our value in society, and if we are good enough to work our lives away, then we are more than good enough to contribute to a creative culture that continuously keeps pushing us out.


Who have been some of your mentors in the past?

My parents are my greatest mentors. My parents are Central American. My Mom is from Honduras and My Dad is from El Salvador. They both came during different times in their lives, but for the most part the push factor that brought them both here was poverty. When The United Fruit Company left Honduras, my Mother had to find work, and her best option was to come to the United States for a better opportunity. During this process she had to leave my older Sister and older Brother behind. My Father came two years before the Civil War began in his country, already experiencing the violence and political turmoil that comes from a divided country. Other mentors that have helped me in my writing are Luis J. Rodriguez, Matt Sedillo, William A. Gonzalez, and Jason “Raize” Gamble. Knowing them and speaking to them, has given me the confidence to walk through uncertain territory when writing. They have taught me to allow myself the freedom to try new things and never stop being a student to  the craft of writing.


Tell us about Obsidian Tongues?

Obsidian Tongues Open Mic was founded by me in 2017. It goes down every second Saturday of the month at Cafe Con Libros Press in the Arts Colony in Pomona, CA. It goes on the same night as the Pomona Art Walk on Second Street.There's always a strong creative energy at Obsidian Tongues. We will soon reach our 6th year anniversary and  we don't plan on stopping. We just added a workshop to it; it’ll take place before the open mic starts in which a featured poet will lead us into writing. Obsidian Tongues’ purpose is to bring poets out to the community. So many folks in Pomona write poetry, so it is a must that we come together, the way the proletariat should. It's not only poets that come to Obsidian Tongues, we have great musicians that come, we have great storytellers, we have folks that come to interpret songs from Spanish to English, we have folks that come and tell us how they fought through their day. Obsidian Tongues is not only an open mic, it’s a community for the creative souls of the working class.

Photography Julian Lucas ©2023

Tell us more about your upcoming book?

My upcoming book is called God of the Air Hose. This book was mostly written inside the factory. Much of this book is about the interaction of workers inside the factory. The book touches on nationality, the division of labor, and the alienation caused by labor. I feel like most folks that talk about labor talk about the solidarity of workers, but in this book I talk about why solidarity is needed. As workers we are ridiculed, neglected and on a daily basis, disrespected to our faces and expected to be grateful for this treatment. God of the Air Hose is a book that talks about the fragmentation created amongst proletariats competing for space in the workplace, as well as the solidarity and friendships that are made along the way.


What does Pomona have to look forward to you with you as the new laureate?

As Poet Laureate you can expect more voices of working class poets to be heard in the City of Pomona. My vision is to collaborate with the library to bring workshops and readings from not only poets of color, but also poets that have the same vision of empowering the community through poetry. It is my goal to have social events that invite other Poet Laureates to share their work and journey in order to create bridges and resources for our hard working community of Pomona. There are so many poets and publishers that need to meet one another. There are so many important voices that must be heard; and as Poet Laureate part of my mission is to bring poets together with the intention of not only promoting poetry, but bringing opportunity to poets as well. Our community not only has talent, but also the heart of the working class people who need resources and opportunity to flourish as writers.


Matt Sedillo has been described as the "best political poet in America" as well as "the poet laureate of the struggle" by academics, poets, and journalists alike. He has appeared on CSPAN and has been featured in the Los Angeles Times, among other publications.