Sanjiv Handa


h1 Posted 1 year, 8 months ago around lunchtime by oso

It’s Friday. It was one of those mornings when at 9 a.m. the sky still looks like it’s sunrise, the air is still 6 a.m. crisp. It’s supposed to rain.

Yesterday Booger passed her driving test. Waiting in line for the driving tester to approach she offered this gem of wisdom: “You know, I decided that I’m just not going to get nervous anymore, cause I mean really, it’s not like it does anything for you, you know?”

Point of the story is that the next time you’re in the Bay Area it is decidedly safer to take BART than share the road with my dear sister.

The day after tomorrow I leave for Delhi. The last time I was in the City of Djinns was a week after I thought I was going to die and just a few days after I first found out about 9/11. I wonder how much it has changed in the last five years. I wonder if I’ll still be able to find my way around Connaught Place. I wonder if I’ll spend my first night there in some cheap hotel on Pahaganj. I wonder if there will be stoned Israelis playing guitar in the lobby.

I’m listening to Gustavo Cerati’s “new” album Ahí Vamos, but I just can’t get into it. It’s no Soda Stereo, that’s for sure. Medea says I need to hear Andrea Echeverri singing with Cerati on “La Ciudad de la Furia.” If you got it, please gmail it to me.

Speaking of Argentina, Ian Mount (infamous for his controversial piece “A Movable Fiesta“) made a really good point recently about Pasa en Buenos Aires, the city government’s “official blog.” It provides an amazing and far-too-rare link between city government and citizen journalism.

I mean, really, how many people under the age of 65 regularly look at their city’s municipal website? When we get parking tickets, right? And yet Pasa en Buenos Aires is one of the coolest and most popular blogs in the whole city.

Lately I’ve been wondering if weblogs make us less politically active. If we’re upset with an issue in our city are we more likely to blog about it and forget about it than march down to city hall and try to get legislation introduced to fix it? Do weblogs give us a space to let off steam, which takes away from the pressure necessary to make change?

I remember we once had a conversation on San Diego Blog about closing off Fourth and Fifth Avenue in the Gaslamp district one afternoon each week to get people out and walking in the streets. It was a great idea - still is - but it never made the transition from comment thread to city council and that’s what I think is so great about Pasa en Buenos Aires - it provides that bridge between online public opinion and municipal government bureaucracy.

Here in Oakland I’ve taken to watching City Council and various committee meetings on the city’s cable TV channel. I do it to check out Mari. And because it’s fun to get to know the characters she talks about when she comes home from work. My favorite, by far, is Sanjiv Handa. Born in Chandigarh, he immigrated to the US with his parents when he was nine and has a has a degree in business management from Cal Berkeley.

Outgoing mayor Jerry Brown accused Handa of living in the city’s pressroom. Handa insists he has a house.

But no one knows how he affords it. Supposedly people subscribe to his online newsletters about city politics. His portrait is in the dictionary entry for gadfly. He speaks on every item at every single council meeting, licking his lips twice and adjusting the microphone once. His condemnations are as monotone as they are articulate.

The man needs a weblog. For real. The technology was made for people like Sanjiv Handa. He could easily establish himself as the voice of the people here in Oakland if he were willing to interact with them more online. Oakland would never do what Buenos Aires did so well: starting their own popular municipal blog. But Handa could provide that same bridge.



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  1. 1rolandogNo Gravatar from Mexico says:

    My sis should\’ve gotten her license a while ago! I got mine when I was 16… however we are afraid of my sister\’s driving skills. :-S

    Regarding Handa, I can\’t stop picturing him as the indian son of Zangief and Edmond Honda… :-P … lol.

    Blogs, if adequately designed (and their posts casually written), can attract people and lure them into a more participative state of mind; it\’s wise for the government to actually tap into the wisdom of the crowds, or at least make them feel like their thoughts are taken into account.

    I\’ve been thinking about an article you co-wrote not too long ago:
    http://tinyurl.com/yjcp5q

    Its about Monterrey\’s blog communities… I think there is a solid platform for news to spread in this town, and for the community to respond to the government in an insightful way.

    There isn\’t, however, an official blog that showcases local news, events or businesses, unlike Buenos Aires\’. Granted, there are some newspapers that have catched up with the online demand for information.

    My town, San Pedro, does have some sort of blog… but it\’s very VERY web 0.9 (effing ugly). They seem to have a columnist or two, but they also scan some newspaper articles and post the scanned pictures in PDFs!! WTF! This is like using excel as a database.

    Sorry for not commenting lately, I\’ve only had time to read you, not to respond!

    Have a nice trip to Delhi!

  2. 2Prentiss RiddleNo Gravatar from United States says:

    City council meetings are a grossly underappreciated form of entertaining TV programming. Zoning commission meetings are even better. Aside from the substance and the political backstory, I just enjoy the peoplewatching value of seeing how a wide variety of citizens (with a sprinkling of corporate flacks) handle themselves in the moderately stressful situation of public speaking. Some are so dreadful and some are so articulate. Their visual presentation and their verbal communication skills are so often out of synch. I’ve heard a developer pitch a $100 million highrise with less grace than a retiree talking in opposition to a neighborhood liquor store. It’s real reality TV.

    Off to Delhi! Once again I get to envy your peripatetic ways. My last trip to India was in 1997. I’m sure there’s plenty I wouldn’t recognize now, and plenty that will still look the same in 2097. The closest I’m coming to an India trip any time soon is that my girls will be going there with their mom for three weeks in January. Let’s hope they, and you, make it there and back in good health.

    P.S. Once you called my site the de facto Mexican bus info blog, something I never intended it to be but people keep using its comments for that purpose anyway. I’ve decided for grins to start thinking about what a real Mexican bus info site should be like. I’ve even set up a survey. Check it out: http://aprendizdetodo.com/travel?item=20061212



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