WATCH Dr. Mozhgan leads the way on a $15 an hour minimum wage for all of us

WATCH Dr. Mozhgan leads the way on a $15 an hour minimum wage for all of us

ANN ARBOR, MI — Should Ann Arbor officials push for a citywide minimum wage of $15 an hour?

The question has come up this election season with the issue raised in a three-way City Council race in Ward 4.

Mozhgan Savabieasfahani, who seeks to unseat incumbent Elizabeth Nelson in the Aug. 2 Democratic primary and also faces fellow challenger Dharma Akmon, has repeatedly pressed the issue, making it a central part of her campaign while arguing city leaders aren’t doing enough about it.

Ann Arbor Observer Editor John Hilton Imposes Media Blackout On Ward 4 Candidate

Ann Arbor Observer Editor John Hilton Imposes Media Blackout On Ward 4 Candidate

by P.D. Lesko

John Hilton, Editor, The Ann Arbor Observer.

Dr. Mozhgan Savabiesfahani circulated her nominating petitions, collected her signatures and the Ann Arbor City Clerk judged that the candidate had collected at least 100 valid signatures of Ward 4 voters to appear on the August primary ballot. Along with Dr. Savabiesfahani, Ward 4 incumbent Elizabeth Nelson (D) and Dharma Akmon (D) will appear on the August 2 ballot. On June 20, Dr. Savabiesfahani sent an email to The Ann Arbor Independent in which she alleged John Hilton, co-owner and long-time editor of The Ann Arbor Observer, had imposed a media blackout on her candidacy. In an email shared with The A2Indy in response to Savabiesfahani’s question about the blackout, Hilton wrote: “Given the modest response to your previous campaign, we will mention you briefly in the article but will not be using the photo.”

Unlike the other two candidates in the Ward 4 Council race, Savabieasfahani was neither interviewed by the Observer’s freelance writer James Leonard, nor was she photographed for the upcoming article by the Observer’s freelance photographer.

John Hilton is a former auto worker. He purchased the Ann Arbor Observer and his position as its editor in 1986. He has no college degree and no formal training in journalism. Dr. Savabiesfahani is a woman of Persian descent. She is an environmental toxicologist who has authored over 30 scientific journal publications and a book entitled Pollution and Reproductive Damage. Her research at the University of Michigan has been funded by a National Research Award from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences. In 2015, Savabiesfahani was awarded the Rachel Carson Prize.

Dr. Savabieasfahani speaking at an Ann Arbor City Council meeting in 2019.

In 2020, Dr. Savabiesfahani ran for Ward 4 City Council and captured a little over 10 percent of the vote.

Hilton’s email to Savabieasfahani in which he asserts his blackout of coverage of her candidacy for City Council in Ward 4 is justified by the “modest response to your previous campaign” is not credible in light of the Observer’s coverage of previous repeat City Council candidates.

Savabieasfahani is not the first local to run more than once for City Council or the first repeat candidate whose campaign elicited a “modest response.”

  • In 2017, Ward 5 resident David A. Silkworth ran for City Council and lost to Chip Smith. In 2020, Silkworth ran for City Council for a second time and snagged 19 percent of the vote. Both times Silkworth ran, the Observer included him in its political coverage.
  • In 2010 and 2012, former Ward 4 City Council member Jack Eaton (D) ran to unseat the incumbent, Margie Teall (D), and lost. When Eaton ran in 2013 against incumbent Marcia Higgins (D), Eaton won. All three of Eaton’s runs were included in the political coverage of the Ann Arbor Observer.
  • In 2015, Ward 4 resident Jaime Magiera challenged Eaton and lost. Magiera ran again in 2017 and lost. Both of Magiera’s candidacies were written up in great detail in the Ann Arbor Observer.

On June 18 Dr. Savabiesfahani posted the following to social media:

Today something unprecedented happened to me in Ann Arbor. You tell me what it means.

Ward 4 City Council candidate Elizabeth Nelson saw me today, June 18th, 2022, at the Juneteenth celebration in Ann Arbor.

She told me that she was surprised that I was not at the photo shoot for the Ann Arbor Observer a few days ago.

I asked her whether she (Nelson) told the Observer that I was also running for City Council?

Nelson said no, she didn’t tell them.

I told her “You should have.”

Nelson then said that she regrets having not told them.

Later, I finally reached James Leonard of the Ann Arbor Observer, who does their City Council election feature. I reached him on his cell phone. In fact, two years ago, he had interviewed me for his 2020 election coverage.

So Leonard, today, June 18, 2022, told me that yes, he was aware that I am running for City Council.

I asked Leonard why he didn’t contact me for his election article.

Leonard said that he doesn’t make those decisions, his editor does.

Leonard did not offer the editor’s name.

So I asked him.

Leonard finally told me that John Hilton is his editor at the Ann Arbor Observer.

Never, in the last 20 years, have I ever heard of any major Ann Arbor newspaper excluding a candidate from their interviews and photo shoots.

-Dr. Mozhgan Savabieasfahani

Candidate for Ann Arbor City Council, Ward 4

Council member Elizabeth Nelson (D-Ward 4) confirmed that she did have this conversation with her opponent, Savabieasfahani. Nelson, in a phone call, said that she thinks Hilton’s decision to exclude one of the three candidates running in Ward 4 is wrong. Nelson added that excluding one candidate from news coverage “does a disservice to voters.”

The Ann Arbor Observer’s coverage of local politics has been sharply criticized by local readers. In 2020, The Ann Arbor Independent was given dozens of emails from a three-year period by members of City Council as well as Council candidates who ran for local elected office between 2014 and 2017. With the emails, these individuals alleged that The Ann Arbor Observer’s political coverage was biased and frequently included falsehoods about candidates’ statements, voting records, and campaign finances, etc…. The emails shared with the newspaper were to and from the Observer’s editor and co-owner John Hilton, as well as to and from the Observer’s freelance political writer James Leonard.

“Local. Trusted. Journalism.” These are the first three words of the Ann Arbor Observer’s advertiser media kit. The Observer is locally-owned, but its co-owners’ and editor’s focus on what critics say is one-sided, horse race political coverage. To some, this means the Observer’s local reporting can’t be trusted. To others, the Observer’s political coverage isn’t reporting at all. In an interview with Concentrate Media, David Askins, the co-owner and editor of the now defunct AnnArborChronicle.com, said that the Ann Arbor Observer focuses on narrative journalism (storytelling), leaving “a critical gap in journalism: straight, fact-based reporting.”

“I’ve pretty much given up on any journalistic integrity coming from the Observer. Their bias has been repeatedly demonstrated,” said Ann Arbor resident Deanne Neiburger in a public social media discussion of the Observer’s alleged ongoing problems with editorial accuracy and biases.

“Maybe it’s just that I’m not up on these things, but the Observer strikes me as coverage that has a certain slant,” said Tom Wieder, a local attorney.

Libby Hunter is a retired music teacher who lives on the city’s west side. Her father was a newspaper editor and she grew up in the news business. She said, “Since I follow local government, I summon up the courage to read the Observer most months, if only to see how Jim Leonard has decided to present things. Then I can explain to friends what really happened. Unfortunately, it’s not a publication that seeks to report truth, and usually represents issues from the angle of the reigning majority power players.  What’s disturbing at times is Leonard’s gratuitous nastiness, and that John Hilton is fine with it, year after year.”

According to research by the non-profit Pew Reearch Center, “Overall, about eight-in-ten Americans (79%) say news organizations tend to favor one side when presenting the news on political and social issues, according to a survey conducted Feb. 18 to March 2, 2020. Far fewer (20%) say these organizations deal fairly with all sides. The share of Americans who say news organizations tend to favor one side has increased 7 percentage points since early 2019.”

The Pew research revealed that, “The most common reason that Americans see for unfair news coverage is the pushing of a political agenda.”

City records show that over the past several years Taylor has been mayor, the City of Ann Arbor has given the Ann Arbor Observer almost half a million dollars in advertising revenue. It is by and far the most money given by the City of Ann Arbor to any media outlet in the County. [The Ann Arbor Independent doesn’t accept advertising from local governments, public K-12 schools, colleges or universities.]

Dr. Savabieasfahani has been sharply critical of Ann Arbor’s Mayor Taylor, as well as his allies on City Council. She has, for the past several months, published a series of cartoons lampooning Taylor and his Council allies about a variety of issues, including their poor records on creating affordable housing, their refusal to adopt a $15 minimum wage for city workers, and Taylor’s opposition to involving the EPA in a cleanup of the 1,4 dioxane plume creeping toward the City’s drinking water source (Barton Pond). The Ward 4 candidate has accused Taylor openly of self-dealing and corruption. Former City Attorney Bruce Laidlaw agrees. He recently filed a formal grievance against Taylor with the Michigan Bar Association.

Dr. Savabieasfahani published this cartoon to her campaign Twitter account on June 17, one day before she discovered John Hilton had excluded her from his tabloid’s coverage of the Ward 4 City Council race.
Dr. Savabieasfahani published this cartoon to her campaign Twitter account on May 30.

In a 2020 piece about the Observer’s political coverage published by The A2Indy, John Hilton replied to accusations of bullying and misrepresenting the views of Council candidates with, “How politicians feel about us is beyond our control. All we can do is encourage them to articulate their positions, then describe those positions accurately to our readers.”

Thanks to Hilton’s decision to exclude Dr. Savabieasfahani, she won’t have the opportunity to articulate her positions to the Observer’s readers.

  • A2Independent: https://a2independent.com/2022/06/21/ann-arbor-observer-editor-john-hilton-imposes-media-blackout-on-ward-4-candidate/
Activist Dr. Mozhgan announces campaign for Ann Arbor City Council

Activist Dr. Mozhgan announces campaign for Ann Arbor City Council

ANN ARBOR, MI — Mozhgan Savabieasfahani, an anti-Israel activist and staunch critic of Ann Arbor’s City Council, said she’s running for council in the 4th Ward again.

Savabieasfahani announced her campaign at a council meeting Monday night, Jan. 3, while carrying a pro-Palestinian sign with the message: “We are against military aid to Israel.”

“I am running for our human rights, for our environmental rights, against a City Council that is rotten with racism, a City Council that is racist to the bone against Palestinian people,” Savabieasfahani said publicly at city hall.

She plans to challenge Council Member Elizabeth Nelson, D-4th Ward, who confirmed she will seek reelection this year.

Nelson was elected to her first four-year term in 2018 and now faces two potential challengers in the Democratic primary in August. Dharma Akmon, an Ann Arbor District Library trustee and University of Michigan assistant research scientist, previously announced her campaign.

Savabieasfahani, an environmental toxicologist who does grant-funded research internationally, ran for council in 2020 and lost in a three-way primary against incumbent Jack Eaton and Jen Eyer. Eyer won with 61% of the vote, while Eaton netted 29% and Savabieasfahani had 10%.

Savabieasfahani has regularly demonstrated at council meetings for many years, decrying the killing of Palestinians by Israel and calling on council to pass resolutions to boycott Israel and call for an end to U.S. military aid for Israel, but council has stayed mostly silent on the issue.

“The American political system has been hijacked by money from the White House down to this outhouse,” Savabieasfahani said Monday night, accusing council members of being elected with the help of “mountains of campaign contributions with God only knows what kinds of strings attached.”

Nelson last week also expressed concerns about the influence of money in city elections, saying the amount of donations poured into campaigns in 2020 should be a wakeup call.

“That should be a huge red flag to people in our community who maybe weren’t previously paying attention,” she said, arguing people with money are picking city leaders and it’s gross.

In the 4th Ward race in 2020, Eyer reported nearly $44,000 in cash contributions to her campaign, plus over $2,000 worth of in-kind donations, while spending nearly $43,000. That included contributions from many residents and progressive activists, as well as groups such as the Realtors PAC of Michigan and Michigan Laborers Political League PAC.

In his pre-primary finance report in 2020, Eaton reported he loaned $10,000 of his own money to his campaign and raised another $6,500-plus in cash contributions, plus over $380 worth of in-kind donations, while spending nearly $16,000. He later reported over $1,000 in additional donations, including $500 from Council Member Kathy Griswold, D-2nd Ward.

Savabieasfahani put over $10,000 into her self-funded campaign last year.

Savabieasfahani’s platform includes support for public housing, clean water and a $15 minimum wage, all issues she doesn’t think the city is doing enough about.

“It’s not the first time that American officials have called themselves progressive while they pollute the land with racism and deprive people of the most basic human rights,” she said, also expressing her support for public health care, mass transit, labor unions and a city cleanup of the Gelman dioxane plume that threatens local water supplies.

“Why does this City Council fill the streets with luxury housing while doing nothing about public housing?” she said. “Why does this City Council fill the streets with bike paths without the kind of mass massive public transportation expansion that’s necessary to replace cars and to allow bikers some safety?”

Savabieasfahani has a campaign website at VoteForTheDoctor.com. 

Article: https://www.mlive.com/news/ann-arbor/2022/01/anti-israel-activist-announces-campaign-for-ann-arbor-city-council.html 

Dr. Mozhgan has petitioned Ann Arbor City Council for a resolution against military aid to Israel.

Dr. Mozhgan has petitioned Ann Arbor City Council for a resolution against military aid to Israel.

Dr. Mozhgan fights against racist exclusionary zoning; wants good housing by the public and for the public.

Dr. Mozhgan fights against racist exclusionary zoning; wants good housing by the public and for the public.

“Defenders vs. disrupters: The debate over preserving neighborhood character in Ann Arbor”

By Ryan Stanton and McKenna Ross

MLive/Ann Arbor News

July 26, 2020

Article: https://www.mlive.com/news/ann-arbor/2020/07/defenders-vs-disrupters-the-debate-over-preserving-neighborhood-character-in-ann-arbor.html

“…Savabieasfahani is concerned Ann Arbor has become ‘a segregated town for the rich.’

“For decades, city government has favored private development over the needs of working people, she said.

“ ‘Single-family zoning drives Black residents out of Ann Arbor,’ she said. ‘Single-family zoning, which has been abolished in Grand Rapids and Minneapolis, is racist to the bone, from its earliest days until now. Ann Arbor needs to abolish single-family zoning to facilitate public housing.’

Courtesy: MLive.com

“Savabieasfahani clarified she doesn’t want to see neighborhoods become ‘hunting ground for private developers to gentrify,’ but she does support public housing.”

Article: https://www.mlive.com/news/ann-arbor/2020/07/defenders-vs-disrupters-the-debate-over-preserving-neighborhood-character-in-ann-arbor.html

WATCH Dr. Mozhgan leads the way on a $15 an hour minimum wage for all of us

ANN ARBOR, MI — Should Ann Arbor officials push for a citywide minimum wage of $15 an hour? The question has come up this election season with the issue raised in a three-way City Council race in Ward 4. Mozhgan Savabieasfahani, who seeks to unseat...

Ann Arbor Observer Editor John Hilton Imposes Media Blackout On Ward 4 Candidate

by P.D. Lesko John Hilton, Editor, The Ann Arbor Observer. Dr. Mozhgan Savabiesfahani circulated her nominating petitions, collected her signatures and the Ann Arbor City Clerk judged that the candidate had collected at least 100 valid signatures of Ward 4 voters...

Activist Dr. Mozhgan announces campaign for Ann Arbor City Council

By Ryan Stanton | ryanstanton@mlive.com ANN ARBOR, MI — Mozhgan Savabieasfahani, an anti-Israel activist and staunch critic of Ann Arbor’s City Council, said she’s running for council in the 4th Ward again. Savabieasfahani announced her campaign at a council meeting...

Dr. Mozhgan has petitioned Ann Arbor City Council for a resolution against military aid to Israel.

Petition · Ann Arbor City Council resolution against military aid to Israel. · Change.org Ann Arbor City Council resolution against military aid to Israel. ------------------------------------------------------ City Councilmember Julie Grand has expressed "shock" at a...

Dr. Mozhgan fights against racist exclusionary zoning; wants good housing by the public and for the public.

“Defenders vs. disrupters: The debate over preserving neighborhood character in Ann Arbor” By Ryan Stanton and McKenna Ross MLive/Ann Arbor News July 26, 2020...

Dr. Mozhgan Savabieasfahani is the first City Council candidate to transparently set forth her legislative agenda

Dr. Mozhgan Savabieasfahani is the first City Council candidate to transparently set forth her legislative agenda so the voters can see it before the election. Here is her agenda, in ten resolutions which she will introduce in City Council after her election to the...

(Article)Pro IDF group goes on the attack against Ann Arbor City Council candidate Dr. Mozhgan Savabieasfahani

ANN ARBOR (The Arab American News) — A former board member of the Friends of the IDF (FIDF), a group that calls itself the sole representative of the Israel Defense Forces and is its biggest donor in the U.S., has expressed his objection to the candidacy of Ann Arbor...

Dr. Mozhgan Savabieasfahani at the Ann Arbor City Council candidates’ forum, June 11, 2020

Dr. Mozhgan and the other candidates from Ward Four speak, on June 11, 2020.

Dr. Mozhgan speaks on CTN Ann Arbor

Candidates Comment, Ann Arbor City Council Primary 2020