Chief Assistant City Attorney Barbara J. Parker named Oakland's Acting City Attorney

Acting City Attorney Barbara Parker

Acting City Attorney Barbara Parker

Chief Assistant City Attorney Barbara J. Parker, a longtime Oakland resident and second in command of the City Attorney’s Office, will take over as Acting City Attorney effective 11:30 a.m. today.


The Oakland City Charter provides that the Council shall make an appointment within 60 days of the June 13 vacancy to fill the balance of Russo’s term, which runs until the end of 2012. If the Council does not make an appointment, it must fill the seat by special election within 120 days after the expiration of the 60-day period for appointment.

“It is important that a seamless transition occur in the City Attorney’s Office,” said Sally Elkington, President-Elect of the Alameda County Bar Association. “A city of Oakland’s size and complexity requires a clear authority to advocate for the City’s and the Oakland community’s interests. Barbara Parker is a strong supporter of the values Oakland residents hold dear – racial equality, marriage rights for all, a woman’s right to choose, living wages, equal access to city services, and open government and transparency, to mention only a few.”

“With the number of complex, difficult legal issues facing the City on a daily basis, now is not the time for training wheels,” said Oakland City Council President Larry Reid. “Barbara Parker is exceedingly qualified in providing objective, reasoned legal advice. I am very comfortable with Barbara taking on this responsibility until the City Council takes further action.”

Parker has 20 years of experience at the Oakland City Attorney’s Office, including more than 10 years as second in command. She is a 1975 Harvard Law School graduate and previously served for more than five years as an Assistant United States Attorney for the Northern District of California. She is a lifelong advocate for civil rights, women’s empowerment and children’s issues. As the Chief Assistant City Attorney, Parker has represented the City Attorney’s Office at virtually all City Council meetings for the past decade. Her responsibilities included overseeing a staff of about 20 attorneys and directing all legal advice provided to the Mayor’s Office, City Council, City Administrator and all other City Boards, Commissions and Departments.

“I welcome this opportunity to continue to serve the City and residents of Oakland in this time of transition,” Parker said. “Oakland has been a national trail-blazer in using the law in innovative ways to make our communities safer, to eradicate blight, to provide medicine for people suffering from illness or injury and to fight for equal access and citizens’ rights.”

 

About Susan Mernit

Susan Mernit is the founder of Oakland Local. She is also a circuit rider for The Community Information Challenge, a program of The John S and James L Knight Foundation, and a consultant to non-profit and community organizations. Susan lives in North Oakland, near the Santa Fe school, with her partner, her housemate, a rescue dog named Cazzie, and a yard full of ants. She is an aspiring gardener, a long-time blogger & entrepreneur, and a recovering journalist who's found home in Oakland.