Story Archives 2001

Who is invited to Listen?

09/24/2021 - 11:35 by Anonymous (not verified)
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root
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pstrongWho’s invited to Tommy Thompson’s Welfare Reform “Listening” Session? /strong/p pDIV align="left" TABLE cellpadding="5"TR VALIGN="TOP"TDIMG SRC= "../sites/default/files/arch_img/516/photo_1_supplement.jpg" //td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TD/td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TDTR VALIGN="TOP"TD pby Gretchen Hildebrand/PoorNewsNetwork/p pDirector of the federal agency of Health and Human Services, Tommy Thompson, is coming to San Francisco on October 25th, supposedly to listen to real life testimony on the last 5 years of welfare reform. But there is a catch. Just about everyone—from elected officials and local and state welfare agencies to welfare advocacy groups and, most importantly, welfare recipients—are NOT INVITED. The people with the most crucial perspectives on, and experiences of, welfare reform and welfare to work will not only go unheard, they won’t even have a seat in the audience./p pThis closed door “listening” session is a pretty good example of our government’s historical attitude towards people on welfare. Since the Clinton administration’s welfare reform in 1996 things have gotten even worse for people struggling to survive on government assistance. The time limits imposed on benefits and the creation of the welfare-to-work system have managed to drop millions of needy people off of government assistance. /p pFewer people on the rolls looks like a success story to government statisticians, but this policy has been a nightmare for poor folks who are still struggling for survival. The “workfare” system has not meant economic independence or stability for poor people, but instead has created a new pool of extra-cheap labor available for exploitation. People on welfare are designated for menial, underpaid jobs that lack meaningful training, education, benefits, security or advancement. And welfare reform has never addressed the fact that a job doesn’t guarantee economic stability or survival. In fact, these reforms have handed over administration, training and placement of workfare participants to private corporations, who use these contracts and workers to make a profit. /p pBut even the politicians in D.C. decided to check themselves when they voted in welfare reform measures five years ago. They put a time limit on it—and soon those same politicians will be deciding if welfare reform has been working. Politicians will be deciding on the suggestions of Bush’s new appointees to the Health and Human Services department, who have their own agendas as far as welfare is concerned. Tommy Thompson, the former governor of Wisconsin, championed dropping the most needy from that state’s welfare rolls and is the new head of HHS. Now in charge of the Administration for Children and Families is Wade Horn, a right-wing pop psychologist and a former leader of the Fatherhood Initiative. As part of this group, he argued that welfare should be used to promote marriage and that married couples and their children should have priority for all government assistance, including food stamps and housing as well as health and education services. /p pThese are the men who will determine the future of welfare policy and will be coming to town to “listen”. But they and the government aren’t interested in listening to just anybody. The five sessions, scheduled to take place in New York, Atlanta, Chicago, Dallas and San Francisco, will be a welfare dog-and-pony show, a scam designed to tell the government what it is maneuvering to hear. The first half of each session will be for officials to speak. Although it is unclear now who will be present, local and state welfare offices and elected officials have not been invited, or even informed of the location of these events. The second half of each session is designated for “public” feedback—this will consist of four hand-selected welfare recipients who will speak about their experiences with welfare reform. Thus, a total of twenty people, handpicked by the government, will represent the more than two million people who have been dependent on this system for survival over the past five years./p pIn San Francisco, local welfare advocacy and economic justice groups have figured out that these so-called listening sessions will be nothing but a justification for policies the government already has in mind. All over California groups like People Organizing for Work and Employment Rights (POWER), the Center for Third World Organizing (CTWO), the Coalition for Ethical Welfare Reform (CEWR) and Every Mother is a Working Mother are working to be heard in the welfare debate. After being denied both a chance to speak and seats in the audience of the session, these groups are now strategizing on how to work around this listening session to get people’s real experiences heard and respected. At a recent meeting local activist and advocacy groups denounced the listening tour sham and made plans to participate without the invitation of the government. /p pThe location and time of this event, publicized for Thursday October 25, 2001 and rumored to be held in a downtown hotel, are still undisclosed, but plans for protests and alternative listening sessions are underway. Many groups and their constituents will be present both inside and outside the session, and there will be a Community Town Hall on Welfare Reform held on Saturday, October 27, 2001. That event will be an ideal occasion for a real listening session and a chance to develop a welfare policy based on the realities of need, not politics. /p pOne activist at a recent meeting described this as a “perfect opportunity” to expose the way the government silences poor people’s experiences and demands. It is also a crucial time to make sure silenced voices are heard. The word listening implies a willingness to hear, but to our government it is clearly just another way to manipulate people and the media to promote their own message. While politicians try to justify the butchering and moralistic manipulation of welfare, poor folks are finding their own ways to speak up and give the government no choice but to listen. /p pTo find more information about the listening session, protests and the Community Town Hall on October 27, 2001 in San Francisco, call the Coalition for Ethical Welfare Reform at (415) 239-5099, in Alameda County call (510) 452-5192, or in Santa Clara County call (408) 268-5680 ext.103./p p/p/td/tr/td/tr/table/div/p
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Breaking the Silence Organizing Campaign (BSOC)

09/24/2021 - 11:35 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
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pstrongDisability Advocates of Minorities Organization(DAMO) is coming to your neighborhood to educate, celebrate, advocate and recruit disabled and non- disabled people of color for BSOC!! /strong/p pDIV align="left" TABLE cellpadding="5"TR VALIGN="TOP"TD/td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TD/td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TDTR VALIGN="TOP"TD pby Staff Writer/p pbWhat is it?/b BSOC Campaign is a platform for disabled people of color. BSOC's main goal is to build friendships, leaders, to display the culture, artistic talents, history of disabled people of color and organize in communities of color to advocate for legal rights, services and bring to light issues that touch the disabled people community in San Francisco! /p pbWhy?/b BSOC Campaign was born because there is no platform where disabled people of color can come together to express themselves, feel empowered and to use their abilities for change and increase public awareness about issues that face them and to help change the economic, political and social objectles. IDo you know that disabled minorities have a rich culture but we also face police brutality, street violence and have the highest unemployment rate every year?/i It’s time to voice our issues and educate our diverse communities that make up San Francisco./p pbHow?/b BSOC Campaign will hit four neighborhoods of people of color with various educational, advocacy and artistic events\workshops throughout the year (The Mission, the Bayview, and the Filmore districts). Anybody is welcome to take part of this campaign. Quarterly DAMO will be at various public spaces i.e. Bookstores, libraries, cultural centers, schools, youth centers, non-profit organizations and churches etc. but we need your help to make this campaign and DAMO a success. /p pbJoin the BSOC Campaign and make a difference. Stay tune for more info../b/p pFOR MOORE INFORMATION and to get involved CALL: /p pLeroy F. Moore Jr., Executive Director @ (415) 586-2047 orbr / br /a href="mailto:sfdamo@Yahoo.com"sfdamo@Yahoo.com/abr / br /820 Valencia St. San Francisco, CA. 94110br / br /DAMO Monthly Meeting the Third Saturday of every month 11-1pmbr / br /www.sfdamo.freeservers.combr / /p/td/tr/td/tr/table/div/p
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The War and Homelessness

09/24/2021 - 11:35 by Anonymous (not verified)
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root
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pstrongDid Recent Terrorist Attacks Affect Dallas’s Homeless community? /strong/p pDIV align="left" TABLE cellpadding="5"TR VALIGN="TOP"TDIMG SRC= "../sites/default/files/arch_img/540/photo_1_supplement.jpg" //td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TD/td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TDTR VALIGN="TOP"TD pby Gordon Hilgers/PNN Texas Correspondent/p pThe evening after organized criminal attacks on New York’s World Trade Center and the Pentagon in Washington D.C., a homeless acquaintance of mine was seen, at downtown Dallas’s Akard Street light rail station, making a spectacle of himself. Stumbling around, half-crocked, sweating like a soaked sponge, rocking on his scuffed heels and winding in and out of the rush hour train-bound crowd, he was seen shouting, cursing, flailing his arms. Most downtown workers probably never realized in their wildest dreams that my friend is a Vietnambr / veteran/p pThis spectacle, however typical in workaday downtown Dallas, had been framed and reconfigured by a terrorist bombing. On that warm North Texas afternoon, it seemed as if every little thing that happened was somehow related to the shocking TV scenes from the previous day. Many downtown office workers seemed, and probably were, hypervigilant, angry, shocked and afraid. /p pIn light of all the nervous energy in the autumn air, I suppose, you couldn’t have helped but notice the befuddled and often contemptuous expressions on the faces of these businesspeople who had happened to step into this man’s path. Many who had been surprised into a confrontation with this man’s parade of emotion, I gathered, found it hard to decide what to make of his fierce expression. Was he upset over the bombings, like everyone else? Or was he just drunk or crazy? And who on earth was he berating?br / /pPAs the man perpetrated his public display of turmoil as if the world had some sort of obligation to listen to him, most workers disdainfully took the other road altogether and ignored the suffering. He was, after all, behaving outside the pale on a day when most people sorely needed routine and business as usual activities to reassure them. It’s also possible that this upsetting slice of life probably didn’t seem particularly pertinent to their worried concerns. All things considered, it was just another nagging upset from beyond the cloister of the real world; which, after all, still reeled from attack by criminal extremists. Even if his unsettling exhibition had seemed significant to the anxieties that consumed most Americans ;will more terror descend on us? Most of us admit that downtown Dallas white collars have long conditioned themselves to keep the disquiet of strangers out of their worlds. That’s the routine.br / /pPTherefore, it wasn’t too surprising, not to me, that is, that no one paused to ask this man if he was all right, or if they could help. Despite admonitions, by everyone from local TV news anchors to the President of the United States, that Americans pull together and muster the courage to comfort one another during this national tragedy, this man might as well have been completely alone in an abandoned ruin of a once-great city. As this homeless guy disappeared into the train and headed for the highway underpass he calls home for a moment I couldn’t help but wonder if unity and pulling together during this crisis were words and phrases that apply only to the productive, respectable segments of the city. The summary tone of public apathy, in fact, suggested the powerful pull even the slightest evidence of suffering has on Americans. We don’t quite know how to react to it. Homeless people have known this about the real world.br / /pPUs Vietnam veterans feel things in ways regular people don’t; a friend of mine, a former Marine who saw action in some of Vietnam’s fiercest fighting, told me. When you see stuff like the WTC buildings crumbling, it throws you right back to the moments you were traumatized. I’ve been dreaming I was at Mead River for two whole weeks.br / /pPThis friend, who jokingly says he’s lucky not to be homeless right now, exclaimed that he has no earthly idea how tough it must be to be both homeless and a Veteran with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. You probably have two traumas to deal with: The war and homelessness. That poor buddy of yours probably felt really vulnerable after the terrorist attack. He probably just started screaming. He’s probably never been able to get past trying to drink away his terror. If that’s how he tried to deal with it 25 years ago, when something like this terrorist attack occurs, he goes right back to what worked. I wonder what he can’t deal with. I wonder what’s so ungodly terrifying to him that it’s presence in his mind has destroyed his ability to cope or strive or even get a little faith in his life. No telling where he was--inside his head. He probably wanted to hide somewhere. Because he’s homeless, he probably he felt he had no place to run.br / /pPBeyond the remembered terror of military duty in Vietnam, nearly all of Dallas’ homeless have also experienced that same sense of vulnerability described by my friend. In fact, we experience that vulnerability on a daily basis. Many of us have been traumatized by our humiliating experiences on the streets of Dallas. Downtown Dallas, of course, is a far cry from the tinderbox of Vietnam’s fabled Mead River Campaign, and there’s no sense in even trying to make a comparison between guerilla war and homelessness in a well-off American city, despite the fact that some actually do try.br / /pPRegardless, we have to look at the facts of life surrounding homelessness that, sadly but truly, tend to mirror the traumatic experiences of those who actually witnessed the criminal attacks in Washington and New York that are documented daily on the evening news, that is, if we want to fully understand how homeless people reacted to a terrorist attack. Many of Dallas’ homeless have seen plenty of trauma: fistfights, stabbings, drug overdoses, muggings and robberies. Some have been assaulted late at night while sleeping in hedges and alleys. Others have gone hungry for days. Still others have suffered mental and emotional relapses on Commerce Street. Most quivered in the cold last Christmas Day.br / /pPWhen a frightening national trauma occurs, one that everyone goes through--many homeless Dallasites, just like my veteran friend, are just plain vulnerable to the strong and often conflicting emotions that open old wounds. Should anyone be surprised by that? Feelings of vulnerability and fears of surprise attack both come with the territory of homelessness. But there is very little in the shape of a support network towards which to turn. Many homeless men women and children, for example, simply have no families left to hug, no shoulders on which to cry. Most of us, however, have learned to survive without what, many of us would agree, seem like indulgences after everything we’ve been through. Living on the streets, you learn to steel yourself to adversity. You get tough. You block out what used to make you afraid. You avoid what puts you in danger. The ultimate effect, according to psychologists interested in the mental and emotional dimensions of the trauma of homelessness, is that you step out.br / /pPMan. I feel like I’m invisible or something one man told IEndless Choices/i. As he sat in the Stewpot, a local soup kitchen which serves as ground zero for the area’s growing homeless population, he laughed. But you could tell he was stymied by the strange sensation of looking at your status as a homeless pariah through the distorted new lens lent to all Americans by 22 suicidal fanatics from the other side of the globe. I mean we’re always invisible when we’re homeless anyway. People don’t even want to know what our lives are like. But this is pretty scary. Who cares if you’re homeless when 6,000 people are dead? People were looking at me like I was one of the terrorists or something. I could’ve smoked a pack of cigarettes the morning of that attack, man, but I didn’t even have any. I’d ask people for a cigarette and they’d look at me as if I was personally responsible for what happened, personally responsible.br / /pPSeveral told me that nobody would care if they were killed in a terrorist attack Nelson said. Her comments were echoed by one homeless man who asked, ‘If some terrorists killed 6,000 homeless people, do you really think it’d make it to the evening news?br / /pPAnd sure, reactions like these are not only startling to those who have never slept on a downtown sidewalk or hid in the bushes when Dallas’ infamous bicycle police came calling, such reactions are shocking.br / /pP”Hey! Look at me!” shouts Vincent, a longtime friend and familiar denizen of Dallas’ streets. ‘Look! Look! I’m a homeless terrorist! I’m a terrorist!’br / /pPCertainly, Vincent was joking. In fact, it might take a while for non-homeless Americans to understand the true meaning and gravity of his comments. But at the bottom of his perplexing remarks, Vincent was telling me that he already stands out as different, a kind of pariah, something to walk around and be aware of;and that this typical day-to-day closet bigotry and stereotyping of people in humiliating circumstances and been re-attenuated, re-framed by the experience of the 911 attacks. /p PAccording to Dennis Strickland, another Stewpot caseworker, homeless people see the disaster in terms of their own set of experiences. In other words, if homeless men and women have coped with the trauma of homelessness by drinking or drug abuse, they more than likely used the same means to deal with news of the attack. As extremists from the world’s dark side salt old wounds, Dallas’ homelessmdash;most of whom seem to know that they, too, are children of oppression and intolerance ;tell IEndless Choices /ithat they’ve lately felt especially vulnerable. Some talk of being invisible, or bereft of love and understanding. Others recoil into the same old rage: the familiar friends of anger, rebelliousness, and contempt for a world that they see as having abandoned them. /p P‘I’ve been working with one person who was very upset about the bombing,’ Strickland says. ‘He thought the bombing was the end of the world. As I talked to him, I concluded fundamentalist preachers have heavily influencing him. He was worried about his soul. He was afraid that, because he has;sexual thoughts,’ he was going to Hell.’/p PIndeed, the golem of the so-called End-Times has been one hot topic on the ‘homeless talk show scene.’ The apocalypse is on everybody’s mind in Dallas’ homeless community. The escalating incidents of street-preachers hollering through inner city canyons that the bombing is a Biblical event, that we are being punished for our sins, is plain-as-day evidence of the influence more simpleminded forms of Christianity command in this part of the nation. Those who are condemned to stand on the corner and listen to these often indecipherable rants while waiting for the bus to come find the presence of street preachers particularly tasteless since the attacks. Others stand and laugh. How on earth can supposedly religious people take advantage of a national tragedy and use it as a convenient excuse for evangelism? But they’re not alone in at least wondering what the future holds. Many Americans are looking for a way to understand this event. /p PViolent tragedy is impossible to understand, according to psychologists who are plumbing the mysteries of how trauma affects the mind, because the range of feelings that rush up to meet it is too wide for the reasoning mind. Modern-day experts and theologians throughout history have spent thousands of years trying to explain suffering or pointless violence. But of course no answers are ever completely certain. /p PWhen a person becomes homeless, he or she is forced to find a way to cope with the psychic violence of what homelessness does to the thinking, and many homeless people eventually find a rationalization that tells them to frame all their suffering in terms of sin and redemption. Many have been taught to see their situations in terms of fundamentalist Christian teachingsmdash;mainly because, they say, fundamentalists and evangelicals run several missions and shelters in Dallas. These well-meaning people, several clients of shelters and missions indicate, teach their worldview to a relatively captive audience whose only other recourse is to live outdoorsmdash;on the streets. /p PWhen you’re homeless and grasping at straws, you tend to identify with the beliefs of the people willing to help you, Strickland says. Consequently, he says, many clients of shelters and missions embrace an interpretation of their life situations as signs of coming tribulation and apocalypse, symptoms of personal shortcoming and the personal results of supernatural events they cannot control. Many critics of using homelessness as a way to make converts consider these tactics forms of religious trickery, a subtle form of coercion. When tragic world events actually do come calling, critics of this chicanery agree with Strickland: homeless people cling to the ideological explanations that seem to make sense to them, no matter how far from reality or reason they actually are. /p PMany of these people live in circumstances that are almost a bombing situation. They’re familiar with despair and with things not being as they ought to be. We all share similar feelings at one time or another. We’ve got to remember that; /p P;so I tried to reassure that man,’ Strickland continues, ‘that God loves him. I told him you can’t do anything to make God love you more--or less. Of course, that man in particular;he suffers from mental illness. But I couldn’t help but think that it was religious teaching that had really upset him. Fundamentalism isn’t my theological bent. Though a lot of us have some fears of widespread violence right now, I don’t see any of this in terms of signs from God. I also don’t think it does any good right now to dwell on the End of the World. That’s a horrible way to look at your life.’/p PBill Thompson, Director of Union Gospel Mission, says that since the attacks he has seen ‘the full range of emotions and opinions,’ but adds that anger and fear seem to predominate the mission’s clientele. ‘We Ialways/i make ourselves available to our clients, especially those who need to vent,’ he says. When you talk about wars, about people losing their lives, it causes you to try to reason it out. Many of our clients have had religious upbringings, and some do try to explain these circumstances in terms of what they’ve been taught.’/p PThompson adds that many visiting church groups that conduct nightly church services at Union Gospel have focused on issues surrounding The Book of Revelations--but that it is the mission’s policy not to control what is said by preachers and laypersons who witness to clients. ‘In our discipleship classes, we have been teaching that when there are people in the world who are controlled by sin, they are going to do sinful things. Specifically, we try to explain to our students here at the mission that, because of their religious bent, the extremists who committed these terrorist acts thought they were doing God a favor.’/p PBut unconscionable episodes such as what is coming to be known in some circles as the 9-11 bombings, have also caused confusing rationalizations of their own. Here’s how one homeless man, an Air Force alumni of the Korean War, reacted: ‘Thinking of this, I thought the world was coming to an end. That kind of played into my insane thinking. I’d been clean off drugs for seven months, but my head started telling me, lsquo;If the world’s coming to an end, why not get high? What’d I have to lose?’ I went out and used cocaine,’ he said. /p PHe adds: ‘I mean, you’re out there;right out there in the open;and you know something’s about to come down. Right out of the sky, man. You feel like you have to just get some kind of shelter somewhere immediately;even if it’s in the form of checking out emotionally. Now, of course, I could just kick myself. I lost seven months of clean time off drugs, man.’/p PJay Dunn, another Stewpot caseworker, tells IEndless Choices/i that clients asked him if they could watch the news on September 11. ‘Our clients had a real interest in what was going on,’ he says. He says he knows of no violent incidents among the homeless that were triggered by the recent attacks. However, he says, since September 11 the Stewpot has been rife with what he calls ‘anxious energy.’ /p PParticularly later in the day of the bombings, there was a real buzz,’ says Dunn. You could just feel it. Everyone was talking about it. Especially when the buildings downtown closed and workers began going home early, I noticed that a lot of our clients were visibly upset. Helicopters were flying over downtown. The homeless who were caught downtown were really scared.’/p PTomie Ann Owen, a Dallasite who claims she has been homeless, off and on, for nearly 18 years, was at Parkland Hospital’s clinic the day of the bombing. ‘I was afraid for my own safety,’ she says. ‘Most of all, I feel sorry for those New York people. A lot of people died. IChildren/i. I feel sorry for Bush and the government, too. The other night, though, the nicest thing happened. This couple from De Soto;a real young man and woman;came up to us while we were sleeping outside. They stayed up all-night and prayed with us. That was so nice’/p P‘We have the same feelings about this as everybody else,’ says one homeless man who identifies himself as Eric. Sitting at a table at the Stewpot, he says he is anxious about the bombings, and is afraid we’re about to start a ‘seriously bad’ war. ‘I think people are still in shock. Because of me being homeless, this hasn’t really registered. I used to live in New York. When I think of New York, I can’t see the place without those landmarks. I’ve also got a friend who works in the Garment District. I can’t get in touch with him.’ /p PLike many people in Dallas, there is little those in the Dallas homeless community can do right now other than keep their spirits up. But at this time, it’s the little things that count. /p P‘I sent a needlepoint cross I made to the President’s wife,’ one homeless man tells IEndless Choices./i Because Stewpot arts coordinator Pamela Nelson was travelling to Washington D.C. to firm up plans for a new job working for the Bush Administration, all he had to do was give it to her. Pam’s a former classmate of the President’s wife. She knows her. And that little cross? I did this out of kindness. I think the President and his wife must be under a lot of stress.. I hope they’ll appreciate my gift./p/td/tr/td/tr/table/div/p
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Perhaps Your Child Was Taken Instead

09/24/2021 - 11:35 by Anonymous (not verified)
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root
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pDIV align="left" TABLE cellpadding="5"TR VALIGN="TOP"TD/td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TD/td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TDTR VALIGN="TOP"TD pby PNN/p pPerhaps your child was taken instead because of a weight problembr / that you couldn't explain. Perhaps you are a mom whose teenager wasbr / somehow ripped away from you only because you refused to let her stay outbr / all night. Or perhaps it was because you didn't have a home, or simplybr / because you were poor, but somehow, you have been singled out and targetedbr / unfairly by Child Protective Services and now you face long and frustratingbr / legal battles that might not even result in your child being returned tobr / you. Does any of this sound familiar?/p p If it does, than chances are you are probably confused, angry, andbr / frustrated, and you are not alone. According to Justice for Families ofbr / Barnstable, M.A., over 2,500 children are seized from their homes every daybr / in this country, only 400 of which due to substantiated abuse or neglect.br / Where do you turn to get help when the system itself seems to be workingbr / against you?/p p You can start right here. Courtwatch is a program launched bybr / PoorNewsNetwork to assist low- and no- income people who have been unfairlybr / persecuted by C.P.S. and the judicial system. Posted in this column willbr / be case information concerning victimized families to update you about whatbr / can happen to disrupt families and what to do if it does. It will alsobr / include valuable information on advocacy, policy- making, legislation,br / events and demonstrations, helpful organizations, and basic advicebr / relating to family justice, as well as suggestions of other places to lookbr / on-line for more help./p p The purpose of Courtwatch is specifically to serve those parentsbr / and families who have been targeted by C.P.S. because of their biasedbr / labeling system. All too often, we here at PoorNewsNetwork hear aboutbr / cases wherein families have been destroyed simply because of misunderstoodbr / cultural practices, misplaced suspicion that is never substantiated, orbr / merely because of poverty. Unfortunately, it is frequently these familiesbr / who lack the resources to fight back against a powerful but corrupt system.br / That is why programs like Courtwatch are so important./p p To begin with, here are some interesting and informative websitesbr / and links, all related to civil rights and family justice:/p p b*pacificjustice.org:/b/p p An organization fighting for religious freedoms, parental rights and civilbr / liberties. Broad-based network of individuals, various organizations,br / churches and attorneys. Includes press releases and press conferencebr / announcements, option to request more info, articles on file, seminars inbr / your area, info about unions, and several great links. Be sure to checkbr / out the article about what to do when C.P.S. comes knocking at your door./p pRecommended links: b Free Market Foundation/b- find your elected officials andbr / proposed legislation, also includes a legal division that representsbr / individuals free of charge for first amendment, family and religiousbr / freedoms cases/p pb Capitol Resource Institute/b- mostly info on currentbr / legislation, tracks bills and policies and lets you know how your electedbr / officials voted (VERY important!), also includes sign- up for bFamily Actionbr / Network/b which will automatically send you timely info through e-mail./p p b*firedocs.com/familyjustice/:/b/p p An organization specializing in support and advocacy for families unjustlybr / targeted by C.P.S. Message boards for on-line discussion, news updates,br / on-line articles, legislative info, and tons of good links. /p p Recommendedbr / links:b False Allegations/b- personal stories and articles related to falsebr / allegations and false memories. Bulletin board for related rallies,br / protests and demonstrations; bHuman Rights USA/b- info about human rightsbr / research and education, as well as advocacy within your community, humanbr / rights library and document search, sign- up forb Global Human Rightsbr / Information Listserve; Participating Attorney/b- this is fantastic! Allbr / kinds of legal info, question and answer forum, help finding attorneys inbr / your area; also search word- bCoalition for Juvenile Justice/b- leads to lotsbr / of other links that provide info concerning the status of juvenile justicebr / in the U.S. today and what is being done to change it, as well as thebr / organizations who are a part of the process./p p More websites and keywords to check out:/p pbOzFamily/b: links to pro-family and justice centers./p pbCommunity Resource Center/b: (based in Canada) resources and info aboutbr / women's issues, education, youth, justice, social development./p pbNational Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges/b: info and resourcesbr / related to juvenile justice, get in touch with or get info on a judge./p pbGovSpot/b: federal and local government resources- you never know what youbr / might find./p pbYouth and Family Services Resources/b: family services and juvenile justice./p pbCommunity Resources for Independence/b: if you are targeted by the courtsbr / because you are disabled, check out this site- aids disabled individualsbr / and their families lead an independent life./p pbWomen United for Justice, Community, and Family/b: Spanish and English-br / adding a collective voice to the political process- a site to educatebr / people about the needs of low-income women and their families./p pbCriminal and Civil Justice!/b: mostly family and divorce law, some info onbr / self- representation and the evils of "family cleansing"./p pbFamily Crisis Services/b: on and off- line services, mostly abuse related./p pbYahoo!Government--Law/b: learn about the law and your government./p pb a href="http://www.wtls.org/familyresources.html:" title="www.wtls.org/familyresources.html:"www.wtls.org/familyresources.html:/a /b/p p info on justice, advocacy, with a focusbr / on low-income and welfare families./p p bwww.westernjustice.org/casey/b:/p p foster care info mostly but some onbr / reunification services./p pbFamily Issues and Assistance/b:/p p leads to judicial branches by state- link forbr / assistance for parents whose kids have been removed from the home./p pbState Departments of Juvenile Justice/b: leads you to websites related tobr / youth and family services./p pbU.S. Federal Government Agencies/b: directory of various gov. agencies- couldbr / come in handy to contact your officials./p p bwww.frca.org:/b/p p bFamily Support America/b: updates and links on issues relatedbr / to family justice and family support across America./p pbSocial Justice and Peace- Resources for Catholic Educators/b: ok, so you maybr / not be Catholic, but this offers links about education, in particularbr / homeschooling, that may be useful./p pb www.divorcelawinfo.com/familylaw.html/b:/p p mostly divorce related info, butbr / some links to government resources and other family law resources./p pbMinistry of the Attorney General- Family Justice Matters/b: /p p(based in Canada)br / some interesting stuff about family court procedures, some legal aid links./p pbNorthwestern Law:Legal Clinic: Children and Family Justice Center/b:/p p infobr / about advocacy, wrongful convictions, human and family rights, etc. /pp bwww.firms.findlaw.com/b:/p p family justice law clinics./p p bwww.familymanagement.com/b:/p p family resources directory./p pbwww.jfa.net/b: victims' rights organization, mostly related to criminal justice./p p If this information isn't helpful or if you do not have access to abr / computer, check out your local phonebook for some resources. Sometimes yourbr / local children's council can refer you to other family servicesbr / organizations. You may also be able to track down volunteer legalbr / associations that specialize in aiding low- or no- income families andbr / individuals./p p A note of caution to families facing housing issues: transitionalbr / housing can be extremely helpful, but beware when it comes to dealing withbr / childcare contracts. In some cases, you will be responsible forbr / maintaining a written or oral contract with someone within the housingbr / program to care for your child at all times when you are not present at thebr / location. /p p If your child is discovered to be alone for even 30br / minutes and you cannot be reached by phone, some programs will contactbr / C.P.S. immediately!! The parent is responsible for contacting the programbr / before they can contact C.P.S., and the child will be forced to remain atbr / the location until the parent is reached. Not only can this jeopardizebr / your standing in these housing programs, but it can lead to an even worsebr / outcome if C.P.S. gets involved. Make sure you understand completely anybr / and all rules concerning childcare when residing at programs like these!!br / (ie. Hamilton House Family Transitional Housing Program in San Francisco)./p p An update on important legislation: the recent assembly bill 2068br / was thankfully vetoed by Governor Gray Davis in early September. The billbr / would have set up a panel of "experts" (including C.P.S. officials) tobr / create a program of interrogation for children entering the first grade.br / In addition to a medical exam, children would be subject to a wide range ofbr / questions for the purpose of detecting mental health problems early. Thesebr / questions could have focused on anything from spanking to bonding withbr / their parents to sexual and psychological abuse. This could have led tobr / all kinds of abuses of power by the school system and C.P.S. To find outbr / more about legislation like this, go pacificjustice.org and the link to thebr / Capitol Resource Institute, and sign up to receive timely postings aboutbr / your government!/p p A victory: also from pacificjustice.org: in August a Californiabr / father was reunited with his seven-year-old son after false claims of abusebr / through the help of Pacific Justice Institute and an affiliate attorney whobr / assisted him at no charge. If you need legal aid or advice, check out onebr / of the links above. Let's hope for more happy endings like this one!/p p If you know of or have been involved in a situation wherin C.P.S.br / has separated a family based on empty accusations, please contact us herebr / at PoorNewsNetwork. Not only can you help to spread the word to otherbr / families about how to deal with the system, but we may also be able to helpbr / you find the resources you need to fight back in your own case./p p/p/td/tr/td/tr/table/div/p
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LAGUNA HONDA- TEAR DOWN THE WALLS!!

09/24/2021 - 11:35 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body
pDIV align="left" TABLE cellpadding="5"TR VALIGN="TOP"TDIMG SRC= "../sites/default/files/arch_img/545/photo_1_supplement.jpg" //td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TD/td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TDTR VALIGN="TOP"TD pby PNN Staff/p pDO YOU WANT TO LIVE IN A NURSING HOME?br / WELL, IF YOU ARE LOW INCOME, A SENIOR AND/OR DISABLED,br / THAT IS THE PLAN THE MAYOR, GOVERNOR, AND THE S.F.br / BOARD OF SUPERVISORS HAVE FOR YOU!/p pb THE REBUILDING OF LAGUNA HONDA IS JUST PLAIN WRONG!!!/b/p p$600 MILLION COULD BUILD A LOT OF AFFORDABLE, ACCESSIBLE, INTEGRATED HOUSING!br / $400/DAY PER PERSON COULD BUY A LOT OF SERVICES!/p pTHE MONEY SPENT TO REBUILD AND OPERATE LAGUNA HONDA CAN BE USED FOR COMMUNITY ALTERNATIVES SO PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES AND SENIORS CAN LIVE WITH DIGNITY IN THE COMMUNITY./p pTELL MAYOR WILLIE BROWN, THE BOARD OF SUPERVISORS, AND GOVERNOR DAVIS TO SUPPORT PEOPLE, SUPPORT COMMUNITY, AND DON'T REBUILD LAGUNA HONDA./p pbOUR HOMES, NOT NURSING HOMES/b/p p"UNNECESSARY INSTITUTIONALIZATION IS DISCRIMINATION"- U.S. SUPREME COURTbr / /p/td/tr/td/tr/table/div/p
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Case Study #1: Ann

09/24/2021 - 11:35 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body
pstrongAn outline of a familiy's struggle with Child Protective Services/strong/p pDIV align="left" TABLE cellpadding="5"TR VALIGN="TOP"TD/td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TD/td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TDTR VALIGN="TOP"TD pby PNN/p pEditors' Note: i Our basic belief is that, as journalists in pursuit of "the story," we must give something back to the poeple who are involved in "the story." Through this method of "extreme advocacy," we believe we are practicing collectivism rather than individualism in our journalizing./i/p p Generally speaking, when breaking these cases down to the students, Court Watch facilitators explained that out of the several ways the journalists could intervene/ advocate- the most logical way was to advocate in some way for the case participants and to provide them with resources that they could m out of the crises they were in at the time./p pNeighbor's dog kills cat- neighbor denies this and angrily, to retaliate, calls Child Protective Services (CPS) regarding a 14 year old Severely Emotionally Disturbed (SED) girl, saying girl is abused (claims that girl sleeps on unlocked porched for 2 days and 2 nights) (girl had run away from unlocked porch anytime she felt like it.)/p p*CPS makes allegation of the charge and combined with other allegations like girl doesn't get presents (photographs of girl getting presents doesn't matter to CPS regarding allegations)/p p* Case goes to trial/p p* Parents get public defender/p p* Girl first placed in psychiatric hospital. They are anti-parent/ i.e. psychiatric M.D. makes psychiatric diagnosis of parentt without ever seeing parent/p p* Parent loses custody/p p* CPS worker makes more allegations/ CPS child workers practice medicine without a license/ make psychiatric diagnoses/ not qualified/p p* CPS puts girl in foster homes and group homes all over state- girl runs away/p p* Finally girl refuses all foster care and becomes street runaway/p p* Juvenile Dependency Court CPS claim ther's nothing they can do/p p* JD Court extremely biased against parent (thru entire case and in all custody cases)/p p* Public Defender not experienced int hese types of cases- court and CPS resent her for defending parent/p p* CPS abusive and divisive of family- attempt to turn child against family/p p* CPS worker threatens parent's professional stnading and job and criticizes public defender for representing parent (as a way to shut them up)/p p* Courts take jurisdiction over teen but unable to stop her from being runaway/p p* Court wants two psychiatric evaluations in order to reunify parent with teen/p p* Parent refuses two psychiatric evaluations on political grounds/p p* Public Defender appeals case/p p* Public Defender loses appeal because case law and J.D. court and appeal court are biased agianst the parent in custody cases/p p* Court Watch begins/p p* Many, many complaint letters sent to court, CPS, the city attorney by parent/p p* City attorney taken off case/p p* CPS worker taken off case/p p* Ombudsperson brought in/p p* Client asked to see report by Ombudsperson/p p* Parent never allowed to see report/p p* Therapy recommended and provided- child refused to recieve therapy services/p p* Child goes to relatives in another state against recommendations of parent, psychiatrist and social worker/p p* Placement failure- child returns to California/p p***Court Watch Responds*** /ppWe are citing some case law and welfare codes from Case #1. These need to be read in full by advocates for parents wanting to reunify with their children./p pThe Juvenile Dependency Court and Child Protective Services, in San Francisco and in other places we have ivestigated, are closed systems- the editors of POOR Magazine have had first hand experience with San Francisco systems and are glad to discuss them with anyone who hasquestions./p p In San Francisco Juvenile Dependency Cout, child welfare workers are called social workers to give them added status as expert witnesses./p pAlso in San Francisco, psychological evaluations are required for parents wanting to reunify, and the psychiatrists are paid by Child Protective services. It is always possible for anyone to get an expert witness if they are willing to pay./p p"Heresay" evidence from psychiatrists is admitted as evidence to prevent the parent from reunifying as well./p pFurther, child welfare wrokers essentially "practice medicine without a license" in that they can make psychiatric diagnoses that are used as evidence in trials./p pIn sum, psychiatry is now being used in the Juvenile Dependency Court and Child Protective Services to remove children from their parents, and case law supports these diagnoses. In totalitarian societies, people are sent to camps and to death based on the recommendations of psychiatrists. Fro some parents, not being able to reunify with their children is like death./p pCPS has gone way beyond their usefulness for extreme abuse reporting adn need to be reigned in- they have complete and absolute power, and the system has to increase its power in order to feed itself (ie pay the wages for all the people it employs)br / /p/td/tr/td/tr/table/div/p
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S.F.P.D...Go Back to School

09/24/2021 - 11:35 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body
pstrongThe death of Idriss Stelley and the case for increasing police crisis intervention training.../strong/p pDIV align="left" TABLE cellpadding="5"TR VALIGN="TOP"TDIMG SRC= "../sites/default/files/arch_img/517/photo_1_feature.jpg" //td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TD/td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TDTR VALIGN="TOP"TD pby Leroy F. Moore, Jr/p pAs a college graduate, I had to take many different classes before I could walk onstage to get my degree, so why can't we hold up the same standard for the San Francisco Police Department? In the case of Idriss Stelley, the young Black man with mental illness shot more than 20 times by police on June 13 at the Sony Metreon Theater, the officers were informed that the call they were responding to was a “5150,” the police code for someone in psychiatric distress. But none of the officers involved had received crisis intervention training to prepare them to save Stelley’s life instead of taking it. /p pThirty officers graduated in June from the SFPD’s first class of Police Crisis Intervention training, but only those 30 of the force’s approximately 2,000 officers — or less than 2 percent — are trained to respond correctly in a situation involving a mentally ill person. That is a frighteningly small proportion of the City’s police force, especially when you realize that one in four calls to the police regards someone in psychiatric crisis./p pThis is why Mesha Monge-Irizarry, Stelley’s mother, along with activists, community members, youth and people with mental illness marched into City Hall on Thursday, Oct. 4 — up to Room 263, where the Board of Supervisors Rules Committee held a special hearing to address police violence against people in psychiatric distress. It’s been almost four months since Stelley, a 4.0 college student, was killed by the SFPD. Once again, Irizarry was in front of another committee. Why is the system constantly making this grieving mother uncover her wounds from the tragic shooting of her only child when what she’s asking for is simply common sense? /p p“My son’s fiancé called for help for Idriss but got a firing squad instead,” Irizarry said. “The SFPD knew they were dealing with someone in psychiatric distress, but the officers involved were not adequately trained. They ran in with guns drawn, and within minutes Idriss was dead.”/p pShe and the other activists are demanding that the City increase the number of officers receiving crisis intervention training to at least 25 percent of the police force within the next two years. As I took notes and pictures of the hearing, I wondered how many times Irizarry and her supporters will have to preach, plead and organize around something so painful? /p pOnce again, the Idriss Stelley campaign made an intimidating space — the Board of Supervisors’ hearing room — into a warm family room. Samantha Liapes, director of Bay Area PoliceWatch, in asking for a moment of silence, called on the spirit and strength of Idriss Stelley and other people with mental illness who have been victims of police abuse. The compelling spoken word of Po' Poets of POOR Magazine echoed that of many spirits who are not at rest because there is still no justice. /p p “The 20 plus shots fired at Idriss Stelley are just the tip of the iceberg,” said Liapes. “Every day, because of SFPD’s negligence, people in psychiatric crisis end up in jails instead of hospitals and are beaten down or shot down instead of talked down. People in psychiatric crisis deserve help, not homicide.”/p pNine representatives of various community organizations and commissions spoke about the need to increase the amount of training police receive to handle people in psychiatric crisis. Many speakers put a face on mental illness by testifying to how they feel about the shooting of Idriss Stelley. One youth spoke about the power of the Board of Supervisors Rules Committee to pass a resolution that would implement the activists’ demands and put pressure on other political leaders. /p pThe resolution, written by a broad coalition of individuals, organizations and family members who have suffered from police mishandling of people in psychiatric distress, makes the following demands: Within the next two years, 25 percent of SFPD officers must receive Police Crisis Intervention training; within one year, at least four to five officers per shift per station must have volunteered and completed this training, enabling them to take the lead in any crisis involving someone with an altered mental status; training must continue until all police officers are trained./p pSupervisor Tom Ammiano took the lead by promising that he and the committee would sign the resolution by the following Tuesday and keep the pressure on to make sure that the PCI training is implemented. Many City commissioners are lending support as well. For example, Marissa Villa Nuelle of the San Francisco Youth Commission and Carol Patterson of the Mayor’s Council on Disability both spoke from the heart about why their commissions wrote a resolution calling for an immediate and mandatory augmentation of the SFPD crisis intervention program. /p pWith the backing of various commissions, organizations, community activists, people with mental illness and the family, friends, and girlfriend of Idriss Stelley, you would think that Mesha Irizarry would by now have learned all of the facts regarding her son's shooting, but this is not the case. She still has not been told the names of the witnesses to the shooting. You would think that after two more shootings of people with mental illness since the death of Idriss Stelley on June 13 that there would be an independent criminal investigation by now. Not true. And you would also think that the increase in police shootings of people with mental illness would spark the Department of Justice to look at these cases as violations under the Americans with Disabilities Act. Not true./p pLast, but just as importantly, you would think that a representative from the SFPD would have come to hear what the public and Board of Supervisors are talking about and start to plan how the department could improve its treatment of the mentally ill. Once again, not true./p pLeroy F. Moore Jr., a reporter for PoorNewsNetwork, is also the executive director of the Disability Advocates of Minorities Organization (DAMO)./p p bSpeech made to the Rules Committee on Mental Illness, Race, Poverty and Policebr /br / By Leroy F. Moore/b/p pGood evening. My name is Leroy F. Moore, Jr. and I’m a resident of San Francisco and Founder and Executive Director of Disability Advocates of Minorities Organization, the only organization that is for and by disabled people of color in the Bay Area and, I think, in California. I am also a staff writer for POOR Magazine and The BayView Newspaper./p pMy topic today is how mental illness, poverty and police brutality play a roll in the lives of people of color, especially Black men. As a Black, disabled researcher, writer and advocate of disabled people of color, I have noticed that in every arena of life—from education, employment, services industry and yes, to the mental health system—disabled people of color, especially disabled Black men, are at the bottom of the heap./p pThe National Council on Disability reported that over 70 percent of people with disabilities are living below the poverty line. Last year, the president and the CEO of the NAACP wrote that the national unemployment rate of African Americans with severe disabilities (including mental illness) is 85 percent. This percentage has not changed in almost ten years! /p pThe San Francisco Coalition on Homelessness reported that there are more people with disabilities, especially people with mental illness, living on our streets than ever before. All of the above, including institutionalism and more, have caused a lot of added tension, stress, depression and other physiological pressures which add to the overwhelmingly high rate of mental illness among African Americans and other people of color/p pPeople of color, especially African Americans, with mental illness have a distrustful relationship with the mental health system because of their history of being over-medicated, misdiagnosed, experimented on— the Tuskeegee Experiments— and the threats of being forcibly medicated and forcibly institutionalized. Today the last real threat to African Americans with mental illness is the increase in brutality and killings, i.e. police shootings. This issue now is to teach the Black community that we must be vocal about how the police, social service providers and even family members are educated about the needs and wants of a mentally ill person in and out of crisis./p pWe all know that there has been a drastic increase in police shootings of people with mental illness all over the country. However, have we noticed that over 80 percent of these shootings have involved people of color with mental illness who are poor, homeless and outside of the disabled or Black communities? Most of them are Black men. Have we noticed recently that many police nationwide have walked away with a clear record from these shootings? (Margaret L. Mitchell of Los Angeles, Eroll Shaw of Michigan and recently, Shannon Smith of Illinois) /p pLast but not least, the brutality committed against people with mental illness has not been on the radar screen of the Department of Justice, the department in charge of carrying out the Americans with Disabilities Act and other disability laws. Mandatory training is needed across the board from the police to the justice system to the families of people with mental illness, from a culturally diverse platform. /p pOne last point I would like to make is that in July, Disability Advocates of Minorities Organization and many other grassroots organizations held the first ever Open Forum on Senseless Crimes Against People With Disabilities. In this forum, many advocates and specialists on this topic concluded that the primary cause of unnatural death of people with mental illness is police shootings. To put the icing on the cake, the justice system—jurors, judges and lawyers—has a lack of knowledge and special training in working with people who have disabilities. We also found out that there is a state organization called the Crime Victims with Disabilities Initiative that is setting up Crime Victim with Disabilities Specialists to provide awareness training to the general public, the justice system and the police and they also will be creating a speaker bureau on this issue. /p pFor more information contact Dan Sorensen of the Crime Victims with Disabilities Initiative of California at (916) 651-9304. /p pThere are too many mentally ill people of color, especially Black men, who have been turned away from the system and ended up in the grave because of police shootings and other street crimes./p pPlease, for the mother, family, friends and supporters of Idriss Stelley, lets make sure that no more youth, adults or elders with mental illness have to suffer what Idriss and his family had to! /p p***Find this story and more on the San Francisco Bay View's online site atbr / a href="http://www.sfbayview.com"www.sfbayview.com/abr / /p/td/tr/td/tr/table/div/p
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Trash Bags Gloves pt.2

09/24/2021 - 11:35 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body
pDIV align="left" TABLE cellpadding="5"TR VALIGN="TOP"TDIMG SRC= "../sites/default/files/arch_img/519/photo_1_supplement.jpg" //td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TD/td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TDTR VALIGN="TOP"TD pby Liam Holt/p p On Thursday 27th, September 2001, an Ordinance tobr / amend Public Works Code 1407-1415 was debated by thebr / Rules Committee - a board consisting of Supervisorsbr / Tony Hall, Matt Gonzalez and President Tom Ammiano.br / This was the third in a series of meetings discussingbr / new municipal legislation proposed by President Tombr / Ammiano which would require that twenty four hourbr / notice be provided before the removal of unattendedbr / personal property. This legislation is being foughtbr / for by homeless people and their advocates to protectbr / the basic civil liberties of those living on thebr / streets. /p pThe basis of the legislation is the humanbr / right to own personal property. The legislation hasbr / become embroiled in many issues and has highlightedbr / many conflicts in the city. The concerns voiced by thebr / Parks Authority and Department of Public Works (DPW)br / pertained, for the most part, to the increasedbr / workload they would shoulder and the possiblebr / ambiguities that the legislation might cause./p pReferring to the previous two meetings, Supervisorbr / Gonzalez, who chaired the board, prefaced thebr / discourse by stating, “I think that the way that thisbr / whole discussion is being framed is losing sight ofbr / why people are compelled to do this. If many rulesbr / which exist were implemented properly, then there wouldbr / not necessarily be a need for this legislation.br / Unfortunately, the reality, when seeing the videobr / tapes which show what happens when there are encountersbr / between the DPW, police and the homeless isbr / disturbing.”/p p The concerns of the Park Department are chieflybr / that the legislation would contradict existingbr / anti-encampment laws. The department continues to pushbr / for amendments to exempt parks from the notificationbr / requirement citing a lack of resources to do so.br / However, John Viola of the Coalition for the Homelessbr / makes the point that, “It is important to recognizebr / that this is a statute about people’s basic rights.br / [Concerns regarding work burden] may not be the mostbr / appropriate way to look at this legislation.” /p p Indeed, if departments are not able to consider these rightsbr / with current staffing and procedures then thatbr / situation urgently needs to be examined. The samebr / necessity to reevaluate the importance of civilbr / liberties also applies to similar concerns from thebr / DPW regarding the feasibility of giving individualbr / notice. The discussion needs to be brought back, firstbr / and foremost, to those basic rights that must bebr / considered. /p pThe DPW head, Ed Lee, did suggest positive action.br / Speaking of collaborative and rehabilitativebr / initiatives, Mr. Lee said, “We have put brooms in thebr / hands of people in Caesar Chavez and have seenbr / results.” Referring to an initiative to encouragebr / collaboration rather than conflict at clean-ups in thebr / area, he rightly highlights the efficacy of suchbr / shifts of attitude. He continued, “We have contractsbr / with the San Francisco League of Urban Gardeners; itbr / is their business to encourage homeless to build jobbr / skills and help us clean streets during hours when webr / cannot. We are very committed to going further in thatbr / direction. Obviously not everyone can do that, but forbr / those that are capable and willing we will encouragebr / that.”/p p Those advocating the legislation (including thebr / Coalition for the Homeless, POOR news, and homelessbr / people) cite, above all, the need to protect thebr / homeless, a vulnerable population who are alreadybr / massively disadvantaged by their situation. Kathleenbr / Gray, a homeless woman and member of the coalitionbr / pointed to the inefficiencies and dangers of currentbr / practices. “When you have systems which givebr / people blankets and medicines,” she said, “then turn around andbr / take them away, [it] is not only wasteful of resourcesbr / it is also very debilitating.” (See “Where’s Mybr / Stuff?” by Clive Whistle, POOR News Network, 7/10/01)/p pGray emphasised, "This legislation is aboutbr / permitting people to own things, to accumulate things,br / to go beyond just collecting bottles in a cart, tobr / have some nice clothes to enable to them to work abr / job.” She makes an important point about the currentbr / vicious cycle: Even if a homeless person can work,br / they cannot guarantee the safety of their possessions,br / they cannot save or accumulate property in order tobr / better their situation. She continued, “This is aboutbr / people’s right to own property. [That right] is selfbr / empowering, and those who are self empowered improvebr / their lives. When their lives are improved, thebr / neighborhood is improved.” /p p Ms. Gray referred to earlier comments by members ofbr / the 7th Street Commercial Association (SSCA) andbr / residents of the Potrero Hill area. The feeling frombr / these groups was that this legislation would makebr / their lives and business more difficult by augmentingbr / the accumulation of trash in those areas. The debatebr / has evoked strong feelings in many, some based onbr / perceptions which the homeless community is constantlybr / battling. /p pMaurine Sullivan of the SSCA implored, “Webr / are very concerned about this. To do an ordinance likebr / this would really cripple all of us who live and workbr / there. There was a cart in our driveway with brokenbr / bottles and syringe needles; it was terrible. I ambr / upset with that. The kids have a bad problem. We havebr / to escort employees after dark. We know thebr / statistics, we know [that some] are felons, we [alsobr / realise] that there are those who are mentally ill whobr / seriously need our help. You have got to help us. Webr / cannot be going through human excrement all the time.”/p pSullivan voices the erroneous fears shared by manybr / residents and business owners: that this legislationbr / will worsen these problems by hampering the police andbr / DPW in their work. The legislation does not intend tobr / do so. The language clearly accommodates the necessitybr / to remove articles posing a health risk (i.e. syringesbr / and broken glass) and the retrieval of stolen propertybr / (the abandoned shopping carts which are repeatedlybr / cited as cluttering large areas). /p pSupervisor Gonzalez attempted tobr / assuage Sullivan’s fears about the “felons.” Speaking frombr / his experience as a public defendant he contested, “I think when you’re speaking about felons,br / there is a huge difference betweens felons who havebr / engaged in violent activities and those who havebr / become felons due to very minor [infringements]. I canbr / assure you that you would not be scared of [thebr / majority of felons], and the ones that you would bebr / sc /ppared of are in the state prison.”br / Ms. Sullivan’s comments further highlighted thebr / need for this legislation as she asserted, “Abr / very small percentage of people have personal propertybr / in carts, they have all manner of objects that theybr / have gathered from goodness knows where, they are notbr / personal items.” This one sentence is justificationbr / enough for the legislation. Ms. Sullivan, the DPW, and thebr / police are not in any position to determine what mightbr / be useful to a homeless person or what might be valuedbr / personal property. Ifbr / individuals are notified that their belongings will bebr / removed if not claimed, they will make that judgmentbr / call; they are the only ones who can and they are thebr / only ones who have a right to./p pThe concerns of the affected departments, worriedbr / residents and business people are currently based uponbr / conjecture. The reality is that the homeless arebr / currently vulnerable; their lives are at risk. If thisbr / small piece of legislation can help then it should bebr / accepted, it should be given a chance. As Supervisorbr / Gonzalez points out, the Sunset provision will providebr / monitoring of the of the legislation. Post-br / implementation it will determine its effects ˆ”bothbr / positive and negative” and will make sure that it isbr / effective in its goals. If problems determine thebr / necessity, the board may modify the language of thebr / ordinance to facilitate the well-being of all. Whatbr / should not be confused is the legislation’s intent./p p During the course of discussion, Supervisors Tonybr / Hall and Matt Gonzalez and others have reiterated manybr / times that it is not only the city that will removebr / unattended property. When homeless people are forcedbr / to leave property unguarded, “whether it be to work abr / job, to go to hospital, because they are arrested orbr / just because they must use the bathroom,” thatbr / property may be stolen or removed by those notbr / authorized to do so. The point has been repeatedlybr / made that the ordinance in question only goes a verybr / small way towards providing security for homelessbr / people. Their property can only be secured if betterbr / facilities are provided- that is, storage lockers.br / This legislation is only a first step, a very basicbr / protection of the civil liberties of the homeless. /p pThe storage issue was expanded upon in Thursday’sbr / meeting by George Smith of the Mayor’s Office on thebr / Homeless. Mr. Smith outlined that there are threebr / storage facilities currently in operation: 219 lockersbr / at South Beach Resource Center, 100 at Bayview Hopebr / Center, and a center serving 375 low-income andbr / homeless people at 150 Otis street, a total of aroundbr / 700 storage units. Mr. Smith said his office wasbr / exploring possibilities to expand, mentioning thebr / use of shipping containers and the creation ofbr / self-storage sites along the lines of systems inbr / operation at airports. Mr. Smith said that he had madebr / a recommendation to the Mayor to convene a meeting. Hebr / suggested that this meeting would consist of abr / dialogue around the storage issues and requested helpbr / from advocates and interested parties. It is verybr / clear that providing safe storage is the essentialbr / next step, all parties agree on this. /p pIt has been pointed out that many interested partiesbr / may be precluded from this discussion due to the factbr / that the board meets on a nine to five schedule. Ifbr / you are unable to attend meetings because you arebr / unavailable at these times, your comments can bebr / directed to board by mail. Write to:/p pCity Hallbr /br / 1 Dr. Carlton B. Goodlet Place Room 244br /br / San Francisco, CAbr /br / 94102/p pAlso, all video taped meetings can be observed remotelybr / on Channel 26 or at a href="http://www.ci.sf.ca.us/" title="www.ci.sf.ca.us/"www.ci.sf.ca.us//a. Video tapes ofbr / meetings may be requested from the main offices of thebr / public library, where they are stored for up to 30 daysbr / after the meeting. To order video tape copies or tobr / enquire about the scheduling of meetings call (415)br / 557-4293.br / /p/td/tr/td/tr/table/div/p
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Selective Channel

09/24/2021 - 11:35 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body
pstrong* Strategy Session: Community actvists respond to current McCarthyism in the radio airwavesbr /br / by Dae-Han Song /strong/p p*..DAVID DAVEY D WAS FIRED!.by Corporate radio moguls Clear Channel Communications from his post as Community Affairs Directorbr / br /by Jeff Chang/p pDIV align="left" TABLE cellpadding="5"TR VALIGN="TOP"TDIMG SRC= "../sites/default/files/arch_img/521/photo_2_supplement.jpg" //td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TD/td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TDTR VALIGN="TOP"TD pby Staff Writer/p pbSTRATEGY SESSION:Community actvists respond to current McCarthyism in the radio airwaves /bbr /br / by Dae-Han Song/p pOn Saturday October 13th, in a packed room in the Oakland YWCA, representatives from Books not Bars, Let's Get Free, POOR Magazine, Media Alliance and Solid Thoughts met together with other community members to strategize ways to fight against the increasing McCarthyism emerging after the September 11th tragedy that had led to the firing of David D. During this strategizing meeting among community activists, David D made an appearance and stressed the importance of a strategized approach to protesting, warning of short-lived protests that begin and end with picket lines./p pThis coalition not only strategized ways of getting David D rehired, but also saw this as an opportunity for the community to reclaim the radiowaves. The resolution statement, in addition to demanding that David D be rehired, demanded local play for local artists and community access to corporate dominated radiowaves, by means of community shows. To meet these goals, those present planned to launch a massive publicity campaign that would include bumperstickers, flyers, and most importantly the strength in word of mouth. /p pb**.DAVID DAVEY D WAS FIRED**/bbr / br /By Jeff Chang/p pMost of you may know his work as a committed young progressive activist ofbr / color and one of the most articulate, sensitive voices for young people outbr / there today. He's developed a national reputation in over 15 years of beingbr / on the radio, and his show and his activism have given voice to the unheardbr / at some of the most important junctures in this generation's recent memory:br / the LA rebellion and its aftermath, the deaths of Tupac and Biggie, and nowbr / the war. He's spoken honestly and forthrightly for peace and forbr / consciousness./p pIt's really ironic that Clear Channel would fire him now. This is thebr / company that, in the wake of the 9/11 attacks out of its west coastbr / division, assembled a list of songs that whose lyrics were deemedbr / "sensitive"--songs which reportedly included John Lennon's "Imagine", Catbr / Stevens/Yusuf Islam's "Peace Train" and the entire Rage Against the Machinebr / catalog. /p pIn its efforts to counter-spin media outrage about this alleged blacklist,br / Clear Channel helped coordinate a Relief Fund that has raised millions ofbr / dollars to go toward relief efforts and the families of those who are nowbr / jobless because of the attacks./p pClear Channel is now eliminating the Community Affairs Director position atbr / KMEL, despite a requirement by the FCC that commercial stations havebr / community affairs programming. The future of such programming is in doubt./p pMake no mistake. While most commercial stations have treated communitybr / affairs as a stepchild in the early hours of the weekend, making itbr / impossible for folks to reach an audience, Davey D set a high standard bybr / making his show an open talk-oriented show geared towards young persons ofbr / color./p pHe took on controversial topics, hosted controversial guests (most recentlybr / Barbara Lee and Boots Riley of The Coup), even had folks like Hillarybr / Clinton come and pay respect. It was a program people talked about on Mondaybr / morning, and many other urban stations modeled their community affairsbr / programs after his./p pImagine a Rush Limbaugh type show, but geared towards a progressive, youngbr / set. Don't progressives always moan and groan about how we wish we had this?br / Well, Davey's been doing it, for over 15 years, around a decade at KMEL. Inbr / recent years, honest, reliable, truthful community radio outlets have beenbr / harder and harder to come by as media monopolization and community radiobr / in-fighting has intensified./p pIf you're as outraged as I am about the decimation of forward-thinking,br / challenging, truthful, youth-of-color-focused radio, here's what you can do!/p p*Call KMEL's General Manager Joe Cunningham at b415.538.1061/bbr /br / *or send an email to:bjoecunningham@clearchannel.com/bbr /br / * If you do send an email, send a hard copy ofbr / the letter to:br /br / Joe Cunningham, KMEL General Managerbr /br / 340 Townsend Stbr /br / San Francisco, CAbr /br / 94107/p pPeace.br / /p/td/tr/td/tr/table/div/p
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In The Mess Cont...

09/24/2021 - 11:35 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body
pstrong pIts been one month and a day,br / to the Commericial Planesbr / Suicide Bombing of, the Worldbr / Trade Towers in New York City./p pMeanwhile folks in America andbr / in other countries are stillbr / pissed off... br /War!br / /pp so how 'yabr / 'doin out there folks?/p/strong/p pDIV align="left" TABLE cellpadding="5"TR VALIGN="TOP"TD/td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TD/td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TDTR VALIGN="TOP"TD pby Joe B./p pbThursday, Oct. 11, 2001, 8:55 am./bThe start of a sunny day faint, light clouds, pigeons - not to many on the ground, new yellow and white page phone books on an old wooden desk temporarily put there so tenants can bring them to their rooms./p pSteam clean and dirty red brick sidewalks. Not to many people on the brick streets today. /p pI've learned to glide between converging Market Street musing from my private life. /p pThe interim of long, rambling conversations with other street folks or monologues to my-self are slowly being filtered out and should not be part of I.T.M.'s ongoing series./p pbFriday, Oct. 12, 2001, 8:25 am./b Dirty red brick sidewalks dirtier black tar, gray-white, yellow-green-clear saliva fresh and old, gum, ground in cigars, cigarettes, skin, blood, urine, fecal matter, and other things part and partial on any street USA./p pBusses, trucks 'n trains, b[trolly cars]/btourists, and regular streets folks and I are walking the streets this pleasant day./p pIt’s a pleasant day. Blue sky, faint clouds thin, clear, and transitory as pigeons flock dropping more gives from on high./p p12 noon is semi regular lunch at St. Anthony's cornucopia of choices. b[one can get full if the food-line isn't long]/b More or less to eat is the choice not variety of food as in cafe's, restaurants, or fast food places; however zero prices or alternative eateries all over or across the bay by Bart are choices street folks make daily.br / /p/td/tr/td/tr/table/div/p
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