Story Archives 2006

I used to live in the Bayview….then I became homeless

09/24/2021 - 11:01 by Anonymous (not verified)
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Housing activists fight for real housing justice in San Francisco rather than more lies by the Mayor.

by Tiny/PNN

"I used to live in the Bayview, then the rent got too expensive and I lost my job", the large brown eyes of Lillette Durton grew quiet for a minute as she reflected on her struggle to stay housed in San Francisco, "then I became homeless" with this last assertion, her strong voice broke up a little. She sort of swallowed the rest of her story which included almost seven years of houselessness until she found housing in the Tenderloin area in the San Cristina hotel, a Single Room Occupancy hotel managed by Community Housing Partnership(CHP) which is currently facing their own struggle against Mid-Market gentrification efforts.

I had the pleasure of meeting Lillette, who was holding a small hand-made sign that said LETS GET OUR PRIORITIES STRAIGHT, at a press conference at City Hall on Mayor Newsoms reduction of the City’s affordable housing goals. This is the Mayors latest re-invention of the wheel, i.e, the mayor has a very busy press office that seems to release press advisories on everything from housing policies already in place, to homelessness and the environment and in the process of his re-invention he reduces/changes or dismantles these urgently needed policies and budgets.

"We are not going to let the mayor reinvent housing policy in his press office," Housing activist, Calvin Welch, one of the speakers at the conference outlined how the Mayor and his minions unilaterally re-wrote a little thing called The City’ s Housing Element of the General Plan, which with one stroke of his mighty pseudo pen, or in this case his mighty mouse (attached to his press secretaries’ computer, that is) he has reduced by 68% the City’s affordable housing production goals which were approved by the Planning Commission, the board of Supervisors and the State of California in a document called the 2004 Housing Element.

"The Housing Element is a solid document and the mayor is changing them through press releases," the days emcee Rene Cazenave from The San Francisco Information Clearinghouse addressed the rather large crowd gathered on the steps

"Washington DC has specifically said it does not care about housing the poor," Sara Short, one of the Housing Justice Summit participants who called todays action spoke to the crowd, " so for Newsom to not target funds to house the City’s poorest citizens is not only wrong, it is a guaranteed recipe to bring more homelessness and poverty to San Francisco"

Sara and several other housing and land use activists called the Housing Justice Summit in July to create a grassroots, progressive, proactive agenda about the City’s Housing, in other words, to not let the City’s working class, poor and homeless residents continue to be pushed out of this increasingly homogenous, rich people only town.

To add insult to injury the mayors press release actually characterized the new goal ( his new goal, that is,) that reduced the number of affordable housing units to be built in the city by 7,200 units as being a "housing opportunity made for everyone"

And for conscious Bayview readers, I am quite sure the Mayor was including the 1600 toxic shipyard units planned for the Hunters Point Shipyard, notwithstanding the vehement protests by Bayview residents and activists.

"San Francisco is increasingly becoming a city completely unaffordable for the majority of families living in this city, " Ntanya Lee, fierce activist on youth and racial justice and executive director of Coleman Advocates, also a participating member of The Housing Justice Summit

Ntanya concluded with her usual flare for breaking it down "We must stop the conversion of family housing into luxury housing, housing justice is the key to making this a City of families"

As the press conference ended with a chant, what do we want? Housing! when do we want it? Now!! My mind reflected on the determined eyes of Ms. Durton, who is now on the CHP board since her homefulness began at CHP answered my nervous question about the possible closure of her current residence, "No," she said resolutely, "we won’t let that happen, because we will continue to fight that!" and as she spoke I realized, one of our biggest fights will be fighting the lies and mistruths of Mayor Newsom and his overly ambitious press secretary.

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Way Below The Poverty ( and Water ) Line

09/24/2021 - 11:01 by Anonymous (not verified)
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* PNN Editors Note

* PNN Southern Poverty Report

by Clive Whistle and PNN editors

People walking aimlessly in the streets. Food preparation on the sidewalk. People pushing shopping carts on the bridges and causeways filled with blankets, bits of clothes and a half-consumed jug of water. Homeless people? Panhandlers? Recyclers? No, survivors of Hurricane Katrina in the ravaged streets of Mississippi, New Orleans and parts of Florida.

And of course they are homeless, because they, the very poorest of our US citizenry, barely surviving on underground economies, food stamps, and SSI, on land that was long ago declared unsafe due to its proximity to weak levees, shores, power plants, roads and freeways were always at-risk of losing the only thing they had, the only thing all poor folks have if they have anything at all; day to day subsistence/existence.

All we have is our patterns of money collection, our little to-up roof, our broke down beds, barely working cars or bicycles, our few clothes, our chipped dishes, our static-filled TV's and a little bit better boom boxes, ….

And when those things are gone, due to eviction, disaster, emergency or crisis, we have lost it all.

It reminds me of my experience with the Northern California Earthquake of 89. When people talk laughingly about where they were, a shudder travels through my body. When that earthquake hit, we had just earned enough in our underground economy street based "job" to pay that months rent in our little Oakland apartment. When that earthquake hit, it meant we had to use the money just to eat cause there was no money to be made on the streets following that disaster, which meant we couldn’t pay the rent and we ended up homeless once again.

As us poor folks, barely holding onto our meager bits of nothing, in other parts of the country watch the descimation of our fellow poor folk in the South, we can only hope that if they even survive this disgusting new blow to their already difficult Amerikkan existences they are able to recoup a little modicum of stability/normalcy/peace in the long hard days to come.

Or perhaps, like me, through losing everything just one mo time, they will become angry enough to stop trying to just survive, and instead live to resist, the racist, classist system that is locked in place to hold them down.

Insider PNN Southern Poverty Report

By Clive Whistle/PNN poverty scholar________________________________

This is me, folks, Clive Whistle, PNN roving reporter and poverty scholar, writing from the flooded streets of my beloved hometown of New Orleans. The funny thing for me is I have been homeless on and off in my life, but when I go home, I do mean HOME, to my people, I am housed in heart and soul if not in house.

This is true in particular when I go home to my grandmama, who like my editor says, might as well be homeless as she has lived in a ramshackle shack with no decent roof on the edge of town for as long as I can remember, but who lives by the old adage, poor is a state of mind, and from her perspective and the whole community, she is about as housed as one human being can be

Now that I finally got public housing in Frisco, I went back " home" this time to visit and help family even poorer than me like Gramama who is still dwelling in unbelievably substandard housing in New Orleans, with open sewers, tenuous levees and walls that shake when anyone touches them.

This kind of Southern poverty is so intense that Peace Corps volunteers train for Africa by "volunteering" in places like New Orleans, Missipippi and Oklahoma.

So, I am writing now (through telephonic transcription via PNN staff in Frisco) to let folks no that yes it is very scary here, some of the untold stories, though are the heroes, who in this case are just everyday people, but also a lot of the storefront church pastors who, through daily spiritual guidance and physical help, have been amazing in all the worst scenarios.

As well, I am feeling the vibe of people like my PNN editors who are worried that this is just the next Bush/Cheny plan for massive poor people displacement, i.e., they are not letting people stay in New Orleans and they are not promising us any time sooon that we will be able to come back, Bourban Street- ala Disney Corporation.

The other untold story which is a heads-up to Leroy and all the folks working on race and disability issues is the way that all disabled people, white and Black, were treated in all this. Unless you had family caring about you - and you were disabled in the floods, you might as well have given up. Several poor ladies in wheel chairs in the Dome were just stashed in dark corners, left to die. I tried to help as many of them as I could, but there was no help, no respect, no sanity, no nothing.

Send us your love and prayers, I am still searching for my grammama, but so far no luck.

Peace and blessings, Clive Whistle/PNN

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Micheal Manning- The Final Chapter

09/24/2021 - 11:01 by Anonymous (not verified)
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Book Two- Lyfe Begins

by Diane Manning & Leroy F. Moore Jr.

Diane Manning, mother of Michael Manning, wrote in her August 16, 2005 email to friends and allies "The Final Chapter has been written!" She is talking about the seven year battle for justice on behalf of her disabled son in which Poor Magazine, San Francisco Bay View Newspaper and I stood beside the Manning family in the early beginnings to uncover and bring to the media the injustice that was handed down from the justice system to this family who at that time had very little media attention. Thank God for the San Francisco Bay View Newspaper, the only Black Newspaper who has consistently gave room to the voice of African Americans with disabilities in our society facing blunt discrimination in every arena i.e. the justice system. Diane Manning constantly acknowledge that Poor Magazine and the San Francisco Bay View Newspaper were the only ones that exposed this story to the world and played a big part of Michael’s freedom today. For background on the case of Michael Manning check out Illin-N-Chillin at www.poormagazine.org. Michael Manning's mother wrote,

“On June 22, 2004, Michael had a Hearing in front of
Judge O'Brien. At that time Judge O'Brien released
Michael with time served. This decision was not to
the Probation Board's liking. They had 10 days to
appeal the decision, but failed to do so. They
decided to appeal the 2004 decision this year. A
Hearing was held in June of this year because the P.B.
felt that Michael should be reincarcerated & finish
his sentence. The judge heard the appeal and handed
his decision down 30 days later. The judge once again
denied the appeal. The PB then filed an appeal with
Supreme Court. We were informed today (8\23\05) that
the Supreme Court denied the appeal. PRAISE THE LORD,
it's finally over!!!! Recently, our lawyer told me
that if the PB insisted upon appealing the decision
they would be the losers & that's exactly what
happened.”

So after being attack by two young men one with a baseball bat and another with a knife at a gasoline station in the village of Scotrun, PA., on June 16th 1997 then being accused of murder by a disabled white judge who come to find out used racist comments in cases involving other African Americans and DA, Mark Pazuhanich, who didn't believe Michael had a disability and actually said that "Michael was lazy and not contributing to society;" Michael ended up serving almost four years on what comes down to self-defense and faced a justice system filled with racism and disablism pouring from the Judge and the D.A., Mark Pazuhanich,

In September of 2002 I traveled to Pa, to visit Michael in prison and by the Summer of 2004 Michael and family sat in a Philadelphia's bookstore watching Molotov Mouth Outspoken Word Troup perform (which I'm a member of). After being released in December of 2003, DA, Mark Pazuhanich, was still trying to convince the courts and public that Michael should be back in jail even though he himself, the D.A. was in hot water involving inappropriate behavior with his daughter and other unlawful activities.

What is important now is that the Manning family is back to "normal" and today Michael has continued with his career in the music industry. Diane Manning, the catalyst of Michael's campaign for justice has been the author of her son's life. Michael has picked up this pen from his mother's palm to continue to write his future as a devoted son, boyfriend, advocate and member of a hip-hop\gospel group, TANAJ, who has a full length CD out entitled CALLING. Michael and his gospel group will be in the Bay Area for Harambee's Disability Awareness Weekend at Downs Memorial United Methodist Church in Oakland, CA on October 15 &16 with other local disabled visual artists, poets and special guest, Pastor S'Wayne, from Buffalo, NY who is the first disabled hip-hop artist that is a Pastor etc. As we closed this chapter of Michael’s life, I hope other African American newspapers, progressive organizations and disability organization learn from the dedication of the Manning’s’ family, Poor Magazine, The San Francisco Bay View Newspaper and the now dissolved Disability Advocates of Minorities Organization, DAMO

For more information about Harambee\Downs Memorial Untied Methodist Church Disability Awareness Weekend contact Sonia Jackson at
(510) 547-7322..

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Bling

09/24/2021 - 11:01 by Anonymous (not verified)
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by Charles Houston

The black rappers rants of "bling"

Clueless of words they sing

For diamonds and gold /

If the be told

Are Africa's resourses plundered

Then sold

The land of their seed

Feeds the greed

There, in the soil, blood and toil

In a mine you can find /

Generations left behind

Bloated bellies, skin on bone

The haunting looks of those yet grown

No amelioration, not one nation

Mental-knuckle dragging

Britches sagging

Adding cadence, this near do well

For the black continents march to hell

The black rappers chants of bling

Damn the bling!

"Of the I sing"

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SFPD guns down another young brother

09/24/2021 - 11:01 by Anonymous (not verified)
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by JusticeFor Tyrell

On Friday morning, Sept.9 2005, the San Francisco Police Department brutally terrorized and gunned down 18-year-old Tyrell Taylor. They never once said freeze or stop, stated Ebony, a neighbor and Hunters Point native, who watched from the top floor of her apartment on Northridge Road as the police shot at Tyrell numerous times as he ran for safety, his shirt and jeans dripping with his own blood, into the house of Lata Price, another neighbor and close family friend.

"Amerikkka has been at war with the African American community since the beginning of slavery. Today, instead of slave masters terrorizing them, it's the terrorist police. Instead of calling it slavery, it's jail and prison. Instead of using whips and chains, their weapons of choice are bully clubs, guns, pepper spray and tasers.

We can't allow the police to terrorize our communities and treat us like dogs. It's time for us to stand up and fight for our lives and the lives of our children. You may not have known Tyrell, but what happens when the police attacks one of your children or someone close to you?

We've swept enough brutality under the door, but it's time for us to take out the trash. This isn't the first time they've done it and it won't be the last if we don't get it together as a community and do something about the way police terrorize our community and the places we call home". (Quote from Apollonia Jordan, reporter for the SF Bayview National Black Newspaper)

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Justice4Tyrell/

Please join and post a message of Love and Support to 18yr. Tyrelle Taylor and his courageous family ! Please forward to your contacts !

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These are the people that the government abandoned...

09/24/2021 - 11:01 by Anonymous (not verified)
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Powerful Words of survival, struggle and spirituality of Hurricane Katrina Survivors filled the First Congregational Church in Oakland

by tiny/PNN

“He was our Moses”, they stood together, bodies swaying slowly back and forth as if to carry their weary bodies through and out of the tragedies they had seen– eyes staring straight ahead – skin the color of the earth –holding hands that had held struggle, had brought forth life and had carried humanity to safety. “…

“..and had it not been for him barbequing on the roof the helicopters would not have seen us – and that’s how we got saved” The soft voice of Amika Wilson, Hurricane Katrina survivor and lifelong resident of New Orleans, was referring to her fellow Katrina survivor and husband Benjamin Lorenzo Wilson. The couple took turns relating their experiences of barely making it out alive of the tragedy that was Hurricane Katrina.

The couple were one of several New Orleans families that spoke to a crowd of artists and activists gathered in rapt attention at the First Congregational Church in Oakland last Saturday at an event entitled HONORING GULF COAST FAMILIES:Mourning Lives Lost and Celebrating the Spirit of Resilience

“I am pleased to be here today, I thank god to have another chance to see life – I want to try to explain to you all what happened today,” Benjamin continued their story, “the day when the storm was broadcasted – we couldn’t get no gas – every one was trying to leave at one time – they (gas stations) started to raise the prices of gas – from 2.50 a gallon to over 3.00 and a lot of people tried to leave, but couldn’t get beyond a few miles out of town, cause they ran out of gas or they got stuck on the road. We only had a few minutes to leave and we could hardly take anything but we took a butane tank and our bbq grill.

“We went to a church school – and when we got there – we moved up to the second level by the first night of the storm- we didn’t have any water- people were trying to come in and they were floating by – we had no rope so we had to throw people an extension chord – some houses all you could see was the pitch roof of a house- at night it was pitch black – you could hear babies crying –people screaming -and we had no food – there was no plumbing” Mr. Wilson sometimes spoke so softly that you could barely hear him, almost as though he was in the midst of tears.

Amika took over the microphone, “No-one expected to see mothers throwing babies into our school building so they could be saved. The first night you could see rooftops coming off of buildings, we had a great aunt who was 400 pounds and we had to take her to the second floor, so my husband and our nephews had to lift her to the next level as the water rose. By the third day we had no food, hardly any water and we had people coming into the space who were hungry , cold, despondent and the hostility was very high”

“Everyone was out for themselves- we had some young folks who tried to take what little we did have but my husband wasn’t letting that happen.”

“By the third day, I asked the Priest to let us cook what little we did have on the roof’s barbeque, but he said no, and in my mind I wanted to say, ‘Pharaoh you gonna let our people go’ but then the next morning he came to us and said who has the Barbeque, cause the wind is not blowing, so you can cook, and so we went on the roof – we fed 200 people – there was no ice- there was no fresh water –and we had to ration what we did have, and I really don’t know where the food came from. And because of that barbeque the helicopters saw us and picked us up and took us to the Dome

Amika continued on with her story, her eyes focusing off into a place far above our heads, to somewhere in the middle of a racist and classist government sponsored death and destruction, a place that even she had trouble believing she lived through, somewhere that no human being should have to go, a place where poor folks are forced to go everyday all over the world, “When we landed they put us under the bridge, her eyes glazed over as she continued, “there were no restrooms, the reek of human waste was so bad we could hardly breathe, with babies screaming and people crying for food and water and it was so hot.”

“They (officials) did not treat us with respect; they would pitch water at us – warm water at that, cursing at us the whole time, calling us names”.
“So After 10 hours of standing there under the bridge waiting for the “bus”, my husband said, ‘we are gonna walk’ so we gathered up our family, all of us stayed clumped together, like the children of Israel, until we got way out on the causeway, where we laid down our all of our belongings on the road and went to sleep. And I actually had reservations about leaving where we were because I thought well we are at least in the line, but my husband was right cause when we we woke up at 5:00 am we were at the head of the line and one of the first families onto the bus.”

The crowd clapped and we felt a moment of collective relief before Amika went on, “So we left one pit and went to another pit, (Houston) but it was a little bit better cause there was water and it was a little bit cooler, but there was horrible stuff going on – including the rape of 6 year old girl – some gang activity, and a lot of other horrible things, but we stayed together, no-one separated.”

Amika concluded by telling us that they escaped because their brother-in law who resides in Richmond rented a van and managed to find them in Houston, she added, “ There were so many wrong things that happened, including the fact that law enforcement did not do there jobs – people were just trying to get food – and they were being shot at - we were one of the chosen people and I am still praying for my brothers and sisters who are still there and desperately trying to get a way out”

After the Wilson’s’ tragic story I stepped outside to finish crying a gush of tears that have not stopped since the corporate and non-corporate media coverage began of this tragedy.

In the lobby of the Church I spoke to another survivor, life long resident of New Orleans, school administrator and principal of one of New Orleans largest high schools, John F. Kennedy,James Gorey, “We lost everything, we lost our homes, we lost two vehicles, we had to make some decisions , my wife and I have three beautiful children, and so we made a decision for them and for our future to relocate to the Bay Area”

“My brother in law is a dean at Cal State Hayward, so I have that option , I have choices that a lot of folks don’t have.” To this last assertion, I, always searching for the position of people who have a voice versus those who don’t, had to ask Mr. Gorey how he would consider himself in terms of economic stability, “I would consider myself middle or upper middle class, and that’s why we had those choices, but there is a large percentage of folks there( New Orleans) who had lost hope, economically, systematically, and that’s why we were doing stuff with the school system to give back hope to the young folks who had lost hope.”

I also asked Mr. Gorey about another sector of folks who are not even being mentioned in this tragedy, which isn’t unusual – cause they are rarely thought of without a tragedy- i.e., about the homeless folks in New Orleans, “There is a significant number of homeless people in New Orleans – and the reason people could survive homeless in New Orleans – is because people in New Orleans are caring people- and there were a lot of children in schools who were homeless = and we were working on programs to make permanent housing available for homeless people, but it hadn’t happened, and of course these folks had no options”

I asked Mr. Gorey what his opinion of the way that the whole thing went down, I blame our state, local and federal officials. Period. New Orleans has always been under-resourced and now it’s coming to light.”

After talking to Mr. Gorey, I went back into the auditorium and had the privilege of hearing from elder survivors, like George Sr, 80, who along with his family had walked through chin-high water for miles just to reach safety, which in his case meant project housing, where they could only stay a little while until they were taken to the Astrodome, and locals like Pastor Carl from Richmond who gave respect to his mother , father, sisters and brothers and knew that even though he was in the middle of his life in Richmond and one day away from having to pay the rent on his church had to rent a van and drive to New Orleans to find his family and bring them home to safety, family who were living in motels and about to be put out on the street because they didn’t have any more money left.

Pastor Carl concluded, “And we got there right on time, because God is always on time, amen.”

As I left the powerful event which was sponsored by the First Congregational Church and Ella Baker Center for Human Rights, and included scholarship from activists Van Jones, and Poet Laureate Devorah Major, I remembered one of Van’s comments following the families stories’; “These are the people that the government abandoned,”

And then as if in answer to those words I remembered the final comment of educator/survivor, James Gorey, “ the only reason people survived at all is because of all the beautiful people in California and Texas who have helped us all.”

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Help us...! One Man Down

09/24/2021 - 11:01 by Anonymous (not verified)
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New Orleans: Prisoners Abandoned to Floodwaters

by Human Rights Watch/courtesy of Corey Weinstein, of California Prison Focus

As Hurricane Katrina began pounding New Orleans, the sheriff's department abandoned hundreds of inmates imprisoned in the city’s jail, Human Rights Watch said today.

Inmates in Templeman III, one of several buildings in the Orleans Parish Prison compound, reported that as of Monday, August 29, there were no correctional officers in the building, which held more than 600 inmates. These inmates, including some who were locked in ground-floor cells, were not evacuated until Thursday, September 1, four days after flood waters in the jail had reached chest-level.

Of all the nightmares during Hurricane Katrina, this must be one of the worst,” said Corinne Carey, researcher from Human Rights Watch. “Prisoners were abandoned in their cells without food or water for days as floodwaters rose toward the ceiling.”

Human Rights Watch called on the U.S. Department of Justice to conduct an investigation into the conduct of the Orleans Sheriff's Department, which runs the jail, and to establish the fate of the prisoners who had been locked in the jail. The Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections, which oversaw the evacuation, and the Orleans Sheriff’s Department should account for the 517 inmates who are missing from list of people evacuated from the jail.

Carey spent five days in Louisiana, conducting dozens of interviews with inmates evacuated from Orleans Parish Prison, correctional officers, state officials, lawyers and their investigators who had interviewed more than 1,000 inmates evacuated from the prison.

The sheriff of Orleans Parish, Marlin N. Gusman, did not call for help in evacuating the prison until midnight on Monday, August 29, a state Department of Corrections and Public Safety spokeswoman told Human Rights Watch. Other parish prisons, she said, had called for help on the previous Saturday and Sunday. The evacuation of Orleans Parish Prison was not completed until Friday, September 2.

According to officers who worked at two of the jail buildings, Templeman 1 and 2, they began to evacuate prisoners from those buildings on Tuesday, August 30, when the floodwaters reached chest level inside. These prisoners were taken by boat to the Broad Street overpass bridge, and ultimately transported to correctional facilities outside New Orleans.

But at Templeman III, which housed about 600 inmates, there was no prison staff to help the prisoners. Inmates interviewed by Human Rights Watch varied about when they last remember seeing guards at the facility, but they all insisted that there were no correctional officers in the facility on Monday, August 29. A spokeswoman for the Orleans parish sheriff’s department told Human Rights Watch she did not know whether the officers at Templeman III had left the building before the evacuation.

According to inmates interviewed by Human Rights Watch, they had no food or water from the inmate’s last meal over the weekend of August 27-28 until they were evacuated on Thursday, September 1. By Monday, August 29, the generators had died, leaving them without lights and sealed in without air circulation. The toilets backed up, creating an unbearable stench.

They left us to die there,” Dan Bright, an Orleans Parish Prison inmate told Human Rights Watch at Rapides Parish Prison, where he was sent after the evacuation.

As the water began rising on the first floor, prisoners became anxious and then desperate. Some of the inmates were able to force open their cell doors, helped by inmates held in the common area. All of them, however, remained trapped in the locked facility.

The water started rising, it was getting to here,” said Earrand Kelly, an inmate from Templeman III, as he pointed at his neck. “We was calling down to the guys in the cells under us, talking to them every couple of minutes. They were crying, they were scared. The one that I was cool with, he was saying ‘I'm scared. I feel like I'm about to drown.' He was crying.”

Some inmates from Templeman III have said they saw bodies floating in the floodwaters as they were evacuated from the prison. A number of inmates told Human Rights Watch that they were not able to get everyone out from their cells.

Inmates broke jail windows to let air in. They also set fire to blankets and shirts and hung them out of the windows to let people know they were still in the facility. Apparently at least a dozen inmates jumped out of the windows.

We started to see people in T3 hangin' shirts on fire out the windows,” Brooke Moss, an Orleans Parish Prison officer told Human Rights Watch. “They were wavin' em. Then we saw them jumping out of the windows . . . Later on, we saw a sign, I think somebody wrote `help' on it.”

As of yesterday, signs reading “Help Us,” and “One Man Down,” could still be seen hanging from a window in the third floor of Templeman III.

Several corrections officers told Human Rights Watch there was no evacuation plan for the prison, even though the facility had been evacuated during floods in the 1990s.

“It was complete chaos,” said a corrections officer with more than 30 years of service at Orleans Parish Prison. When asked what he thought happened to the inmates in Templeman III, he shook his head and said: “Ain't no tellin’ what happened to those people.”

“At best, the inmates were left to fend for themselves,” said Carey. “At worst, some may have died.”

Human Rights Watch was not able to speak directly with Orleans Parish Sheriff Marlin N. Gussman or the ranking official in charge of Templeman III. A spokeswoman for the sheriff’s department told Human Rights Watch that search-and-rescue teams had gone to the prison and she insisted that “nobody drowned, nobody was left behind.”

Human Rights Watch compared an official list of all inmates held at Orleans Parish Prison immediately prior to the hurricane with the most recent list of the evacuated inmates compiled by the state Department of Corrections and Public Safety (which was entitled, “All Offenders Evacuated”). However, the list did not include 517 inmates from the jail, including 130 from Templeman III.

Many of the men held at jail had been arrested for offenses like criminal trespass, public drunkenness or disorderly conduct. Many had not even been brought before a judge and charged, much less been convicted.

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In Memorial of Brother Malcolm-

09/24/2021 - 11:01 by Anonymous (not verified)
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A Black Panther Sidewalk Scholar, Teacher and Father

by Leroy Moore/Illin n' Chillin correspondent, Black Disabled Activist\Poet

The Nation of Islam and the Black Panthers took the education to the streets. In July of this year Berkeley and Oakland lost more than a sidewalk scholar, former Black Panther, Union worker, father, people’s activist, poet, tailor, and outspoken speaker. We lost a piece of East Bay foundation and a source of revolutionary education and political truths! On September 25th I found out that Malcolm Samuel, AKA Brother Malcolm, passed away on July 29th 2005 from complications of diabetes but these complications came by the hands of police and the non existence medical care in prison and in so called vocational hospital.

During Malcolm’s memorial on September 25, 2005 at the Center for Independent Living, CIL, Berkeley, CA. where he was consider a life long consumer, I learned why I haven’t seen Malcolm at his regular place, outside of Amoeba Records Store on Telegraph Ave. in his wheelchair with his hard hitting spoken word CD speaking Black Panther truth to the youth. You see, his brother, James, and others at the memorial said that Malcolm was caught in a police sweep on Telegraph in April. Many people, friends of Malcolm that are involved with Catholic Workers who delivers meals to the people who were homeless told me that the Berkeley police performs three sweeps a year. They told me the schedule of the sweeps are as follows, one sweep before the school year to present a ‘new cleaner campus for U.C. Berkeley new incoming students; during the holidays for all the business owners on Telegraph so they can make their Christmas money and at the end of the school year for parents picking up their love ones. Malcolm was use to being harassed by Berkeley police.

Malcolm was swept up in April of 2005 and brought to a jail in Vacaville, CA. according to his brother he was then transferred to Duelle Vocational Center and then to Hospital Doctors in Montica, CA where he passed away. All of this time and Malcolm’ brother could not get the correct information of where he was and how his brother was doing. Tears streamed down our checks when Malcolm’s brother told us that his brother was cremated without his say and still today the jail refuse to send Malcolm’s remains to his brother in Berkeley.

The raw but true stories that were told at the memorial hit my ears voiletly. Stories about Malcolm’s run ins with Berkeley finest filled CIL with anger. His brother told us a story how the police thought Malcolm stole a wheelchair from the hospital when he was in for treatment for his dabites. Malcolm’s brother continued the story by telling us that the police actually handcuffed Malcolm in his wheelchair! Malcolm used to tell me in my ear bending over his wheelchair how the police continuously verbally threaten him to stay off Telegraph Ave. His brother told us that Malcolm was swept up by police because he was a Black Panther and his revolutionary sidewalk education he spread on the Avenue no other reason. Because Malcolm was a Black Panther the FBI had a file on him and his brother told us that Malcolm was closely watched after the 911 attacks in New York and in DC. Malcolm told me one day how he escape the draft for the Vietnam War by going to Canada and the time he saw Malcolm X speak.

Malcolm and I met a year ago this was the same time that he was getting services from Center for Independent Living of Berkeley. Mav from CIL told me that they helped Malcolm get temporary housing, disability benefits and the Executive Director and other employees of CIL came out of packets to get him food and clothes. I think because of CIL Malcolm got to know about Pushing Limits radio show on KPFA. He did a show with Kiilu Nyasha talking about his early years in the Black Panther Party and his job as a tailor for the Panther Party during Black History Month 2004. Malcolm lost a leg from diabetes. His brother remembered what he told Malolm after he lost his leg. He told his brother, “Now I’m your legs now!” His brother told us that he was the comedian and Malcolm was the political, grassroots educator/activist. In 2002 Malcolm with local artists like the Coup, his brother and others helped produce and package his CD entitled Brother Malcolm SPEAKS. Before Malcolm died his brother and Malcolm was working on his second CD and a DVD of his 2002 live performance at The Yellow Warehouse in Oakland. This project will be ready sometime this Winter or early 2006.

Malcolm’s poetry tells a story of unity, strength, the beauty of humanity and the need of self-determination without the two political party system. During the memorial, Siraj, a local poet and one of many Malcolm’s adopted young solider, spoke about his connection with Malcolm. Siraj in 2004 was hosting the open mic event at Blake’s on Telegraph and was trying to get Malcolm to come and be a feature. Finally Malcolm agreed and tore up the place with his poem “Rainbows” according to Siraj. At the memorial Siraj shared a poem he wrote to remember Malcolm. Siraj told us Malcolm was like his grandfather. He used to push Malcolm places when his electric wheelchair broke down and used to help him charge it in stores on the avenue. Siraj also shared with us that Malcolm was ready to take on anything from opening a recording business to performing by saying, “we should start this or that!” He used to tell all the youngsters the history of Berkeley and Oakland and the city’s ties to people’s power.

Malcolm was featured in the article in Street Spirit and in the East Bay Express of April 2003. A lady at the memorial gave us insights of the unselfishness of Malcolm when he offered his Chinese Cookies and other food to her and the rest of his friends on the Avenue. Although Malcolm was a revolutionary, poet, father and friend to many, he had strange craving for food. Another of Malcolm’s friends at the memorial said that his favorite meal was a mayonnaise & tomato sandwich. Yesterday I found myself outside of Amobia Records on Telegraph Avenue eating a mayonnaise & tomato sandwich with my portable CD player blasting Malcolm’s CD while looking up in the foggy sky waving hi to my disabled revolutionary Brother, Brother Malcolm. You’ll be missed!

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A State Mandated Underclass

09/24/2021 - 11:01 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body

Bay Area high school students, parents and advocates rally in support of alternative bills to the High School Exit Exam but the Govenator vetoes them anyway

by Tiny/PNN

"Arnold has thrown down with all the other haters," POOR Magazine Youth in Media intern, William W, 17, flipped his thin chocolate brown hand in the air toward a place where "Arnold" (Schwarzenegger) might be.

William, a very low-income, formerly houseless, African Descendent student at Oakland Technical High School and intern with POOR's Youth in Media program, was referring to Arnold's recent veto of AB1531 which would have allowed school districts to develop alternatives to the mandatory high school exit exam that California students have to pass before they graduate and receive their diploma. AB1531, along with SB385, which focuses on allowing English learner students to take the high school exit exam in the student's first language, were vetoed by the increasingly right wing leaning Govenator on Friday Oct 7th.

"Arnold, what if when you came to the United States someone told you that you had to take a test just to receive your high school diploma even though you only spoke German," asked Eduardo Ayala. Ayala, was one of several youth from Richmond High School who spoke at an emergency press conference sponsored by Fuerza Unida and Youth Together held on Thursday. They were requesting support from the community for these two bills, which were the last chance to save low-income students, immigrant students and students of color in California schools from the racist, classist exit exam which comes with the penalty of not passing high school and receiving your diploma.

As Eduardo spoke to the crowd of powerful youth, teachers, politicians and advocates gathered together to promote these bills in a last ditch attempt to save California's youth, I was struck by the irony of his heartfelt question to Arnold. In fact, as I did some research for this story I found that notwithstanding Arnold's anti-youth, anti-immigrant, jingoist stance, the Austrian school system which Arnold is a product of, teaches its children to master three languages. When confronted with an increasing mono-lingual Slovenian population in one of its districts, the schools began, without protest or fascist policy interlopers to incorporate the Slovenian language into their core curriculum. Not to mention the fact that Austria, like most of Western Europe, is a welfare state that supports its population with low and/or no cost healthcare, child care and housing, cradle to grave. Perhaps, as he states in his message about his veto of 385; As an immigrant whose second language is English, I know the importance of mastering English as quickly and as comprehensively as possible, in order to be successful in the United States, he should have added that he already knew English when he arrived in the US, because he had the privilege of an elementary and secondary education that included a tri-language curriculum, something all California would benefit from.

"This test discriminates against not just Latino students but all immigrants and students of color," Eduardo added

"We are representing all English learner students in California, that's over 1. 5 million students in public schools, that's one out of every four Californian students' speak a language that is other than English," Raul Alcarez, organizer with Youth Together who co-emceed the bi-lingual press conference with a young Raza student, Maria Celebon, addressed the crowd.

Raul and Maria continued in tandem, "If these bills are not signed many high school students and students of color will not be receiving their diploma - we are hard-working students - we are simply asking that this test be more fair, that there be alternatives to the exit exam or that it be given in the students' first language "cause one size doesn't fit all." Following Raul and Maria's introduction several mono-lingual and English learner students declared their extremely logical and well-reasoned requests to the Govenator to pass these bills. One of them was Elise Padilla, a direct, no-nonsense, Raza female who addressed the crowd in Spanish.

"Soy estudiante de Richmond High. Estoy en el duodicimo grado. El Gobernador fue elegido como representante de California, y ahora es el momento que de verdad nos demuestra que representa los intereses de nosotros estudiantes" (I am a student in Richmond High. I am in the 12th grade. The Governor was elected as a representative of California, and now is the time that he truly demonstrate to us that he represents the interests of us, the students.]

As well as students, teachers and counselors from Richmond High and Met-West High in Oakland and organizers from Californians For Justice, the press conference included the supportive voices of Richmond City Council members Gayle Mcloughlan and John Marquez as well as a representative from Representative George Miller's office, who stated that he, "hadn't weighed in yet on the state-based propositions." This was interesting, as Miller is one of the lead proponents of the highly problematic, full of lies and mythologies, No Child Left Behind Act( NCLB). NCLB is the frame in which the exit exam lives, and in and of itself is fraught with several punitive, anti-child, anti-learning policies, policies that have a dire impact on low-income schools like Richmond High and many others in West Contra Costa County. An act that I have re-named No Child Left Alive.

"The High School exit exam is a racist policy aimed at disenfranchising low-income students of color and making their communities more susceptible to poverty and its related ills," Olivia Araiza, Program Director with Justice Matters Institute, said. Justice Matters works on racial justice policy in education, specifically, changing harmful policies that impact low-income youth of color and immigrant youth across California and re-defining what schools for low-income children, children of color and immigrant children look like and act like.

"The high school exit exam is a state policy and it is used to satisfy one of the requirements of the federal NCLB act, but NCLB doesn't mandate a penalty on the exam. California added the penalty of not getting a diploma, which results in keeping our communities at the bottom, so creating a permanent underclass is now mandated by the state," Olivia concluded.

In addition to a huge outcry from educators, advocates and thousands of youth across the state, the state's own sanctioned research team, Human Resources Research Organization (HUMRRO) acknowledged in their just released study that due to the impact of the exit exams, over 100,000 students will be denied diplomas in 2006 and recommended implementing multiple methods of assessing English and Math skills to determine a students' real life academic ability.

In response to the veto, Assembly Member Karen Bass, (D. Los Angeles) who authored 1531 said, "I am disappointed that the Governor can't see the residual effect of mass failure of students whose schools do not have adequate resources."

Or as Liz Guillen, Director of Legislative & Community Affairs with Public Advocates Inc, stated, " The Governor believes that alternative assessments would lower California's standards, which is counter to the findings of the states own evaluator (HUMMRO) as well as a similar study conducted by Stanford (University) on the need for multiple assessment."

Because of these and other similar findings, North Carolina and Florida recently passed laws requiring non-test alternatives. New York's state senate passed a bill authorizing the use of portfolios and performance assessments as alternatives to the state tests. As well, Wisconsin repealed its exit exam after creating local performance assessments and Indiana developed an alternative based on students passing core courses linked to state standards. In addition, so-called "higher achieving" states like Oregon, Washington, Pennsylvania, Maine and Rhode Island all require performance assessments as part of their graduation decisions.

"These exams will have an immediate impact on Black, Brown and poor students in California," said Kim Shree-Mofas, parent and tireless advocate for San Francisco's student body. She continued, "Low-income students of color are not benefiting from this kind of testing at all."

From POOR's perspective Kim is more qualified than Arnold to judge what is good for California's student body considering she has an African Descendent 18 year old daughter who is still having trouble with California's already under-funded, under-resourced school system

"I don't see the point of high school for four years," Kristi Dyes, recent San Francisco high school graduate and now college journalism major said. In my discussions with youth of color scholars on this issue I spoke with Kristi. “ That means that high school would be spent preparing you for taking a test because if you failed the test that could prevent you from getting your diploma." Kristi concluded.

As Kristi spoke, I was reminded of my own experience as a very low-income child who was homeless for much of my elementary school years and eventually had to drop out of school in the sixth grade to care for my family, only to find out as an adult without a high school diploma that I was unable to qualify for financial aid in the state of California, making my struggle to come up and out of poverty as a low-income single parent, even more unattainable.

"The Governor's veto sends a message to students of color, disabled students and immigrant students that they don't deserve a diploma," declared Raquel Jimenez, one of the lead organizers from Youth Together. After the veto came down I spoke with Raquel who worked with Youth Together and Fuerza Unida to sponsor Thursday's press conference. "Therefore California is not willing to provide equal opportunities to all students," Raquel added.

When I asked Raquel what Youth Togethers' next steps would be, she added, "We need to step up our organizing and go the legal route."

"I am already having a hard time with school, but I have stuck with it….Now I feel like what's the point," William concluded. As I listened to William speak, his face filled with dread at the possibility that he would have to take the exit exam even though he has serious learning disabilities, I hoped Raquel was right.

Thanks to William Romero and Valentina Velez-Rocha from Justice Matters for research assistance

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10 Days in Louisiana

09/24/2021 - 11:01 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body

Corporate Sludge Motivates SF Activist to Action

by James Chionsini/STREET SHEET

As I watched people dying on national television in the days following the Hurricane Katrina and the subsequent levee breakage, I realized that the problems were far larger than the storm itself or the government’s absolute failure to respond effectively. The people left behind were living in abject financial poverty, too poor to get out of town, too poor to warrant proper upkeep of the levees that protected them, too poor to be worthy of rescue by a system that had built its wealth on their backs. With the military busy making the world safe for oil companies by killing poor people overseas, there weren’t even enough troops left at home to save seniors from rooftops.

I chose to volunteer with the Red Cross (not the band), because they paid for airfare, lodging and expenses. I signed up, took a one-day training and found out I could be called at any time in the next few weeks to be deployed within 48 hours. One month later, my cell phone rang. I kissed my pregnant wife, Sarah Beth, and our 4 year old son, Day, goodbye and on Thursday October 6 left for Baton Rouge.

I am fortunate to have a job at the Coalition on Homelessness that allowed me to go to Louisiana for ten days and still pay me for those days. I took a bundle of the October Streetsheet and promised to engage in outreach and report back. This job kicks ass sometimes.

Flying American Airlines seated in the first class cabin, I struck up a conversation with my neighbor, a fertility doctor from Dallas. He told me about a wealthy White patient of his from New Orleans who escaped the city with her family in their fleet of Mercedes prior to Katrina”s landfall. She was staying in luxury hotels, waiting to return. He reported that she commented on the people trapped in the Superdome, “They ought to just drop a bomb on the place, that would save a lot of money and trouble.” We agreed that racism was doubtlessly at the core of her sentiments and that her cruel words reflect attitudes held by many in this country. I felt nauseated as the flight bounced through the dense, white Texas cumulus clouds. This is what we are up against.

At the Baton Rouge airport I found the Red Cross representatives; a friendly but weary group of seniors wearing Red Cross vests and plastic photo nametags. An older African-American man who had lost his New Orleans home to the rising waters from the breach of the 17th street levee drove 10 of us to the “staff shelter.” He was surprisingly upbeat and talkative considering his circumstances, saying, “Me and my wife survived. We lost everything but ourselves. I consider myself lucky so that”s why I joined up to volunteer with this outfit.”

One of Many Shelters

The shelter was in a recreation center office next to the public swimming pool. I claimed a cot and proceeded to get to know my neighbors. The one sporting an American flag hat was a retired parole officer from rural Montana with a son in Iraq. Then there was the bearish Gay Black Anarchist from Baltimore, who as it turned out had always wanted to live in San Francisco. Yet another was a Methodist minister from Cleveland who boasted about the type of cocktails he enjoyed and the size of his former congregation. I stayed up late in the night eating Pop Tarts, smoking menthols and chatting with the local security guards, one of whom used to play in the rec. center playground as a child. The population of Baton Rouge has doubled since the storm and the influx of evacuees. “Y”all watch out for snakes out there in that field.” she warned me. “What about alligators?” “Not here in town.”

Early the next morning a Swamp/Plantation tour bus with a lime-green alligator painted on the side transported us to a vacant Wal-Mart that had been pressed into service as the Red Cross headquarters in Baton Rouge.

Smokers lounged behind the fenced-in former Lawn and Garden Center, languidly watching the new volunteers arrive. Some there were waiting to be deployed (some reported waiting two or more days), others were awaiting redeployment or on their way home. I was issued a photo name card and assigned to “feeding and shelter” but no one had any idea where I would be sent. I activated my credit card, ate several free “Honey Buns” and other tasty junk food items, and waited to be told where I would go.

They were from all parts of the country and from a pleasant and remarkably harmonious diversity of political persuasions. All of the volunteers I met seemed like really kind spirits. Lots of chatting. Hella church people. Nine hours later five others and I were transported to Covington, Louisiana, site of another Red Cross “headquarters.”

Outside the Covington office I noticed a man wearing the stereotypical black-and-white striped prisoner uniform. He was a county jail trustee assigned to maintenance of the building. “I been in six months, rode the storm out here in jail, getting out soon, I”m from New Orleans but my house is gone. Took in about 8 feet of water. They let me go see it with my brother-in-law. The house is ruined, covered with mud, it”s all ruined.” He told me about some people in New Orleans jails who were not evacuated and drowned in their cells. “I guess I”m lucky compared to them.”

Destination: Hammond

Our party was ultimately sent to Hammond Louisiana, a small college town 45 miles east of Baton Rouge. We were housed in a Presbyterian church that had been designated as “staff shelter” and informed of our responsibilities: working with the evacuees housed in two nearby “client shelters,” both in Baptist Churches: Mount Vernon and Emanuel. We visited Mount Vernon and talked with the “shelter manager.” He was a former Coast Guard member from Detroit who claimed to have experience with “law enforcement.” FEMA was bringing in trailer to accommodate the evacuees. There was a lot of miscommunication and confusion about when and where people would be sent. “Things change daily, and there are problems with these people here, they don”t want to leave,” he said. There were seven National Guard troops with M-16 rifles sitting around looking very bored. They had been called in to replace the Louisiana police that were “protecting” the evacuees.

Immanuel Baptist Church in Hammond housed about 150 evacuees from rural Plaquemines (plaque-mans) Parish (counties are called parishes in Louisiana). Plaquemines is the southernmost parish in the state, a slender peninsula that extends like a long toe from the end of the Louisiana boot. It is where the Mississippi River meets the Gulf. It is the beginning and end of the line. Katrina has changed the shape of the marshy shoreline there. Many towns are completely gone; reclaimed by the sea. Of those that survived the houses are nothing but piles of wood and mangled metal. The strange fruit in the trees these days consists of boats. The people of Immanuel shelter had literally lost everything and had nowhere to go. Apparently FEMA was going to provide trailers, but no one, not the people themselves nor the Red Cross knew or would say anything.

The temporary shelter was set up in a large gymnasium. Everyone had cots or mattresses, along with all their personal possessions in areas arranged like a series of small living rooms, without walls. Some folks had couches, televisions and radios and there was a lot of noise and activity as the kids played in the areas of the gym that were clear.

My job was working in the kitchen and helping around the shelter. That consisted of smoking with the people outside, trying to make people laugh, holding babies, crisis intervention, playing with the kids and serving food cafeteria style. I had a lot of time to hang out and talk with people. They were a tight knit community, having virtually all grown up together in Plaquemines. Many people never previously ventured outside the parish. Most of the people did not like the city and only went to New Orleans when it was absolutely necessary for doctor”s appointments or business. They were Deep South rural country folks who had grown up in moderate to extreme poverty. Out of 150, all were African-American except for two older White men, one of whom was Deaf.

What struck me was the remarkable stability and mental health of the people. There was a definite depressed mood, but most people seemed to be in relatively good spirits, even the kids. There was one 10 year old out of the 40 some odd kids who showed visible signs of distress. In the middle of a kickball game he ran to me crying, hugged me around the chest and pointed at a snarky teenager near third base, “He told me to run home, and I got out. He told me to run home. I want to go home, where is my home?” The others seemed to understand, got real sad and we all took a break. They consoled their friend with playful jabs. The game quickly diverted to playful child energy chaos. A huge dumpster nearby overflowed with abandoned and broken furniture.

The six National Guard troops who were stationed at the far edge of the church parking lot were in their early 20”s had just returned from a year in Iraq and were really disgusted. The sergeant told me, “We are engineers. We drive bulldozers and can tear down and build shit. Why the fuck are we sitting around here when we could be helping clean up the god damn mess all over this state? There are some serious problems going on around here. I don”t know why they have us guarding this place. FEMA is fucked up!” The soldiers were actually really cool people. Total working class dogs from Maine.

“Are you all going to get sent back to Iraq?” I asked them.

“Don’t know, but I hope not,” was the general consensus.

“I wanna go back. I”ve already put in my request,” said a visibly anxious young soldier with Elvis sunglasses.

“Be careful over there cousin,” I told him and held up my hand high-five style to shake his. He flinched and spilled hot coffee all over his arm.

“Yeah yeah. I will I will. Thanks man,” he stammered.

Two days later at around 4 pm one of the soldiers accidentally discharged his M-16 in the parking lot. The bullet ricocheted off the ground and knocked out a car window three blocks away. That entire crew was replaced the next day by two local women with the Louisiana National Guard. We all got a big kick out of laughing at the lemon-size crater in the asphalt.

“Those guys will be cleaning toilets for 3 months,” one of the soldiers told me.

They shared the same sentiments as the previous soldiers. “We have all this equipment just sitting there not being used. Why? It’s a damn shame.”

I talked at length with one man from who had worked for 20 years as a “sucker” on a fishing boat. He would go into the hull and suck the fish from the nets out with a big hose The fishing industry in Plaquemines is almost totally wiped out since Katrina and Rita.

He talked somberly about his experiences. “Cars like those over there just sliding sideways across the road. Whole trees ripped right out of cement and thrown through the air. Houses had their roofs blown off. Water coming in everywhere.” He and some family members had evacuated to New Orleans before the storm and had gotten trapped there when the levees broke. “We walked five blocks in waist deep water only to get somewhere to be told there wasn’t any busses and were sent off three blocks away in chest deep water. We were sitting on top of cars and anything we could find. It was horrible and I was scared. I’m still scared man, I don’t know what the hell is going to happen to me. It’s all gone.”

He said FEMA hadn’t done anything for anyone at the shelter, “They showed up once, took some names then never came back again.”

Everyone had stories like this. It was difficult opening that can of worms. People don’t want to be reminded of horrific situations so soon after they happened. People were really willing to talk though. I explored the topic of life before the storm. People cheered up. There were people from small towns named Point-a-LaHache (poine la hash) , Belle Chasse (bell shays), Port Sulfur (poat sailfur), Buras, Bohemia, Dalcour (dakur) and Naomi. The population of the entire county was only 26,000. The industry was primarily fishing, chemical plants and shipping electric coal that came down the Mississippi headed for Florida. People took seasonal jobs that varied throughout the year. They said there was very little crime, doors were left open. “If anyone was to ever steal anything from you, you would know who it is or someone would tell you. Kids ran around without shoes, we was one big family. We were poor but we had each other, still do,” one man told me. “You could always get oysters, shrimp and fish. And it was always cheap. Friends would just bring you a sack or two and you didn”t even have to ask. Now my mobile home is totally gone and my boat is 20 feet up in the air in a tree!” He and everyone I spoke with planned to return and rebuild. “Home is Home” they all agreed.

I gave out copies of October Streetsheet and this helped me gain the confidence of the people there. They liked the story, “The Drowning of New Orleans,” and figured I must be ok if I am handing out material such as this. People were interested and supportive of the Coalition on Homelessness.

When asked if anyone in their group had lost their mind people laughed, “There has been a whole lot of crying, but we are all together and even though we are staying in a gym, you always got a shoulder to lean on,” a 68 year old man from Point-a-LaHache told me. There was enough mutual support to go around.

Poverty: the Real Disaster

Before Katrina (and Rita), Louisiana had by far the highest unemployment rate of any state (11.5%), and in some areas, as high as 25%. It has adult illiteracy rates of 28% (second only to Mississippi with 30%). Racism and exploitation are also alive and well in the South. Over 13% of children in Louisiana live in extreme poverty that is, in families with an income less than half of the federal poverty level, or $9,675 for a family of four compared to a national average of 7%. These children are disproportionately African American. In Louisiana, 44% of black children live in poor families, while 9% of white children live in poor families. (Source: National Center for Children in Poverty. http://www.nccp.org/pub_cpt05a.html)

The Red Cross is designed to provide temporary, emergency food and shelter for a few days at the longest. It is a very different matter to provide emergency services to people whose homes in Walnut Creek have burned down than to try to help those in the Deep South who can not read and have never traveled more than 100 miles from their homes. The magnitude of destruction caused by Katrina and the 20 something percent % of people living in poverty with few options has presented problems that the Red Cross is simply not equipped to deal with. The Red Cross mantra is provision of “temporary shelter and housing” and it is not equipped to address historic patterns of structural poverty. In Louisiana and Mississippi at this time are thousands of extremely poor people who have suddenly become homeless.

All over the South, people are being warehoused in hotels, stadiums and auditoriums because there are no places for them to live. The Red Cross is attempting to discharge people, often with very little follow up or consideration of special needs. Evacuees are being shipped out of state with 30 day hotel vouchers, but when that money is gone, they are on their own. The maximum amount someone with a family of five can receive from the Red Cross is $1565. That doesn’t last very long and unless they are fortunate enough to get a trailer, they are out of luck.

Civil Disobedience Against FEMA (Failure to Evaluate Meaningful Alternatives)

FEMA employees arrived at the Emanuel shelter, claiming they were providing trailers that people could move into. At the request of the residents I asked the FEMA representatives about the location, and they informed me there was a school and a store nearby and the place was really hospitable. Most of the residents were dubious, but a few families took up the offer and were transported to “Mount Herman.” We received a frantic phone call a few hours later from those who had left: The place was horrible and the evacuees were refusing to stay there. The Red Cross directed us not to readmit these three families to the shelter and to have the National Guard troops prevent the families from entering if they tried to return.

Our volunteer team unanimously decided to disobey this ridiculous order, tactfully neglecting to inform the armed National Guard. We spoke to the bus driver by phone and told him to return immediately with the families. A technical error in the paperwork meant that they were not actually officially discharged, so we were covered. Nonetheless, we had all prepared ourselves to be sent home (or worse) by the authorities. The FEMA officials (the same ones that had lied to me) were trying to coerce the people to stay there by saying that if they refused, FEMA would disqualify the evacuees from all the benefits to which they are entitled. FEMA ordered the bus driver to leave them there, but luckily he was a man of conscience and put his job on the line by directly refusing. They returned to the Emanuel shelter.

The bus arrived and people’s faces showed a mixture of shock and disgust as they exited the bus. We quickly brought their belongings inside and encouraged the returnees to mix in with the crowd. They told us of the site. It was on a farm that raised goats and ostriches, located about five miles down a dusty dirt road from the nearest highway, miles from any town, in the middle of KKK country. Many of the trailers lacked water or electricity, and there was no sign of either the promised store or school. Wreckage from the hurricane was being hauled in on semis to a nearby landfill. “A dump is a dump and I won’t live in one,” one man told me, continuing, “If the dust don’t get you, the scent from the animals will. That place ain’t fit for humans!”

The next day the local paper (Hammond Daily Star, October 11, 2005) bore the front page headline “Trailer City Revolt,” and people in the town were irate that FEMA had tried to place all these folks, many of them children and frail elders, in such a remote and dangerous location. It created a local scandal.

The people were encouraged by this writer (not that it was necessary, for they were all in agreement) to collectively refuse to leave the shelter unless adequate facilities were provided. The people agreed that they would not leave unless trailers in a place where the children could stay in school and the seniors could access medical care were found. The FEMA public relations department could have ended up spending a sizable chunk of revenue to explain how National Guard was used to force them from the church shelter. The feeling of solidarity was exciting. The evacuees said, “Hell no we wont go!”

The very next day FEMA announced that a location near town had suddenly been “found.” The kids could stay in school in Hammond, and the entire community could stay together. People began relocating to the 3 and 4 bedroom trailers where they could live for 18 months. The evacuees of Plaquemines parish exerted their collective will and won! Everyone was pleased with the trailers, which were fully furnished and livable. The people scored big time. VICTORY!

Common Ground

Two Red Cross volunteers (a Social Worker from Boston and an archaeology student from LA) and I took a road trip one day in a brand new blue PT Cruiser courtesy of the Red Cross. Gulfport Mississippi (ground zero of Katrina) looked like a nuclear bomb had gone off in the town. Huge brick buildings were reduced to skeletal masses of iron girders. In Slidell, Louisiana, vast mounds of splintered wood (former homes) lined the road for miles. Everywhere, trees were snapped in half and all manner of debris littered the roadways.

We visited the Common Ground Health Collective in Algiers, on the west bank of the Mississippi in the New Orleans area. Housed in an old mosque, Common Ground free medical clinic was established by concerned community members and autonomous volunteer medical personnel from all over the country. Based on principles of mutual aid, its initial goal was to provide free medical and humanitarian relief, but it has evolved into a community center that aims to address the history of abandonment, exploitation and neglect with a dignified and respectful health delivery system. It embodies a radical Free Clinic philosophy by providing medical services in an oppressed neighborhood with the full participation of community members encouraged.

Common Ground can boast one of the most multidisciplinary of all teams. There are (categories not mutually exclusive) nurses, doctors, psychiatrists, pharmacists, anarchists, herbalists, acupuncturists, community organizers, journalists, legal representatives, aid workers, proletarian neighborhood members, EMTs, squatters, gutter punks, artists, mechanics, chiropractors, clergy, and so forth involved. A huge sign outside the door reads, “Solidarity Not Charity,” and this statement exemplifies the perspective of those involved.

I spoke with people from New Orleans and all over the country there. Everyone volunteered their time to help those who came to the clinic. At first they were treating injuries sustained during and immediately following Katrina but at the time of our visit they were seeing people with chronic, untreated conditions. They serve about 100 patients a day, sometimes more. Many of those showing up have not been seen by a doctor in 20 years. It is a true community clinic in that it incorporates members of the neighborhood as part of its organizational structure and aims to create a new paradigm of health care that incorporates community development and revitalization with health services. Where else can you find medical/Mental health care and Copwatch offered under the same roof?

Common Ground wants to become a sustainable collective. There is a serious need for legal assistance. It is also in desperate need of political and financial support. If anyone would like to join a visionary, revolutionary approach to healthcare, please contact Common Ground Collective at: www.commongroundrelief.org or by telephone at (504) 361-9659. Please support them and help spread the word.

Immigrant Laborers Doing all the Work

Latino migrant workers in large numbers are working in the cleanup operations in New Orleans. The restrictions on hiring undocumented workers have been relaxed during the cleanup operations in Louisiana. Living in squalid conditions, they are doing the most dangerous work at unreliable wages. Fly by night contractors are employing them and are not required to comply with labor regulations or provide access to health care. These imported workers there are expendable, exploitable and the firms that use them are not liable for damages sustained over time. The workers are experiencing all kinds of serious health problems.

Some Latino workers who cleaned up the Superdome (there were no African-Americans in the entire crew of several hundred) reported to our team that as they were brought in by bus people lined the street and flipped them the middle finger. Locals are not being hired. It is creating class antagonisms when what is needed is unity and solidarity.

Where to from here

Poverty and oppression are endemic in Louisiana, the South as a region and the United States as a whole. This storm removed the veil that normally obscures poor people from the hegemonic gaze of middle-class America. Thousands of people who lived in marginalized racial and economic ghettos prior to Katrina were exposed, waiting on their roofs for days while news, army and police helicopters passed overhead, unable or unwilling to rescue them. The imbalanced class structure of America is revealed by a simple look at the demographics of those who were left behind. Can you say people of color? Can you say poor people? To quote one of the psychiatrists involved with the Common Ground Collective, “New Orleans offers an apocalyptic mirror into the completely rotten core of a capitalist society run amok by neocon terrorists...We so need a revolution.”

Move it forward!

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