Story Archives 2008

Grinding Young Men of Color up like glass

09/24/2021 - 10:42 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body

PNN re-ports and sup-ports on Young Men of Color in Crisis panel.

by Sam Drew/PNN

“We are grinding young men of color up like glass. Every institution in our community is failing young men of color,” said Ron Dellums Mayor of Oakland regarding the sinking position of young men of color in the United States. He was speaking at the “Men and Boys of Color in Crisis” panel and discussion at the Youth Uprising Center in East Oakland. I attended the event to report and support for POOR Magazine.

Listening to him speak, I couldn’t help remembering my bus ride in Oakland earlier that day. While on the packed bus, I noticed a young African-descendent male sitting a few seats in front of me. He was staring impassively at no one in particular during our bumpy ride on the unpaved streets of Oakland. As the bus began to fill up, older passengers began approached the youth decked out in a dark hoodie, brightly colored jeans and a blank stare, but no one would sit next to him.

Time and time again someone would approach him, give him the once over and then decide to sit or stand somewhere else. He reacted to this rejection by distancing himself and not making eye contact with anyone. His body language exuded an “I don’t give a damn attitude.” This mutual coldness continued for most of the overly long ride. It was odd to see one open seat in a loaded bus with plenty of standing passengers.

Finally, one new rider bucked the trend and forced her way to the seat. After a few minutes of emotional distance, the young man suddenly bolted from his seat for no apparent reason. But the reason soon became clear when an old man with a cane took the seat the young man had graciously given up.

The vision of this young man on the bus remained in my thoughts, as I listened to the powerful speakers at the day’s panel.

“I believe the problem of the city is the unfinished business of this country. It’s one thing to integrate a lunch counter. It’s another thing to have money to buy lunch,” quipped Dellums about the lack of economic opportunities facing many young men of color.

According to a report of the Children’s Defense Fund. Black and Hispanic workers holding the same educational credentials as white workers experience higher unemployment rates.

Harvard Law School Professor of Law, Charles Ogletree moderated between panelists and concerned citizens seeking ways to correct decades of neglect and criminalization.

Chris Robinson, a film and video director said, “It’s not an us or them conversation… it is interdependence. You sink or swim with us. We pay much less to educate a child than to incarcerate a child.”

According to the Children’s Defense Fund, a black boy born in 2001 has a 1 in 3 chance of going to prison in his lifetime: a Latino boy a 1 in 6 chance; and a white boy a 1 of 17 chance. Black juveniles are about four times as likely as their White peers to be incarcerated. Black youths are almost five times and Latino youths are more than twice as likely to be incarcerated as White youths for drug offenses. Today, 580,000 Black males are serving sentences in state or federal prison, while fewer than 40,000 Black males earn a bachelor’s degree each year.

Two of the most searing comments came from exceptional young men of color that many in the audience could identify with. Both men spoke about the importance of family.

Alfred Johnson, a father, Oaklander, and YouthUpRising member proudly said, “Being a parent is the cornerstone of our community. Being a parent isn’t taught in school.” While Tito Rodriquez told the audience that “Children are a blessing from God…the best way to teach them is not to point them in the direction, but walk beside them.”

Both of these positive and powerful role models have faced the typical roadblocks most boys and men of color deal with everyday. Tito was profiled by the police on his way to the meeting and Alfred is struggling raising his 3-year-old with his landscaping job with the City of Oakland.

Dr. Henrie Treadwell, Director of Community Voices and the associate director of development at the National Center for Primary Care at Morehouse School of Medicine, summed up the problem this way, “The Criminal Justice System is a reflection of what is wrong with our system. Policies are taking men out of the household and [putting them] into the prisons…It’s time for amnesty.”

Joe Brooks, Vice President for Civic engagement at Oakland-based Policylink, wrote these positive ways for beginning the healing process, “We must find more effective ways to connect these boys into the social networks that help them succeed…We need our boys to grow into full, well-rounded, able men. But to do that, they need more than a one-time math tutor or a free asthma inhaler. They need a society geared toward helping them overcome the hurdles that were thrown at their feet even before they were born…By joining together under a single banner, Bay Area advocates can ensure these boys return to lift up their communities and start a new cycle of hope.”

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Poor People's Movement Assembly in Atlanta

09/24/2021 - 10:42 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body

Join a poor people's caravan in Atlanta on the World Social Forum's Global Day of Action

by Staff Writer

What: A Poor People’s Caravan and People’s Movement Assembly

When: January 26th 2008 The World Social Forum’s Global Day of Action

Where: The Caravan will take place in Downtown Atlanta, passing by
significant sites of struggle. Then we will rally at the Capitol and travel
together to the Hunger Coalition to participate in the first ever Poor
People’s Movement Assembly.

Who: Grassroots folks from all over the State, educators, organizers,
community -based organizations, community members, families, folks building
Another World!

Why!! In the spirit of the Poor People’s March on Washington 40 years ago,
we are taking to the streets with a powerful caravan. In the spirit of
bringing together movements from all over the country this summer at the
first US Social Forum, we are bringing GEORGIA together for a Poor People’s
Assembly to demand action & create a more unified vision. In the spirit of
bridging local struggles to global movements, we are answering the World
Social Forum_s call for Global Days of Action. Atlanta is one of the first
US cities standing with people from all over the world on this day of
action, January 26. Join us.

How to participate:

* Distribute information to your community and fill out the People’s
Assembly Ballot!

* Attend and/or host a Town Hall meeting. Leading up to the 26th!

* Share your Vehicles with the Caravan

* Endorse the e Poor People’s Caravan and Movement Assembly

* Bring a Delegation to the Caravan

* Participate in the Poor People’s Movement Assembly

Our voices will truly be heard around the world!!!
Let us know you are coming!

In order to make the 26th a success we need your support. Your endorsement
also guarantees that you get your name on the Poor People’s Movement
Assembly banner and that we continue to build and fund our movements from
the grassroots level!

Below are the various levels your organization can support and endorse the
Caravan and Assembly:

Sponsor a Car holds 5-7 people Costs $25-$50

Sponsor a Van holds up to 16 people Costs $50-$75

Sponsor a Flat-Bed Truck holds up to 40 people Costs $75-$150

Sponsor a Bus holds between 50-75 people Costs $150 and up!

Initial questions? Commitments? Thoughts? Contact Fredando Jackson at
fredando@intellectualcurrency.com (229) 938.9218 or Kate Shapiro
mzshaps@gmai l.com (404.446.6874)_..MORE INFO TO FOLLOW SOON!

What is a People’s Movement Assembly?

The Poor People_s Movement Assembly is an opportunity for folks from all
struggles and backgrounds to come together, educate and share with one
another and then collectively determine what issues are most directly
affecting our communities_This gives us an opportunity to commit together to
organizing and actions in the upcoming year so we can better address our
concerns and needs.

Why a caravan?

We will be hosting a Poor People_s Caravan in downtown Atlanta for a number
of reasons: one, it is new, exciting and creative and is sure to get
people_s attention. This also means we will be able to extend our reach in
highlighting local and global struggles and in many ways a caravan is more
inclusive, with young people, elders and folks of varying abilities able to
participate fully.

How will it work?

On January 26th, we will be in the streets, engaging in various actions and
rally_s downtown, making music, holding teach-in_s, sharing stories and
holding a People_s Assembly where we can make our voices heard, develop
points of unity and collectively determine organizing strategies for the
upcoming year. We will gather at 10am at the IBEW building in Downtown. The
Caravan will begin at 11am and end up at the State Capitol at 1pm for a
final action and rally. The People_s Movement Assembly will begin at 2pm at
the Hunger Coalition, and will go until 5pm.

What is the route?

The Caravan route will go through Downtown Atlanta and In town neighborhoods.
As of now, organizations will co-ordinate site specific actions related to
the Healthcare Crisis, Homelessness and Affordable Housing and Reproductive
Justice. The caravan will also pass by significant sites highlighting
educational inequalities, lack of public transportation on, Disability Rights
struggles, immigration and the prison-industrial complex.

What do we bring?

Bring yourselves and your people! Represent your Struggle and
Yourselves. Decorate your vehicles, bring signs and banner_s etc.
Coordinate shirt colors etc. so your delegation stands out and we all get
noticed!

What’s the Global Day of Action?

This is a call from the organizers of the World Social Forums. As the host
city to the historic, first ever U.S. Social Forum this summer, Atlanta has
taken the lead to nationally to organize in this spirit. In 2008 this Global
Day of Action will occur in place of the annual World Social Forum...It is a
strategy to unite grassroots communities in struggle, to link actions with
demands and to demonstrate our power as part of a global movement demanding
change, justice and self-determination.

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The Federal Building Needs to Come Clean

09/24/2021 - 10:42 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body

18 janitors, formerly employed by the new Federal Building remain on the picket line, terminated for no cause and demanding their right to justice.

by Sam Drew/PNN

"My main concern is that these companies take advantage of the anti-immigration hysteria in the country to discourage worker activity. We really have to raise our voice to support workers brave enough tom stand up," said Eric Quesada as we watched proud members SEIU (Service Employees International Union) Local 87 protesting unfair layoffs in front of the state of the art Federal Building located at 90 Seventh Street.

The story of how these hard working janitors lost their jobs has to go down in recent labor history as one of the meanest and shadiest events. The janitors had been working for American Building Services (ABS) a janitorial service with contracts to clean other federal buildings in San Francisco when ABS was notified on September 27, 2007 that they were losing the contract effective October1,2007 and the current employees were to be laid off on September28, 2007. The company taking over janitorial services was the anti-union Exemplar located somewhere in San Diego. The reason the federal building went with the mysterious Exemplar was according to Andrew Solis (SEIU Local 87) because of their low bid.

Since October 1st, these stalwart and loyal workers have been protesting in front of the futuristic federal building to make Exemplar come clean and play fair.

"The Federal Building needs to come clean about about what’s going on," Tiny, co-founder and editor of POOR Magazine stated powerfully to the crowd, "There is no clear reason why the Federal Government took your jobs away."

What has transpired is an obvious case of the crooked corporation being rewarded and the hardworking laborer being punished. Exemplar violated San Francisco city law requiring new companies to rehire workers from the former contract. The law known as the displaced worker Protection Act, requires workers from the former contract to be re-hired for a minimum of 90 days. If that wasn't enough shady business practices Exemplar has no Bay Area business license and under their new contract the eight non-union janitors are paid one dollar less per hour than the eighteen laid off union workers were.

Tony Medina (SEIU 1021 Tenderloin Housing Clinic) summed up this scrooge like behavior, saying "This is totally unfair. This is the federal governments way of saying thank you...by putting you out on the picket line."

While Exemplar and GPS are playing Grinch to these 18 workers and their families during this holiday season, the San Francisco Board of Supervisors introduced a resolution calling on Exemplar Enterprises to reinstate the union janitors and urged Congresswoman and Speaker of the house of Representative Nancy Pelosi to call upon GPS and Exemplar to reinstate the janitors.

Supervisors Daly, Ammiano, Mirkarimi and Sandoval names were placed on the resolution. Not only did local 87 receive love from the board of supervisors. A constant stream of cars passed by the demonstration honking horns in support of the picketers who continued chanting, "No Union...NO Peace...No Respect...No Peace...No Justice...No Peace" as they marched in a tight circle.

Voicing support for the workers who want to remain union was Jaron from POWER (People Organized to win Employment Rights ) who reminded everyone "Do the workers run this city? We want justice NOW. We are going to take these jobs back now."

Exemplar they may not be spreading holiday cheer but they are spreading serious discontent and dissatisfaction. According to Marlon Crump of POOR Magazine, "Misery afflicts both the union and non-union workers. The new Exemplar employees are constantly complaining that they are overworked and being assigned improper custodial tasks. Exemplar itself has turned to recruiting people in the vicinity including workers from the Best Western Hotel on Seventh Street out of sheer desperation."

It's odd to hear about Exemplar difficulty in attracting qualified workers. The laid off janitors are the ones who cleaned the building for the grand opening that was attended by political big shots like Nancy Pelosi and San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom. "Local 87 are the originals that opened up this building before Exemplar," said Solis to our approval.

Despite intimidation from ICE agents who came to a legal peaceful demonstration with guns pulled, Local 87 has remained focused on their goal of remaining union and getting their jobs back. Their indomitable spirit inspired Tony Robles(San Francisco Human Rights Commission) to say, "We appreciate the work you are doing now on the picket line. And the work you will continue to do."

As the protest waned down Homeland Security agents gathered together in a small group to observe and distort.. Eric Quesada remarked, "These are dark times we are living in. But these workers are the light in these dark times."

Please be sure to raise your voice in support of these brave workers strong enough to stand up.

HELP LOCAL 87 JANITORS!!

Join the picket line in front of the new Federal Building!!! (7th and Mission)

Flood the following offices with calls

At Exemplar; Daniela (Project Manager) 415.722.3365 Rudy (president) 619.985.9602

Lewis& Rocca (Attorneys) 702.949.8282

GSA Contracting Opportunities 415. 522.2700

Nancy Pelosi 415.556.4862

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Tribe Banishes Four

09/24/2021 - 10:42 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body

An Indian tribe begins using an old method to deal with new problems.

by Mark Ranzenberger/Sun Online Editor

The Saginaw Chippewa Indian Tribe has begun using a very old method of dealing with problems in a new way: invoking the ancient tribal practice of banishing troublemakers from tribal lands.

"There is a historical basis and a cultural basis for it," said
tribal spokesman Joe Sowmick.

So far, the Tribal Council has banished at least four people from
tribal lands. Those four include one member of the Saginaw Chippewa Tribe, two members of other tribes, and the most recent person banished, a non-Native man.

The banishing of Juan Garcia Romero, 37, was announced in the Jan. 1 issue of the Tribal Observer, the official publication of the Tribe. Romero reportedly had a "disruptive" relationship with a tribal
member.

Romero currently is on state probation after pleading no contest to attempted aggravated stalking, according to the Michigan Department of Corrections. His conditions of probation address drug usage, gang affiliation, domestic violence and mental health issues, and orders him to wear a tether.

The formal banishing order from the Tribal Council orders Romero to stay off tribal lands.

Kent Jackson, a cultural representative for the Elijah Elk Seventh
Generation Cultural Center, said banishing a person is "an extreme
response to extreme behavior" and is not a decision taken lightly by
Native leaders.

"This isn't how our people are, according to the seven grandfather teachings," Jackson said. "We don't want this stuff in our community." The practice of sending people away from the community dates back many generations, said Shannon Martin, director of the Ziibiwing Center for Anishinabe Culture and Lifeways.

"Banishment was decided on by the head men and head women of the various clans," Martin said. "It wasn't something that was done haphazardly. There was much thought put into it."

Many other tribes also have begun using the practice of exiling wrongdoers.

The Red Lake Band and Portage Lake bands in Minnesota use the tactic occasionally to banish drug dealers. The Lac du Flameau Chippewa Indians in Wisconsin and the Eastern Band of the Cherokee Nation in North Carolina have banished gang members and drug dealers.

In a woodland culture, being cut off from the community meant being cut off from food sources, shelter, and spiritual and family
relationships.

"For the individual who was banished, it was a time they were given instruction," Martin said.

"It was a time for them to be in solitude," Martin said. "They could change their lives. They could change the way they were walking.'

The ordinance giving the Tribal Council the power to send wrongdoers into exile is one of the oldest on the books of the Saginaw Tribe.

It recently was updated to make clear the council claims power to send banish both members and non-members, and to make the procedure one that shows due process of law.

A formal hearing on the Romero banishment order is scheduled for later this month if Romero chooses to contest it.

Sowmick admitted that the precise definition of "tribal lands" is
open to some interpretation. A federal lawsuit involving the Tribe,
the federal government, the state of Michigan, the city of Mt.
Pleasant and Isabella County currently is under way that may clarify
exactly what that means.

"I'm certain that all of those units of government would agree that on, whatever interpretation of tribal lands there are, that there is an element that we don't want in our community," Sowmick said.

He said that certainly, there are areas where there is no dispute
that the land is tribal, and Romero and others banished would face
criminal trespass charges if they go there.

"I think the Juan Romero case can be looked at as a positive form all of these units of government," Sowmick said, "that we don't want drugs, we don't want gang activity, in our community, period."

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A New Breed of Monster

09/24/2021 - 10:42 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body

PNN Courtwatch Project on the case of a young father trying to father his children.

PNN Courtwatch Project on the case of a young father trying to father his children.

 
 

by Marlon Crump/PNN

"On September 18, 2006, I was hospitalized at San Francisco General Hospital, with a broken hip, and a fractured pelvis, from trying to prevent the mother of my children, from driving drunk. The Child Protective Services section manager, Tracy Burris, told me that after I got out of the hospital, I could go get my children."

This is how James, a thirty-six year old African descendent man, began telling his unbelievable story of Child Protective Services (C.P.S.) fraud and abuse.

"A few days later," James continued, "two C.P.S Workers Miss Renee Williams, and trainee Mrs. Donita Carter, asked me various questions, then passed false accusations about my kids, their mother, and her auntie. On the morning of September 28, 2006, Miss Williams called to tell me that my kids were in C.P.S custody, stating that they were living like animals, that I was a women abuser, and so forth."

As a child, I would often see on T.V shows, commercials, even Saturday morning cartoons about the evils of child abuse, tortures, exploitations, and kidnappings. The program advertisements would also share tips for parents in how to protect their children, as well as report child abuse.

Unfortunately, these guidelines are never followed by government agencies and greed has breed a new kind of monster; Child Protective Services. (C.P.S) A racket of sorts, C.P.S receives over $12,000, for each child the agency takes from a family, while receiving billions of dollars in funding from the U.S AmeriKKKan Federal Government.

While many of us residing in C.P.S-plagued poor communities of non-white descent, struggle through desperate hard times; C.P.S is creating even more difficult times, by snatching away children from these communities nationwide. The proper procedural paper-work and protocols are even ignored by the agencies.

This time, C.P.S has truly overstepped its boundaries by preying upon poor, communities of color, like wicked wolves to sheep. A hardworking African Descent man who drives a taxicab at dusk to support his family while taking care of his six children at dawn, James has become the latest victim of this system's savagery and abuse.

On November 6th, 2007, James presented a very lengthy summarization of this eyebrow raising, tear-inducing situation to my entire family at POOR. This is the narrative summarization of the pain inflicted by C.P.S. on James� family.

A longtime ago, an aunt of the mother of James' children that stayed with them reported complete falsehoods to C.P.S about James regarding his children. Because of these "reports" they opened a file on him and his family, and constantly harassed them. What C.P.S fails to reveal is the fact that the aunt is mentally disabled, has prostituted herself for drugs and is a child molester.

Once a neighbor notified Mr. James one night of some unusual activity happening inside his home while he was away at work. When it was discovered that the aunt was using his home as a safe-haven for her tricks, Mr. James immediately removed her from his home and because of this, vengeance entered the mind of the aunt.

Between the years of 2004 and 2005, the aunt was part of a domestic violence support group. As she shared her omissions to the group, the aunt stated to them " I was spanking the kids because their parents would not!" The group facilitator became very disturbed by these words by the aunt, and reported her to C.P.S.

How the C.P.S is able to use the aunt as a credible witness is a question that has yet to be answered and possibly violates the California Penal Code � 11172(a) of False Reporting. Another unanswered question is, aren't all claims of suspected child abuse thoroughly examined by the agency? Was the aunt ever investigated, herself?

On September of 2002, the mother of his six children had a pelvis synthesis separation during the birth of their fifth child. She, along with the U.C Hospital social worker sent in a referral to Department of Human Services (D.H.S) for preventive precautions against child abuse and neglect. The mom was released from San Francisco General Hospital, with their newborn child, despite suffering medical injuries, as a result of this separation.

From the years 2002 to 2004, now having six children, the mother was in dire need for in home support services. The mom called for the services daily, but was told every single time, that her request was either "denied" or "pending." She then started calling the C.P.S Hotline excessively, often crying, distraught, and extremely emotional.

James met with workers of the Bayview Department of Social Services, on many occasions. He made inquiries on whether or not the referral by U.C, was ever going to be honored by them. In mid-2004, after the birth of their 6th child at U.C Hospital, the mother called C.P.S again for preventive cautions due to the fact that there were no supports in place, for her and the family.

In trying to get services again, they dealt with workers, Wade Ishamaura, Rhonda Johnson (Bayview Department of Social Services Staff), Lee Shafer, Adrina Island, Renee Williams, Donita Carter, Amy Prine, Supervisor Jim Colonaco, and Supervisor Cheryl Baker. Section Manager Tracy Burris.

In mid- July of 2005, the mother underwent a life threatening brain surgery, and was hospitalized in the Intensive Care Unit (I.C.U). Two days after her surgery, she was sent home with absolutely no service anticipations, implemented. In a heated conversation with Supervisor Cheryl Baker face-to-face, she told James and the mother of his children that they were "abusing the system" and that they (D.H.S) do not offer services.

Baker then told them that they had to inquire about other programs, but it was ironic due to the fact that these "other programs" were the ones that referred them to D.H.S, in the first place.

In February of 2006, their children's doctor was changed to a new doctor. During a visit, the mom's auntie brought the children in, and an argument erupted between her and the doctor. The doctor then called C.P.S, and met with one of the workers, Lee Schafer. James consistently filed complaints against the doctor to the hospital administration, up until July of 2006, when the doctor called C.P.S.

The last straw was when the mother of his children told the hospital that they were going to change hospitals, and doctors, due to harassment by this new doctor. Less than a week later, there was another C.P.S Worker called by this same doctor. James and his children's mother then had a meeting with Supervisor Jim Colonaco.

In this meeting, he saw their documents and had them copied for the third straight time. Concerned, Mr. Colonaco called the Bay Area Legal Aid for them, and informed them that they were being harassed by this doctor.

While Mr. James was hospitalized with a broken hip and fractured pelvis, on September 18th, 2006, Miss Williams called him ten days later to tell him that his kids were in C.P.S custody. She told James that his children had been living like animals and that he abused women. James was completely distraught.

"If the San Francisco Police Department, or its Domestic Violence Unit, never deemed me as an abuser, how can C.P.S?" said James with pain in his voice.

850 Bryant (San Francisco Hall of Justice Building) would not hesitate to lock a man of color up for beating on a woman�if they thought I was an abuser they would have already locked me up, said James.

After arguing with Ms. Williams about her decision, she informed Mr. James of the Team Decision Meeting, on October 2nd, 2006, regarding his family and to attend it. The department was writing up a petition for temporary custody of the children, and he needed to go to the court on October 4th, 2006. At the Team Decision Meeting (T.D.M), there were a lot of arguments, debates, and many lies thrown out by the department furthering confusion in the family situation.

Supervisor Colanco admitted that the department had "dropped the ball" on James's family, in providing services and has let them "slip through their cracks". Mr. James volunteered to sign up for programs with the Bayview Hunter's Point Resource Center, with Nicoleus Hooker who was present at the T.D.M, the following day.

October 4th, 2006 proved to be the beginning of the end for James, after the department presented a petition to him claiming domestic violence and child and medical neglect.

The absurdness of the situation continued to grow. James's childhood was examined and brought up in legal proceedings without first receiving consent from him, or any of his family. "The trauma in Mr. James's childhood has led to ineffective parenting of his children,� they said.

James was raised well by a loving family, went to private schools his whole life, and has held a job since he was 15 years of age. He graduated from one of the top three private high schools in San Francisco, California. His children lived in an eight bed-roomed home, large back yard, and private schools for them, as well.

James's verbal, and written complaints about the department, and the malicious writings of Mrs. Carter led them to keep misleading the courts with false reports of lies, hearsay without the judge hearing both sides. The department has been committing perjury, over and over on this case. However, the department's lies were sustained as "true" without the production of any real evidence, by the callously corruptive C.P.S in the Bayview Hunter's Point District.

Even in a meeting with C.P.S ombudsman, Todd Wright, who informed James that he would take any action against C.P.S, but was also quick to inform him that he could not be a witness to the things he heard in a meeting with Section Manager, Tracy Burris, Donita Carter, and James, himself.

They blatantly showed absolute disregard to his parental rights, with discrimination, character assassination, patient breach of confidentiality, and defamation of character. The Bayview Department of Social Services has been abusing James� family for years and it seems with corrupt judges and workers that there�s no end in sight.

James and his family are seeking legal support in their struggle against the C.P.S.

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The Poor Get Diabetes; The Rich Get Local and Organic

09/24/2021 - 10:42 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body

From the War on Poverty to new farmers' markets, a food
expert tackles America's dangerous dietary split.

by Mark Winne/Beacon Press.

Closing the Food Gap: Resetting the Table in the Land of
Plenty.

As a class, lower income people have been well
represented in some of the best-covered food stories of
our day, particularly hunger, obesity, and diabetes. As
these issues have faded in and out of the public's eye
over the last 25 years, another food trend was rapidly
becoming a national obsession -- namely, local and
organic.

At about the same time that Berkeley diva Alice Waters
was first showing us how to bestow style and grace on
something as ordinary as a local tomato, the Reagan
administration's anti-poor policies were driving an
unprecedented number of people into soup kitchens and
food banks. And as organic food advocates were putting
the finishing touches on what was to become the first
national standard for organic food, supermarket chains
were nailing plywood across their city store windows
bidding farewell to lower income America.

Organic food and agriculture had barely climbed out of
the bassinet in 1989 when 60 Minutes ran its now famous
Alar story. The exposure it received before 40 million
television viewers ignited a firestorm of consumer
reaction that eventually made organic food the fastest
growing segment of the U.S. food industry.

Yuppie families reacted first. Like every parent since
time immemorial, these parents wanted what was best for
their children, and the emerging evidence that our food
supply was tainted accelerated their desire for the
healthiest and safest food possible. Though the research
surrounding the health and safety attributes of various
foods remained foggy, competing claims opened up a never
ending number of consumer options. One's food choices
may be vegetarian, vegan, organic, grass-fed, free-
range, humanely raised, or some combination of these. As
to the source of this food, it could range from
"generally local when it's easy to get" to "obsessively
local and will eat nothing else."

In low-income circles, however, such food anxieties got
little traction. Between getting to a food store where
the bananas weren't black and having enough money to buy
any food at all, low-income shoppers had little
inclination to parse the differences between grass-fed
and grass-finished. But this didn't imply that their
awareness of organic food was non-existent, nor did it
mean that low-income consumers were less likely to buy
organic if they had the chance.

Low-Income Shoppers Speak

To better understand a variety of issues, the Hartford
Food System, a Connecticut-based non-profit organization
that I directed for 24 years, would often meet with low-
income families to get their point of view. On one such
occasion, we asked eight members of Hartford's
Clay/Arsenal neighborhood to discuss local and organic
food. Like other impoverished urban neighborhoods,
Clay/Arsenal was entirely devoid of good quality food
stores, and their residents experienced hunger, obesity,
and diabetes at rates that were two to three times the
national average. This group was comprised exclusively
of Hispanic and African American residents.

First off, the group expressed an immediate consensus
that fresh, inexpensive food -- the food they generally
preferred -- was unavailable in their neighborhood.
Everyone agreed that traveling to a full-line
supermarket was a hassle because it required one or two
long bus rides or an expensive taxi fare. As a result,
they did their major shopping once or twice a month, and
when they shopped, price was their most important
consideration.

When asked what the word organic meant to them, the
residents answered "real food," "natural," "healthy,"
and "you know what's in it." While they believed that
organic food was preferable to food they described as
"processed," "full of chemicals," or "toxic," they said
that buying organic food wasn't even an option, because
it was simply not available to them. One young woman
made a point of saying that she didn't trust the
environment where she lived or the food she ingested.
"Everything gives you cancer these days," she said.
Conversely, there was an underlying tone of confidence
in the safety and healthfulness of food that they could
identify as local and organic.

Their awareness of the benefits of local and organic
food was very high. For the elderly, there was the
nostalgic association with tastes, places, and times
gone by. For those with young children, there was an
apprehension that nearly everything associated with
their external environment, including food, was a
threat. Like parents of all races, education levels, and
occupations, these moms wanted what was best for their
children as well, even when they knew that what was best
was not available to them.

Local and Organic Go Mainstream

"In a burst of new interest in food," spouted Newsweek's
2006 food issue, "Americans are demanding -- and paying
for -- the freshest and least chemically treated
products available." Whole Foods' John Mackey told the
Wall Street Journal, "The organic-food lifestyle is not
a fad ... It's a value system, a belief system. It's
penetrating into the mainstream."

As we cast our eye over the sheer effulgence of American
food, there appears to be no limit to the type and
number of food products for those who are motivated by
taste, environmental concern, animal welfare, political
correctness, or simple virtue. Niman Ranch produces a
pork to die for, and costs significantly more than the
factory-farmed alternative. Don't want to spend the
"best four years of your life" eating swill from the
college cafeteria trough? Select from any of hundreds of
colleges and universities that are now featuring
"sustainable dining" (some inspired by master chef Alice
Waters). And when you just can't find anything that
satisfies your organic lifestyle where you live, you can
always pack up and leave. The New York Times style page
featured a number of families who had the financial
wherewithal to escape from New York City to the Hudson
River valley. Once there, the families "began eating
strictly organic foods." One couple said they had moved
because the wife was pregnant with their second child
and "we decided that the children needed to be in
nature."

Sounds pretty good. In fact, it just may be the latest
incarnation of the American dream. But what about those
who can't escape or afford to eat "strictly organic" or
for whom "buying local" means the past-code date,
packaged baloney at the neighborhood bodega? How do we
fulfill the desire for healthy and sustainably produced
food that is increasingly shared by all?

There are two general directions that have shown promise
in closing this food gap: one is through private,
largely non-profit projects and the other is through
public policy. At the Hartford Food System we founded
the Holcomb Farm Community Supported Agriculture (CSA)
Farm that made an explicit commitment to distribute
about 40 percent of its local and organic produce to the
city's low-income community. Using a hybrid method of
funding, CSAs like the Holcomb Farm (Just Food in New
York City and the Western Massachusetts Food Bank in
Hadley are other examples) have been organized around
the country to ensure that CSAs are not solely the
province of a white, bright elite. Other models like the
People's Grocery in Oakland are using mobile markets to
bring high quality, healthy food into communities that
are underserved by supermarkets.

Public policy advocacy has leveraged federal and state
funding to provide special farmers' market vouchers to
low-income women, children, and elders (Farmers Market
Nutrition Program). These small denomination coupons
have opened an increasing share of the nation's 4,500
farmers' markets to a wider demographic of shoppers.
Along the same lines, a small but steady stream of
farmers' markets are installing swipe card machines to
enable food stamp recipients to use their electronic
benefit transfer (EBT) cards to buy local food. And in
what might be the biggest breakthrough yet, the national
Women, Infant, and Children Program (WIC) will be
implementing a new fruit and vegetable program that is
potentially worth hundreds of million dollars to lower
income consumers and local farmers.

While it may be some time before we see a Whole Foods
open in East Harlem, non-profit organizations like the
Philadelphia-based Food Trust have secured millions of
dollars in state financing to develop food stores in
underserved urban and rural Pennsylvania communities. As
part of an overall economic development strategy, these
stores are not only providing new sources of healthy and
affordable food to low-income families, they are also
expanding employment opportunities and the local
property tax base.

These projects and policies have inched us closer to
bridging the divide between the haves and have-nots, but
unless every segment of society rejects the notion that
there is one food system for the poor, and one for
everyone else, these gains will remain marginal.

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Homelessness De-Criminalized in Santa Barbara

09/24/2021 - 10:42 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body

A new Santa Barbara program makes it legal for folks struggling with poverty to live in their cars.

by Reprinted from Steve Chawkins/LA Times

Reprinted with permission from the L.A. Times

SANTA BARBARA � Two or three nights a week, a 29-year-old ex-Peace Corps volunteer named Shaw Talley rolls through the parking lots in his old Volvo wagon, offering help where he can. In spaces where others see a handful of battered RVs and vans, Talley sees lives playing out, for better or worse.

Here, a Vietnam vet suffers from war wounds that keep him in constant pain. There, a man in a van plays classical music on his violin. Here, a diabetic gives himself an insulin shot under the dim glow of his dome light. There, a quiet middle-aged woman eases into her old Lincoln for the night, resting up for another day in customer service at a big-box store. In the glare of a street lamp, she relaxes with a book before closing her eyes.

All are beneficiaries of the city-sanctioned Safe Parking program, which allows people to live -- sometimes for years -- in cars or RVs in about a dozen parking lots that belong to the city, the county, churches, nonprofits and a few businesses in industrial areas.

In the course of a week, Talley, a caseworker for the program, checks in with most of his roughly 55 charges. Some need doctors, some need jobs, some need car repairs. On top of such daily concerns, Talley helps them through the laborious process of applying for low-income housing, though a few prefer a more-or-less permanent berth on the asphalt.

"It's not my job to judge them because they might want to live in their vehicles," said Talley, who volunteers at a hospice during his off hours and plans to attend graduate school in social work next year. "I'm here to give them options."

The five-year-old program, administered by the New Beginnings Counseling Center, is one of just a few across the United States. It is being considered as a possible model by neighborhood groups in the increasingly costly Venice area, where parking on congested blocks has been made even tougher by an influx of street campers.

"The streets aren't meant for living -- it's not acceptable," said Mike Newhouse, president of the Venice Neighborhood Council, which, with Los Angeles City Councilman Bill Rosendahl, is studying the Santa Barbara program. "And most folks here think it's not acceptable that anyone should be forced to live in a vehicle."

In Santa Barbara, a place of legendary affluence where fixer-uppers can cost more than $1 million, nobody knows just how many people are living illegally on four wheels. Last year, Talley took it upon himself to do an informal census, driving around one evening looking for telltale signs of vehicular habitation: towels draped over windows, condensation fogging windshields. Within hours, he counted 249 makeshift homes.

"Mostly, they try to stay invisible," Talley said. "They don't want to get hassled by the police. They don't want to be victimized by thugs."

Talley, who has the sunny good looks of an extra in a surf movie, is unrelentingly positive. He speaks of "the higher self" within everyone and draws on his Peace Corps stint for inspiration: "When I go up to a vehicle, it's like going to some hut in Paraguay and clapping my hands before I enter, saying, 'Hey, I'm here!' "

Still, the job drains him. In his closet-size office at the Salvation Army in Santa Barbara, he sometimes cringes at the stories he hears. "They're crying in front of me, they're telling me about being raped on the streets, about all sorts of things -- and a little piece of me dies," he said.

On the wall hangs a license plate, an artifact from the ancient Volkswagen bus that one of Talley's first clients lived in for years. Talley helped place the man -- an ex-lawyer who had attended West Point -- in low-income housing. He drove him to a Los Angeles VA hospital for knee replacement surgery. He even got him a $1,000 check from a state program that pays motorists to scrap polluting vehicles.

"I just kept thinking that this guy could be my grandfather," Talley said.

Addicts show up from time to time, asking for a parking permit. One man was obsessively picking at himself -- the mark of a meth user. When Talley told a couple to wait while he fetched a drug-testing kit, they vanished.

"If they're not taking themselves or their hygiene seriously, I'll pass them on," he said. "I'll say, 'You need to go to detox. We're not going to help you hurt yourself.' "

New Beginnings runs the program on an annual budget of about $105,000, drawn from city and county funds as well as private donations.

It does not cater to the poorest of the poor. Participants must have auto insurance, driver's licenses and vehicles sound enough to drive off the lots during daylight hours. They must also agree to rules: no loud music, no alcohol, no drugs, no overnight visitors, no cooking outside the vehicle.

No showers are provided, and though only a few of the lots have portable toilets, using parking-lot shrubbery as a bathroom is grounds for immediate expulsion. No more than five vehicles are allowed in each of the lots, which are located downtown and in the outlying areas of Goleta and Isla Vista.

City officials say the program has generated few complaints, most of them from one resident who owns property near one of the lots. It hasn't ended illegal camping on Santa Barbara's streets, but police say it presents no major problems and offers security and hope to those involved.

Some of the lot-dwellers work steady jobs. More than half were living in the area for years before some combination of bad luck, bad choices, booze, drugs or mental illness bounced them onto the streets.

In 2004, an ex-welfare worker named Boyd Grant bought a 31-year-old RV after selling the Carpinteria mobile home he could no longer afford to maintain.

By day, he's the unofficial caretaker of the Goleta fishing pier and has successfully lobbied Santa Barbara County for a small grant to fix the place up. At night, he's at home in the parking lot of a local food bank.

When Talley knocks on his door and calls his name, the 63-year-old Grant tells him things are going fine. The surgery for the bladder cancer went OK; ditto the double-hernia operation. He describes a week of recovery at a Motel 6 the way a middle-aged couple might describe their house after the kids leave for college: "I didn't know what to do with all that space."

Grant reads Buddhist philosophy under his rig's solar-powered lights and taps the latest news from the pier onto his website. It's a far cry from the exhausting cat-and-mouse game he used to play with the police -- finding a parking spot every night, dousing his interior lights when the sun went down, keeping himself still to avoid attention.

In the neatly kept RV he calls his "monk's cell," Grant argues that more local governments should allow single people to live this way.

"We can't afford to put everyone in a stick house," he said. "This is a reasonable option."

Not everyone agrees. Though she voted last spring for a modest expansion of the program, Santa Barbara Mayor Marty Blum said she worries about the city giving tacit approval to housing that can be squalid. She also fears exacerbating the homeless problem.

"The homeless community has a tremendous communication network," she said. "If they tell each other that it's OK in Santa Barbara, that's not the message we want to give out."

In 2000 -- two years before the program's inception -- the city felt so besieged by the mobile homeless that police wrote more than 200 illegal-camping tickets in just a few months. The Safe Parking program was begun only after homeless advocates mounted successful legal challenges to the aggressive enforcement policy.

"Who isn't drawn to Santa Barbara?" asked Talley, who grew up in the city before attending Gettysburg College in Pennsylvania. "I mean, give me a break -- it's Santa Barbara! Homeless people are going to keep coming here, and we have to engage them instead of looking the other way."

At 73, Bob Coyle didn't come for the ocean views. After a turbulent past of heavy drinking, a bad divorce and ruptured family relationships, he wound up in an Isla Vista church parking lot because he has a daughter in the area. Besides, he said, his daughter's place was too crowded and "I didn't have anywhere else to go." When he wanted a shower, he would drive his cluttered van to his daughter's house. When he needed a bathroom, he would use one at a nearby park.

Five years ago, the former home remodeler had a stroke. Last summer, he underwent a six-hour operation to replace a blocked artery in his leg. Grant, his fellow RVer, paid for a week's stay in a motel.

"Amazing what that guy did for me," said Coyle, whose face is as weathered as his van. A few weeks ago, Coyle, who gets around only with great pain, moved into $300-a-month senior housing that Talley helped him nail down. Beforehand, he worried about finding furniture for the place, about appliances, about the rent.

"I keep telling Shaw I'll get there just in time to die," he would say, only half joking. "Shaw keeps telling me not to worry."

In the last couple of years, Talley figures that he has helped at least 35 people move from their vehicles into subsidized apartments. Even after the move, he checks in with them frequently, helping them deal with landlords, neighbors, monthly payments -- skills that can fall away with life on the streets.

Earlier this month, Linda Turner, 66, found a spot in a new low-income senior housing project. For eight years, she had lived in a van crammed with pillows, stuffed animals, self-help books and memories. A basket held the ashes of her cat. There were framed photos from happier times: Turner when she was a white-gloved flight attendant, and when she was in a Bavarian dance troupe. Another was of the son, now 37, whom she hasn't seen in years.

She's had dramatic ups and downs. One downward spiral was triggered, she said, by an attorney who was embezzling her life's savings. A choral singer, she likens her life to the powerful operatic work "Carmina Burana" because "it can be seen as musically confusing but also exciting."

Turner used to work in interior decorating but now gets by on Social Security and supplemental SSI payments -- a source of income she didn't have until Talley gave her the paperwork and helped her fill it out.

With a loan from New Beginnings, Turner recently headed for Washington to retrieve her great-grandmother's settee and other heirlooms. Over the years, she has paid $14,000 to store them.

"It's kept my hope going that one day I'd have a place," she said.

Not everyone wants that.

"There are hard-core cases where people who have moved into their vehicles are -- for very private and idiosyncratic reasons -- devoted to them," said Peter Marin, a longtime Santa Barbara activist.

In 2002, Marin's Committee for Social Justice won city approval for the parking program, which was modeled on one in Eugene, Ore. Marin said his group merely wanted safe parking spots for the homeless, but it was more politically palatable to "regularize" them with placement in conventional housing.

One man, who requested anonymity, said he has lived in vans off and on for 25 years, partly because coming up with rent every month can be so stressful that it triggers his chronic fatigue syndrome.

He said he feels some shame about it.

"Some RVers are just drunks, living on the street, letting their sewage tanks overflow and giving all of us a bad name," said the man, who wears a dark suit every day to his minimum-wage job in the tourism industry. "I deal with some high-end people, and if they knew I lived in my van, I'd feel about two inches tall."

That's not a big concern for Harley Hill, 27, and Megan Connelly, 23, a couple from Oregon who can afford their expensive raw-food diet and all-natural clothing partly because they live with their two small children in an RV they bought for $2,300.

Last spring, Connelly gave birth to baby Theo in the RV, parked at the county office complex. A landscaper at UC Santa Barbara, Hill has medical benefits, but he and Connelly both wanted the kind of privacy that's rare in bustling hospitals.

"We'd studied what to do, but we had a list of emergency numbers just in case," said Hill, slicing tomatoes, peaches and Spanish sheep's milk cheese for an evening repast by candlelight -- a necessity after a fuse blew. "In a hospital, people keep coming in to check on you. But here at home, it was quiet, we could focus."

They're not sure how long they'll call the parking lot home. After all, they were en route to Mexico when Santa Barbara drew them in last year. "We're kind of nomadic by nature," Hill said. "Next stop could be South America -- who knows?"

In the meantime, most of their parking-lot peers will pursue more modest dreams.

Talley will help them navigate a three-year waiting list for apartments, advise them on how to save money, get them to medical appointments and point them to stores that have good deals on secondhand blankets and camping toilets and day-old bread. Rowdies and rule-breakers will be tossed out, at least for a while.

"It's a constant give-and-take," Talley said. "It's a huge deal that organizations allow us to use their parking lots at night. They're saying we trust you, we trust your clients."

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Indifferent Institutions

09/24/2021 - 10:42 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body

One woman's struggle for justice in a sexual assault case at City College in San Francisco

by Sam Drew/PNN

I tried to make my voice sound as upbeat, pleasant and non-threatening as I possibly could when I asked a San Francisco City College official about the college's handling of a recent sexual assault case. The response was measured and bureaucratically remote as representative of Affirmative Action icily explained, "That's a police matter you’ll have to get in touch with them."

I decided to call City College after meeting with Sandra Thomsen, a former student whose life was turned upside down after she reported an attempted sexual assault by a teacher. Instead of receiving care and respect, she was made a pariah for protesting the way her case was being handled by the school.

I made a second call to the office of the dean. This time the official said that if a student disagrees with the college’s findings they have the right to file a complaint. He went on to let me know about the improvements that have been made to assist students who report sexual assault. But when I asked him about Sandra's case his openness changed as he quickly responded, "I can't comment on that case."

Well, I can comment on her case. Sandra's problems began while she was working to acquire her AA degree in Criminal Justice. "I wanted to get a degree in Criminal Justice to inspire the youth," she said.

"I was weak in Geometry so a math teacher offered to tutor me," she continued, "He said we would have to go back to his place to study...that is where he attempted to rape me." Her eyes filled with sadness and rage as she remembered how she was treated after reporting the attempted assault

"I reported the incident to Affirmative Action and then I went to the Chancellor, later they sent me a letter saying that they hired an investigator but they couldn’t substantiate my charges," she said.

Sandra still keeps the letter with her other papers about the case. But this denial of justice only spurred Sandra on to push harder for the truth. Due to her complaints to the Chancellor’s Office, Sandra was put on disciplinary probation, and eventually was suspended indefinitely for speaking out at a meeting of the Chancellors.

Despite each of these setbacks, Sandra is still positive about her case. She has always been a champion of the underdog and dispossessed. Her passion for the neglected was born out of her own hardships.

"I have a past, I came out of the Foster Care System and later got into juvenile hall...I then got involved with gangs [and] spent six years at Chowchilla Prison for involuntary manslaughter. I didn’t do it but I was convinced to take a polygraph test. I was young and wasn’t educated about my civil rights, But I've changed my life," she said passionately. Sandra was scheduled to graduate in the Spring of 2008 with a high G.P.A. before she was suspended.

Sandra is not just thinking about her own case, but also the many other women facing similar hardships. "A lot of other students on campus mention that instructors have done this to them too, but there is no support for students on campus," she said.

According to the 1992 study, Rape in America by the National Victim Center in Virginia, "College age women, 18-24 years old, are more likely to be raped than at any other time in their adult life...many women do not come forward because they feel embarrassed or wrongly blame themselves."

Without a victim friendly reporting system and sensitive and caring administrations, those brave enough, like Sandra, to report sex crimes will continue to suffer as victims of an overloaded bureaucratic monster.

"Sandra's indifferent treatment by the administration is the reason why on campus student run organizations like the Betty Shabazz Family Resource Center, the Multicultural Students Organization and OurStories Club are so important, because they actually understand the needs and serve students like Sandra who need support" said Tiny co-founder of POOR Magazine and former student at City College.

Although Sandra has found support in other organizations and community members, she is still fighting for the right to be heard as a victim and demanding justice in her case.

Sam Drew is a poverty scholar and staff writer at POOR Magazine for more of his powerful work go on-line to www.poormagazine.org. To support Sandra please call POOR Magazine at (415) 863-6306

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Gangs, Drugs and Denial

09/24/2021 - 10:42 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body

A ReViewForTheREVolution of Gangs, Drugs and Denial- a recent POOR Press publication.

by Marlon Crump/PNN

"I felt the cop's hard boot hit my neck, I heard the wind pass as he lifted back and swung his foot onto my neck and upper back, I tasted the warm blood drip down my mouth..."This gripping passage from Angel Garcia's recently published memoir, Gangs, Drugs and Denial is just one of many where he shares his life's pain, stories and struggles openly and honestly.

In his powerful, candid memoir Angel confronts his struggles with immigration, disability, drugs and gangs. Angel tells his harrowing life story, one filled with sexual abuse, rejection, trauma, addiction and police brutality- things no human should ever have to experience.

Yet, Garcia has succeeded in defeating these demons by gracefully reconstructing his life story. Angel joined POOR Magazine's Race, Poverty and Media Justice Institute earlier this year in his own pursuit of happiness and peace, as he overcame overwhelming odds, trials, and intense tribulations to write and publish this memoir.

Just reading the first couple of pages of this intense, attention-grabbing autobiography, the reader becomes immediately engulfed in Angel's life story. He begins by describing how at age 14, he gained the courage to flee his native country of Pe'ten, Guatemala to escape the inhumane abuse he suffered at the hands of relatives.

Through the pages of his book, Angel re-lives the pain of losing his mother at a very young age, the abuse he suffered and the brutality he witnessed on the streets in San Francisco's Mission District. He tells how he was schooled by OGs (Original Gangsters) and the veteranos (veterans) about life on the streets.

During the struggle to save his very life and sanity, Angel desperately sought soul salvation, reunion with his mother, and support in his later years, as he overcame drugs, violence, poverty, rejection, system oppression, callous characterization, and police brutality.

Though there are millions worldwide that have lived through similar heartbreaking stories of violence, rape, and trauma, unlike most Angel was able to resist self-destruction and suicide. In the end his strong determination led him on the road to his own recovery and self-healing. And, ultimately made him into a positive role model for others.

Despite being born with Cerebral Palsy and continually told that he would "never be able to succeed in life," Angel’s unseen strength and Catholic faith in the Virgin de Guadalupe of faith, luck and protection- a work of artistry in the fantastic tattoos on his arms and the cover of his book- helped him recover.

Angel's story is truly an inspiration to anyone who’s battled or battles the demons that Angel continues to conquer today.

This autobiography is far more than just a mere title. It's a journey into a life of inspiration, of voice that refused to go unheard, a tortured spirit that refused to remain unseen, and one man who ultimately needed Gangs, Drugs, and Denial to be re-born into the man that today is Angel Garcia.

For more information on Angel Garcia and to order Gangs, Drugs and Denial, please go to http://www.poormagazine.com/static/angel/index.html, call 415-863-6306 or write to POOR Magazine 1095 Market Street #307 San Francisco, CA 94103

POOR Press is a non-profit publishing project of POOR Magazine that is dedicated to publishing the books, cds and zines of very low income and or houseless youths, adults and elders in the Bay area.

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Another World Is Happening NOW!

09/24/2021 - 10:42 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body

Join POWER, St. Peter's Housing Committee, POOR Magazine,SOUL, and many more organizations and folks as they hold a vigil at Diane Feinstein's House in solidarity with displaced peoples in the Gulf and all over the world on the National Day of Action sponsored by the USSF this Saturday, January 26th 3-5pm 2460 Lyon at Vallejo in San Francisco.

by tiny/PNN

What is Access, What is Action? How do we truly include all voices in strategy building so we can also create models of long-term change?

I reflected on these questions as POOR Magazine poverty, race, disability, youth, migrant and indigenous scholars prepare to collaborate with other organizers locally and globally at the upcoming National Day of Action on January 26th 2008, a day of shared resistance of peoples in poverty the world over, an action sponsored by the US Social Forum.

My reflections brought me back to July 2007, and another story I wrote called, Another World or Another Mistake? - which attempted to document the phenomenal struggle that POOR Magazine poverty, race, disability and youth scholars faced when we traveled to Atlanta to collaborate with other media justice organizers on the Ida b Wells Media Justice Center at the US Social Forum.

"Another world of media production is possible!" was our quixotic motto; a world of media production not bought, sold and controlled by the same folks who always write, translate and produce our stories, the stories of poor folks of color locally and globally. We would establish a space like POOR has in San Francisco where media production is collaborative, where normally top-down structures of media making are shared and horizontal. Suffice to say, the creation in Atlanta of these other worlds of media production required a cross-organizational, cross-movement struggle we didn't expect. The space we were assigned, despite clear and year-in-advance requests to the contrary, wasn't accessible or safe; most of our time in ATL was spent trying to acquire a pace we could actually use for the inclusive, indigenous circle of revolutionary media production that we strove to create, that is necessary to have all voices heard and understood.

I wrote my first piece in the heat of the moment, immediately upon our return to the Bay Area, and although that piece stands as a testament to our disillusionment with certain facets of the ATL experience, the reality is that POOR's struggle in the Media Center detracted our attention away from the many positive things that flowered there.

The USSF was a very powerful event of strategy building, a tremendous logistical community-building coup for the "scattered left," and a meeting of people, organizations and popular fronts that could never have taken place in quite the same way were it not facilitated in quite the way it was.

Therefore as POOR Magazine scholars prepare to join POWER, St Peter's Housing Committee and other Bay Area organizations at a vigil at Dianne Feinstein's house in solidarity with the Green Ribbon Campaign which was launched by activists fighting for affordable housing and Reconstruction for Black and working people of New Orleans and throughout the Gulf Coast, on the powerful National Day of Action on January 26th I want to share with readers some of the powerful work that was presented at the USSF in July, and will be highlighted across the globe on the upcoming National Day of Action.

Beginning with some of the most grassroots organizing projects such as Direct Action for Rights and Equality who is doing performance art at the flea market in Providence, RI to protest gentrification and express solidarity to stop the demolition of public housing in New Orleans and Domestic Workers United who is launching a state legislative campaign for the Domestic Workers Bill of Rights with a press conference and convening of domestic workers in New York City�

To the Georgia Citizens Coalition on Hunger and Project South who are organizing a poor people's caravan through historic sites in Atlanta, ending in a Poor People's Assembly, and The National Network for Immigrant and Refugee Rights who are holding a press conference at their national conference the week of January 18th in Houston, Texas, and the New Orleans Folks and Black Workers for Justice are also requesting that organizations do actions targeting Louisiana Senator David Vitter, the Senate Banking Committee and the Senate in general to stop the destruction of public housing and demand passage of the Gulf Coast Recovery Act, SB 1668.

And, New York City AIDS Housing Network is organizing an action for the right to housing for people living with AIDS, Portland Jobs with Justice is doing street theater in the mall on the Colombia free trade agreement, Power U Center for Social Change, is organizing a naming ceremony and a reclaiming land away from corporate developers in the Historic Black community of Overtown, (Miami, FL,) or Southwest Workers Union who are organizing a march to the Alamo calling for Human Rights for All in San Antonio, Texas. All of these powerful groups of resistance fighters will be joined by several hundred more organizations that will hold press conferences in cities in Cuba to the Philippines

When POOR Magazine finally did acquire a space in Atlanta (by any means necessary) we were able to create some truly revolutionary media collaborations and relationships with poverty scholars across the nation such as Jim Anderson from Buffalo, New York, who is organizing to fight the closure of community hospitals in the US and Jay Toole, a woman dealing with shelter abuse in New York City. As well as media relationships such as Free Speech TV, Paper Tiger TV, Alternet and Race, Poverty and The Environment

As we continue to resist the ongoing repression of globalization, neo-liberalism, criminalization and displacement it is urgent for us to truly collaborate, listen and respect each others work and resistance. Another world is happening, and to ensure we are all part of the effort we must ALL see , hear , be a part of or link up with all the crucial organizers, and poverty scholars from the rest of the planet many of whom were at the USSF, who were and are doing truly revolutionary things, and in fact actively taking part in the creation of this crucial "World" we all know must happen, can happen and is happening.

For more information about the USSF schedule of action go on-line to www.ussf2007.org If you are in the bay area please join the Vigil at Diane Feinstein's House on Saturday, January 26th @ 3:00 pm 2460 Lyon at Vallejo in San Francisco. To read more of POOR Magazine's poverty , race and disability scholars written by folks who experience these positions first-hand go on-line to www.poormagazine.org

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