Archive for safer city initiative

LAPD Continues Criminalization Efforts against LA CAN to Squash Organizing and Silence Dissent, but We Won’t Let that Happen

Posted in civic participation, civil rights, human & civil rights, LAPD, legal, organizing with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , on July 8, 2011 by Cangress

On Wednesday, July 6th, just hours after the conviction of General Dogon was announced, LA CAN and partners including Dream Team LA, Comunidad Presente, Hippie Kitchen and others gathered for our monthly protest of the supposed Skid Row Neighborhood Watch Walk.  Pete White, LA CAN Co-Director, was distinctly targeted and arrested during the protest.

This Walk is organized by the Central City East Association, a business improvement district which promotes criminalization of homelessness and the increased policing and enforcement under the Skid Row Safer Cities Initiative.  Often, City Attorney Trutanich, Councilmember Jan Perry, other business leaders, and media attend the walk.  What is conspicuously missing every month is Skid Row residents.

LA CAN and our partners decided to begin a monthly protest of this event for several reasons, including: 1) the City Attorney’s crackdown on protest and dissent which has impacted all of the participating organizations; 2) the lack of resident involvement in the Walk – instead using the walk to demonize and degrade residents; and 3) to protest the Safer Cities Initiative (SCI), since the Walkers are generally accompanied by several SCI officers who have made thousands of arrests of poor, mostly Black residents as part of the Initiative.

We have been doing this protest since March, but this month the response from LAPD was quite different and more intense.  Although there were only 10-12 people, mostly business reps, participating in the Walk, there were dozens of LAPD officers on hand.  Officers gave conflicting information to legal observers about our right to be there and our right to protest on public property.

LAPD at 6th and Gladys, a block before arrest

Although we were simply exercising our first amendment right on a public sidewalk that was not closed to the public nor occupied by a permit obtained by CCEA, Pete White was arrested for what LAPD claimed was disrupting a public meeting.  After the arrest, an order to disperse was given and all others were threatened with arrest.

A community partner who also attended the protest of the “Safety Walk” posted this video:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z_4qOHHall8&feature=channel_video_title

LA CAN leadership has been targeted with arrests, detentions, false charges, degrading comments and public statements by LAPD, and much more because of our opposition to Safer Cities and our active resistance to criminalization efforts.  We believe this arrest, and especially this ridiculous charge, is unjust like all the rest and we will fight it all the way.  Pete has been released from jail and his first court date is scheduled for July 27th.  Stay tuned for ways to support.

 

The Honorable Philip S. Gutierrez, United States District Judge, Issues Order to Stop LAPD’s Ongoing Practice of Taking Property from Homeless People, Finding the City’s Argument Lacked Credibility

Posted in civic participation, civil rights, grassroots policy, human & civil rights, LAPD, organizing, press release, Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , on June 23, 2011 by Cangress

For Immediate release

Contact:   
Law Offices of Carol Sobel
310 393-3055 [o]/ 310-922-7001[c]

Pete White
213-434-1594 [c]

A federal district judge in Los Angeles issued an injunction today against the City of Los Angeles to halt the seizure and destruction of the personal possessions of homeless residents of Skid Row.  This follows a temporary restraining order the court issued against the City on April 22, 2011.

The court’s order rejected the City’s claim that the property was abandoned or created a public hazard. The judge ruled that homeless individuals have an expectation of privacy in their property, even when they leave it unattended on public sidewalks for short periods of time. The court also rejected the claim that signs posted by the City advising that property on the sidewalks would be disposed of was proper justification that anything on the sidewalk was abandoned and could be taken and destroyed.

Jeff Dietrech of the Catholic Worker/Hippie Kitchen located in Skid Row stated, “Homeless people have now had their inalienable rights of person and property validated by the court—LAPD hands off!”

In its ruling the court also noted that significant evidence submitted by the City in opposition to the claims of the homeless individuals was not credible and conflicted with other evidence the City submitted. The opinion recognized the City’s initiative to revitalize the downtown area, but found that the homeless population will suffer greater injury without the court’s intervention on behalf of their rights.

LA CAN Organizer and Skid Row resident Steve Richardson, better known as General Dogon, worked diligently to collect documentation presented in the lawsuit. When informed about Judge Gutierrez’s ruling, he stated, “Thankfully this is one judge that saw through the City of Los Angeles’ lies—this is more than just a lawsuit. It is about dignity, respect, and property rights for all people.”

Click HERE to read Judge Gutierrez’ Preliminary Injunction Ruling (Highlights added by LA CAN).

On Homeless Memorial Day, LA CAN Releases Survey Data on the Devastating Impacts of Safer Cities Policing in Skid Row

Posted in anti-violence, civil rights, human & civil rights, LAPD, organizing with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , on December 21, 2010 by Cangress

On Tuesday, December 21st, the Los Angeles Community Action Network (LA CAN) held a press conference to release a human rights assessment of Skid Row’s Safer Cities Initiative, an intensive policing effort launched by Mayor Villaraigosa that has been sustained for more than four years.  Residents also delivered the report to the Police Commission and called for the end of Safer Cities.

The Human Rights Assessment is available here:

Human Rights Assessment-Skid Row’s Safer Cities Initiative 2010

The report is based on a survey of more than 200 poor and homeless residents of downtown Los Angeles and shows that:

  • More than half of the respondents (53.6%), both homeless and housed, had been arrested in just the past year.  This compares to an adult arrest rate in the State of California of 4.9 percent.
  • As a result of arrest, 51.5% lost their housing, 42.4% lost access to social services, and 16.4% lost employment.
  • Although LAPD touts improvements in biased policing (formerly racial profiling), 75 percent reported being profiled by police in the past year due to their race, economic status, or residence in the Skid Row community.  Almost 80 percent of respondents reported they do not feel safe from police violence and police harassment.
  • The report also includes previously unpublished data from the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority’s 2009 Homeless Count that shows that the most prevalent form of victimization reported by those surveyed was police harassment (37%), exceeding assault (24%) and robbery (18%).

 

Community groups from across the country submit an urgent appeal to the highest international authority on human rights defenders

Posted in civil rights, human & civil rights, LAPD, united nations with tags , , , , , , , , , , on December 20, 2010 by Cangress

Steve Richardson, an organizer with the Los Angeles Community Action Network (LA CAN) commonly known as General Dogon, faces criminal charges and potential incarceration in what appears to be retaliation for Richardson’s recognized and influential human rights work in the Skid Row community of Los Angeles. Just weeks ago, LA CAN and community partners from across the country submitted an urgent appeal on Richardson’s behalf to the highest international authority on human rights defenders. The appeal alleges that the City’s use of the criminal justice system to target Richardson has not only troubled him and others at LA CAN, but also sends “a clear message to other existing and potential human rights defenders.” The appeal urges the UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights defenders, Margaret Sekaggya, to investigate the City’s persecution of Richardson.  Review a copy here:

Richardson_UrgentAppeal

The UN has created a reporting mechanism, through which watch dog organizations, community groups and individuals may submit appeals internationally. Sekaggya collects and reviews these appeals and determines whether and how to intervene and pressure government officials to cease the persecution of and protect human rights defenders.

LA CAN’s CommunityWatch teams, which document human rights violations, are well-known to City officials for releasing crucial video evidence of violations that have led to media coverage and civil rights lawsuits against the LAPD.  Dogon is the lead organizer for the CommunityWatch project.

In May, Richardson was one of three LA CAN members unfairly arrested out of a group of over 300 in LA City Council Chambers protesting the Council’s inaction on a rent freeze proposal for rent-stabilized tenants. The charges against all three members were initially dropped, but re-filed against Richardson in August, one week after he gave testimony in Council Chambers about his LA City Commendation Award for completing a violence prevention program.  He returned the Award to the Council since, he argued, it wasn’t worth the paper it was printed on after the City’s violent acts against him and others in May.

Richardson’s case is not an anomaly, but one example of a pattern of retaliatory acts faced by those speaking out in defense of human rights in the United States. More than 45 human rights defenders working on housing rights, immigrant rights, workers’ rights, and transportation rights in LA are currently facing criminal charges.

However, unique from the others in LA, the retaliation against General Dogon is essentially an expression of the daily harassment and abuse by LAPD toward residents of Skid Row. Skid Row is home to about 15,000 extremely low-income residents of whom one third are homeless, and, since 2006, the City’s primary response to this housing crisis has been intensified policing through the so-called Safer Cities Initiative.  Safer Cities has resulted in tens of thousands of arrests and citations, many of them similarly unjust as those against Dogon.

Protesting racist Safer Cities policing in Skid Row and it’s expansion to Venice

Posted in civic participation, civil rights, human & civil rights, LAPD, organizing, Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , on October 8, 2010 by Cangress

As Councilmember Bill Rosenthal calls for an SCI expansion to invade Venice Beach, residents from downtown and Venice align forces to stop all SCI policing.

The Safer Cities Initiative, still very much active in Skid Row, recently passed  its 4th Anniversary with still no intervention to stop it from any elected officials. In years past there were huge press conferences in select venues with every local political opportunist fighting for their minute on the microphone. This, of course, was accompanied by degrading media coverage that portrayed poor, mostly Black, residents as animals that were unfit to live, and, who deserved exactly the type of treatment they were getting. And this was always placed in juxtaposition to a new and emerging, White, downtown-playground waiting for those who could pay to play.

From day-one most residents decried the racist policing being thrust upon them in violent and unforgiving ways. The oppressive nature of SCI made some people run and hide for cover but few, if any, were able to be untouched by its wide net. At the same time many residents believed the only way to stop SCI was to fight it head-on, organize resistance, and take public action to add allies in opposition to this “Jim Crow” throwback policing.

This year there was no SCI luncheon held in the Biltmore Hotel; no regal press briefing held by the Mayor, Chief of Police, Central City Association, or the throngs of council people masquerading as “progressive.” There was, however, still the growing group of residents and supporters demanding an end to SCI in downtown, and fighting to stop it before it reaches Venice.

This year’s action entitled, “The Triple Block Bonanza,” used street theater, community education, and direct action to highlight the realities faced by those unfortunate enough to have to deal with SCI.  In the morning, there was a lively march to police headquarters, where we occupied their space as they have been occupying ours.  We also delivered over 3,500 signatures from downtown residents and businesses who oppose SCI.  In the afternoon, we reclaimed space on Towne Street, where police have recently been targeting free food providers to intimidate them out of the area.  The City’s goals remain clear – homeless and poor people should be criminalized until they leave downtown and, now, the people who provide basic necessities to the community should leave too.  But we’re still here, and we’re not going anywhere!

 

41.18d skit to illuminate how targeted and unfair enforcement happens in the community

 

 

Heading to the LAPD Administration Building..."we ain't scared!"

 

 

Food Not Bombs serves up a healthy and delicious plate of brown rice, vegetables, and beans on Towne Street

 

 

Hippie Kitchen representing as always.

 


Hot Off the Press: Community Connection #37

Posted in anti-violence, art & culture, civic participation, civil rights, community connection, DWAC & Women's Issues, education, food access, grassroots policy, health access, housing victories, human & civil rights, LAPD, legal, organizing, united nations with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on July 21, 2010 by Cangress

[enter here to read real stories of Angelenos making history] community connect 37FINAL

It is that time again, Community Connection time! This edition will highlight the Los Angeles Right to Housing Collective’ response to the May 21, 2010 melee in City Council. We will take you to the Mayor’s Mansion and LA Council President Eric Garcetti’s home where residents let him know “that we shall not be moved!” We will also bring you news from Northern Cali where executives of Amerland Group, headed by Ruben Islas, have been arrested and charged with manslaughter in connection to faulty fire systems in one of their affordable housing for seniors projects [search back-issues of the CC and read more about Amerland's failures to adequately serve low-income families and individuals].  These are but a few of the stories that are just a mouse click away, join us as we connect communities locally and abroad.

New Directions California: A Public Health and Safety Approach to Drug Policy

Posted in civic participation, education, health access, housing victories, LAPD, legal, organizing, united nations, women's issues with tags , , , , , , , , , on June 28, 2010 by Cangress

LA CAN is a Co-sponsor of this timely and incredible event. We encourage you to join us on July 8, 2010 at the California Endowment [details below] to learn, grow, and build approaches to substance use and addiction that really make our communities safe.

Solidarity Statement on the May 21, 2010 Proceedings in Los Angeles City Hall

Posted in anti-violence, civic participation, human & civil rights, legal, organizing with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on June 7, 2010 by Cangress

Dear LA CAN supporters and friends,

On May 21, 2010 tenants and their allies who were fighting for a temporary rent freeze were betrayed by Councilmembers and attacked by LAPD in City Council Chambers.

We are writing to explain the details of these events, urge your public support, and ask you to sign and return the attached solidarity statement.

On May 21st a 4-month moratorium on rent increases was being considered by City Council, an action that reflected months of organizing and the active involvement of more than 1,000 low-income tenants from across the city in the rent stabilization reform process.  The proposed moratorium was a significant compromise by tenants.  Our original demands were (and still are) for comprehensive rent stabilization ordinance reform and a one-year moratorium until full reforms were in place.  The motion to write the moratorium had passed two weeks prior with an 8-6 vote, and a vote was needed on this day to adopt it.

Council chambers was filled with mostly Black and Brown tenants, including mothers with their children, people with disabilities, elders, Veterans, and others, with more than a hundred people in overflow areas. Tenants had taken the day off from work, left their children in school after hours, and/or had to make special family arrangements to attend the meeting.  After five hours of a Council meeting that included numerous awards, commission appointments, and the declaration of Harvey Milk Day, the Council took up the moratorium item.  Limited public testimony was taken on this crucial issue – about 12 minutes each for those supporting and opposing.  Councilmembers Hahn and Alarcon expressed their support for the moratorium and their willingness to include some additional compromise, and called for a vote.

Council President Garcetti then intervened in the process and introduced an alternate motion to send the issue back to Committee, although two weeks prior he had voted to move it forward — essentially killing the moratorium and any chance for respite for rent-burdened tenants.  That motion passed 10 – 5, with only Councilmembers Alarcon, Hahn, Huizar, Krekorian and Wesson voting on behalf of tenants.

Tenants were outraged by this betrayal and the obvious priority placed on landowners over tenants.  We began chanting such things as “Housing is a Human Right” and “Traitors.”  Councilmember Zine, who was acting President at the time although Mr. Garcetti was in Chambers, immediately called for the police to clear the room.  Within minutes, there were over 60 officers pouring into Council chambers with bean bag guns, taser guns, and billy clubs ready.  Councilmember Zine remained in the President’s seat, instigating the officers and continually commanding LAPD on the loudspeaker with such orders as “Get ‘em out of here.”

Tenants continued chanting as we were moving toward the door.  Our chants posed absolutely no physical threat to any person or property.  An order to disperse was never given by LAPD.  Yet, when the entire large group had already moved about 2/3 of the way to the door, officers charged the group, using extreme force and violence against tenants.  Officers had been aggressive toward tenants all day, but escalated their efforts to the extreme at this point.  The police locked a group of people in the chambers at one point. Also, the police attacked people – shoving, pushing and pulling them to the ground.  They stomped, choked, hit with billy clubs, and shot one person with a taser gun at least four times.  Three people were forcefully arrested, two of whom face felony charges.  These were not planned or justified arrests.

At no time during this violence did Councilmember Garcetti retain his seat or his obligations as Council President, nor did he intervene to prevent these human and civil rights abuses happening in front of his face.  Instead he allowed Councilmember Zine to incite the officers further while he sat and laughed and chatted in Mr. Zine’s assigned chair.

We know that many of you consider Mr. Garcetti a friend, an ally, or a supporter, and many of us have as well.  Yet, on May 21st, he was wrong on all counts – he initiated and allowed multiple and massive human rights violations. For years tenants have been overburdened by their rent payments, many paying over 50% of their income to maintain homes. In the meantime landlords have generally had profitable, growing businesses.  Yet, tenants got no break.  Councilmember Garcetti betrayed tenants with his motion to kill the moratorium, a violation of the human right to housing.  He acted on behalf of wealthy property owners instead.  He was not protecting small, “mom and pop” landlords, who had already been exempted from the proposed moratorium.  He was not protecting labor, as he originally claimed to housing leaders, since many union members were present in Chambers and directly expressed their support for the moratorium to him prior to the vote.  And, last, Mr. Garcetti allowed a physical assault on the democratic process in his own Chambers and sat silent watching police brutality against low-income people of color.  This cannot be acceptable to any of us.

There were others who were wrong that day.  Nine other Councilmembers caved to the pressure of large, wealthy landlords instead of taking the opportunity to provide temporary respite for rent-burdened tenants in an historic economic crisis.  Councilmember Zine basically ordered LAPD officers to escalate their tactics against tenants who were already peacefully, but not quietly, leaving chambers.  Councilmember Rosendahl had indicated he would vote against the moratorium.  Many other councilmembers sat and watched the brutality unfold.  And, to date, only Councilmember Alarcon made a public statement that reflected the sad state of affairs in City Hall on that day.

But Councilmember Garcetti is the President and he introduced the motion to kill the moratorium.  He could have simply voted no, and we would have seen where the votes fell.  He did not.  He is also obligated to preside over Chambers, facilitate an open public process, and ensure the safety of those participating in that process.  He did not.

On the same day that Harvey Milk Day was established in Los Angeles, the exact same police force and brutality tactics used against Harvey Milk and those in the gay rights movement were used against LA’s housing rights movement.  In City Hall.  In front of the Council’s own eyes.  As Angelenos, we are asked to participate in civic processes and give input and when we did, enforcers were called in to violently silence us. Again, this cannot be acceptable to any of us.

Today we inform you that we will continue our fight and push forward our demands to ensure that Housing is a Human Right in Los Angeles.  Also, we want to let you know that we hold every Councilmember accountable to the tenant majority in Los Angeles.  The council, as a whole, is morally responsible for ensuring safe, stable and decent affordable housing regardless of market conditions or their own political aspirations.

We urge you to act.  We urge you to publicly voice your opinions and position about this travesty of justice.  While private conversations are often useful, in this case we need widespread and public response.  We cannot allow May 21st to happen without accountability from all of those who participated – either actively or silently.  As a first and simple step, you can sign the attached solidarity statement, which will be shared with public officials and others. We also urge you to send/email more extensive letters to Councilmember Garcetti and others, and provide copies to us.  There are many other ways you can support the LA Right to Housing Collective’s actions now and in the future, so please contact us if you are interested and willing to act.

Signed:

The LA Right to Housing Collective, including:

Coalition LA, Comunidad Presente, Inquilidos Unidos, Los Angeles Community Action Network, POWER, South Asian Network,

Strategic Actions for a Just Economy, and Union de Vecinos.

(All of whom had members and staff present in Council Chambers on May 21, 2010)

News clips and raw video are available at:

KTLA-Rent-Control-Advocates-and-LAPD-Clash-at-City-Hall-Raw-Video

?id=135380@kcbs.dayport.com

Rent Freeze for Main Street!

Posted in civil rights, DWAC & Women's Issues, education, food access, health access, housing victories, human & civil rights, legal, organizing, Uncategorized, united nations with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on May 5, 2010 by Cangress

Freeze Our Rents Right Now

-Los Angeles, CA

Angelenos, withering under the weight of a depression with no end in sight, are calling for the Los Angeles City Council to give them a break. The break they are demanding comes in the form of a “rent freeze” slated to last for the next 12 months. It is fact that the lion’s share of Los Angeles residents are indeed renters. Plus, in light of the housing bubble collapse, many more Angelenos have been thrust into marginal housing; an already over-burdened social service system; and the ranks of homelessness.

As cuts to crucially needed services continue to send the quality of life for poor residents straight down the toilet, banks and businesses continue to get bailed out. Adding insult to injury  in many instances banks have assumed the role of landlord in foreclosed multi-unit properties. There are numerous reports stating that banks are not making repairs, violating health and safety code standards, and attempting to drive people from their units. Why? Because it is easier to get rid of an empty building, that’s why!

Many of these institutions are direct, or indirect beneficiaries, of the bailout.

A Little History

The City-sponsored “Economic Study of the Rent Stabilization Ordinance and the Los Angeles Housing Market” (RSO Study) was released in June 2009. This study includes recommendations relative to the City’s Rent Stabilization Ordinance (RSO), including calling for the elimination of the 3% “floor” on rental increases allowed by the RSO based on the Consumer Price Index and elimination of the additional 1% rent increase allowed for each utility (gas or electricity) where it’s included in the rent. The study showed that the utility increases allowed in the RSO bears no relationship to the actual cost to landlords, thus providing landlords with a significant windfall at tenants’ expense.

The current CPI rate for 2010 is -.62 %, which means that renters will face unjustified rent increase of 3%, due to the “floor” beginning July 1, 2010, unless the rent increase moratorium is passed.

The City of West Hollywood currently has a 0% allowable rent increase. In San Francisco rent increases are now 0.1%,  in Oakland it is 0.7%, in Santa Monica it is a 1% increase, and in Berkeley it is a 0.1% allowable rent increase.  Why does Los Angeles continue to stand out and to have a 3% minimum increase on the books?

On May 5, 2010, in a 3-1 vote in our favor, we were able to convince the Community & Economic Development Committee that a moratorium is warranted. As with all political struggle our original 12-month demand was reduced to 4 months–of course this was without our knowledge or support. While this falls short of our ultimate 12-month moratorium we are clear that we will continue to fight hard for a vote on Friday that reflects the community’s. Moreover, we will not stop fighting for the Human Right to Housing until all of our demands are met.

If you are a tenant living in Los Angeles we urge you to come and join the growing ranks of tenants fighting for the rent-freeze and the universal right to housing.

Details:

LA City Hall , 200 N. Main, Los Angeles, CA

Friday, May 7th 10:00am – conference to be held immediately after the vote

SCI Anniversary Report Back & Thank You’s

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on October 2, 2009 by Cangress
Unity in the Hood

Unity in the Hood

We wanted to express our sincere thank you for your strong showing of solidarity against the Safer Cities Initiative over the past two days – and a special thanks goes to those of you who are on our Safer Cities Committee.  Please also share with your friends, colleagues and members that joined us that we are not reaching with this email.

Your participation embodies the bold resistance needed to swing the pendulum of change in our direction, far left of center. Your insistence that the creed, “…and justice for all”  be truly recognized for all regardless of economic status, race, or gender affirms that a better day is coming. Your bravery in speaking truth to power on our terms is commendable.  We and all of our members recognize and value your commitment to justice.

International Symbol of Distress, we are under siege!

International Symbol of Distress, we are under siege!

On Monday night, about 150 people joined us throughout the evening as we claimed space and celebrated community strength on the steps of Central Division.  On Tuesday morning, after a few dozen people rallied and distributed citations around City Hall, more than 100 people gathered in Chambers to address the Council.  Councilmember Perry, acting president, promptly skipped over public comment when she saw the number of people there to speak out against SCI and her failed leadership in her district.  While her stalling tactic caused us to lose a handful of people, most everyone was able to stay.  After waiting patiently for a reasonable time, we refused to be blatantly ignored – we loudly and strongly demanded that public comment be heard and it was.

LA CAN members and staff were really energized by the two-day action.  We were able to highlight community leadership and resistance, re-activate old members and gain new ones, and stand together as a broad Los Angeles community fighting criminalization of poverty.   Also, as a result of our actions in Council Chambers, Councilmember Rosendahl called for a review of the Safer Cities Initiative. While small in some respects. this opens some new doors of possibility thus widening our opportunities to finally stop the occupation and human rights violations occurring daily in our homes and community.

unity2Today we celebrate, tomorrow we continue the fight and we are honored to have you by our side.  End SCI Now!

P.S. Below are a couple of the news clips, and it was also covered on npr and other radio, as well as Channel 7.  This is the first year that the media covered only LA CAN and allies’ perspective on SCI, instead of solely our response to the City’s propaganda!!  We’re going to be putting pics and videos on our blog in the coming days, so check it out at cangress.wordpress.com.

LAPD, Los Angeles Poverty Department, is in the house

LAPD, Los Angeles Poverty Department, is in the house

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-cityhall-protest-2009sep30,0,1062625.story

http://www.dailynews.com/search/ci_13444226?IADID=Search-www.dailynews.com-www.dailynews.com

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