Archive for SAJE

HACLA Tenants and Other LA Human Right to Housing Collective Members File Lawsuit against Housing Authority

Posted in civic participation, housing victories, human & civil rights, legal, organizing with tags , , , , , , , , , on January 20, 2011 by Cangress

Press Release

January 20, 2011

For Immediate Release

Contacts:

Bill Pryzlucki, (310) 439-8564

Becky Dennison (213) 840-4664

HACLA Tenants and Other LA Human Right to Housing Collective Members File Lawsuit against Housing Authority

Tenants who were excluded from recent public meetings and processes file suit for violations of the State’s Brown Act and tenants’ right to organize

What: Last month, LA Human Right to Housing Collective members filed a lawsuit in State court to address the Housing Authority’s violations of the right to participate in public processes during the contentious 2011 Agency Plan approval.  The lawsuit will be formally served to HACLA representatives today.

Why: HACLA continuously fails to provide adequate notice for the Board of Commissioner meetings, and regularly takes actions that exclude the public from real participation, all actions that violate the Brown Act. During the 2011 Agency Plan approval process last year, the Housing Authority used a variety of tactics to exclude tenants from participating, provided misinformation to tenants and tenant organizations, and excluded tenant rights organizations from their legal right to educate and associate with tenants upon invitation. Additionally, HACLA continues patterns and practices that violate the Brown Act, such as holding special meetings in lieu of regular meetings, posting agendas only on the door of HACLA on weekends, and not allowing the public into meetings or to address the Board.  Tenants active in the LA Human Right to Housing Collective have taken steps to counteract HACLA’s exclusionary tactics but after HACLA refused to respond to letters with demands to correct these issues, tenants had no choice but to initiate legal action to invalidate the 2011 Plan and correct the participation process in the future.

Who: Los Angeles Right to Housing Collective is a coalition of organizations from across the City of Los Angeles.  Our members consist of tenants, homeowners, immigrants, low income families, homeless people, seniors and youth from across Los Angeles, including East LA, Downtown, South Central, Venice, Koreatown, and Pico Union.  Member organizations include Union de Vecinos, LACAN, POWER,¡Comunidad Presente!, Inquilinos Unidos, SAJE, and others.  We believe that affordable, decent, safe, and sanitary housing builds stable communities and that housing must be accessible to everyone. In a country with an abundance of resources housing should not be out of reach for the most poor and the most in need.

Spanish speakers available

###



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.

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

Community Connection #36: Hot Off the Press

Posted in 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, women's issues with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on April 15, 2010 by Cangress

It is that time again, Community Connection time! In this edition you will join us as we connect the struggle for human rights at home with those struggles abroad. We will also pick a part the latest attempt by the City Attorney, LAPD, Union Rescue Mission, and Business community as they continue to try an banish poor and Black downtown residents. As always, there is plenty of information for everyone and please send us your thoughts.

[Please click on link below to view Community Connection 36]

community connect 36 final

Councilmember Alarcon Calls for Rent Increase Moratorium

Posted in civic participation, civil rights, education, grassroots policy, housing victories, human & civil rights, legal, organizing, united nations with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on April 14, 2010 by Cangress

–Los Angeles

On the morning of  April 14, 2010 tenants from across Los Angeles crammed into the LA City Council press room waiting anxiously for the press conference to begin. This would not be your usual City Hall pres conference where politicians are surrounded by their staff, lobbyists and the gamut of  deep-pocket special interest players that adorn the corridors of City Hall. Instead, you had an eclectic mix of people adorning colorful t-shirts that boldly stated their organizations, mission and communities standing around the podium.

Today would mark the first time in a long while in which everyday Angelenos would be viewed as a priority. Today Councilmember Alarcon would call for a 1-year freeze on rent-increases in rent stabilized units in Los Angeles.

Councilmember Alarcon opened with a story about he and his wife having lunch at El Pollo Loco. A property owner approached him and said hello, to which Alarcon asked if he was faring okay in these tough economic times. The owner responded that the mortgage meltdown was great for business because there was such a demand for rental property and that  he could raise his rents at will.

That was the make or break moment for Richard Alarcon.

You could sense the pain of uncertainty as tenants from LA CAN, Union de Vecinos, and Comunidad Presente shared their testimony from the podium. Councilmember Alarcon listened quietly, thoughtfully, as Claudia Gomez tearfully told her story about a family of six forced to live in a one bedroom home. It was clear, given the entirety of her comments, that any increase would mean being forced to choose one life sustaining thing over another.

Click Link below to Read Story

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2010/04/la-councilman-calls-for-oneyear-moratorium-on-rent-hikes.htm

Claudia G., Union de Vecinos, tells her personal story of unfair rent burden.

Thelmy P., Comunidad Presente, talks about members of their organization who will be devastated by an increase of any sort.

Leonard Woods, LA CAN, tells how it is to be a retired disabled worker and facing rent increases.

Union de Vecinos and Baby Destiny, our next generation freedom fighter.

Joel and the CES family in the house!

Los Angeles Human Right to Housing Collective organizations involved have included: Los Angeles Housing Preservation Alliance, Coalition LA, Coalition for Economic Survival, Comunidad Presente, Esperanza Community Housing, Inquilinos Unidos, KIWA, LA CAN, LACEH&H, Lamp Community, POWER, SAJE, Union de Vecinos, legal partners, and other supporters


LA CAN and allies arrive at the Nate Holden Performing Arts Center

Zandra S., LA CAN Member, reminds everyone that housing is a human right.

LA CAN keeps the energy flowing while waiting for the rest of the troops to arrive.

Councilmember Wesson serves chicken, spaghetti, and red kool-aid at the HCED meeting.

Fighting for the human right to housing is catching on, over 500 tenants were in attendance.

Wesson listens as tenant after tenant tells their housing horror stories.

There was overwhelming support for all speakers experiencing gross human rights to housing violations.

Single mother loses her job, her home, and has to move into a garage. The garage owner is seeking to raise her rent another $500 dollars.

Deborah B., LA CAN, tells why it is important to save public housing.

Resident has faced five-illegal evictions as property owner attempts to empty the building.

Each story highlights the pain that people on "Main Street" are experiencing on a daily basis.

March 30, 2009 Human Right to Housing Action at a Glance

Posted in grassroots policy, housing victories, human & civil rights, legal, organizing, Uncategorized, united nations with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on March 31, 2010 by Cangress

–March 30, 2010

Hundreds of tenants from across Los Angeles converged on L.A. City Hall to demand that policy-makers; 1) make housing for everyone that needs it a priority; 2) respond to the United Nations report which documented human rights violations that exist in L.A.s housing stock; and, 3) hold a public hearing, in the community, at a time that is convenient for a broad range of Angeleno’s.

Tenants, armed with determination, were prepared to stay in City Hall until their demands were met. Sensing that something powerful was underfoot Councilmember Wesson quickly capitulated to their demands.  He addressed the crowd after our testimony and agreed to hold an HCED hearing in his district on or near April 15th.  Stay tuned for more details.

[click links below to view declaration demands and recommendations]

People’s Housing Declaration [ENGLISH] Declaración de la Gente de Los Angeles [SPANISH]

Photo Journal:

Photographs By:  Nicholas Dahmann

Tenants start arriving 1hr prior to scheduled council meeting to guarantee they secured a space in council chambers.

Union de Vecinos and LA CAN Organizers discuss the current atmosphere in council chambers.

Tenants fill council chambers leaving standing room only for all other business. The following organizations were represented at the historic gathering: Los Angeles Housing Preservation Alliance, Bus Riders Union, Coalition LA, Coalition for Economic Survival, Comunidad Presente, Esperanza Community Housing, Homeless Health Care LA, Hippie Kitchen, Inquilinos Unidos, LA CAN, LACEHH, POWER, SAJE, Union de Vecinos, and our legal supporters.

Council President Eric Garcetti prepares to receive public testimony on human rights violations.


Bilal Ali, Coalition LA, issues community demand and defiantly waits for a response. The LAPD officer attempts to remove Bilal but Councilmember Wesson intervenes.

Communidad Presente's Davin Corona and daughter Amaya speak "truth to power."

Councilmember Herb Wesson is apparently moved by public testimony as his face conveys deep thought.

Tenants prepare to dig in provided their demands are not met.

Councilmember Wesson agrees to hold an official community meeting to focus on the United Nations report.

Tenants gather in the City Hall Rotunda to celebrate their victory and prepare for the next leg of an extensive journey. The mood was festive, unifying, spiritually and emotionally uplifting, and very optimistic.

Inquilinos Unidos member let's it be known that fighting for the right to housing is the order of the day.

"Rumble in the Rotunda" as Herman Jones gets the crowd moving.

Union de Vecinos member stands proudly at the post action rally

The smile and sign says it all, this day is for the people!

There is no stopping the movement that has started. Si se puede, Yes we can!!!

Post action rally in front of LAPD headquarters

CES member fighting for the right to housing

Espy, Bus Riders Union, pumping up the crowd, "a thousand more houses a thousand less police, a thousand more buses a thousand less police"

Media Advisory: TENANTS OVERWHELM LA CITY COUNCIL CHAMBERS

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on March 30, 2010 by Cangress

MEDIA ADVISORY                                                                                                                            MEDIA CONTACT(S):

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Pete White (213) 434-1594                                                                                                                                                                         Elizabeth Blaney (323)816-4961

TENANTS OVERWHELM LA CITY COUNCIL CHAMBERS

Community Organizations and tenants continue to build momentum to secure the Human Right to Housing in light of the recent United Nations report that finds Los Angeles in violation of human rights standards.

WHAT: Hundreds of tenants overwhelm city council chambers to demand that the Mayor and LA City Council make housing for everyone that needs it a top priority. Tenants will present their housing declaration outlining their vision of safe, clean, and truly affordable, housing. They will also deliver public testimony, demand a special public hearing on the state of housing in Los Angeles, and rally outside city hall making their voices heard.

WHEN: March 30, 2010

10 a.m. – 12 p.m.

WHERE: Los Angeles City Hall

City Council Chambers, 200 N. Spring St., Los Angeles, CA

WHY: Earlier this month, the UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Adequate Housing, Raquel Rolnik, released her report and recommendations to the United Nations on the state of housing in the United States. In it she states:

Housing is not simply about bricks and mortar, nor is it simply a financial asset. Housing includes a sense of community, trust and bonds built between neighbours over time; the schools which educate the children; and the businesses which support the local economy and provide needed goods and services. The subprime mortgage crisis has increased an already large gap between the supply and demand of affordable housing, and the economic crisis which followed has led to increased unemployment and an even greater need for affordable housing.”

Despite the report findings that highlighted Los Angeles’ housing violations the City continues to prioritize sustaining the police force while simultaneously cutting services for those most in need.  Additionally, the Department of Housing and Urban Development is constructing legislation to eliminate its public housing stock across the country.

Los Angeles tenant Claudia Gomez states, “with homelessness increasing, now is the time for the city to strengthen its housing policies to protect more tenants and provide housing stability for all its residents. Many of our recommendations can be done at no additional cost to the city.”

WHO: A broad coalition of housing rights organizations which include: Los Angeles Housing Preservation Alliance, Bus Riders Union, Coalition LA, Coalition for Economic Survival, Comunidad Presente, Esperanza Community Housing, Homeless Health Care LA, Hippie Kitchen, Inquilinos Unidos, LA CAN, LACEHH, POWER, SAJE, Union de Vecinos, and our legal supporters.

Specific Media Opportunities: Public testimonies, outside rally.  Spanish speakers will be available.

International Human Rights Day

Posted in anti-violence, art & culture, civic participation, civil rights, grassroots policy, housing victories, human & civil rights, legal, organizing, Uncategorized, united nations with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , on December 14, 2009 by Cangress

–December 10, 2009

Organizations from across Los Angeles descended upon City Hall demanding that policy makers respect their human right to adequate housing.

In a gathering that was truly reflective of multi-cultural L.A. residents took to the streets on the International Day of Human Rights. Members from KIWA, SAN, LA CAN, Union de Vecinos, Comunidad Presente, CES, Esperanza Housing, SAJE, Coalition LA, and Homeless Healthcare took to the street to highlight domestic human rights violations.

The action comes on the heels of a recent United Nations mission investigating housing conditions in the United States. While in Los Angeles Raquel Rolnik, United Nations Special Rapporteur on Adequate Housing, stated that she indeed saw human rights violations in our city. The United Nations will release findings in March 2010 in their official report. Stay tuned because there will be many more activities in the months before the release.

“Taming the Perfect Storm”

Posted in civic participation, grassroots policy, human & civil rights, legal, organizing with tags , , , , , , , , , on October 13, 2008 by Cangress

NEWS RELEASE:

Please Contact:  Sharon H. Jimenez, Icon Imaging PR, 310-409-3306 cell, enzah@aol.com

 

SOUTH LOS ANGELES POVERTY LEADERS

JOINED BY HUNDREDS IN SIGNING OF A

DECLARATION OF HEALTH AND HUMAN RIGHTS

(“This community is determined to fight for the rights of the poorest population in Los Angeles.  An historic community that has suffered for generations.” Jim Mangia, CEO, St. John’s Well Child & Family Centers)

 

OCTOBER 12th, 2008-SOUTH LOS ANGELES

            As news of the Dow Jones sharp declines dominate headlines, hundreds of determined social service providers in LA’s hardest hit community have dedicated themselves to fight for a place at the table.   “We have a high density population in South LA whose suffering has been going on for generations,” declared the CEO of 11 public health clinics in the region.   “Homelessness is rising at an alarming rate among people who just can’t afford the increases in their rent.  Housing is inadequate and dangerous with lead paint, mold, rodent and cockroach infestations that undermine the health of children and families.   There isn’t enough housing.  And, law enforcement is so misguided that poor and homeless people are criminalized and plucked from their communities simply because they have fallen through all safety nets.”

 

            Jim Mangia was joined by Dr. Rishi Manchanda, coordinator of the South LA Homelessness Prevention and Intervention Collaborative, Gilda Hass, Executive Director, Strategic Actions for a Just Economy (SAJE), Nancy Halpern Ibrahim, MPH, Executive Director Esperanza Community Housing Corporation, Pete White, Executive Director of Los Angeles Community Action Network (LA CAN), for a Town Hall Meeting addressing the Crisis on Main Street.  

 

Dr. Rishi Manchanda has authored and released a white paper, “Taming the Perfect Storm”, http://hhrjournal.org/blog/wp-content/uploads/2008/10/taming-the-perfect-storm.pdf now on the Harvard website, which was given out to community leaders today during the provocative call to action which underscored the important town hall meeting.

 

“The collaborative relationship between these social service agencies offers leadership for “Taming the Perfect Storm” which threatens the health and welfare of hundreds of thousands of people in South LA,” Dr. Manchanda declared.    “Anyone who cares about the future of this great city must read, “Taming the Perfect Storm” and become involved in finding solutions which is the mission of this leadership collaborative.

For Interviews with Jim Mangia, Dr. Manchanda, of the St. John’s Well Child and Family Center Clinics, Please contact:  Sharon Jimenez, Icon Imaging PR, 310-409-3306,  Report is available online.  A hard copy is available to media upon request.

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