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Archive for the ‘New Orleans’ Category

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/bill-quigley/eight-homeless-youth-die_b_802109.html

By Bill Quigley

Eight young people, who the Fire Department said were “trying to stay warm,” perished in a raging fire during the night in New Orleans. The young people were squatting in an abandoned wood framed tin walled warehouse in a Ninth Ward neighborhood bordering a large train yard. The young people apparently had a barrel with wood burning in it for heat. Officials said this was the city’s most deadly fire in twenty five years.

The eight young people, estimated to be in their late teens and early twenties, remain unidentified. “We don’t know their IDs,” said the Fire Department, “they were so burned we cannot even tell their genders.”

Audrey, a young woman with brown dreads and a Polish last name, arrived at the scorched scene. She spent the night in the warehouse a couple of times. Because last night was so cold she and a few others begged money from people in the French Quarter and got enough to spend the night in a hotel. Do you know who was in there? “Usually 10 to 15 people, nobody uses last names, but Katy, Jeff, Sammy, Nicky, John and Mooncat usually stay there,” she sobbed. Why did people stay here? “A lot of freight hoppers stay here,” she said, pointing to the nearby trains. “We are just passing through, hopping trains. We don’t have any money.” Behind her a group of young people were crying and hugging as they picked up pieces of a navy blue sweatshirt from the burnt remains.

There are an estimated 1.6 to 2.8 million homeless youth in the US, people between the ages of 12 and 24, according to a June 2010 report of the Center for American Progress. Most are homeless because of abuse, neglect, and family conflict. Gay and transgender youth are strikingly over-represented.

The fire happened in an area of abandoned warehouses at the end of Prieur Street, two blocks towards the train tracks down from the new Family Dollar on Claiborne. It is a modest neighborhood. Some people are back, some aren’t. One block from the warehouses is a long lime green shotgun house with a beautiful red rose bush in front. Next door stands a big grey double shotgun with a wide open door and tattered curtains hanging out broken windows. Untouched since Katrina, the grey house sports OWNER HAS DOG spray painted on the front and the date, 10.8.5. “After Katrina, people don’t have the money to fix their houses up,” said the firefighter.

Across the street from the blackened warehouse is a vacant lot with a tiny handmade wooden shelter at its end. No electricity, no water. Inside are a mattress and some clothes. Follow the path through the weeds and there is another long vacant building that looks like it was once a school. Clearly people stay here as well. Empty cans of baked beans, chili, and Vienna sausages are piled next to Four Loko cans, jars of peanut butter, and empty juice boxes. “Where’s our skate park?” is painted onto the wall in blazing red. A Thanksgiving card with a teddy bear on the outside lies on the pavement. Nana wishes the best to granddaughter Heather and son Dave.

New Orleans has 3,000 to 6,000 homeless people living in abandoned buildings according to an August 2010 report by Unity of Greater New Orleans. The report, “Search and Rescue Five Years Later: Saving People Still Trapped in Katrina’s Ruins,” notes homelessness has doubled since Katrina. Seventy-five percent of the people in those buildings are survivors of Hurricane Katrina. Outreach workers report many are disabled but many also work. Inside abandoned buildings live full-time sitters and restaurant workers.

Since Katrina, New Orleans has a severe homeless problem because of the scarcity of affordable housing. HUD and local governments demolished over 4000 affordable public housing apartments after Katrina. “The current housing crisis in New Orleans reflects the disastrous impact of the demolition policy,” according to the UN Special Rapporteur on Adequate Housing in a February 2010 report very critical of the United States. Rents rose. Tens of thousands of homes remain vacant. Over 30,000 families are on the waiting list for affordable housing.

A November 2010 report from the Greater New Orleans Community Data Center pegs the number of vacant and blighted properties at over 40,000 in New Orleans with more in the suburbs – 14,000 of which are owned by the government.

Unity for the Homeless has been asking for help for people living in abandoned buildings for years. They have four outreach workers who nightly check on people living in abandoned buildings. Five recommendations from Unity to help these thousands of people: convert abandoned building into housing for the homeless; fund case managers to help people with disabilities move into housing; additional outreach and housing search workers; create a small shelter with intensive services for people with mental health problems who are resistant to shelters; and serious investment in affordable rental housing. There are several hundred housing vouchers available for disabled homeless people but no money to fund the caseworkers they need.

Nationally, the US has severely cut its investment in affordable housing despite increasing need from the foreclosure and economic crises. Homelessness is of course up all over. The U.S. Conference of Mayors reported in December 2010 that demands for food and housing are up across the country. The causes? Unemployment, high housing costs and low wages.

Will we look into our abandoned buildings and look into the eyes of our abandoned daughters and sons and sisters and brothers? Will our nation address unemployment, high housing costs, and low wages? Will we address the abuse, neglect, and family conflict that create homelessness for millions of youth, especially gay and transgender youth? Or will the fires continue and the lives end?

Bill Quigley is Legal Director of the Center for Constitutional Rights and law professor at Loyola University New Orleans. You can reach Bill at quigley77@gmail.com.

 

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Friday, July 30th
5:00pm

Invite people you know and people you don’t know!

 


Peoples’ Action for Rights and Community has been at its current location for a year.

Gather this Friday to share stories, food, laughs, and music.

 

Special Presentations from PARC folks:
-who went to Philadelphia to be with the revolutionary MOVE organization
-who marched in the Poor People’s Economic Human Rights Campaign “March To Fulfill the Dream”
-who volunteered in New Orleans at the Meg Perry Center for Environmental Peace and Justice.

Learning
Connecting
Surviving
Rebelling !!!

Hope to see you Friday night!

Call PARC for more info: (707) 442-7465

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The Civil Liberties Defense Center [CLDC] Humboldt is hosting Malik Rahim on campus Thursday April 29th at 6pm in the BSS forum. Malik is a community activist and organizer, a veteran of the New Orleans Chapter of the Black Panther Party and a long-time housing and prison activist who founded the Common Ground Collective, formed in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina to provide immediate relief and long-term solidarity to residents of the Gulf Coast. Malik will talk about his work doing prisoner rights advocacy and about how communities can organize effectively to combat the prison industrial complex.

“Confronting the Prison Industrial Complex: The Liberation Struggle Against the Modern Slave System”

*Date – Thurs. April 29th
*Time – 6 pm
*Location – Native Forum, Behavioral Sciences Studies (BSS) building 162

*FREE

*Sponsored by the CLDC, Sociology Dept, HSU


BACKGROUND ON MALIK……


Here are a few links to Malik – check em out!

‘Welcome to New Orleans’ (if you watch the first few minutes of the video, you will get a much better understanding of who he is)
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=829424674434594989#

Malik with King in Maine:
http://vimeo.com/962641

Wikipedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malik_Rahim
 

What he’s dealing with now:

http://www.nola.com/crime/index.ssf/2010/04/algiers_point_vigilantes_terro.html

Some of his Democracy Now! Interviews:

Sort by Date | Sort by Relevance 1 2 3 Next Page  

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MARCH TO FULFILL THE DREAM
April 4, 2010 to June 20, 2010!!!

As the nation observed the birthday of Martin Luther King, leaders of organizations of poor and homeless families, including Katrina survivors, clergy, USSF organizers and Detroit hosts…gathered in New Orleans to plan a national March and Caravan from New Orleans to the United States Social Forum in Detroit from early April to late June 2010….

Background from the initial call for the March, written in August

In 1998 the Poor People’s Economic Human Rights Campaign (PPEHRC) picked up the mantle of MLK and vowed to work until the dream was fulfilled.

“If you think we’re there, you can ignore this. But if you’re hurting, or your mother or your brother or your neighbor or friend is hurting, put on your walking shoes,” said Cheri Honkala, National Organizer of the Poor People’s Economic Human Rights Campaign (PPEHRC).

At its national conference in July, nearly 400 representatives of PPEHRC member organizations voted to organize the next phase of the campaign—a march from the Katrina-torn Gulf through the Mississippi Delta and on through the Rust Belt. The march will culminate in Detroit at the 2010 US Social Forum, which expects upwards of 20,000 participants from around the country and the globe. As was the case in the 1968 Poor People’s Campaign, other marchers will follow Freedom Roads from other parts of the country to join the main branch, which will visibly unite south and north in their common cause. In 2003, PPEHRC recreated the 1968 Poor People’s March, caravanning from Marks, Mississippi to Washington, DC. Commemorating the 35th anniversary of the campaign planned by King before his assassination, organizers of that march pointed to the shameful lack of achievement of the original economic justice goals of jobs, housing, and health care. Since then things have gotten worse—much worse.

Organizations voted to organize the next phase of the campaign—a march from the Katrina-torn Gulf through the Mississippi Delta and on through the Rust Belt.

from PPEHRC: http://old.economichumanrights.org/USSF2010/USSF2010_why.shtml

Why are we marching?

Thousands will participate in this historic march and caravan to transform our nation and highlight the urgent need for guaranteed healthcare and housing for everyone in the United States. We are demanding that our government prioritize life over death by allocating some of the tremendous resources at its disposal to provide for the vital human needs of healthcare and housing.

Many countries around the world already offer these human rights to their citizens, but the US system reflects a different set of values.

Right now, in the richest country in the world, record numbers of people are experiencing homelessness and poverty while record profits are being made on Wall Street through the help of massive government bailouts for the rich. Poverty, homelessness, and unemployment are skyrocketing while trillions of dollars are being misappropriated to fight wars abroad. Millions of poor people in the US are being incarcerated, abandoned, and attacked by an economic and political system that prioritizes wealth over health and profits over people. We can and must do better.

In the final years of his life Dr. King refocused his vision from racial equality to economic justice, realizing that people of all colors living side-by-side in poverty was far short of a true victory for all people. He launched the Poor People’s Campaign in 1967 to unite poor people of all races to build a massive nonviolent movement to end poverty. He was assassinated for his efforts.

This Easter, The Poor People’s Economic Human Rights Campaign launches the March for Our Lives as a testament of resurrection. Out from the death of natural and unnatural disasters there is rising a poor people’s movement for life. Out from beneath the ruins of Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans and a devastating earthquake in Haiti, come the singing voices of the poor, the people who were struggling through miserable man-made disasters of poverty and injustice long before the ground literally shook below them. Today, economic inequality is worse than ever, but out of the darkness comes light. From the swelling ranks of the poor, nonviolent troops are organizing and mobilizing for peace and justice. In Detroit, the eye of the economic storm, we will gather our forces at the US Social Forum. A movement is growing to end poverty forever – to create a new life-affirming economy and a better world for everyone. Years after the assassination of Dr. King his words resound loudly and his dream is alive!

“The dispossessed of this nation — the poor, both white and Negro live in a cruelly unjust society. They must organize a revolution against that injustice, not against the lives of persons who are their fellow citizens, but against the structures through which the society is refusing to take means which have been called for, and which are at hand, to lift the load of poverty.”
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., 1967

The March to Fulfill the Dream launches on April 4, 2010. This significant date is Easter Sunday, as well as the anniversary of Martin Luther King Jr.’s assassination. We begin in New Orleans, Louisiana and finish our march in Detroit, Michigan on June 20, 2010 for the U.S. Social Forum.

We demand guaranteed healthcare and housing for everyone in the United States.

Rising from the ruins of economic storms, we unite – poor people, homeless people, social workers, activists, artists, musicians, people of faith, students, healthcare workers, lawyers, and more – we rebuild!

Join us. Build the movement to end poverty!

Download the route map!
http://old.economichumanrights.org/USSF2010/img/PPEHRC_Route_map.pdfPPEHRC_Route_map

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