Tonight’s Show Includes: Brief Bits on City Council’s “Shove [A Few of] ‘Em in a Shelter” Plan, the County’s “Cut Back on Cannabis” Law, Longtime Lydia Looks Back, Cornerstone Carol Denney on new anti-homeless laws in Berkeley, and more…
Tonight’s Show Includes: Brief Bits on City Council’s “Shove [A Few of] ‘Em in a Shelter” Plan, the County’s “Cut Back on Cannabis” Law, Longtime Lydia Looks Back, Cornerstone Carol Denney on new anti-homeless laws in Berkeley, and more…
For the text of the ordinances, go to http://scsire.cityofsantacruz.
As of 11:30 PM Monday night, the only correspondence posted was critical at
http://scsire.cityofsantacruz.
My own thoughts were sent to Mayor Terrazas earlier tonight. I reprint them below:
The proposed ordinance changes seriously impact downtown vehicle accessibility for the general public, for those who are disabled and required to use vehicles higher than 6′, and for artists like Alex Skelton and Joff Jones. These two were driven off Pacific Ave. by the “performance pens” “no art to be displayed for more than 1 hour” ordinances. https://www.facebook.com/
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In contrast with recent claims in local media from Senior Ranger Jeremy Matthews (Ranger pictured on left) that “We’ve already racked up quite a few citations,” (via KION news) We have not seen…
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They returned and were showing their work on the side of their vehicles–which would now potentially be banned under the “no vending” provision. Curtis Reliford–who has already suffered racial and class discrimination–would now find his musical offerings and charity work excluded from Pacific Avenue view.
There is also an obvious economic impact, encouraging folks with vehicles to patronize other nearby cities and businesses where they won’t face jacked-up meter costs and likely parking tickets for parking longer than 2 hours.
For a city government supposedly concerned with carbon impact, encouraging folks to drive their cars to more distant cities, aggravates a growing crisis.
The prior intensified anti-homeless Downtown ordinances have also crowded and diminished musical performers, political tablers, and social gatherings on the Pacific Avenue sidewalk. Vendors of arts and crafts have been outright banned.
Plus, of course, accomplishing their main unstated purpose–to drive away visible poor people under the guise of “problematic street behavior”. Homeless folks report being driven out into the rain by SCPD and P&R rangers in spite of the more liberal nighttime policy regarding Sleeping Ban enforcement by Chief Mills.
The recent division of the City into 5 policing districts has apparently intensified “move along” directives by police officials like Bill Azua on public sidewalks where homeless folks have the right to congregate, whatever the aesthetic affectations of Taco Bell, Staff of Life, and other NIMBY businesses.
The proposed increased parking meter costs not only seem to negatively impact businesses, but also puts a particular burden on poor people. Especially those whose vehicles are their homes. Were the vehicularly housed and disabled part of the so-called “Stakeholder” group consulted in creating the staff recommendations? If so, please provide their testimony–when, where, and what was presented.
Have city staff has reportedly posted areas under bridges as “no sleeping/camping/assembling” areas–as activist Brent Adams has claimed? Are they still using shrill high-pitched “mosquito” noise devices to discourage public assembly in different places around the city? Is the City still enforcing its unique “no public allowed on City Hall grounds at night and during the weekends”?
The combined impact of these misguided laws is clearly to Yuppify the City and drive the visible poor out of town.
Please delay any discussion of these laws until the stakeholders who are most impacted by these laws–not just some hand-picked businesses–are able to provide relevant information on the impacts. Particularly the disabled, the poor, the artists, and the general public.
Current Stuff:
- Cherie Sherie Returns to City Hall in a Winter Shelter shutdown protest
- Voices from Food Not Bombs Peace Rally, Pacific Avenue, and the Red Church
- Brent Adams Updates Shelter & Storage Options, Warns of Police Crackdown
- “Homeless Begone” Bigotry at the Food Bin?
Flashback to May 18, 1997 :
- Skidmark Bob on the New Leaf, Downtown Association Crackdown on Food Not Bombs
- Arrests for Flowerpicking, Panhandler Pummeling, and Other Familiar Tales of Terror
- Bob Campbell reviews the Medical Marijuana Situation
- San Jose Community Homeless Alliance Ministry Nancy Nichols Reports
- Norse on the “Toy Poodle” Police Review Board in Santa Cruz
- Robin Pickets “Bead It” Bigotry from a long-gone Pacific Avenue biz.
This show archives April 22, 2018 at http://www.huffsantacruz.org/L
ostshows.html
Leave your comments and questions at 831-423-4833.
HUFF [Homeless United for Friendship & Freedom] will meet Wednesday, 4-18-18 11 AM at the Sub Rosa, our normal meeting place, next to the Bike Church.
Agenda Prospects:
Current Stuff:
- Campground worker “Joyful Heart” fields Bathrobespierre’s blasts
- Educational eruptions from the Monday Night Free Meal
- HUFF charts a response to the closing of Winter Shelter and Trump’s bombing
- Whittle-em-down Wes White updates us on Salinas sufferings
Flashback to March 6 and 9, 2003 :
- San Francisco anti-war activists hit the streets in early March 2003
- Olivia Brownrabbit Describes Police Repression on Anti-War Homeless Activists on Pacific Avenue\
- A lot more of the same
This show archives tomorrow or perhaps later today at http://www.huffsantacruz.org/L
ostshows.html
Leave your comments and questions at 831-423-4833.
THE ISSUES
Meet outside the Sub Rosa Cafe at 703 Pacific Ave. in Santa Cruz at noon today to discuss a response.
The Sub Rosa is also the site of the Really Free Market today and we may be able to meet indoors. the weather is expected to be cool to temperate. Coffee may be available.
For more visual info, go to https://www.facebook.com/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?
Free Radio Santa Cruz will be covering these issues in a pre-recorded show Sunday morning 9:30 AM for several hours afterwards on Sunday, April 15th.
More info: call 831-423-4833.
Current Stuff:
Flashback to December 3, 2006 :
This show archives tomorrow or perhaps later today at http://www.huffsantacruz.org/L
For the full Flashback go to http://www.radiolibre.org/
Leave your comments and questions at 831-423-4833.
Contact 575-770-3377 to volunteer to help Santa Cruz Food Not Bombs locally through Facebook.
Donate blankets tents, and tarps to folks directly on the street (80% of the homeless population) either directly to those outside or through the Warming Center Project at 831-234-9848.
Check out Homeless Outside in Santa Cruz on Facebook for updates on the shivering majority, left outside and outside the law.
HUFF (Homeless United for Friendship & Freedom) meets Wednesday 4-7-18 at 11 AM at the Sub Rosa Cafe (next to the Bike Church at 703 Pacific). Coffee on the house.
Call 423-4833 to volunteer for or learn more about civil rights work on homeless civil rights issues.
Snippets of Snippings outside the last Shitty Council meeting and more…