HUFF prepares for Protest Against Police Cover-Up 11 AM-1 PM Sub Rosa 703 Pacific Wednesday 12-17

HUFF looks for clearer skies tomorrow after its meeting when we assemble at the police station at 2 PM  on Cop Corner for some flyering, feeding, fasttalking for passing pedestrians and vehicles.  Then closer to Copland for a Speak-Out, perhaps a Shriek-Out against police violence.

The HUFF meeting at 11 AM  will consider the latest police non-response to Public Records Actg requests for police use of force (tasers, batons, pain-compliance holds, choke-holds, bullets, etc.).  We will discuss a response to the upcoming Homeless (Lack of) Services Center Homeless Death Memorial (reportedly Thursday), consider emergency responses to the unmet Warming Center crisis, take Street Reports, and attempt to link up with protesters across the state and country who are addressing police violence against the unhoused communities.

Come, have fun, discuss what might work, then do it!

Council Moves to Shut Down “Shame” Protest; Excludes Public; Jettisons Agenda

 

Council Moves to Shut Down “Shame” Protest; Excludes Public; Jettisons Agenda
by Robert Norse
Tuesday Dec 9th, 2014 10:29 PM

Every single speaker opposed the acquisition of a new armored police vehicle at the afternoon City Council meeting. When two speakers turned their backs on the Council, outgoing Mayor Robinson made arrest threats, further heightening the tension in the room. At one point the Council left the room, leaving the community to organize its own meeting. They shortly returned, quickly voted in the police vehicle, without giving a clear answers to questions about the deadline requirement, additional costs, and the potential for further militarizing the police force. Speakers began shouting “shame” from the floor. Police “escorted” one out; others raised the cry; police then cleared the chambers and the Council met (illegally) behind locked doors and drawn shades.

At the request of activist Steven Argue and others, Micah Posner pulled item #13 “2015 Homeland Security Grant Funding – Budget Adjustment (PD/FD)” off the agenda for more extensive debate.

At some point I hope to give a more extensive account of the critical testimony as well as the police PR for the “rescue tank”. It took the police half an hour or more to come up with a picture of the machine–which activists had found on line hours before.

Deputy-Chief Clark claimed the agenda item was “time sensitive”, but declined to specify what the deadline was for applying for the grant. Councilmember Posner–who asked the question–considerately took him off the hook and immediately suggested that Clark’s assurance was enough for him. He moved that the $250 grand piece of heavy hardware be accepted with the caveat that it “not be used against peaceful protesters”, and that in future such items be placed on the regular agenda and given several weeks notice for the public. Posner’s scramble to please all sides while essentially rubberstamping the item was pathetically obvious.

His motion was voted down 5-2, and the item passed 6-1–prompting the cries of shame that led Robinson to order police to force the public to leave the meeting.

Outside, people continued to shout “shame”. When the Council resumed deliberations behind locked doors, it refused me and others access without explanation. No one was arrested or cited. Demands that he Council allow the public to reenter the chambers were ignored. The shutters were drawn. At several points police chief Kevin Vogel asked me if we could hear the proceedings through the speakers–which we couldn’t. That didn’t stop the Council from proceeding as though we weren’t there. Well in fact, we weren’t. We were all locked out.

One bright note was that any action on the infamous Stay Away Ordinance was postponed until the second Tuesday in January according to Micah Posner. A second was the apparent determination of many ejected from the meeting to hit the streets in protest in the days ahead–specifically Saturday when a day long event with marches, die-in’s, and other actions against police violence are planned. Additionally some felt empowered and for once not cowed by the police-backed authority of City Council.

Outside HUFF brownie baker “Push Back” Pat Colby served brownie, coffee, and vegan soup–compliments of Jumbogumbo Joe Schultz.

The evening session, I’m told proceeded with the usual congratulatory blather and a post-coronation chowdown in the Civic.

LEAVE COMMENTS, AUDIO, AND VIDEO AT https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2014/12/09/18765331.php \

I”ll be playing some audio and commenting on the afternoon’s events on Free Radio Santa Cruz Thursday evening 6=-8 PM at 101.3 FM and/or freakradio.org .

Last Council of the Year Takes a Bow Over the Bodies of the Poor in Santa Cruz

Last Council of the Year Takes a Bow Over the Bodies of the Poor

 

City Council meets today ignoring the national and local crisis around police class and race profiling. Ignoring foreign militarism, national police scandals, and local police profiling, they will be patting themselves on the back as they vote on a final escalation of the War Against the Poor. Here’s a reiteration of some items that are coming up.

UNTOUCHABLE CITY ATTORNEY AND CITY MANAGER
At 1 PM in Council chambers, City Council will be following a unusual procedure in holding the open interval of its closed session in this larger room. It will then retire to the smaller City Council Conference room behind the chambers where it usually meets behind closed doors in “Closed Session”.

What’s peculiar here is the process being followed. Two of the most powerful and well-paid officials in the City–the City Attorney and the City Manager are up for “performance evaluation”. The on-line agenda suggests that it will be behind closed doors with the public excluded.

BERNAL CONTROLS VOGEL
City Manager Martin Bernal controls the hiring and firing of the Police Chief Kevin Vogel.

The SCPD refuses to open its records of use and display of force, tasering, pain compliance holds, choke holds, gun drawings, baton use, and so forth (See “SCPD: No Disclosure of When People were PepperSprayed, Choked, Tasered, Gun-Bullied or Shot” at http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2014/12/04/18765028.php).

Unaddressed claims of racial profiling also hang over the department (See “Race and Class Bias in the SCPD: What’s the Real Story?” at http://www.indybay.org/uploads/2014/12/03/grand_jury_protest_updated.pdf).

City Council is legally required to open its closed sessions–however briefly–for public comment. Of course, Mayor Robinnson (and in-coming Mayor Don Lane) haven’t cared much for that in such matters as allowing unimpeded recording of City Council meetings (See “Video of the False Arrest at Santa Cruz City Council for Audio Recording ” at http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2014/05/03/18755258.php)

“RESCUE TANKS” IN SANTA CRUZ?

Consent Agenda Item #13 is titled “2015 Homeland Security Grant Funding – Budget Adjustment (PD/FD)” This is likely to come up shortly after 2:30 PM.

See “Santa Cruz Police to Procure $250K ‘Rescue Vehicle'” at http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2014/12/08/18765238.php

Could be another Steve Clark special (he’s our reactionary Deputy Police Chief) rushing to amp up the department’s aggressive image? With anger against police abuse rising all around the country, it’s a good time

I’ve asked Councilmember Posner to pull this item from the agenda for discussion rather than a rote vote. The public has been banned from pulling items and requiring they be more fully discussed and individually voted on. Other City Councils, our Board of Supervisors, and past City Councils have had this rather elementary public process, but it was removed at the behest of former Mayor and incoming Supervisor Ryan Connerty some years back. Neither Posner nor Lane have moved to restore this process.

Cafe HUFF will be serving brownies and brew (that is, coffee) as well as Jumbogumbo Joe Schultz’s soup, hopefully as early as 2;30 PM

STAY-AWAY STUPIDITY

The time for this item is uncertain but probably between 3:30 and 4:30. Come early to be sure.

This is the latest anti-homeless eruption from the Public Safety Task Force/Public Safety Committee. It’s aother step demonization of the poor outside and follows on a long train of anti-homeless laws and policies.

The law that vastly increases the discretionary power of rangers and cops to arbitrarily ban people from large areas of the city (not just parks) for any infraction, no matter how minor with no court injunction, conviction, or charge.

To paper over this homegrown Constitution-shredding, the City Attorney came back with an “administrative review” process that would have the stay-away order dissolved if a city employee appointed by the city manager finds the infraction “unjustified” “by a preponderance of the evidence”.

The new wording of the ordinance is at http://scsire.cityofsantacruz.com/sirepub/cache/2/e5y2okfjeqxksdpkhmfsya0i/396073312092014110820380.PDF . Or go to http://scsire.cityofsantacruz.com/sirepub/mtgviewer.aspx?meetid=574&doctype=AGENDA and click on item #18.

All correspondence received by City Council has urged the law be voted down. But it is likely to pass 5-2 or 6-1.

The one-day stay away law, passed last year, and equally un-Constitutional and abusive passed unanimously. Councilmembers Posner and Lane have yet to apologize for this travesty which has been used 1000 times by Homeless Deportation squads in uniform, according to their own figures.

Steve Pleich has said he will appeal the proposed expansion of the law but probably not the current law.

ORAL COMMUNICATIONS AT 5 PM (OR SO)

Want to raise issues that others are raising on the streets (and that are planned for a Saturday day-long rally at the Town clock)? Come and speak out demanding fundamental changes in the SCPD. (See http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2014/12/04/18765028.php for my thoughts on the issue). HUFF will review the record of the Council and the SCPD.

QUAFF CAKE AND BEVERAGES AFTER THE CORONATION

At 7 PM outgoing Council blowhards will make speeches celebrating their wonderful terms in office and the in-coming Council elected people will do the same. Around 8 PM or soon thereafter, the whole jolly crew will cross the street to the Civic Auditorium where the public is invited to mingle and munch with them on various pastries and pies. It’s a tradition.

Fortify yourself for the Wednesday storm. Bring some homeless friends. Confront the privileged in public. While chowing down at the same time.

HUFF (Homeless United for Friendship & Freedom) meets Wednesday morning at the Sub rosa Cafe 11 AM to plan for protests and express solidarity with those in other cities.

FOR FLYERS AND FURTHER COMMENTS, GO TO: http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2014/12/09/18765278.php . Continue reading

SAN JOSE ACTIVISTS CALL FOR ENCAMPMENT SUPPORT 6:30 am 12-5 Inbox x

HOMELESS LIVES MATTER – EVICTION IS NOT THE SOLUTION TO HOMELESSNESS
We call on all allies and people of conscience to come to the so-called “Jungle” encampment at 6:30 am on this Thursday morning, December 4, to stand in solidarity with the homeless who are threatened with arrest for the “crime” of having nowhere to go. The City’s planned eviction of homeless residents is not the answer to San Jose’s homelessness problem. Simply arresting or dispersing people will not make them go away.
We applaud the City’s efforts that have so far housed some 144 encampment residents in the past 18 months. However,
many more than that number BECAME homeless during the same time period, due to the City’s misguided jobs-housing imbalance and its lax rent control laws. Residents who have moved out of the “Jungle” into housing have been replaced by new homeless people moving in.
The City should concentrate on housing the homeless, not moving them around from place to place. Moving them from one creek to another does not protect the environment. According to its own survey, 96% of encampment residents would move into affordable housing immediately if it became available.
To say that one of the richest cities in America does not have the resources to house its people is immoral and deceitful. The City Council has the opportunity to show the courage and vision to claim the resources that are there. Silicon Valley corporations have over $500 billion in cash reserves. To continue saying there is nothing we can do while our people are dying is a disservice to the fine and compassionate people of San Jose.
Robert Aguirre, H.O.M.E.L.E.S.S.                               915-471-8674

Pastor Scott Wagers, CHAM Deliverance Ministry

Sandy Perry, Affordable Housing Network

 

Mobile Showers for Homeless–Cheaper Than Buildings

NOTE BY NORSE:  Santa Barbara and its neighbor Goleta are several (token) steps ahead of Santa Cruz.   Santa Barbara has had a Safe Parking program on government lots for some time. Goleta now weighs in with a shower program.  On the downside, activist and poet Peter Marin reports (http://radiolibre.org/brb/brb141123.mp3 1 hour, 11 minutes into the audio file) Santa Barbara is following Santa Cruz’s bad example in passing anti-homeless (e.g. anti-sitting) laws on its main tourist thoroughfaire State Street.
Santa Cruz, meanwhile has stacked its Pacific Avenue with gun-toting cops, uniformed First Alarm “security” thugs, and “happy” Hosts adding phony public safety hysteria to its usual “clean ’em out for Xmas” program.  City homeless haters are  now planning to arm these “Get Movin’!” mannequins with further with “no conviction needed” stay-away powers on December 9th at City Council.  (See “Stay-Away Stupidity Not on Tuesday’s 11-25 Council Agenda” at https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2014/11/24/18764553.php   No doubt, the hope is to intimidate homeless people out of town, but it’s likely only to increase jail and policing costs ).
Hey, what with drenching rain and dropping temperatures, who needs additional showers and shelter.  There’s no plan on deck other than the usual well-intentioned pleas of a few activists to provide regular warming centers.

Goleta Council Approves Pilot Program to Provide Mobile Shower for Homeless

By Joshua Molina, Noozhawk Staff Writer | @JECMolina | Published on 12.02.2014 6:49 p.m.

Homeless people will have a place to take a shower under a pilot program offered by the City of Goleta and an advocacy group.

In partnership with the group HEAL (Hope, Empowerment & Love), Goleta will provide space outside the  Goleta Valley Community Center for a mobile shower for the homeless.

The shower facilities will be located inside a trailer, a two-room unit, that has a shower, stall, sink and toilet.

The trailer is self-contained with its own water tank, heater, wastewater holding tank and air conditioner.

The Goleta City Council voted 5-0 on Tuesday to approve the project.

“I think it is a fabulous idea,” new Goleta Mayor Paula Perotte said. “I really believe it is the right thing to do. I can’t even imagine going days and days without a shower.”

Showers for the homeless people would be limited to about five minutes.

Initially, the mobile shower would be open one day per month, over a three-month period, beginning Dec. 29. The trailer would be parked in a rear parking lot of the community center, just north of the tennis courts.

The project would be a pilot program for three months, but eventually HEAL activists want to have the trailer visit regular sites, including St. Michael’s University Church and St. Mark’s Catholic Church, both in Isla Vista.

The hours would be from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., and homeless people would have to make an appointment to use the facilities.

HEAL activists said they do not tolerate intoxicated individuals.

Continue reading

Jilliam Pam Hunger Striker Grows Weaker in Ft. Lauderdale, FL

NOTE BY NORSE:  Food servers have largely been driven off the streets of Santa Cruz–except for the twice weekly Food Not Bombs [FNB] folks, who serve 4-6 PM Saturdays and Sundays near the main post office downtown.  Previously, Ronne Currey, Pastor Dennis Adams, and Pastor Steve used to serve in downtown Santa Cruz until they were pressured into leaving.  The Circles Church near Garfield Park has stopped some of its meals and its entire Sunrise Hangout Cafe Warming Program in response to bigoted neighbor pressure and the increased influx of clients driven there from elsewhere in the City by anti-homeless laws and policies.
On 11-17, the Transportation and Public Works Commission voted to approve permit parking in spite of questionable documentation and most folks speaking against it with the threat of further expansion of the homeless nighttime parking ban in the Errett Circle area.   Recently folks report being told they could not sleep under bridges in the rain..  On December 9th, an unprecedented Stay-Away order law is likely to be handed to police allowing them to unilaterally ban homeless people from many areas around the city without court process for such “crimes” as sleeping, being in a park after dark, and smoking.
As pushback, on Saturday at the FNB literature HUFF regularly has claim forms for folks who want to sue abusive authorities for camping, sleeping, and other sorts of homelessness tickets they’ve been given in the last 5 months.   If you’d like to help in this effort, contact HUFF at rnorse3@hotmail.com or call at 831-423-4833.

For video, to post comments, and to contact Pim and/or the Sun-Sentinel, go to http://www.sun-sentinel.com/local/broward/fort-lauderdale/fl-lauderdale-homeless-hunger-strike-20141121-story.html

Hunger striker vows not to eat until Fort Lauderdale homeless can be fed in public

Jillian Pim of Food Not Bombs has been on a hunger strike for 20 days, protesting Fort Lauderdale’s new restrictions on feeding the homeless outdoors.

Hunger striker said she has lost 25 pounds already, going from 143 lbs. to 118 lbs.
“My friends, when they look at me, they hold back tears,” hunger striker says.’
Hunger strike enters 20th day in opposition to Fort Lauderdale outdoor homeless feeding restrictions.

Jillian Pim said she hasn’t had a bite to eat since police cited Arnold Abbott three weeks ago for feeding the homeless at Stranahan Park.

Since then, the 90-year-old Abbott has garnered international attention in his battle with the city, but few have noticed the 30-year-old Dania Beach hunger striker.

Pim said she won’t eat again until the city stops enforcing its month-old law that restricts where charitable groups can feed the homeless outdoors.

Jillian Pim

Jillian Pim, who has been on a hunger strike for 20 days, gets a hug from Jimmy Dunson at Friday’s Food Not Bombs food-sharing at Stranahan Park in Fort Lauderdale. At right is Thursday Addams, who joined Pim as a hunger striker a week ago. (Larry Barszewski / Sun Sentinel)

“I can imagine it’s a lot easier for me than for the people who are on the streets who are starving involuntarily,” said Pim, a member of the Food Not Bombs group that has actively protested the city’s recent spate of laws affecting the homeless.

She said she has lost 25 pounds, bringing her to 118. A bicyclist who once clocked several hundred miles a week, she now uses a walker to keep from falling. She is visibly thinner than she was during an appearance at a City Commission meeting in October.

“My friends, when they look at me, they hold back tears because I’ve gotten so frail and tiny,” Pim said. “I’ve not only had to tighten my belt, I’ve also had to tighten my wristwatch.”

She said she subsists on water with lemons, sometimes with salt. Her boss asked her to take time off 10 days into the strike, fearing she could hurt herself. She takes more naps and has called a doctor because she’s noticing tingling in her extremities that she said shouldn’t have started for several more days.

How quickly the body’s systems break down without food vary by individual, but death is generally considered a severe risk after 45 days. As of Friday, Pim was on Day 20.

“It definitely hurts seeing her,” said Paulino Mejia, who was with Pim at Friday’s Food Not Bombs food distribution at

Stranahan Park, which went off without police showing up to issue citations. Pim made the pumpkin soup.

“She’s definitely an incredibly strong person,” Mejia said. “It’s very powerful to see someone doing what she’s doing.”
Pim is getting closer to the time when she can do permanent damage to her body, but that hasn’t weakened her resolve.

City officials have said they have no intention of putting the law on hold. The best chance for Pim to break her fast is if a judge issues an injunction against the law. Several suits have been filed.

Pim knew the feeding ordinance was coming and prepared for a hunger strike. “I did a month and a half of research and three weeks of prepping my body for it,” Pim said.

She described herself as athletic, doing up to 800 situps a day, exercise she had to wind down before starting the strike.

Pim is used to the commissioners paying her little attention when she gets up to speak for the homeless. She wasn’t sure what to expect when she started the strike.

“I am a little concerned it’s not getting enough support in the media.” Pim said. “What I’m more upset at is the city commissioners, the mayor, the [Downtown Development Authority], all the people we’ve been protesting. I’ve sent them emails about this hunger strike and none of them have responded at all.

“I was at last Tuesday’s City Commission meeting, and none of them would even look at me.”

Pim said this is her first hunger strike. She joined the local Food Not Bombs chapter in 2010 after moving to the area from Tampa in 2009. She has been active in a number of protests, including the 2008 Republican National Convention in Tampa.
Another member of Food Not Bombs, who goes by the name Thursday Addams, has completed one week of a hunger strike.

“It felt like someone else should also be doing it,” the Lake Worth resident said.

Pim’s husband, Nathan, does not think the effort is for nothing.

“I think overall it’s helped with the overwhelming sort of outrage and sentiment that’s been going on to get people to do something about this,” he said.


lbarszewski@tribpub.com or 954-356-4556

 

 

HUFF Recovers From Latest Council Assault 11 AM Today 11-19 Sub Rosa

Huddling together against the growing cold, HUFF will attempt to light a warming fire as nights grow colder and the chance of rain increases.
Some possible topics:  Responses to the new Performance Pens and Stay Away Orders.  Another look at the Homeless (Lack of) Services Center.  One-Day Charity Meet Returns to the Veteran’s Hall on Thanksgiving.  Response to the RV Threat.   Nasty Santa Cruz Neighbors Meet Tonight.
And Whatever Else Wanders In…  Come one, come all.