Brandon Jessup, leader of Michigan Forward and campaign to Repeal Public Act 4
On December 22, Rev. Jesse Jackson, Rainbow PUSH and allies met at Bethany Baptist Church in Detroit for a community meeting and later press conference regarding Public Act 4. These allies included Michigan members of the Occupy Movement, faith and community leaders.
What’s been swirling around the local conservative talk crowd is “civil disobedience” and what that means in regards to the campaign against dictatorship in Michigan. The term itself leans towards some type of abnormal behavior normally frowned upon by mainstream society.
Yet, what’s abnormal about demanding my right to vote and defending not those who were elected to office, but in essence the office itself. I guess that’s the problem: the Repeal effort isn’t an attack on any one elected official so it’s not personal, this is business. Petitions, laws, legislation, recall, election and voting are the tools of our government and how we govern ourselves. This campaign engages and uses democracy to fight this odious and unconstitutional law. This state-wide movement is touching every corner of Michigan. For the record, civil disobedience began when the Michigan Legislature passed and Governor Snyder signed into law Public Act 4, March 26, 2011.
Young woman rallies against Snyder in Benton Harbor earlier this year
Over 163,000 voters in Michigan see our petition as an effort to see Democracy work again. Some signers have said to me, “I didn’t know Gov. Snyder would do this.” I understand what they mean, so I won’t draw opinions from that statement. Michigan’s Dictator Law is a reflection of the ultra conservative stand the Michigan Legislature, Attorney General, Secretary of State and Governor have taken against the majority of Michigan voters.
Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette has pursued a state lawsuit against the Affordable Health Care Act. President Obama’s efforts to reform health care were met with a ferocity that many think crossed the line between politics and personal. Tea Party members threatened the lives of members of Congress, hurled racial, homophobic and other derogatory slurs like beads at Mardi Gras towards our national leadership. This activity was supported with 20 states filing lawsuits against the constitutionality of health care reform, another example of civil disobedience. Continue reading →
Huge rally lays plans to repeal Emergency Manager act
January 3, 2012
By Diane Bukowski
DETROIT – Over 2500 Detroiters packed a local church Jan. 2 to stop a complete state takeover of their city. Under Public Act 4, enacted last year, Michigan Governor Rick Snyder and State Treasurer Andy Dillon are rapidly moving to appoint an “emergency manager” (EM) to run the city, disenfranchising the residents of the world’s largest majority-Black city outside of Africa.
US Congressman John Conyers addresses rally against PA 4 January 2, with Detroit City Councilwoman JoAnn Watson, a co-convenor, at his left; Council members Kwame Kenyatta and Brenda Jones are at far right
The EM would have the unilateral power to strip the city of all its assets, including its water and sewerage department, the third largest in the country, remove elected officials, abrogate union contracts, take over its pension funds, worth $6 billion, and even dis-incorporate the city.
Wall Street’s Fitch Ratings agency has said that an EM takeover will cause the banks to call in $400 million of outstanding city bonds immediately, one-third of the city’s budget. Detroit is paying $579 million on its debt to the banks in the current fiscal year.
“It is our understanding if you choose to appoint an Emergency Manager to oversee Detroit, that would mean that approximately 50 percent of all the African American citizens in the State would be living under the authority of unelected managers,” U.S. Congressman John Conyers (D-Detroit) and 65 elected officials wrote Snyder on Dec. 15.
Part of mass audience rallies against PA 4 in Detroit January 2
They received no response. Instead, Snyder has now moved to the second step of the takeover procedure, the appointment of a 10-member formal review team to conduct a 60-day study of the city’s finances, which he can cut short at any time to declare a takeover.
Rev. Edward Pinkney, leader of Black Autonomy Network Community Organization (BANCO), in Benton Harbor, denounces effects of PA 4 on his majority Black city, its first victim. Photo by Dale Rich
Snyder and Dillon have focused their PA4 takeovers almost exclusively on the state’s majority-Black cities, including Benton Harbor, Flint, Inkster, Pontiac and the public school systems of Detroit, Highland Park, and Inkster.
Conyers also wrote U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder Dec. 2 asking him to take action against the takeovers under the nation’s Voting Rights Act.
“It just so happens that I have a closer relationship with the 44th President of the United States and his Attorney General, Eric Holder, than I have ever had with anybody in the Washington White House,” Conyers said at the rally. To date, however, Holder has announced no action, despite the Justice Department’s investigations of current voting practices in other cities. An inquiry to his office had not been answered by press time.
Conyers, Detroit City Councilwoman JoAnn Watson, and the Moratorium NOW! Coalition were among the chief conveners of the rally, held at Tabernacle Missionary Baptist Church on the city’s central west side.
PA 4 referendum organizer Brandon Jessup explains how to get valid petition signatures at rally January 2
Brandon Jessup, leader of Michigan Forward, which initiated a referendum petition drive to overturn PA 4, called on Detroiters at the rally to collect 100,000 petition signatures in the next two weeks. Michigan Forward, in coalition with unions and community groups, has collected 170,000 signatures state-wide since the petition drive was launched last June. At least 161,000 valid signatures are needed.
Al Garrett, president of Michigan AFSCME Council 25, said his union and Michigan Forward plan to take the petitions to the State Board of Canvassers Jan. 18. If the signatures are certified, the state constitution requires the act be frozen until a popular vote in November of this year.
Council 25 President Al Garrett
“We plan to hit the streets, and knock on doors,” Garrett said. The audience responded with a resounding “Yes” and a standing ovation when he asked if they were ready to lead the charge. Jessup said they are focusing on the next three Saturdays to “take it to the streets” with the petition drive, and gave detailed instructions to the audience on how to collect valid signatures. (See details at end of story.)
The state says it wants the Detroit takeover because the city is under “severe financial stress,” with an expected deficit of $155 million this year. In his recommendation for a formal review, Treasurer Dillon also cited the $579 million paid out on the city’s debt this year, and said the city’s total debt load is approaching $12 billion.
However, the state has announced it expects to end its fiscal year with a budget surplus of up to $1 billion, at least $242 million in the general fund, and $645 million in the state school aid fund. The surplus has resulted largely from slashing revenue-sharing funds to municipalities and aid to the schools, and cutting tens of thousands of Michigan residents off public assistance.
Maureen Taylor, president of Michigan Welfare Rights Organization, addresses rally against PA 4 Jan. 2
“This state government is aimed at destroying the lives of women and children,” said Maureen Taylor, President of the Michigan Welfare Rights Organization.
Helen Moore of the Keep the Vote No Takeover coalition noted that two state takeovers of the city’s public schools have resulted in the fact that 66,000 Detroit students now attend charter schools. Close to ninety-percent of state per-pupil aid to Detroit goes to pay off the district’s debt to the banks, largely incurred during the takeovers.
State officials have said they want to use the state surplus to pay off the state’s own debt, estimated at $76.6 billion, according to the U.S. Debt Clock.
Attorney Jerome Goldberg, with attorney Vanessa Fluker to his right, both of Moratorium NOW! calls for a moratorium on debt to the banks. Photo by Dale Rich
But Councilwoman Watson and the entire City Council, the city’s Mayor Dave Bing, and the State Legislature’s Black Caucus have demanded that, at the very least, the state repay $220 million it owes to the city as a result of a revenue-sharing agreement with a previous governor.
Snyder has refused, saying it would be only a one-time solution. Continue reading →
I have what appears to be some good news from Libya. But first, some comments:
As you know, of course, it has been a while since I gave my “report” on Libya, and the reason should be obvious. It has been extremely difficult to get any truthful and accurate news out of Libya. During the eight months that I covered the Libyan struggle, the reports I was giving you were accurate, for the most part. One way that you can believe that is by the fact that NATO’s aggression took “infinitely” longer than NATO had thought and predicted. In fact, when every single residential dwelling in Sirte was being bombed by NATO, and the non-combatant citizens were being slaughtered, one NATO commander openly remarked, in the corporate news media, “I am astonished at their will to fight!”
And, as you can easily recall, NATO kept pushing its “victory date” back. At first they said it would be three days. Then they said three weeks. Then they said three months [I’m not sure what this “three” thing was all about]. They would take Brega, and the LDF would take it back. They would take Ras Lanuf, and the LDF would take it back. In time, NATO, at CIA headquarters in Langley, Virginia, conducted a self-assessment of its Libya operations, and conclude that its prosecution of the war had been, “ineffective and pathetic.” You will recall the DEBKAfile report that I sent you on that.
Libyan green resistance
So, this should tell you that the “glowing” reports that I was sending you for most of those eight months was accurate: The LDF and the people of Libya, fighters by nature and history, had shocked NATO and the entire world by forcing the most powerful military alliance in human history to spend nine months in a tooth-and-nail fight. When NATO finally realized that it could not do it alone, it started recruiting Al-Qaeda fighters, European mercenaries, Afghani mercinaries, Qatar mercenaries, Paksitani mercenaries, and even mercenaries from Columbia, South America. Without all of that help, NATO would have failed.
Well, I cite the above as a prefix to the following short report. The only difference with this report is that I can’t be as certain as I was during those eight months, concerning the information that I’m receiving. Because as time progressed, NATO got total control of all communications, and that appears to be the case to this day. Nevertheless, I will give you a little summary of what I have received. And some of this might find support by one item that appeared in the New York Times today regarding Jalil, the so-call “head” of Libya. Well, he openly told reporters, from Benghazi, that he is NOT safe in Tripoli, the capital; that The Resistance has killed 4 key people. Well, the reports I’ve received show that there’s a lot going on that we aren’t hearing about in the corporate news media [as usual]. Libya lovers are hoping beyond hope that these reports are true.
I have to repeat: I cannot have the same confidence in these reports that I had during the eight months that I was receiving direct and indirect information from Libya, before NATO finally cut off all flow of information. But, since I’m not sure, I feel to present this information to you anyway. I’ll present it in bullet-point fashion, not in any chronological manner:
Green flag represents the Libyan socialist Jamahiriya
1. The Green Resistance has captured Ghaddams [a city ] near [the] Algerian border. And the Green Flag of the Libyan Jamahiriya is flying throughout the entire area. Continue reading →
Wall Street banks, responsible for the brutal housing crisis that has displaced an estimated 7 million American families from their homes, have still not been held accountable.1 After receiving a massive taxpayer bailout, these same banks continue to bend laws, influence politicians, and ignore regulations. Meanwhile, the public pays a heavy price for Wall Street’s corruption and greed — millions are out of work, face foreclosure, and feel the pain of ever-worsening economic conditions.
Now, the Obama Administration and Department of Justice have an opportunity to help make things right. Instead of pursuing a settlement deal that lets the banks off the hook2, they should commit to a full investigation into the actions of the big banks and the damage they’ve caused.
The housing crisis and the economic downturn it triggered has hit Black people and Latinos particularly hard. The mortgage industry targeted prospective home buyers with toxic loans and ballooning interest rates, and engaged in systemic predatory lending and mortgage fraud — including unlawful foreclosures, false documentation, and “robo-signing” of foreclosure documents.3 Wells Fargo was even sued for steering African Americans towards high-cost subprime loans when they qualified for better loans.4 Subprime and predatory lending, foreclosures, and plummeting home values have devastated Black wealth, which has fallen to its lowest level in 25 years.5 Continue reading →
SIX MORE CONNECTED TO SNYDER, ENGLER, BUSH, BUSINESSES
The 10 member PA 4 review team appointed by Snyder includes six African-Americans, likely an effort to counter allegations that the PA 4 move on Detroit is racially-motivated.
Critics including prominent Detroit, state and national elected officials contend a state takeover of Detroit would leave 50 percent of the state’s African-American population under the control of emergency managers, in violation of the federal Voting Rights Act.
The daily media has prominently displayed photos of the team’s Black members and downplayed the role of state staff. The Detroit Free Press ran a banner headline declaring, “State review team for Detroit is met with praise.” However, they have ignored the role many of its members have played in furthering the Snyder agenda.
Andy Dillon running unsuccessfully for governor in Democratic primary
ANDY DILLON, State treasurer.Dillon conducted emergency manager classes for more than 40 people after PA 4 was enacted. He has authorized the renewed takeovers of Benton Harbor, the Detroit Public Schools, Ecorse and Highland Park under PA4, as well as the new PA 4 takeovers of Flint, Inkster and Pontiac.
He is an attorney who was president of DSC (Detroit Steel Co.) Ltd. until 1999, according to state records. His company bought the closed McLouth Steel plant in Trenton in 1996 after an employee stock-ownership plan failed, leaving thousands jobless. DSC Ltd. never got the plant up and running. Current Wayne County Tax Records show the property owes $4, 219,201.19 in delinquent taxes. Although it has not paid for at least five years, it has never faced foreclosure.
McLouth Steel in ruins after Dillon company DSC, Ltd. failed to revive it
Dillon also worked as the managing director of Wynnchurch Capital, vice president of GE Capital and as a financial analyst at WR Grace.
Dillon, formerly Democratic Speaker of the House, went over to Snyder’s side after progressive candidate Virg Bernero, Mayor of Lansing, won the gubernatorial nomination. Bernero had advocated standing up to the state’s corporations and banks.
FREDERICK HEADEN has been director of the state Treasury’s local government services division since 1997. Headen has been appointed by Governors John Engler, Jennifer Granholm and now Rick Snyder to serve on at least 15 review teams. He has authorized the takeovers of Benton Harbor, Ecorse, Flint, Highland Park, Inkster, and Pontiac.He formerly was legal counsel to the Citizens Research Council of Michigan, which frequently advocates privatization of public services. Its board members represent AT&T, Blue Cross, BorgWarner, Citizens Bank, CMS Energy, Comerica Bank,Compuware, Deloitte LLP, Detroit Economic Club, Dickinson Wright PLLC, DTE Energy, Dykema Gossett PLLC, Ernst & Young LLP (being sued for helping Lehman Brothers cook its books before its collapse); Hennessey Capital LLC, Hudson-Webber Foundation, JPMorgan Chase & Co., Kelly Services, Inc., Manoogian Foundation, Meritor, Inc. Miller, Canfield, Paddock and Stone, PLLC, PNC Financial Services, Rockbridge Growth Equity, LLC, W. E. Upjohn Institute and Wells Fargo Bank (recently implicated in laundering hundreds of millions in drug money.)
Brom Stibitz
BROM STIBITZ, senior policy adviser for the Treasury Department, was on the Flint review team with Headen and is on a current review team dealing with Highland Park Schools’ finances. He was formerly legislative director for Dillon.. He chairs the Finance and Claims Committee under Dillon, which on Dec. 13 recommended approval of the state’s Recovery Act Funds agenda. Detroit City Councilwoman JoAnn Watson has said the state has failed to transfer those federal funds to local municipalities, but used them to plug holes in its own budget. Continue reading →
While Michigan criticizes Detroit for its debt, it is racking up its own with Citigroup
December 28, 2011 Bloomberg News
By Chris Christoff
Dec. 28 (Bloomberg) — Michigan, whose joblessness led the nation during 2006-09, will issue $3.3 billion of variable-rate bonds — its largest-ever sale, according to treasury officials — to repay federal unemployment-benefit loans.
The two-year bonds underwritten by a unit of Citigroup Inc. were selling at a yield of 0.24 percent, said Tom Saxton, deputy state treasurer. That compares with estimated 3 percent interest on federal loans next year, Saxton said. Repaying the U.S. government by Dec. 31 will save as much as $100 million in interest and avoid federal penalties, he said.
“This is a good deal for the employer community,” he said.
The sale through the Michigan Finance Authority closes today. The state joins Texas and Idaho in tapping debt markets to repay unemployment loans after the 18-month recession that ended in June 2009. Michigan’s 9.8 percent jobless rate in November marked the first time in two years it’s been below 10 percent. The national rate for November was 8.6 percent.
Twenty-seven states and the Virgin Islands owed the federal unemployment trust fund a combined $39.3 billion as of Dec. 22, according to the U.S. Department of Labor. California owes the most, $9.7 billion, followed by New York and Michigan.
Michigan chose variable-rate bonds to take advantage of historically low short-term interest rates, Saxton said. He said that will give the state flexibility to convert the borrowing to long-term financing in 2012.
Two-year debt with a AAA rating yields 0.41 percent, compared with the average 2.82 percent since 1992, according to Bloomberg Fair Market data. Continue reading →
Councilwoman JoAnn Watson at Council meeting Sept. 13, 2011
By Diane Bukowski
December 23, 2011
Detroit—“A consent agreement consents to the takeaway, the giveaway of Detroit,” City Councilwoman JoAnn Watson said during a public hearing Dec. 1. “It has a trigger that says if you don’t pay your bills on time, or numerous other situations, you end up on a slippery slope to an emergency manager (EM) within seconds. There is nothing to be gained from giving away our city, we don’t have that right.”
Loud applause greeted her remarks, made in response to City Council President Pro Tem Gary Brown’s advocacy of such an agreement.
“A consent agreement gives you tools so you can address the problem without an emergency manager,” Brown said during the hearing. “It maintains the democratic process because City Council and the mayor would still be making the decisions.”
Gary Brown at Council meeting Sept. 13, 2011
He alleged that the Mayor and Council would have the powers of an EM, including breaking union contracts. Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder and the city’s dailies have taken the same position.
Brown was the sole Council member not to sign a Dec. 15 letter to Gov. Rick Snyder authored by U.S. Congressmen John Conyers, Hansen Clarke, and Gary Peters and signed by 63 local and state elected officials. The letter requested a meeting with Snyder before further action under PA 4 was taken.
Snyder cavalierly ignored the request. He has now moved to the second step of a PA 4 takeover, appointing a team to conduct a 60-day review of Detroit’s finances, which may take less time if Snyder so orders, under provisions of PA 4, He ordered the Flint review team to cut the time in half to 30 days.
Detroit APTE Vide-President Cecily McClellan leads chants at Benton Harbor rally against EM
Despite Brown’s allegations, Public Act 4 does not give local officials the right to break contracts under a consent agreement. The act specifically exempts their ability to “reject, modify, or terminate 1 or more terms and conditions of an existing collective bargaining agreement” under Sec. 19 1(k). It reserves that power for the state alone.
It also gives the State Treasurer sole discretion to help draft and approve a financial “recovery plan” as part of the consent agreement, and sole discretion to terminate the agreement and move to an EM at any time.
“A consent agreement shall provide that in the event of a material uncured breach of the consent agreement, the state treasurer is authorized to place the local government in receivership as provided under section 15,” PA 4 reads.
Former DPS Board of Education President Carla Scott
The Detroit Board of Education, under then President Carla Scott, approved such a consent agreement under PA 4’s predecessor Public Act 72 in September of 2008. Only four months later, on Dec. 8, State Schools Superintendent Mike Flanagan terminated the agreement, and recommended an emergency financial manager. Governor Granholm appointed Robert Bobb shortly thereafter.
This was despite the fact that on Dec. 1, 2008, as part of a “deficit elimination plan” required under the consent agreement, the Board agreed to close an additional 63 schools, eliminate 16,000 jobs, outsource numerous departments, regionalize other services, get $37 million in union concessions, and charge for textbooks.
State schools superintendent Mike Flanagan
“The District has been in deficit for multiple years over the course of several decades,” Flanagan told Scott in his Dec. 8 letter. “During that time, the Michigan Department of Education’s interactions with the District have exposed numerous systemic issues including the failure to meet deadlines and requirements, the misappropriation and lapsing of significant amounts of federal dollars, and an inability to remedy its financial problems by taking appropriate action.”
Flanagan completely ignored the fact that for five of the eight years the state cited in the schools’ budget history, from 2000 through 2005, the district was under state control, as a result of then Gov. John Engler’s hotly-contested 1999 takeover. The district had a $93 million surplus in 1999, and ended up with a deficit of over $300 million by the time that first takeover concluded.
Protest against Detroit and DPS debt loads
The deficit was caused by rampant borrowing encouraged by bank representatives who came to monthly meetings with the state trustee. These included a $220 million loan to be paid back over 15 years and taken out of the schools’ state per-pupil funding. Detroiters voted overwhelmingly to cancel that debt. Nearly 90 percent of state per-pupil funding now is reserved to pay off the district’s debt.
The district is a shell of its former self, and the state legislature is fast-tracking passage of bills that would eliminate any cap on charter schools, which will devastate public school systems state-wide because charters get funds originally allotted to public schools.
The state is currently lobbying Mayor Bing and the Detroit City Council hard for their approval of a consent agreement, which PA 4 requires.
Andy Dillon at re-election rally for Dave Bing
Treasurer Dillon told reporters in a conference call Dec. 2, “I talked to the mayor today, and I talked to three of the city council members and there was a very positive tone of cooperation. So I think – well several council members have said publicly they would like a consent agreement, so I expect that we will work in cooperation with them and I told the mayor that we will coordinate with you so that we don’t interfere with the work that you have on your plate already.”
Nikos Photopoulus, leader of Greek electrical workers union, and 14 others face up to 5 years in prison for occupying power plant to stop shut-offs
Appeal by the International Liaison Committee of Workers and Peoples (ILC)
Stop the prosecution of Nikos Photopoulos and his comrades from the GENOP-DEH union immediately!
We have just been informed by representatives of the Greek public power union, GENOP-DEH, of the repression affecting 15 Greek members of the GENOP-DEH union.
Greek riot police storm plant
On 24 November 2011, squads of riot police (MAT) stormed the power company’s facilities in Mesogeion Avenue in Athens and violently cleared it of workers and trade unionists who had been staging a sit-in/occupation for a few days. The offices are responsible for cutting off the electricity supply to the thousands of working-class families who have refused to pay the new property tax imposed by the Greek government by order of the Troika (IMF-European Commission-European Central Bank), which is being levied through the electricity bills. The same offices are in charge of cutting off the supply to the thousands of families who, due to the crisis, can no longer pay their bills.
On 30 November 2011, 15 trade unionists, including GENOP-DEH General Secretary Nikos Photopoulos, appeared in court, charged with “obstructing the forces of order” and “obstructing the correct functioning of the public services”. They face prison sentences of 6 months to 5 years without parole. On the eve of the 1 December general strike called by the trade union confederations GSEE and ADEDY, the government decided it would be wiser to hold its fire; accordingly the court postponed its ruling until 10 January 2012.
GENOP-DEH demonstration against austerity measures in Greece
Throughout the world, the workers and peoples are standing shoulder-to-shoulder with the Greek workers and their trade union organisations as they engage in the battle against the Troika’s barbaric plans implemented by the Greek government. The workers’
actions are legitimate, just as the actions of the Greek power workers and their trade union to prevent the power disconnections and to demand the withdrawal of the new tax imposed by the government are legitimate.
No worker, no labour activist, no democratic labour organisation can accept this threat of repression, which would be a blow against all labour and democratic rights.
This is why the International Liaison Committee of Workers and Peoples (ILC) has decided to inform all labour organisations around the world of these extremely serious facts, and to invite them to join in the effort, in whichever form they see fit, to demand that the Greek authorities immediately drop the legal proceedings against the GEOP-DEH union members, and to express their solidarity with them.
signed/ Louisa Hanoune, General Secretary of the Workers Party (Algeria)
Daniel Gluckstein, National Secretary of the Independent Workers Party (France )
Co-ordinators of the International Liaison Committee of Workers and Peoples
Moratorium NOW! coalition rallied last year to suspend city’s debt payments
JAN. 2 RALLY WILL ORGANIZE PARTICIPANTS TO GET SIGNATURES FOR REFERENDUM TO REPEAL PUBLIC ACT 4, FREEZING FURTHER ACTION
Dillon cites Detroit’s debt, names 60-day review team, says city officials
“either incapable or unwilling to manage its (sic) own finances”
TIME FOR WAR ON THE BANKS
By Diane Bukowski
December 27, 2011(See upcoming VOD stories on Snyder’s appointment of financial review team and what a “consent agreement” means under PA4.)
State Treasurer Andy Dillon
LANSING – Michigan State Treasurer Andy Dillon made the main issue very clear in his Dec. 21 letter to Michigan Governor Rick Snyder, recommending escalation of the state’s war on Detroit. The letter announced the second step in the PA 4 takeover process, a formal 60-day review of Detroit’s finances, cutting in half the original 30-day review. Today, he named the review team.
Dillon told Snyder the CITY’S DEBT TO THE BANKS plays a prominent role in the alleged crisis.A banner headline in the Free Press blared, “DETROIT’S DEBT CRISIS EVEN WORSE THAN THOUGHT.”
“The city has a mounting debt problem,” Dillon said. “In 2010, annual debt service requirements exceeded $597 MILLION. “As of June of 2011, the long-term debt of the city exceeded $8 BILLION . . . However, if one includes the unfunded actuarial pension liability of $615 million (offset by an almost $1.4 billion pension asset) and the unfunded other postemployment benefit liability of over $4.9 billion, the city’s total long-term debt liabilities are over $12 BILLION, which does not include substantial sums of interest which are over $4.9 BILLION.”
Tashi Kiya tells Bing to cut city's debt service
Dillon said, “City officials are either incapable or unwilling to manage its (sic) own finances,” (without using spell-check, evidently), in the six page letter, which did not hold Wall Street accountable in any fashion.
Dillon’s sneering comment on city officials typifies his and Snyder’s utter contempt for the Black elected leaders of Detroit and Michigan. They failed to honor a request from U.S. Congressmen John Conyers, Hansen Clarke, Gary Peters, and 63 other state and local officials that Gov. Snyder meet with them before taking further action against Detroit under Public Act 4. (Click on Conyers and elected officials letter to Snyder re EM).
The letter stressed that the duo appear to be targeting majority-Black cities in Michigan for emergency manager (EM) takeovers.
Snyder earlier responded to a question about the “appearance” of racism from Channel Four’s Devin Scillian on Flashpoint Dec. 18.
“It’s not racist, those cities have shrinking populations,” Snyder said,
He ignored the fact that the nation’s banks and mortgage companies targeted communities of color for criminal sub-prime loans. Later, when families could not pay their mortgages, they were evicted and often forced to leave their cities.
Considering Snyder and Dillon are moving towards the appointment of an emergency manager (EM), their stress on the city’s debt is telling. PA 4 says an EM shall be responsible for “The payment in full of the scheduled debt service requirements on all bonds, notes, and municipal securities of the local government and all other uncontested legal obligations,” among other matters. Continue reading →
ON TUES. JAN. 3, DPL ADMINISTRATION WILL BE MOVING EVERYTHING OUT OF THE FOUR BRANCHES SCHEDULED TO BE CLOSED.
PROTESTS TUES. JAN. 3, 2012 8 A.M.
LINCOLN BRANCH, 1221 E. 7 MILE 4 blocks east of I-75 f reeway) MONTEITH BRANCH 14100 KERCHEVAL (3 blocks west of Chalmers)
NO MORE SCHOOL CLOSINGS!
STOP THE DESTRUCTION OF OUR NEIGHBORHOODS
BUILD THE NEW CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT!
On Thursday, December 22, 2011, the people of Detroit stood up and said that we will not take the destruction of our libraries, our neighborhoods, our city and our future any more. Eleven people occupied the Lincoln Branch Library and refused to leave until their demand was met to keep all of the libraries open. The inside occupation was supported by about one hundred people who rallied outside the library to defend the occupation. Friends of the Monteith Library also rallied outside Monteith.
Protesters outside Monteith Library December 22, 2011
At Lincoln, occupiers began to gather at 10:30 am, right after the library opened. Occupiers read out loud a classic book of the last civil rights movement, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr’s “Why We Can’t Wait.” As they read Dr. King’s moving description of the struggle for black equality and freedom in Birmingham in 1963, we heard loud honking from E. Seven Mile, as motorists expressed their support for the libraries. As the day progressed, more people called and came by to show support.
At 4:00 pm, the police arrived and closed the library to the public, even though it was scheduled to remain open until 6:00 pm. In fact, the police and library officials closed every library branch two hours early, and hurried the patrons and staff out of the buildings. At Lincoln, the police even closed the window blinds to prevent supporters and press from seeing the occupiers.
In spite of police threats to charge every occupier who didn’t leave the library with felony charges for “obstructing,” the occupiers held their ground, chanting, “When the libraries are under attack, what do we do, stand up, fight back!,” and “Public libraries are a must! Detroit won’t go to the back of the bus!”
The police arrested the occupiers, and took the occupiers out in handcuffs. Defenders outside the library did their best to slow the progress of the police, and once the occupiers were driven away in police cars and a paddy wagon, the defenders regrouped at the jail (near Nevada and Ryan), and picketed the jail, calling for the occupiers’ release.
Movement attorneys found a sympathetic judge who signed writs of habeas corpus for all, which forced the police to let the occupiers go.
No charges have been filed yet, but the outcome depends on how hard we fight this week to continue to defend our libraries.
The December 22 library occupation showed the way to fight and win. If more people adopt this method, especially the young people of Detroit, we will be able to stop library and school closings, home evictions and the destruction of our neighborhoods.
The Detroit Public Library Commission’s November 16 vote to close four Detroit libraries on December 22–Mark Twain, Monteith and Lincoln on the East Side, and Richard on the West Side, must not stand.
Our libraries are essential cultural institutions. They are free public spaces outside school and home, where young people can explore the world beyond their daily experience, through books, movies, music and the internet. Libraries provide gathering space and social contact for young and old. Libraries offer everything from latchkey care for working parents, to job search support for unemployed people, to free classes and summer reading programs.
Gail Beasley said the closing hurts area seniors during Dec. 22 protest.
For the students and neighborhoods that these libraries serve, and for Detroit as a whole, these library closings would be yet another devastating blow that we cannot afford, do not deserve, and should not accept.
For far too long our youth and our city have been given second-class treatment and conditions. The Democrats and Republicans are united in systematically stripping our city of every essential service, from public schools to public libraries. This is the new Jim Crow, and we are organizing to defeat it.
The current political powers-that-be claim that there is no money for the libraries, but we know that money is always found where there is the political will. If we fight to win, they will find the money.
Last year, when the young women of Catherine Ferguson Academy heard that their school was going to be closed, they began to organize to keep it open. The students believed in two things: 1) like Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., they refused to believe that “the bank of justice is bankrupt;” they refused to believe that there wasn’t enough money to keep their school open; and 2) they know that the rich and powerful are not the only force that can change history.
The Catherine Ferguson students joined BAMN, the Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action, Integration and Immigrant Rights and Fight for Equality By Any Means Necessary. As young BAMN leaders, they organized an occupation of their school, they sat down inside and refused to leave, and they organized hundreds of supporters to stand outside and defend them, and they won—they kept their school open.
We can follow this example of how to win and save our libraries. The young people who depend on these libraries and who believe in the right to have public libraries can answer the challenge of becoming our generation’s voice of freedom. Together with our families, friends, loved ones, neighbors and supporters there is no reason why we can’t keep our libraries from closing.
Become part of the fight to end the second-class treatment of Detroit. Our libraries must stay open. We deserve nothing less!
Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action, Integration and Immigrant Rights and Fight for Equality By Any Means Necessary (BAMN) www.bamn.com