STOP STATE CHILD ABDUCTIONS! SUPPORT GODBOLDOS TUES. NOV. 1 12 NOON Lincoln Juvenile Hall 1025 E. Canfield

Maryanne Godboldo, with supporters, speaks to Occupy Detroit General Assembly Oct. 20

BATTLE NOT OVER FOR MARYANNE, ARIANA AND FAMILY: CHILD STILL UNDER DHS SUPERVISION, KYM WORTHY APPEALS DISMISSAL CRIMINAL CHARGES AGAINST MOTHER

By Diane Bukowski

Oct. 31, 2011

Detroit–Supporters of Maryanne Godboldo and all families who have had their children taken illegally by the state’s Child Protective Services plan to rally outside the “Lincoln Juvenile Hall of Justice” Tues. Nov. 1 at 12 noon to demand an end to state-sponsored abductions.

The Hall is located at 1024 E. Canfield at the 1-75 service drive, between Mack and Warren..

During a meeting at the Occupy Detroit general assembly Oct. 20, Godboldo, Debbie Williams, whose grandchildren were taken, and others addressed the gathering to ask for support for their cause. Although Black poor families in particular face the abduction of children into foster care, for the profit of the state and non-profit child “welfare” agencies, the policies affect poor families of all races, and sometimes even families of means.

(Click on http://voiceofdetroit.net/2011/08/30/9604/, http://voiceofdetroit.net/2011/10/09/%e2%80%9ci-want-my-mother-to-come-home-espinoza-trial-continues-oct-14-10-a-m/, and http://voiceofdetroit.net/2011/08/17/detroit-father-of-5-pursues-federal-civil-rights-suit-against-mia-wenk-dhs-judges-agencies-for-removal-of-children/ for earlier VOD stories on the Godboldo, Espinoza, and Brent cases.)

Godboldo called on Occupy Detroit to take up the urgent issue.

“People in Detroit are not only losing their jobs, their homes, their cars and their utilities every day, they are also losing their children,” Godboldo said. The assembly supported her cause almost unanimously.

According to Godboldo, despite the fact that Wayne County Family Court Judge Lynn Pierce ruled recently that her daughter Ariana can come home, the family is still under the supervision of the Department of Human Services CPS division, and faces another hearing in front of Pierce Dec. 12.

Godboldo won a significant victory when 36th District Court Judge Ronald Giles dismissed all criminal charges against her related to her March stand-off with a Detroit police Special Response team comprised of officers with assault weapons, tanks and helicopters. Giles ruled that the police had no legal right to take Ariana from her. However, Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy recently appealed the criminal case, according to Godboldo’s attorney Allison Folmar.

Families who are being thrown off public assistance benefits this month as a result of a DHS ruling are especially vulnerable to having their children taken. Gov. Rick Snyder and DHS Director Maura Corrigan recently held a ceremony and press conference featuring 300 new workers assigned to the CPS unit.

For more information, go to http://justice4maryanne.com/, http://www.facebook.com/#!/pages/Justice-for-Maryanne-Godboldo/178678602179610., justice4maryanne@gmail.com,

Phone: 313 867 4841 P.O Box: P.O. Box 20924 Ferndale, MI 48220-9998

 

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BRIDGE BLOCKADE STOPS INTERNATIONAL TRADE

Marchers target Mattie Moroun before blockading bridge

Protesters target “Bridge Baron” Matty Moroun, worth $1.8 billion

 By Diane Bukowski 

Oct. 30, 2011 

DETROIT – “We stopped international trade from happening,” Rev. Charles Williams III shouted over his bullhorn as more than a hundred protesters from Bridge Watch, Occupy Detroit, Good Jobs Now, the Metro Detroit AFL-CIO, the UAW and AFSCME massed in front of a long line of semi-trucks at the Ambassador Bridge Oct. 27. 

“Matty Moroun just came in and took a piece of public property,” Williams said. “He bought off the politicians and the state legislators. But this shows what we can do together to stop him and the rest of them!” 

Williams is pastor of the Historic King Solomon Baptist Church and a long-time community activist. Moroun is owner of the Ambassador Bridge, with a net worth of $1.8 billion according to Forbes magazine and a network of companies that spans the world. 

Protesters blocked truck traffic for nearly one hour

“We did it! We stopped them!” shouted one woman, pointing above to the arch of the bridge, where trucks stood motionless on one side. Protesters carried several large effigies of Moroun and chanted, “Moroun is a criminal! Lock him up! Lock him up!” 

One protester called out, “We’re tired of trucks in our neighborhood and asthma in our children from the exhaust!” 

Twenty protesters were prepared to face arrest, according to organizers, but National Lawyers Guild members out in force to support them negotiated a truce with police. The protesters stayed for almost an hour, and left shouting, “We’ll be back! From New York to LA, Occupy the USA!” 

Bridge traffic at standstill

As trucks started rolling again, many drivers loudly blew their horns in support and gave thumbs up signals. 

Save our children from Matty Moroun

A release from Detroit Bridgewatch said, “There is no greater sign of corporate greed than Matty Moroun, the Bridge Baron. The gross injustices his Detroit International Bridge Company has inflicted on our community include: 

  • Illegally occupied and stolen a city street (23rd Street) including West Jefferson
  • Illegally occupied our streets, service drives such as W Grand Blvd., Fort Street, West Jefferson, and others.
  • Illegally occupied our City of Detroit Riverside Park (the East half)
  • The trucks in our neighborhood are unbearable.  They travel past our children’s schools, parks and homes jeopardizing our public safety, our health and destroying our local streets.
  • Bought and allowed the decaying of hundreds of homes, buildings and blighted lots in our neighborhood.
  • Illegally erected the beginning of a second span without the appropriate environmental studies and permitting by the federal government. “ 

 

James Hunter with yellow sign demands Community Benefit Agreements

Protesters said they were inspired by the Occupy Wall Street takeover of the Brooklyn Bridge last month, during which 700 marchers massed across the span were taken into custody by New York Police. 

James Hunter, representing the Sugar Law Center and the Metro Detroit AFL-CIO, and others were wearing yellow T-shirts demanding “Community Benefit Agreements.” 

Hunter, previously a long-time City of Detroit worker and AFSCME local president, said it is time for the labor movement and the community to come together for the benefit of all,  along with fighting Moroun. 

“Everyone is clamoring for jobs,” Hunter said. “We want the other corporate bosses to provide good jobs with benefits , including environmental clean-up and providing good homes for our families. We are here on the southwest side, where some of the most downtrodden, forgotten folks in Detroit live in crumbling houses. There is plenty of work to be done.” 

Many seniors live on southwest side, demand end to truck pollution

This was not the first time southwest residents have taken direct action against Moroun. In June, they mobilized to tear down a fence that he had erected blocking off part of Riverside Park next to the bridge. The park is a favorite spot for people to come to enjoy the river and bridge views, fish and relax in their cars and on picnic benches. 

Moroun is a long-time player on the Detroit political scene, lining the pockets of mayors, city council members and others with campaign contributions amounting to bribes. He has been running television ads fighting the construction of a second span across the river by the Michigan Department of Transportation. The ads claim a second span is not needed, but in fact Moroun wants to build his own private second bridge to gain the profits from bridge fares and sales. 

Click on http://borderculture2009.blogspot.com/2010/03/matty-moroun-climbs-forbes-richest-list.html to read Windsor Star article on Moroun’s wealth. He has a net worth of $1.8 billion and is the 556th richest person in the world, according to Forbes Magazine. 

Stop Moroun's criminal profits!

The Star article says Moroun is battling to maintain his monopoly over the Detroit River border crossing, including the Ambassador Bridge, which handles 25 percent of the commerce between the U.S. and Canada, 8,000 trucks a days, and $100 billion worth of goods each years. 

“The secretive Moroun for decades has guarded his financial holdings behind an array of private companies, so his true wealth has always been difficult for Forbes and others to determine,” said the Star.

“A 2006 Windsor Star investigation revealed he owns a wide variety of businesses: insurance companies, logistics firms, railways, air cargo companies, constructions firms, about 25 real estate companies and dozens of trucking companies on both sides of the border. His empire stretches to nearly every corner of the world with shipping connections in Australia, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, China and Japan. His trucking interests include companies and affiliates across the U.S., Canada and Mexico.” 

For more info email: DetroitBridgewatch@gmail.com

 

People Rip Down Fence at Riverside Park in Detroit: MyFoxDETROIT.com

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MARCH ON DTE HQ Tues. Nov. 1 at 1 pm: SIERRA CLUB, OCCUPY DETROIT, MICHIGAN WELFARE RIGHTS

 

DTE protest by Michigan Welfare Rights Org., Dec. 10, 2010/Photo: Daymon Hartley

DTE Energy raised rates $175 M Oct. 29, despite whopping $200 M second quarter profits due to  Snyder tax cuts

 Low-income customers face loss of assistance as a result of Obama LIHEAP cuts and state legislature

March and press conference Tues. November 1, 1pm – 3pm 

March from Grand Circus Park to DTE Energy Plaza, 2000 Second Ave. (map) 

Our Neighborhoods need: Clean, Affordable Energy now! Make Energy Shutoffs Illegal! Stop Dirty Coal Pollution with Clean Energy Solutions! Promote Green Energy Jobs! 

SPONSOR: PEOPLE AND ENERGY  (on Facebook)

Contact: Michelle Martinez, Sierra Club Detroit (313) 443-1046

Maureen Taylor, Michigan Welfare Rights Organization (313)729-5558

Kady McFadden   Sierra Club Media Relations (312) 251-1680 X195

 __________________________________________________________

DTE RAISES RATES BY $175 M 

(Detroit Free Press  10 21 11) 

Waterfall and pool in front of DTE HQ cost $8 million, while thousands of Detroiters have no water, heat or lights

Customers of DTE Energy will see an increase in their electricity bills next month because the Michigan Public Service Commission authorized the utility to raise its rates by $174.9 million. 

The utility initially requested a rate hike of $443 million last year and implemented a $107-million increase in April, pending a review by the commission. After that review, the commission said Thursday that the utility could raise its rates by a total of $174.9 million. 

The hike represents a 1.5% increase for utility customers, but DTE didn’t have figures available Thursday on how that would translate into the average customer’s bills.

The rate increase comes when DTE is reporting improved earnings. For the second quarter of 2011, the utility earned $202 million, compared with $86 million in the second quarter of 2010. 

The quarter included benefits DTE gained when the state got rid of the Michigan Business Tax in favor of a flat corporate tax. The rate hike will go into effect Oct. 29. 

Cold winter isn’t only bad news for low-income families facing high heating bills

Published: Tuesday, October 25, 2011, 7:00 AM     Updated: Tuesday, October 25, 2011, 7:36 AM
 

Pres. Barack Obama and his family at Christmas Tree lighting; as a result of his cuts to LIHEAP, many families across the U.S. will have neither lights nor heat this winter.

With the prospect of further cuts in home heating assistance, predictions of a cold, snowy winter could equal a double dose of bad news for low-income West Michigan residents.

Federal funds for the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program were cut from $5 billion to $4.5 billion for the fiscal year that ended in September.

Advocates believe Congress will approve $3.5 billion for fiscal 2012.

“We are looking at a situation where the funds are more limited than they have been in a long time,” said David Schroeder, coordinator of the Kent County Essential Needs Task Force.

“There are an awful lot of people struggling to make mortgage payments and to keep food on their table and also to make heat and utility payments.”

Schroeder said the area’s network of charities, churches and social service agencies are working to ensure low-income residents make it through winter with heat and shelter.

But he said he was “not entirely confident” no one would have their heat turned off.

At Heart of West Michigan United Way, officials are bracing for hundreds of requests for help with heat or electric bills.

FRIGID TEMPS PROMPT CITY OF DETROIT TO OPEN DAYTIME RESPITE CENTERS FOR RESIDENTS AND EXTEND WARMING CENTER HOURS FOR HOMELESS .

“The number of folks seeking assistance has always exceeded the resources available to provide assistance,” said Robert McKown, director of community engagement for the agency.

With unemployment seemingly stuck above 10 percent and rising poverty in Kent County, McKown said it is no surprise area charities are reporting “a great deal of need.”

For the last three months of 2010, the agency received 1,083 calls for assistance with gas bills and 1,225 calls for assistance with electric bills. If anything, it expects more this winter. For July through September this year, it received 1,314 requests for electric assistance and 866 for gas.

The state’s Department of Human Services, which helps administer the federal assistance program through the Home Heating Credit, could see its federal heating assistance funds reduced by one-third to one-half.

Last year, the state received $276.5 million in federal funds for home energy assistance.

Households with incomes below 110 percent of the federal poverty level, or $24,255 for a family of four, are eligible for the heating credits. They receive an average benefit of $388 per household.

Adding to the concern, a state appeals court in July struck down the financing system used by Michigan’s Low Income and Energy Efficiency Fund and the state Legislature has not enacted a replacement.

Money for the state program, which has been operating since 2002, was built into the rate base used by Detroit Edison and Consumers Energy Co., Michigan’s two largest utilities. But the appeals court ruled that lawmakers failed to authorize the fee when they rewrote state energy laws several years ago.

In addition, the state is poised to remove some 11,000 families from the welfare cash assistance rolls. Those cuts, which were to take effect Oct. 1, were temporarily halted by a court decision that found the state did not inform notified recipients of their right to a hearing.

In Kent County, 287 cases are slated for termination, including 767 children. The cuts are aimed at families and individuals who have received cash assistance for four years.

“We are doing what we can to take advantage of whatever resources we can,” said Schroeder of the Kent County Essential Needs Task Force.

E-mail the author of this story: localnews@grpress.com

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CANCEL STUDENT DEBT NOW! PROTESTS NOV. 2 AND 9; DEBT TOPS $1 TRILLION

Calling all Detroit area students!  Wayne State, Marygrove, CCS, UofD Mercy, WCCC, OCC, MCC, Oakland University, Eastern Michigan University, University of Michigan Dearborn and Ann Arbor!

Converge on November 9th to join the national movement taking the first major step towards ending the student debt crisis.

On November 9th Occupy Detroit will stand in solidarity with students and graduates across the nation who will be participating in a nationwide day of protest and education on the student debt crisis.

Our universities have increased tuition and cut services with impunity.  We pay more money for larger classes, less academic assistance, and to be taught by underpaid and overworked graduate students rather than the professors we came here for.

We are the most indebted generation in history.  Now is the time to say NO MORE!  Now is the time to demand the cancellation of student debt for all current and former students! Now is the time to demand the restoration of education as a fully funded public good! Now is the time to end the usury of America’s youth! Now is the time to achieve economic justice. Our generation’s movement is upon us, we are the 99%, and we will win!

Tentative schedule:

11:15 a.m. March leaves Grand Circus Park headed toward WSU.

12 noon. Rally begins at Wayne State University in the center of campus on Gullen Mall. March from Occupy Detroit converges with the rally.  Speak out against student loan debt! Trash your bill!!

12:45 p.m.  Depart for the Chase Bank in the Maccabees Building on WSU’s campus.  Members of Chase, the largest holders of student loan debt,  will move their money across the hall to Michigan First Credit Union. Demand that Chase end its usury of young people.

We stand in solidarity with all victims of the Great Debt Crisis who are facing foreclosures and utility shut-offs! We are the 99%!

Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=221934377873713

UNPAID STUDENT LOANS TOP $1 TRILLION

By: Tim Mak
October 19, 2011 07:44 AM EDT

Giving validation to Occupy Wall Street protests over the increasing burdens of student debt, a new report indicates that the total amount of outstanding student loans this year will exceed $1 trillion for the first time.

In addition, the amount of student loans taken out last year was greater than $100 billion, another new record, according to USA Today, citing the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.

The $1 trillion of outstanding loans means that Americans now owe more on student loans than on their credit cards. While students have been racking up educational loans, American consumers have been paying down credit cards and home loans.

The average fulltime undergraduate student borrowed $4,963 in 2010, up 63 percent from a decade earlier, even after adjusting for inflation, the report says.

Meanwhile, with a greater loan burden, the percentage of borrowers that defaulted on their student debt also rose — from 6.7 percent in 2007 to 8.8 percent in 2009.

The Occupy Wall Street protests have been driven by many frustrations, originating from across American society. But perhaps one of the most common complaints has been that of overwhelming student loan burdens.

“I have about $75k in student loans. I will default soon. My cosigner, my father, will be forced to take my loans. He will default as well. I’ve ruined my family because I tried to rise above my class,” writes one testimonial on the 99 percent website on Wednesday.

The 99 percent website is one of the places where the Occupy Wall Street movement first got its inspiration.

“I am a young medical professional who BARELY makes it paycheck-to-paycheck because I have over $200,000.00 in student loan debt,” says another testimonial on the website Tuesday. “I pay almost $1,000 a month just in student loan repayment. I will have to do so for the next 30 years. How will I ever afford to buy a house, have children or save for the future?”

http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1011/66347.html

To sign MoveOn.org petition to cancel student debt, which has already garnered almost 650,000 signatures, in support of H. Res 365, introduced by Rep. Hansen Clarke (D-MI), seeking student loan forgiveness as a means of economic stimulus, click on http://signon.org/sign/want-a-real-economic

 

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CHARTER ???? – VOTE “NO” AND WHY

 

Water Dept. worker Andrew Daniels-El speaks on city charter in January, 2009 at Call ’em Out meeting as Agnes Hitchcock and AFSCME Local 207 President John Riehl moderate.

By Joyce Moore

My name is Joyce Moore and I a former Detroit City Charter Revision Commissioner for the adoption of the 1997 Detroit City Charter. 

In this article I want to outline some of the events, the players, provide laws, and encourage you to vote “NO” on Proposal C.  

MAYOR 

Under both Charters that I have read, the Mayor will continue to be in complete control of all city services: 

Article 5. Sec. 5-102. The Executive Branch 

Except as otherwise provided by law or this Charter, executive and administrative authority for the implementation of programs, services and activities of city government is vested exclusively in the executive branch (In both Charters).  

Morris Mays (center) and others campaign against Charter revision at Occupy Detroit march

There is no shift in power, the Mayor will have more power. For example, many parts of the city are currently without street lights and yet when you go downtown you have street lights, and in addition, there are garbage trucks with brooms to sweep up overspills in certain areas of the city and not in other parts.  If this Charter passes, the Mayor will have more power in determining which districts that he favors will get city services, which ultimately from my perspective will impact on who will get elected to city council.  

I am encouraging you to continue reading this article as it will explain and further clarity, the havoc that has been brought upon the people of the City of Detroit by a RESOLUTION that should not have been neither presented nor adopted by any council members. 

CITY COUNCIL 

Below is Section 9-403 of our current charter which clearly states the following: 

Article 9. Sec. 9-403.   Revision Question. 

The question of whether there shall be a general revision of the City Charter shall be submitted to the voters of the city of Detroit at the gubernatorial primary of 2018, and at every fourth (4th) gubernatorial primary thereafter and may be submitted at other times in the manner provided by law.  A primary election shall be held for the offices of Charter Revision Commissioners at the same election and shall be void if the proposition to revise is not adopted.  If the proposition to revise is adopted, Charter Revision Commissioners shall be elected at the ensuing general election for governor. 

THE FOLLOWING 

1.         The Detroit City Council’s malicious abuse of the legal process in constructing the February 3, 2009 resolution, which placed a charter revision question on the ballot, in the May 5, 2009, Special General Election

2.         Article 7 Section 22 of the Michigan Constitution, relevant part, stated: “under general laws the electors of each city… shall have the power and authority to frame, adopt and amend its charter…” 

Chris Griffiths, with APTE VP Cecilyn McClellan and Pres. Dempsey Addison march against revised charter during first Occupy Detroit march Oct. 14

3.         The general law under which the City of Detroit is incorporated is under the Home Rule Cities Act, No 279, Section 117.18, which provides two conditional ways to submit the question of whether Detroit City Charter may be revised, relevant part, states that: “any city desiring to revise its Charter shall do so in the following manner [as laid-out in this Sec 117.18] unless otherwise provided by Charter…” 

4.         The City of Detroit already operates under the 1997 Detroit City Charter, the above quoted dependent (Subordinate) clause – “unless otherwise provided by charter”, complies with Article 7 Section 22 of the Michigan Constitution, by granting cities with a Charter, the Autonomy to frame and revise their charter. 

5.         In November 1996 the voters adopted the revised 1997 Detroit City Charter which states in Section 9-403 that: “the question of whether there shall be a general revision of the City Charter shall be submitted to the voters of the City of Detroit at the gubernatorial primary of 2018, and at every fourth (4th) gubernatorial primary thereafter and may be submitted at other times in the manner provided by law…” 

6.         Grammatically, the above provision, in paragraph 5, construction consists of one independent (main) clause –  “the question of whether there shall be a general revision of the city charter shall be submitted to the voters of the City of Detroit at the gubernatorial primary of 2018”.  And two dependent (subordinate) clause, respectively, “and at every fourth (4th) gubernatorial primary thereafter and may be submitted at other times in the manner provided by law.” 

7.         On February 3, 2009, the Detroit City Council adopted their own constructed resolution beginning with the fourth statement, whereas the resolution, which states that: “the changes that are required in the 1997 City Charter necessitate that a revision of the charter begin before calendar year 2018 and, therefore, in accordance with Section 9-403 of the 1997 Detroit City Charter and may be submitted at other times in the manner provided by law”. 

8.         When the Detroit City Council adopted the February 3, 2009 Resolution that was introduced by Council Members Kwame Kenyatta and Brenda Jones with a vote of 6 to 2 to place the question for revision on the ballot for the May 5, 2009, special general election, citing Section 9-403 from the 1997 Detroit City Charter and arbitrarily used procedures from Section 117.18 Home Rule cities act, as an authority granting them permission to submit the charter revision question to the voters, they maliciously abused the legal processes laid out, respectively, in the City Charter and Home Rules Cities Act.  And thereby, violated the State Constitutional Right provided by Article 7, Section 22.  

9.         “A malicious abuse of legal process occurs where the party employs it [the Charter and home rules cities act] for some unlawful object, not  the purpose within it is intended by the law to effect; in others words, a perversion of it.” Lauzon v. Charroux, 18 R.I. 467,28A. 975. 

FURTHER NOTE THE POSTAL CARD 

 Most people have received the postal card (above)  in the mail recently circulated by the current Charter Commissioners, please note these two (2) statements:       

 “The Detroit Charter revision process is a legal process started by local  City Council members”.  (NOT BY THE PEOPLE)

 “Feb 3, 2009, City Council members Kenyatta and Jones sponsored a  resolution, approved 6 to 2, to place the charter revision question on the  May 5, 2009 ballot – calling for the charter revision question earlier than scheduled for 2018.”  

The definition of resolution is a written motion adopted by a deliberative body (Wikopedia) and in the Dictionary – Merriam-Webster’s: the formal statement expressing the opinion, will, or intent of a body or persons. 

In short, the will of the people was ignored and violated by members of City Council in creating a RESOLUTION for Charter Revision.   There is no city that has a charter that poses the question of charter revision as a RESOLUTION, except in the City of Detroit. 

There is a penalty when the Charter is violated.  It should be enacted upon each city council member that either initiated or voted  on such a RESOLUTION, as to the maximum extent possible by law . 

CITY CLERK 

The City Clerk has the responsibility to ensure that every proposal that is to be placed on a ballot is in compliance with the law and can challenge any proposal in a court of law. 

Specifically, to place the Proposal for Charter Revision, the City Clerk could have challenged the legality of the resolution as related to in Sec. 9-403, but did not.  However, we (citizens) pursued a law suit only to be bombarded by the courts with appeals and more appeals, with no results and finally to be lost in the mix after two (2) years, with the process of Charter Revision continuing.  

Tyrone Travis speaks at special community meeting Sept. 10, 2011

Although the people will vote, the question is whether their votes will be counted properly?  In the last election, Tyrone Travis and myself requested an extensive investigation of the City Clerk’s office with no response from the Justice Department in Washington as well as provided extensive documentation to the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) of the fraudulent activities of this office. 

One candidate running for Mayor clearly showed how the “absentee ballots/votes” were tainted in the last election.  (VOD ed: the Wayne County Election Commission found that nearly 50 percent of the votes in that election, including 100% of the absentee ballots, were not recountable due to numerous irregularities. Mayoral candidate Tom Barrow requested the recount, and appealed the fact that the election was allowed to stand to both the Appeals and State Supreme Courts, with no results.)

Tom Barrow speaks at Call 'em Out dinner Feb. 2010

Tyrone Travis and myself had done exactly the same thing in bringing attention to the tainted “absentee ballots/votes” even in 1996 and requested even then a Federal Investigation of the Clerk’s Office. Just for history, Tyrone Travis and I sued the Secretary of State Candice Miller back then, to bring the election at that time in compliance with State Law, ultimately to ensure that the votes would be counted properly.  Currently, we have recently heard how the computerized machines have gone down in the 2005 election and were re-initialized only to find that votes had been lost with no one bringing this information to the public’s attention until four (4) years later. Unfortunately, nothing has changed in protecting the votes of the people. 

DISTRICTS 

This Charter that is being proposed for the November 2011 Election is about Districts.  “Districts” was placed on the 2009 ballot illegally; again the City Clerk ignored her responsibility to the people. We showed how many suburbanites circulated petitions for Districts, not the people ofDetroit.   

We showed in the 2009 Election how the QVF (Qualified Voter File) through the City Clerk’s office was reduced by 45,872 Registered Voters from May 5, 2009 to August 4, 2009 to accommodate the number of signatures necessary to place the proposal for Districts on the ballot.  Specifically, when there is a petition drive for a proposal you have to know how many signatures are needed, which is why the PREVIOUS general election results are used.  The CURRENT QVF was used to place Districts on the ballot. 

This issue alone now possesses an even greater threat by using our Charter to determine who draws the boundaries of the Districts. Further, Districts will: 

  • clear the way to take control of more of our assets, 
  •  dilute the tax base, 
  •  reduce the voting power for all the citizens, 
  •  consolidate the voting blocks of those who wish to confiscate the most desirable and valuable areas in our city, and 
  • finalize the concept raised as far back as 1972 of, a “City within a City.      

A clear example of these events is Midtown as part of Downtown.  It is one of the choice areas of the City for Districts and is being populated by rewarding people to move into this area.  

“NO” on CHARTER – PROPOSAL C 

The sad and devastating part is that most of the general public is unaware of the politics that is changing our city, partly because the mainstream media has not provided accurate information to the public and special interest groups have more input into the structure of our city than the people of the city. 

Have no doubt it is absolutely about money, power and greed.  Again I stress: 1.) people will go to the polls and vote, 2.) votes will be counted and 3.) there will be official results.  NOTE AND NOTE AGAIN, part of the demise of our great city with be, are the votes actually being counted properly?

 Therefore, the only choice that I have is to Vote “NO” on Proposal C.  I hope that this information helped in understanding the importance of voting “NO” on a proposal that was not to be brought to the people until 2018.   This new charter is about control of the assets and a new regionalization ofDetroit. 

Yours for a Better City! 

Joyce Moore,

FormerDetroitCityCharter Revision Commissioner (1993-1996) 

P.S.

BE PREPARED FOR A RECOUNT AND DISTRACTIONS!

F.Y.I.

To read both versions of the Charter, click on Detroit City Charter and on Revised City Charter for the Charter with revisions proposed.  

To stay current with the issues of the city and hear the truth and accuracy of “WHAT’S GOING ON” go to http://voiceofdetroit.net, an on-line newspaper written by Diane Bukowski, a Detroiter and life-long, writer.

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OCCUPY OAKLAND RETAKES PARK, CALLS FOR GENERAL STRIKE NOV. 2

Occupy Oakland holds its first General Assembly after retaking Oscar Grant Plaza in front of City Hall Tuesday evening and votes for a General Strike on Wednesday, Nov. 2.

                                                                                 Liberate Oakland! GENERAL STRIKE!Shut down the 1 percent Wed. Nov. 2

Protect OccupySF by packing hearing on the Avalos resolution Mon, Oct. 31, 10 a.m. Room 250, SF City Hall

by Occupy Oakland

Oct. 27, 2011

Below is the proposal passed by the Occupy Oakland General Assembly on Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2011. In reclaimed Oscar Grant Plaza, 1,607 people voted – 1,484 voted in favor of the resolution, 77 abstained and 46 voted against it, passing the proposal at 96.9 percent. The General Assembly operates on a modified consensus process that passes proposals with 90 percent in favor and with abstaining votes removed from the final count.

PROPOSAL

  • We as fellow occupiers of Oscar Grant Plaza propose that on Wednesday, Nov. 2, 2011, we liberate Oakland and shut down the 1 percent.
  • We propose a citywide general strike and we propose we invite all students to walk out of school. Instead of workers going to work and students going to school, the people will converge on downtown Oakland to shut down the city.
  • All banks and corporations should close down for the day or we will march on them.

While we are calling for a general strike, we are also calling for much more. People who organize out of their neighborhoods, schools, community organizations, affinity groups, workplaces and families are encouraged to self-organize in a way that allows them to participate in shutting down the city in whatever manner they are comfortable with and capable of.

The whole world is watching Oakland. Let’s show them what is possible.

The Strike Coordinating Council will begin meeting every day at 5 p.m. in Oscar Grant Plaza before the daily General Assembly at 7 p.m. All strike participants are invited. Stay tuned for much more information, and see you next Wednesday.

OCCUPY OAKLAND RETAKES OSCAR GRANT PARK, OCCUPY SAN FRANCISCO THWARTS POLICE RAID

The 99 percent have continued Occupy Oakland and protected Occupy San Francisco. After a devastating early morning raid and a night of police repression and brutality, people did what they had to do: They returned to the site by the thousands.

This time the police stood down. In a triumphant return to Oscar Grant (Frank Ogawa) Plaza, 3,000 members of the 99 percent held their General Assembly. It was powerful. It was peaceful. And it could not be stopped.

Update, Oct. 27, 5pm Pacific: Olsen will undergo brain surgery "within the next one or two days." In the photo above, Veterans For Peace member Scott Olsen, who is identified as a former U.S. Marine and Iraq war veteran, lies on the street after being struck in the head by a police projectile in Oakland, California, during eviction of the Occupy Oakland encampment.

Injustices that mandate the continuation and growth of the Occupy movement abound. Oakland spent several million dollars on its campaign Tuesday to shut down free speech in Oakland – a campaign so brutal that Scott Olsen, 24, a Marine veteran of two tours of duty in Iraq who had been staying at Occupy Oakland, is hospitalized in critical condition, his skull fractured by a police projectile.

Meanwhile, despite parents’ impassioned testimony and the attendance at a School Board meeting of a crowd of 300, bolstered by occupiers, the board voted Wednesday to close five schools: Lakeview, Lazear, Marshall, Maxwell Park and Santa Fe.

Across the Bay in San Francisco, hundreds gathered to stop a planned raid ordered by Interim Mayor Ed Lee. Community organizations, labor unions and progressive members of the Board of Supervisors came down to defend the camp and risk arrest.

Supervisor John Avalos sits in support of Occupy San Francisco with thousands of protesters Wednesday night, Oct. 26, to prevent a raid threatened by Interim Mayor Ed Lee and Police Chief Greg Suhr. The presence of Avalos, who stayed until 4 a.m., along with several more supervisors, Public Defender Jeff Adachi and other elected officials, helped thwart the raid. – Photo: Jeff Chiu, AP

“We have a responsibility to protect the legacy of this city as a haven for free speech, as well as to protect the residents,” said Supervisor John Avalos, who stayed at the camp until 4 a.m. along with four other supervisors. They were responding to calls from labor and community groups to join the peaceful protest in a show of solidarity and an attempt to head off a violent clash as San Francisco police marshaled forces to raid the encampment. Avalos is also a candidate for mayor.

Periodically, he reported, they heard reports of police heading to the area and amassing in two different locations. Avalos says he did not receive any response from repeated calls to Interim Mayor Lee, Police Chief Greg Suhr or Suhr’s deputies. Helicopters began hovering over the protest site at 9 p.m., adding to the tension among protesters after the violent conflicts the night before in Oakland.

Occupy Oakland participants restore banner to Oscar Grant Park

This comes days after Avalos introduced a resolution supporting the goals of Occupy Wall Street and the right to peaceful assembly in San Francisco. The resolution, co-sponsored by Supervisors David Campos, Jane Kim and Eric Mar, would put the San Francisco Board of Supervisors officially on the record in support of the growing protest movement. It also explicitly called on the interim mayor to halt the crackdown on protesters and prevent further violence.

Supporters from Occupy Oakland streamed across on BART to stand with San Francisco – until BART shut down three stations in Oakland at 11 p.m. With hundreds picketing, chanting and rallying all through the night, the city wisely called off the raid.

“I have no doubt that the broad show of solidarity last night from the people of San Francisco is what prevented the police raid. I am proud that my colleagues and I were there to be a part of this small but significant victory.”

Community organizations, labor and faith leaders worked throughout the day yesterday, pushing both mayors to back off and let the encampments continue and calling people to come out and support. The mayors were told the movement would not be deterred and the people would come back.

Calls are being heard for the recall of Oakland Mayor Jean Quan. This movement is now too big to fail.

If you haven’t already, sign the petition to permanently prevent the raid in San Francisco.
Go visit your local encampment. Stay a while. Let’s find even more ways to connect Occupy, community organizing, labor and all of the 99 percent to keep this movement growing.

This story is based on a report from Causa Justa :: Just Cause, with additions by Bay View staff.

During the police raid by 500-600 officers from Oakland PD and 16 other jurisdictions on the Occupy Oakland camp in front of City Hall, the brutality by cops against peaceful protesters was crazy.

http://sfbayview.com/2011/call-for-general-strike-nov-2-%e2%80%93-plus-occupy-updates/

How to help Scott Olsen : Iraq Veterans Against The War has a link here and Veterans for Peace has a link here where you can donate to help cover Olsen’s medical expenses.

 

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THE GREAT TROLLEY RIOT OF 1891: THE FIRST DETROIT UPRISING AGAINST PRIVATIZATION

Mayor Hazen Pingree's statue in Grand Circus Park: beware the power of the private corporations

By Barbara and Keith Hines

First published in the Michigan Citizen
08-12-2000

This presentation was given by Keith Hines at the July 11 2000 City Council public hearing on the Mayor’s plan to separate the City Housing Commission from city government.

 Hundreds of public housing residents, many mobilized by Council member Maryann Mahaffey and her staff, packed the hearing to denounce separation, privatization, and demolition of public housing.

It has been proven in the past over and over again that most private corporations put profits first when it comes to running their businesses.

Take the poor quality of transportation in Detroit back in 1891, which laid the grounds for “The Great Trolley Riot of 1891.” Back then, most “big cities”, or should we call them “world class cities”, were switching to electric trolleys. But the Detroit City Railway Company, a privately-owned company, refused to upgrade to improve living and working conditions for the public.

Privately-owned horse-drawn trolley in Detroit, 1890

After all, what was wrong with riding behind a foul-smelling horse? The company felt that up to 18 hours a day to work for a person was not unreasonable, even though drivers were only paid for 12 hours a day, and that 18 cents per hour for men and 9 cents per hour for women were reasonable wages, even though the huge, privately-owned company charged 5 cents for each rider.

The results were that the drivers who tried to form a union were fired. The workers who were not fired went on strike anyway, with support from the thousands of workers who left their jobs in the city of Detroit and did not even work for the railway company. The company countered by outfitting trolleys with armed strike-breakers.

The citizens countered with barricades across major streets, using lamp  posts and trees.

Streetcars were overturned. Two blocks of tracks were ripped up on Gratiot, wagons were driven and parked on the tracks, anything to block the trolleys. Pitched battles between Detroit police and rock-throwing crowds raged on platforms and at intersections across the city. Also toward evening, a cheering crowd of 5,000 men, women and children rolled a captured streetcar down Woodward Avenue and dumped it in the Detroit River.

Panicked company officials pleaded with Mayor Hazen Pingree to save the city, and call in the state militia. The mayor refused. He instead  recommended arbitration between the company and the union to end the strike, and warned he was inclined to throw a few stones himself if the company refused a settlement too long.

The company capitulated!

As the mayor and leading industrialist in Detroit, Pingree now came to believe that “The greatest threat to social peace in this city is the greed and callousness of the private corporations.”

It took until 1922 for the city to win the complete control of the trolleys, but in the meantime Mayor Pingree forced the trolleys to electrify and lower their fares to 3 cents.

A few years later in 1895, the Pingree-sponsored Municipal Lighting Plant replaced the then called “utility crowd’s” overpriced street lighting operations, reducing costs from $132 per lamp to $83 per lamp. The Mayor also forced the private gas utility to cut its rates in half. (He also laid power lines to Detroit residences, intending for the new Public Lighting Department to provide power to the people in their homes. Instead Detroit Edison came along. DB)

Mayor Pingree was one of the first big city mayors to publicly ally himself
with the working class and challenge big business.

If corporate colonialism didn’t work back in 1895, why is it supposed to work in the year 2000? 

Youth Shandell Crawford rouses angry crowd at bus cutback hearing in August, 2009; this time, Bing held no hearings before cutting buses again several months ago.

WORKING DETROIT, THE MAKING OF A UNION TOWN, BY STEVE BABSON: scroll to pages 14 and 15 for further information on the Great Trolley Riot.

 

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OCCUPY DETROIT MARCHES FOR BUSES FOR DDOT RIDERS, WORKERS

 

Occupy Detroit marches through Rosa Parks Terminal Oct. 28, 2011

 By Diane Bukowski

 

Protester says Rosa Parks would not have tolerated Detroit's bus situation.

Occupy Detroit took to the streets Oct. 28 because people can’t rely on the city’s buses, marching from Gand Circus Park through the Rosa Parks Terminal at Michigan and Cass and then down Woodward to the Coleman A. Young Municipal Center, They demanded demand that Detroit Mayor Dave Bing and all government funding sources immediately get buses back on the street. Riders have reported three-hour delays in buses showing up. They are also packed and frequently forced to bypass long lines of waiting riders.

Union presidents Leamon Wilson, representing the bus mechanics of AFSCME Local 312, and Henry Gaffney, representing the bus drivers of ATU Local 26, testified earlier that the delays are due to the city’s refusal to hire new mechanics to replace more than 50 who have retired and others who have left. Over 250 buses are in the yards waiting for repair as a result.

Joe McGuire opens rally for buses at Grand Circus Park

Bing has refused to hire more mechanics, and instead threatened workers with mass suspensions and discharges, while the City Council has joined the fray on his side, unanimously passing a resolution calling for mechanics’ work to be contracted out. Wilson has repeatedly said that contracting out is a big part of the problem because buses are shipped long distances for repair, and when they come back, Local 312 mechanics frequently have to repair them all over again due to the contractors’ incompetence.

Marchers proceed down Washington Blvd.

Some are calling for regionalization of the bus system as a solution, but in fact SMART buses recently laid off workers and are forcing riders from Detroit to pay surcharges for each ride on monthly DDOT-SMART bus cards that are supposed to cover all rides.

For detailed information from union and community leaders, and bus drivers and mechanics on the crisis, click on http://voiceofdetroit.net/2011/09/20/bus-workers-riders-blast-bing/. Also see story below by Keith Hines on the Great Trolley Riot of 1891, where the community came out en masse to support striking workers of the city’s privately owned trolley system. As a result, Mayor Hazen Pingree founded Detroit’s public “Department of Street Railways” (DSR) and numerous other public service institutions, including the Public Lighting Department and Detroit’s public hospital.

After marching through Rosa Parks terminal, protesters proceeded to Woodward, down to the Coleman A. Young Municipal Center, for a rally.

DDOT demonstration flier

For more information on upcoming Occupy Detroit events, go to http://www.occupydetroit.us.

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AUTOWORKER CARAVAN CONDEMNS CHRYSLER AGREEMENT

Workers on strike at the Chrysler Warren Stamping Plant, October, 2007

Statement on the Chrysler ratification despite skilled trades’ rejection, from two tradespeople at Chrysler Warren Stamping

October 27, 2011

The contract between Chrysler and the United Auto Workers is being imposed on the entire membership by the International Executive Board of the UAW. A majority of skilled trades workers and a substantial minority of production workers voted against this agreement.

Skilled trades workers on the shop floor have been denied a voice in this decision, made less than 24 hours after the last vote was cast at Warren Truck. Trades workers had been adamant in their opposition to the brutal restructuring of their work, misnamed skilled trades “rationalization.”  The skilled workforce at Chrysler has seen their numbers cut from 12,000 to 5000 since reductions began under the 2003-2007 agreement. If our union would have opposed this program, skilled trades workers would have applauded their efforts.

We now wonder how many skilled workers will be left in the plants at the end of this contract. Over thirty skill sets will be reduced to five; there will be three working groups where it is up to trades workers to give each other on the job training. Under the expanded “autonomous maintenance” program, production workers are forced to take over many of our daily tasks. Outsourcing will continue. Building maintenance will now be done exclusively by outside contractors. Tradespeople whose classifications are being eliminated will have to transfer to a “related trade” where they will be at the bottom of the seniority list for three years. Brick masons, carpenters, painters and other building tradespeople will have to exit skilled trades or find their way back through another apprenticeship.

Eventually there will be too few of us to keep up with the variety of unfamiliar tasks we will be asked to perform, and safety will suffer.

The company and our union leadership are refusing to address our legitimate concerns, with the rationale being that our biggest complaints were just about “economics.” This is not true. As skilled trades workers we are extremely concerned about the integrity of our respective trades, work rules, safety, training, maintaining lines of demarcation, and prohibiting the outsourcing of our work.

While we have our particulat complaints, UAW-represented Skilled Trades Workers at Chrysler do stand in solidarity with the production workers on the shop floor. We share their hopes and aspirations for fair and equal compensation for our labor. We hope that by rejecting this agreement we can further the fight for a more equitable society.

This imposed “ratification” by the UAW leadership is yet another example of the union’s failure to confront the greed of Fiat/Chrysler CEO Sergio Marchionne. We feel that the massive propaganda effort to win ratification through the fear of arbitration by the administration was wrong and the implied threat to move new work to locals that approved the contract was unconscionable. Without this fear factor, we are sure the contract would have been shot down by the entire membership.

We call on President Bob King and Vice President Holiefield to reopen the contract provisions pertaining to skilled trades. We are betting that when Chrysler releases its third quarter results Friday you will have further proof that the company can well afford to treat its workers fairly.

Contact: Martha Grevatt, 216-534-6435; Alex Wassell, 734-629-7226 (skilled trades workers at Chrysler Warren Stamping) 

www.autoworkercaravan.org,  autoworkercaravan@gmail.com,

WHO IS UNION AND WHO IS COMPANY? WHICH SIDE ARE YOU ON? United Auto Workers Vice President UAW Chrysler Department General Holiefield (L), UAW President Bob King (2nd L), Chrysler Group LLC Senior Vice President Manufacturing Scott Garberding and Chrysler Group Vice President Employee Relations Al Lacobelli (R) answer questions from the media during opening ceremonies of the Chrysler UAW Contract Negotiations at Chrysler headquarters in Auburn Hills, Michigan July 25, 2011

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OCCUPY DETROIT TARGETS BANK OF AMERICA

 Protests result in at least one loan modification, attorney says; BOA, largest U.S. bank, under federal order to review all loans for illegality 

By Diane Bukowski 

October 24, 2011 

DETROIT – “Immediately after the Occupy Detroit marches on the Bank of America’s downtown headquarters Oct. 18 and 21, BOA contacted Moratorium NOW! attorneys relative to stopping the eviction of a homeowner who’s been fighting BOA for four years,” attorney Jerry Goldberg told VOD Oct. 24. “They are offering to place him in a loan modification program to save his home.” 

Nation of Islam Minister Louis Farrakhan said in a broadcast on Chicago’s WVON-AM radio the same day that the Occupy marches across the country represent the first time people have gathered nationally en masse to march on the banks, lauding their stand. 

Keisha Newburn with daughter Divine Angel marches at BOA Oct. 18; she said her grandmother was "destroyed" by the loss of her home

“The banks got bailed out, we got sold out,” hundreds of protesters chanted outside BOA both days. They had marched from the Occupy Detroit site in Grand Circus Park down Woodward Avenue to target BOA.  “Shame, shame, shame!” 

“My grandmother lost her home after 21 years,” said Keisha Newburn, who brought her baby Divine Angel Newburn in her stroller on the Oct. 18 march. “It destroyed her. That was 21 years of watching her grandkids grow up in that house. I was raised there. Detroiters have got to come together in more protests to stop foreclosures. All the banks are doing is letting the vacant homes go to waste in the neighborhoods.” 

The Oct. 18 march served as a press conference to announce the Oct. 21 action. At least three times more protesters showed up Oct. 21. (See video above.)

Young Occupy marchers are rising up directly against capitalism

Many signs carried by the marchers condemned the capitalist system, a characteristic of Occupy actions across the country as people of all races, sexes and ages become aware that their suffering is directly related to the global economic crisis caused by the greed of the corporations and the banks. 

Major media coverage of the marches was broad. Reporters and TV crews who arrived at the 12 noon time set for the Oct. 18 press conference waited anxiously outside the BOA offices in the Guardian Building for a half-hour as marchers made their way to the site. 

Attorney Jerome Goldberg of Moratorium NOW! talks to Channel Four reporter

“Bank of America is the largest bank in the country,” Goldberg told the media as they waited. “They took over Countrywide and Merrill Lynch and have laid waste to poor and working class communities nationally. Bank of America and all the banks have been guilty of massive fraud in carrying out foreclosures. As a result, they are now under a federal order to review every one of their foreclosures for illegal activity.” 

The Federal Reserve system lists the Bank of America, headquartered in Charlotte, N.C., at the top of all the country’s banks in terms of assets. As of June 30, 2011, BOA had $2,264,435,837 in assets according to their National Information Center website at http://www.ffiec.gov/nicpubweb/nicweb/top50form.aspx

Bank of America takes mortgage payments and forecloses anyway

In a letter to Detroit BOA president Brian Moynihan, Occupy Detroit demanded that the bank immediately implement a moratorium on foreclosures and evictions. 

“Bank of America received $45 billion in federal TARP bailout funds,” says the letter. “It continues to be bailed out by the federal government through Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which guarantee $2.1 trillion in Bank of America loans, many of which were fraudulent and as a result are in default. Bank of America and its affiliate Countrywide signed contracts to receive over $7 billion in additional taxpayer funds to modify loans and keep families in their homes, but continues to refuse to modify loans and keep families in their homes.” 

Marcher demands end to U.S. wars, bring troops AND federal dollars home to rebuild cities

The Moratorium-MI coalition has been fighting the foreclosure Katrina for at least five years, demanding that the state legislature and governors declare a moratorium on all foreclosures, evictions and utility shut-offs for at least two years.   

The Coalition’s banners demand that U.S. President Barack Obama take action through executive orders, bypassing Congress. Many excuse Obama’s lack of action, saying that Congress ties his hands. Notably, there is a survey on Chicago’s WVON website at http://www.wvon.com/ asking “Should Pres. Obama use Executive Order privileges to help Mainstreet, in spite of GOP gridlock?” Over 85 percent of responders checked “yes.” 

“Today the federal government, through its takeover of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac along with the Federal Housing Authority, owns at least 75 of all mortgage loans,” the coalition says on its website at http://www.moratorium-mi.org/ .

Detroit, over 86 percent Black, is one of the cities hardest hit by foreclosures

“It’s time for the federal government to bail out the people and not the banks.  President Obama should immediately declare a two year moratorium on all foreclosures and evictions, during which times the loans could be renegotiated to their real value, with the banks eating the losses for the fraud they practiced.  Rather than selling off government owned housing to investors and sharks, the government should train our youth to rebuild these homes and reoccupy them with the millions of homeless and unemployed.” 

A Bank of America customer uses a Bank of America ATM in Charlotte, North Carolina May 11, 2011. REUTERS/Chris Keane

Bank of America has additionally earned the wrath of its customers for enacting a $5 monthly fee beginning next year, for customers who use their debit cards to make purchases. Currently, debit card withdrawals from other bank machines are tagged with individual fees by BOA and other banks, but purchases made at retail outlets such as gas stations and drug stores are not tagged.

To keep abreast of Occupy Detroit activities, go to its website at http://occupy.detroit.us , its Twitter site at http://twitter.com/#/OccupyDetMI, or its Facebook site at http://www.facebook.com/groups/272548539433526/. Also, information for Occupy the Hood, which seeks to bring communities of color into the struggle, is at

Marchers pack the sidewalk outside BOA HQ in Guardian Building Oct. 18

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