IT’S 1968 ALL OVER AGAIN, AND KING’S FIGHT FOR UNIONS IS STILL ESSENTIAL

 

Union members of the American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) Local 1733 gather in Memphis to protest unfair labor practices in 1976. Photo: Robert Abbott Sengstacke/Getty Images

by Michael Honey

COLOR LINES

Wednesday, February 23 2011

WHO ARE THE EVIL PUBLIC WORKERS? BLACK PEOPLE

In light of the clash of wills in Wisconsin, we should remember the teachings of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. One of King’s slogans that we rarely hear is this one: “all labor has dignity.”

King spoke these words in Memphis on March 18, 1968, in the midst of a strike of 1,200 black sanitation workers that had lasted over a month. After rousing them to a fever pitch, King called for a general strike by all workers to shut the city down on behalf of the sanitation workers.

Striking AFSCME sanitation workers, Memphis, 1968

What was the demand of these workers? Improved wages and benefits, yes, but their key demand was that the City of Memphis grant collective bargaining rights and the collection of union dues, without which they knew they could not maintain their union.

These are the very two items that Wisconsin’s Gov. Scott Walker wants to take away from public employees. He knows, as did Mayor Henry Loeb in Memphis, that if you can kill union bargaining rights and dues collection, you can kill the union.

Also like Loeb, Walker is a fiscal conservative. As he cuts taxes for business he raises costs for workers and says ending union power will benefit the fiscal health of the state. Walker wants to end the right of public employees to bargain collectively, even though the workers have accepted a tripling of their health-care costs and a wage cut to help offset the state’s fiscal crisis.

Jericho Road, by Prof. Michael Honey

In nearby Ohio, Gov. John Kasich wants to take away the right to join a union for 14,000 state-financed child-care and home-care workers, among the most overworked and underpaid of public servants. In other states, Republicans want to adopt “right to work” (for less) laws that would take away the requirement that workers in unionized jobs pay union dues. This would undermine the unions while, in King’s words, providing “no rights and no work.”

Even in Midwest states that have been union strongholds, Republicans now have public-employee unions in their cross-hairs. This is the latest and potentially most deadly phase of government assault on unions. Ever since the Reagan counterrevolution, government policies joined with private sector profiteers have vastly worsened racial-economic inequalities, created a gambling casino on Wall Street and paved the way for the current economic crisis.

Conservatives rationalize their attacks on unions by saying unionized public workers are unfairly privileged. But they only look privileged by comparison to the rest of the working class, which is suffering economic catastrophe and has almost entirely lost the benefits of unionization. Yet class envy is an easy means to divide and rule.

Racism is another part of the Republican arsenal of divide and rule. Thanks to the destruction of manufacturing jobs and unions, black and Latino workers in manual occupations have disproportionately suffered high rates of poverty and incarceration as many of their families disintegrate. The one toe-hold many black and minority workers (and especially women among them) still have in the economy is in unionized public employment. Now, the Republicans want to take that away.

AFSCME Local 457 President Laurie Walker, Lansing march, Feb. 23, 2011

In one stroke, by eliminating both bargaining rights and union dues, Republicans can insure that organized, dues-paying workers and particularly minorities and women will no longer provide a potent base for the Democratic Party. There will be few grassroots organizations left to counter the huge infusion of money into politics by the rich.

Workers in Wisconsin have agreed to make sacrifices to get state government out of its budgetary hole. But it would be a huge mistake for anyone to go beyond that and buy into attacks on public employee unions. Loss of unions will further decimate the spending power of working people, thereby intensifying the economic crisis while further removing the voice of workers from politics. That’s a downward spiral.

Republicans most especially want to undermine the American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees (AFSCME). Founded in Wisconsin, AFSCME flowered after King died in the fight for union rights in Memphis in 1968. AFSCME became one of the largest unions in the country, with King regarded as an honorary member and practically a founder of the union.

March on state capitol, Lansing, Feb. 23, 2011

In King’s framework, killing public employees unions today would be immoral as well as foolish. He said the three evils facing humankind are war, racism and economic injustice, and that the purpose of a union is to overcome the latter evil. King said the civil-rights movement from 1954 to 1965 was “phase one,” to be followed by a second phase—the struggle for economic advancement. We are not doing very well in phase two, and unions remain essential to carry it out.

I’ve recently finished a new collection of King’s remarkable speeches, titled “All Labor Has Dignity,” which shows that throughout his life, King stood up for union rights. There is no more important time than the present for us all to follow his lead.

http://colorlines.com/archives/2011/02/its_1968_all_over_again_and_kings_fight_for_unions_is_still_essential.html

Michael Honey is a historian and Haley Professor of Humanities at the University of Washington, Tacoma. He is editor of “All Labor Has Dignity” (Beacon Press, 2011) and author of “Going Down Jericho Road: The Memphis Strike: Martin Luther King’s Last Campaign” (W.W. Norton, 2007).

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WISCONSIN IGNITES WORKERS’ UPRISINGS ACROSS THE U.S.

 

Wisconsin uprising continues

Rallies planned in all 50 state capitols Sat. Feb. 26 12 noon.

Updates on Wisconsin, Indiana, Ohio uprisings;  Michigan, Boston, New York City, Atlanta protests

Indiana GOPers Pull Union-Busting Bill

Here’s a run-down on events and key analysis on the fast-moving events in Wisconsin’s state capitol — and nationwide.

AlterNet / By Joshua Holland

 

Whose House? Our House!

February 21, 2011  |

  (VOD editor: the following updates as published by Alternet have been re-arranged to emphasize national spread of Wisconsin uprising and protests planned for this Sat. Feb. 26.)

 

As the drama unfolding in Wisconsin continues, a large coalition of progressive groups has issued an Emergency Call to Action and are planning to offer a massive show of solidarity with the workers of Wisconsin and protest the right’s plan to slash vital services in the name of balancing the budget.  

 

The groups are planning “Save the American Dream” rallies in all 50 state capitals for Saturday at noon (local time). You can find out more about the rallies here.

Saturday, 26 Feb 2011, 12:00 PM The Rally to Save the American dream 
Lansing State Capitol
232 registered participant(s) (1000 maximum)
100 South Capitol Ave
Lansing, MI 48922
Directions: Steps of the State Capitol Building
Hosted by Carlos Whitmore
Description This Saturday, we will stand together to Save the American Dream. We demand an end to the attacks on worker’s rights, a focus on the creation of decent jobs for the millions of people who are out of work, and that the rich and powerful pay their fair share.
Share this event on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=204818579532575 

 

Egypt supports Wisconsin

Update:

Nationwide protests are scheduled for this Saturday to fight back against balancing the budget on the backs of working people while corporate America shelters hundreds of billions in potential tax revenues. Find out more at US Uncut.

Over at the HuffPo, Van Jones argues that we may be seeing the emergence of a new movement centered on social and economic justice.

Ohio protest

Reinvigorated by the idealism and fighting spirit on display right now in America’s heartland, the movement for “hope and change” has a rare, second chance. It can renew itself and become again a national force with which to be reckoned.

Over the next hours and days, all who love this country need to do everything possible to spread the “spirit of Madison” to all 50 states. This does not mean we need to occupy 50 state capitol buildings; things elsewhere are not yet that dire. But this weekend, the best of America should rally on the steps of every statehouse in the union.

Moveon.org and others have issued just this kind of call to action; everyone should prioritize responding and turning out in large numbers.

Columbus, Ohio: protesters take over state capitol

On Saturday, the powers-that-be (in both parties) should see a rainbow force coming together: organized workers, business leaders, veterans, students and youth, faith leaders, civil rights fighters, women’s rights champions, immigrant rights defenders, LGBTQ stalwarts, environmentalists, academics, artists, celebrities, community activists, elected officials and more — all standing up for what’s right.

Update:  Big news out of Indiana, as the Indianapolis Star reports that GOP lawmakers have pulled their controversial right-to-work-for-lower-wages bill. They’ll send it to a committee for further study. But the Dems who fled the state will not return yet “because they have additional issues they want resolved.”

Indiana protest

Last night they issued a statement saying they had concerns about 11 bills, including other labor-related bills, education reforms and the proposed next state budget. They singled out two in particular: the right-to-work bill and one which lets state tax dollars pay for private school tuition for some families. 

Update: Solidarity rallies are being held across the country. In Boston, the local NPR station reports that “union members and Tea Party supporters clashed over the stalemate 1,200 miles away, between teachers and the governor of Wisconsin.”

Update:

Indianapolis: sit-in at state capitol

TPM reports that a conservative deputy attorney general in Indiana took to Twitter and called for Madison police to use live ammunition to end the protests in the capitol.  “[A]gainst thugs physically threatening legally-elected state legislators & governor?” he tweeted in an exchange with a Mother Jones editor. “You’re damn right I advocate deadly force.”

He’s not alone. A rally to show solidarity with the protesters in Wisconsin is being held at 4 pm today at the Gold Dome in Atlanta, and the Journal-Constitution points to another threat of right-wing intimidation posted on the hard-right Free Republic.

“Members of the various Tea Party, 9/12, and other freedom-oriented folks in the Atlanta area will be … providing balance to the ravings of the passengers aboard the SEIU Thugbus, which is scheduled to vomit forth its stooges at that same place and time.
 

 

 

 

New York City workers support Wisconsin

If you are within three hours drive of ATL, come join us. Dan and others from RTC will be there, with the usual accoutrements. As always, each participant is responsible for compliance with all applicable local laws.”

Update:

Congressman Dennis Kucinich, D-Ohio, spent three hours greeting workers and union members who gathered in 26 degree temperatures around the Ohio State Capitol to protect their right to organize. He called it, “a defining moment in the history of our state that will determine the rights of workers for years to come.”

 

Atlanta rally to support Wisconsin

“The hundreds of workers who I personally spoke to feel betrayed. The federal government has no hesitation to hand out billions to Wall Street, but when it comes to workers there is an effort in Ohio and other states to destroy the right to bargain collectively,” said Kucinich.

“This is the beginning of a long and drawn out battle between state government’s corporate philosophy and the workers. I am proud to stand on the side of the workers.” 

 

Update:

Boston rally to support Wisconsin

CNN estimates 10-15,000 protesters in Columbus, Ohio. There are reportedly 1,500 at a protest in Canton.

Via Twitter, Matt Stoller sends this pic of a demo he describes as a “Fairly large block-long Cheesehead rally outside Fox News” headquarters in New York:

  Continue reading

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THE URBAN FRONTIER

 
 

Greg Thrasher

 By Greg Thrasher, VOD contributing editor

Detroit like many other urban venues across the nation is on the edge of a massive gentrification and urban migration movement that not only means housing and property changes but a cultural and political upheaval is  also percolating and is currently underway. From the regionalization of the city’s water department to the resurgence of the mid-town area to a dismantling of DPS. Urban renewal, gentrification, suburban sprawl, regionalization, and even resizing of the city speaks to the new landscape in Detroit and other urban venues in America. 
 
Cities like Detroit are now the new Urban Frontier and as such all of these themes and movements create tension, economic shifts, cultural sparks and of course political posturing. From who gets to be the new sheriff in town to how the city is to be governed this new urban landscape brings with it all manner of opportunity including the specter of conflict and growth. How one navigates in the new Urban Frontier remains a critical issue for this new urban terrain for those living in the new urban frontier and for those observing it from afar.
 

Corktown presents an object lesson regarding the urban frontier; Charlie Duncan, (shown here) is a homeless Corktown resident who was attacked by Steve DiPonio last Oct. 6; DiPonio attempted to drag Mr. Duncan behind his truck, reminiscent of the Jasper Texas lynching. DiPonio currently faces trial for assault with intent to commit murder, but has an expensive attorney since his family owns a wealthy city contractor, Jay Dee Contractors. His trial is set for later this year.

Some have argued that old neighborhoods would never return become renewed and refreshed without the injection of new capital and new people. Others have argued that such injections of new people destroy the historical fabric of a community and make the new landscape a reflection of new money, different hues and different agendas.
 
Detroit’s demographics reflect a majority Black population yet the latest wave of gentrification is a different hue and class orientation. The emergence of class and elitism is reflective of this new urban frontier. The recent recession in the nation has slowed the emergence of the new urban frontier but it will not stop it.
 
With the new urban frontier expect the following: a more diverse array of public officials, an educational system that is driven by demands of class and higher expectations, an urban poor that becomes more hostile and hopeless. Plus with the new urban frontier demographic we can also expect a cultural terrain that is inspired by Robo Cop statues, gritty literature and cultural artifacts that do not embrace the lyrics of rhythm and blues but the sounds of world music and the chatter of social networks.
 

Steve DiPonio

"Robocop" William Melendez

The new Urban Frontier will be either a gateway to a better city or a guarded fortress. I expect a combination of everything under the sun…..

 
 
Editor’s note: It is particularly appalling that serious consideration is being given to building a “Robocop” statue in Detroit. Detroit police officer William Melendez was known as “Robocop” for his vicious attacks on poor southwest side Detroiters. He and 17 other cops were indicted by the Department of Justice in 2004 but during the trial of the first eight, a predominantly suburban jury acquitted them. It is not known if Melendez is still on the force. Go to http://michigancitizen.com/feds-break-blue-wall-p153-1.htm and http://michigancitizen.com/jury-frees-cops-p686-1.htm to read about Detroit’s “Robocop.” Melendez was sued at least five times, once for killing a Detroiter, and  framed up the son of a Detroit Coalition Against Police Brutality member,  forcing him into prison. See billboard below on I-75 north of Davison, glorifying Detroit police on behalf of the show “Detroit 1-8-7.”
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REPORT ON SNYDER BUDGET, RALLY V. CUTS ON CAPITOL STEPS FEB. 22 9 A.M.

State Rep. Tim Melton (D-Pontiac)

By State Rep. Tim Melton

Rally at the Capitol

A rally will be held at the State Capitol on Tuesday, Feb. 22, at 9 a.m., and Wednesday, Feb. 23, at noon. They are intended to voice the people’s opposition to the Governor’s budget, and a number of bills being considered in the Legislature.

Gov. Rick Snyder presented his budget to the state Legislature this week. He outlined his plans to address the upcoming $1.7 billion deficit for next year. The Governor also presented a plan to restructure taxes in the state. A significant portion of the tax proposal includes cutting business taxes while shifting much of these taxes to individuals. His proposal essentially contains enough cuts to address the deficit, and then brings in additional taxes from Michigan citizens in order to eliminate the Michigan Business Tax.

The Legislature is faced with another difficult budget to balance for next year. I have serious concerns about the Governor’s proposal. The proposal shifts the tax burden to seniors and the working class, while cutting local governments and the services they provide in their communities.

Here is a brief overview of the Governor’s budget and tax proposals:

Education

  • Higher Education cut 22 percent ($222 million)
  • $83 million incentive fund to universities to not hike tuition rates
  • Cut $470 in K-12 per pupil funding ($452 million), and eliminates categorical spending
  • Community colleges are not cut

State Employee cuts

  • Asked for unspecified concessions ($180 million)

Revenue Sharing

  • Statutory revenue sharing is completely eliminated ($300 million cut)
  • Revenue sharing payments to Auburn Hills will be reduced to $1.27 million
  • Pontiac will lose about 57 percent in revenue sharing (approximately a $6 million cut
  • Incentives for “best practices” will require locals to compete for $200 million pot of money, but won’t be announced until March 2012 and awards/payment could be much later

Corrections

  • $51 million in direct spending cuts
  • $32 million savings from privatizing food and privatizing prison stores and others
  • Closing one prison saving $19 million
  • Eliminates the public works program

Military and Veteran’s Affairs

  • Privatize resident care aide service ($4.2 million)

Agriculture

  • Eliminates the Dairy Farm Inspection program ($600,000) allowing the industry to police itself

Judiciary

  • Eliminates six Trial Court judgeships ($940,000)

State Police

  • $3.2 million cut; close state police posts

Human Services

  • Instituting 48 month time limit on welfare (federal 60 month limit)
    •  
    • 20 percent can extend beyond for hardship or disability, etc.
  • Eliminate 300 positions in DHS.
  • Family day care provider rate being cut from $1.60 to $1.35 an hour

Community Health

  • No cuts to Medicaid reimbursement rates
  • No cuts to Medicaid coverage

Tax Changes

  • Replace Business Tax with 6 percent corporate income tax (approximately $1.5 billion cut)
  • Only larger corporations pay
  • Eliminate charitable giving tax deduction/credit
  • Future business tax credits would end
  • Current credits would be honored
  • Phasing out film credits spend $25 million FY 12 from 21st Century Jobs Fund
  • Eliminate credit for donations to public universities
  • Tax increase on all income earners by freezing the income tax rate at 4.25 percent after October 1, 2011. Current law would drop the rate to 3.9 percent.

Tax Increases

  • Tax public pensions ($128.8 million)
  • Tax private pensions ($725 million)
  • Change Homestead Property Tax credit to households ($320 million in additional tax revenue)
  • Eliminate the Earned Income Tax Credit for working citizens ($340 million) – Estimates on the EITC credit elimination show approximately a $430 tax increase to individual working taxpayers in Auburn Hills and Pontiac
  • 1 percent tax on all health insurance claims. Every claim filed by an individual will add a 1 percent cost
  • Tax increase via cap in the income tax personal exemption at $75k single and $150k couple

Changes to Emergency Manager Law

House and Senate committees have been considering repealing and replacing the existing law on Financial Emergency Managers. Republicans have called for this legislation to be moved quickly because of pending financial emergencies to local governments. Despite the necessity for Financial Emergency Managers, I have some serious concerns about the legislation. I’m continuing to talk with committee members and legislative leadership to get some changes inserted in the bills.

Here is an overview of the bills:

  • The process begins with a state review of a local government’s finances. The bills add a number of ways in which the state can begin the review and Financial Emergency Manager process. The local government must cooperate with state officials.
  • The state will create a review team to focus on the finances of the local government, if a probable financial stress is determined in the preliminary review. The review team will create a financial consent agreement for the local unit of government. The bill allows the state to empower local leaders with some authorities of Emergency Managers.
  • The Review team will report to the Governor within 60 days of their appointment. They may recommend whether the local unit is working to fix the financial situation and abiding by their consent agreement. The Governor may declare a financial emergency, and an emergency manager will appointed to run the local unit of government.
  • The proposed legislation does a number of things to expand the powers of an Emergency Manager appointed to run a local government. These things include: Assuming all powers of the elected board and city manager or mayor, control all aspects of a community’s finances; terminate and impose union contracts; borrow on behalf of the local community; and dissolve the local unit of government.

These bills empower Emergency Managers to control all aspects of a local government, and supersede any local government provision. A few pieces modified of the bill include**: removing the ban that prohibited officials from the local government from running for election again, and allowing Emergency Managers to take over pension funds**. I fought for language that prohibits an Emergency Manager from taking over a pension fund, if the fund is over 80 percent funded. The bill is still early in the process. But, at this point, this added language would exempt the Pontiac retiree pension fund from takeover.

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FALL OF EGYPT’S MUBARAK CELEBRATED IN DEARBORN

 

Youth. women and entire families celebrated the fall of Mubarak outside Dearborn City Hall Feb. 12

By Diane Bukowski

DEARBORN – “It’s just like an avalanche,” said Hasan Nawash. “This is a more significant loss to Israel and the U.S. than the fall of the Shah. The real Egypt is coming back in the most beautiful form, with the masses of the people, women, workers, the old people, the youth, professors, doctors, entire families. The people have been governing themselves for 18 days now. Today I’m proud to be an Arab, and proud to be a Palestinian.”

Nawash spoke at a celebration of the fall of Hosni Mubarak’s government, held at the Lebanese American Heritage Club in Dearborn, and sponsored by the Congress of Arab-American Organizations (CAAO) Feb. 11. The following day, a larger celebration was held outside the Dearborn City Hall.

Rally at Lebanese American Heritage Club Feb. 11

Osama Siblani, CAAO spokesman and publisher of the Arab-American News, told the gathering. “This is the most significant event in the history of the modern Arab world. Today we witnessed the rise of the Sphinx. We saw a 30-year dictatorship crumble before our eyes in 18 days. Nobody believed in them, but they believed in themselves. They marched for the rights of the Palestinians, the Iraqis, the Yemenis as well as themselves.  There will be a domino effect throughout the region, in Morocco, Lebanon, and Africa.”

Siblani added, “We urge the Obama administration and the U.S. Congress to take a firm and unwavering stance in support of the Egyptian people and the ousting of not just the dictator Hosni Mubarak but also his entire regime. We strongly urge the U.S. to reverse its support of oppressive totalitarian regimes in the Arab world in support of the ideals of freedom and democracy that we cherish here.”

.

Rally at City Hall Feb. 12

Speakers noted that Mubarak’s resignation took place on the anniversary of the fall of the Shah of Iran on Feb. 11, 1979. Arab-Americans of all nationalities joined in singing the Egyptian national anthem, as children cavorted in the aisles of the hall.

“This is the beginning of a bigger movement for independence, for the integrity of our people,” one speaker said. “This will be a great test for people of honor. We are proud of the Shia and Sunni brothers who supported this from Lebanon, and of the unity of Muslims and Christians. We are proud of the honorable position of President Barack Obama, and admire the army. We know it is not over, and there are many challenges ahead of us.

In a separate interview, Nawash said, “I am cautiously optimistic. We celebrated

Hasan Nawash

the rise of Obama but have been disappointed on all fronts, including the Palestinian question. The Egyptian army is still infiltrated at the top by generals with ties to all kinds of billionaires. We must be responsible and alert. The U.S. administration, with the role it plays in the world, will try to frustrate any people’s movement.”

Nawash said the Palestinian people will  target Mahmoud Abbas, head of the Palestinian Authority, because of his collaboration with the U.S. administration.

Those celebrating at both events took time to pay tribute to over 365 Egyptians who died in the uprising, saying that they and their families had sacrificed their lives for the future of their people. A speaker announced that CAAO is starting a trust fund for the families of the victims.

They also paid tribute to the the thousands of Arab people in Lebanon and Gaza whose uprisings paved the way for the Egyptian Revolution.

“Today, we have conquered again in Tahrir Square,” they said.

Another rally was held Feb. 20 in front of the Dearborn City Hall, sponsored by the CAAO.

Child at Dearborn rally Feb. 12

US Greens celebrate Egypt’s giant step towards democracy, assert that the Egyptian people must build a new government according to their own interests, not US strategic demands.

DEMAND U.S. FREEZE $70 BILLION IN MUBARAK ASSETS 

Feb. 13, 2011

http://www.gp.org

WASHINGTON, DC — The Green Party of the United States congratulated the Egyptian people and called President Hosni Mubarak’s resignation a huge step towards democracy, human rights, and stability for their country.

“The Egyptian revolution is a victory for the people of Egypt, and also the victory for an idea — the idea that violent regimes can be overthrown through nonviolent means,” said Romi Elnagar, member of the
Green Party of Louisiana and wife and mother of Egyptian-Americans. 

Celebration of Egyptian Revolution in Dearborn Feb. 11

“While police and rampaging pro-Mubark thugs killed 350 and injured thousands more, the protesters themselves remained overwhelmingly peaceful.”

US Greens hoped for an end to the 30-year-old ’emergency decree’ and for a broad-based transitional government that embraced opposition parties, to begin the work of dismantling the brutally oppressive
Mubarak regime.  The next step will take place when the military relinquishes power and Egyptians establish a civil government with a constitution, free and fair elections, democratic institutions, and
the means to solve problems like unemployment and poverty.

Greens also urged the Obama Administration to cooperate in an investigation of the alleged $70 billion that Mr. Mubarak’s accumulated during his corrupt regime and to freeze any of his assets that are held in the US.

Around 1,200 workers strike at the Oil and Soap Factory in the city of Mansoura, Egypt, Thursday, Feb. 17, 2011. Growing labor unrest, rekindled by the 18-day uprising that toppled longtime leader Hosni Mubarak, is deepening economic malaise and compounded by weeks of bank closures that are hampering business operations and the drying up of tourism - a major money earner for Egypt. (AP Photo)

“We call on the US government to avoid meddling and respect the right of Egyptians to rule themselves.  Aid for Egypt must be for humanitarian purposes, not military, and without strings attached.  If the Obama Administration tries to press the new Egypt into subordination, to satisfy the US’s strategic military and economic interests in the region, we will betray the Egyptian people and their right to democratic sovereignty,” said Laura Wells, 2010 Green Party candidate for Governor of California.

US Greens noted that much of the conflict in the Middle East and resentment of the US by Egyptians and other populations in the region centers around the unresolved Palestinian-Israeli conflict.

“Since making its 1979 ‘cold peace’ with Israel, the Egyptian government has supported Israel’s ongoing apartheid and dispossession of Palestinians, most recently complying with the siege of Gaza, in return for billions in aid from the US.   We look to the formation of a democratic Egypt which adheres to international law and reflects its citizens’ long-standing opposition to Israel’s oppression of Palestinians,” said Dr. Justine McCabe, co-chair of the Green Party’s International Committee (http://www.gp.org/committees/intl ).

MORE INFORMATION

Green Party of the United States http://www.gp.org
202-319-7191, 866-41GREEN

Contacts:
Scott McLarty, Media Coordinator, cell 202-904-7614, mclarty@greens.org
Starlene Rankin, Media Coordinator, 916-995-3805, starlene@gp.org

• Green Party ‘Egypt in Revolt’ page with news feeds
http://www.gp.org/egypt.html

PUBLIC EMPLOYEES TAKE TO THE STREETS IN EGYPT

 

Feb 15, 2011  |  

 

By TAREK EL-TABLAWY and SARAH EL DEEB
Associated Press

 

Bus drivers strike at a bus depot in the lower-income neighborhood of Shubra Mazalat in Cairo, Egypt Thursday, Feb. 10, 2011. Bus drivers and public transport workers in Cairo joined thousands of state employees on strike Thursday in spreading labor unrest that has pumped further strength and momentum into Egypt's wave of anti-government protests. Writing in Arabic on placard center-left reads "Increase basic pay" and on placard center-right "End of work pension: 60 months."

CAIRO, Egypt — Thousands of government

employees, from ambulance drivers to police and bank workers, protested to demand better pay Monday, in a growing wave of Egyptian labor unrest rekindled by the democracy uprising that ousted Hosni Mubarak’s regime. Egypt’s military rulers asked for an end to the protests in what could be a final warning before an outright ban.

 

The military said it needed calm to implement what it promises will be an eventual handover to civilian rule under a new, more democratic system. It has set a swift timetable for change, saying it aims to have the constitutional amendments drawn up within 10 days and a referendum to approve them within two months ahead of elections for a civilian government, according to youth activists who met two of the top generals.

 

The coalition of young activists who organized the unprecedented protest movement pressured the military Monday for new steps to ensure the autocratic system that has pervaded Egypt for the past 30 years is dismantled. Protesters welcomed the military’s takeover after Mubarak’s resignation, but many remain wary of the military’s intentions.

 

In a list of demands Monday, they called for the dissolving of Mubarak’s National Democratic Party and for the creation within 30 days of a cabinet of technocrats. They want it to replace the current caretaker government, appointed by Mubarak after the protests erupted Jan. 25. 

Public transport workers on strike in Egypt

The military’s patience with the strikes, which are independent of the activists, may be running out as it struggles to restore stability and get Egypt’s economy functioning again.

 

 

 

Egypt’s dusty streets were transformed Monday into fertile ground for anyone with a grievance against anything.

 

Employees of the National Bank of Egypt, the largest government-owned bank, went on strike, a day after hundreds of them massed outside its headquarters.

 

Meanwhile, momentum is building to move against the international assets of Mubarak, his family and regime officials.

 

The U.S. is examining requests from Egypt’s new government to freeze the assets of top Mubarak aides, but not the president himself, a senior U.S. official said.

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UTILITY PRIVATIZER RUNNING WATER DEPARTMENT

Chris Brown worked for Singapore Power International and DTE

By Diane Bukowski

DETROIT – In January, Mayor Dave Bing appointed Chris Brown, who was a managing director of Singapore Power International, and previously a DTE Energy Executive Vice-President, as the the city’s Chief Operating Officer. In that role, he was given oversight of the Detroit Water and Sewerage Department.

Bing selected Brown because of his “wealth of corporate and operational expertise,” according to a news release from the Mayor’s office. Bing has not yet appointed an official DWSD director to replace Victor Mercado, now under federal indictment.

DTE CEO Anthony Earley (l) with Mayor Dave Bing at his side during 2010 Christmas tree lighting in Campus Martius

Brown replaced Robert Buckler, previously President of DTE Energy, a subsidiary of DTE, headed by Bing’s close ally and campaign contributor Anthony Earley.

Brown’s role in overseeing DWSD must be watched, said John Riehl, President of Local 207 of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME). Local 207 represents 3,000 DWSD workers.

“Since Brown comes from private utilities, we will see what direction he will take DWSD in,” Riehl said. His local has fought massive internal privatization under previous directors including Mercado, and the City Council vote last year to buy 100 percent of the Detroit’s power from DTE instead of using the Public Lighting Department.

DWSD workers and customers now have increased concerns as a new Board of Water Commissioners on which suburban appointees will have increased power over contracts and rates takes over in April (click on http://voiceofdetroit.net/?p=4544  to read VOD story.)

Singapore Power Building

Singapore Power was created in 1995 to take over the electricity and gas businesses of Singapore’s state provider, the Public Utilities Board. Since 2007, it has also owned Australia’s Alinta Limited, which was formed in 1995 to take over the role of the State Energy Commission of Western Australia. Alinta eventually bought out suppliers across Australia and New Zealand.

Customers of Singapore Power have increasingly complained of falsely inflated rates, according to an article in the July, 22, 2008 issue of Straits Times.

 

“A record number of complaints about overcharging for electricity were investigated by Singapore Power last month,” said the Times. “SP Services, the power company’s customer service arm, said it looked into 1,093 cases where customers had complained that their bills for May were higher than in previous months. . . . A Straits Times check of 100 households found many that also said their bills for last month had jumped. About 10 per cent said their charges went up by extraordinary amounts, of between 60 per cent and 113 per cent.”

The Times said SP Services claimed the rates were accurate. The paper predicted, however, that the alleged overcharges would continue in the future.

Alinta Energy logo

In January of this year, the Western Australia Council of Social Service (WACOSS) issued a release saying Alinta had the highest rate of customer shut-offs in the previous year, of the country’s utilities.

“Alinta’s disconnection rates reveal the most worrying data of the [Economic Regulation Authority] reports, increasing for the second year in a row. Alinta disconnected 17,223 households in 2009-10, compared to 12,942 in 2007-08,” said WACOSS.

“WACOSS cautions against further price hikes and calls for careful consideration of essential service affordability following the release of the performance reports on electricity and gas retailers by the independent regulator today.”

DTE demo July, 2009

DTE has been the subject of continuing demonstrations sponsored by the Michigan Welfare Rights Organization (MWRO) and other community groups for its draconian policies of shut-offs of heat and lights to thousands of its customers.

After toddlers Tro’vion, 4, Fantasia, 4 and Selena Young 3, died last March in a fire caused by a DTE shut-off, their grandmother Martha Young, said, “It sure was murder. My daughter begged the man not to shut her power off because there were babies in the house. He saw at least three or four of the children. She told him the utilities were included in her rent, but he wouldn’t wait for the landlord to get there. He said he was just doing his job.”

Travion, Selena and Fantasia Young, murdered by DTE

Seventeen people died that season as a result of shut-offs, said MWRO President Maureen Taylor.

 “We recognize that DTE Energy is a private company, but it is subsidized by the people, by federal and state sources,” she declared. “DTE continually violates Michigan Public Service Commission regulations which give limited protection to seniors and low-income people. Utilities are necessary for life and should be protected as a human right. We demand an end to shutoffs for seniors, low-income people and the differently-abled all year round.”

MWRO has also demanded affordable water rates for Detroiters and an end to shut-offs of that basic necessity, which have continued unabated under the Bing administration.

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WORKERS OCCUPY STATE CAPITOLS FROM WISCONSIN TO OHIO

Ohio workers pack State Capitol

PROTESTS SPREAD TO OHIO FROM WISCONSIN 

By Mark Niquette – Feb 18, 2011 

Bloomberg News, Feb. 18 

(EDITOR: Go to VOD national page to read Stephanie Taylor’s column on the history of the use of military force against labor in the U.S. Governor Scott Walker in Wisconsin has threatened to call out the National Guard as crowds have now grown beyond 50,000 every day, and appear determined to remain.) 

In what union leaders say is becoming a national fight, protests against legislation to restrict public employees’ collective-bargaining rights spread from Wisconsin to Ohio

In Madison, Wisconsin, crowds that police estimated at 25,000 engulfed the Capitol and its lawns yesterday during a third-straight day of protests as Democratic senators fled the legislative session. In Columbus, Ohio, about 3,800 state workers, teachers and other public employees came to the statehouse for a committee hearing. President Barack Obama and House Speaker John Boehner, an Ohioan, argued over whether the bills are “an assault on unions.” 

WATCH BLOOMBERG VIDEO AT http://www.bloomberg.com/video/66862588/ 

Wisconsin protesters occupied capitol 24-7

Ohio firefighters Dave Hefflinger and Jerry Greer said they were. They stood near hundreds of workers elbow-to-elbow in the statehouse atrium and listened to a Senate hearing through speakers. Chants of “Kill the bill” echoed.

 “We’re here to support our brothers and sisters,” Hefflinger, a 27-year veteran, said in an interview. “They’re trying to take away what we fought for all of these years.” 

 

Hefflinger, 49, and Greer, 39, members of the department in Findlay, Ohio, drove two hours south to protest the bill. The measure would eliminate collective bargaining for state workers, prevent local-government employees from negotiating for health insurance and replace salary schedules with merit pay. 

With states facing deficits that may reach a combined $125 billion next year, Republican governors including Wisconsin’s Scott Walker, Ohio’s John Kasich and New Jersey’s Chris Christie are targeting changes in rules for collective bargaining and worker contributions for health-care coverage and pensions. 

Wisconsin Walkouts 

 

Union strong

In Wisconsin, Walker championed a bill that would make public workers bargain only for wages and require them to pay 5.8 percent of their pension costs; they pay nothing now. They would have to foot 12 percent of their health-care premiums, up from 6 percent. Police and firefighters wouldn’t be covered by the measure.

Fourteen Democratic senators disappeared from the Capitol yesterday, just as the Senate was about to begin debating, according to the Associated Press. Their flight brought the debate to a swift halt by denying the chamber a quorum, the news agency said. 

‘Don’t Blink’ 

 

Yesterday, University of Wisconsin-Madison students walked out of classes at the urging of student government and campus newspapers and marched to the Capitol, about a mile away. There, they joined protesters who filled the rotunda to chant, bang drums and sing, and spilled outside. 

 

Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker has threatened to call out National Guard; photo at left shows Guard threatening striking Memphis sanitation workers in 1968; Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. marched with them and was assassinated shortly afterward

In a telephone interview Feb. 15, Walker said he spoke with Kasich about the demonstrations. When asked for advice, Walker said, “Don’t blink.”  

The White House’s political operation, Organizing for America, helped to build crowds using social media, the Washington Post reported today, citing an unidentified Democratic Party official. Obama himself spoke to Milwaukee television station WTMJ. 

“Some of what I’ve heard coming out of Wisconsin, where they’re just making it harder for public employees to collectively bargain generally, seems like more of an assault on unions,” the president said. 

Boehner, a Republican from a Cincinnati suburb, responded with a statement saying he was “disappointed” that Obama criticized Walker. 

Dire Challenges  

 

Learn from history

“Republicans in Congress — and reform-minded GOP governors like Scott Walker, John Kasich and Chris Christie — are daring to speak the truth about the dire fiscal challenges Americans face at all levels of government, and daring to commit themselves to solutions that will liberate our economy and help put our citizens on a path to prosperity,” Boehner said. 

The bills are state-level skirmishes in a national battle, and the purpose is to undermine labor unions and the Democrats they support, said John Russo, a professor and co-director of the Center for Working-Class Studies at Youngstown State University in Ohio. 

“It’s really an ideological battle that’s being fought across the country right now,” Russo said yesterday in an interview while waiting to testify before the Ohio Senate Insurance, Commerce and Labor Committee. “This is a real teaching moment. Let’s have this debate about the role of the public sector.”

There were 50 witnesses scheduled, and Chairman Kevin Bacon said the committee would hear them without a break. 

“This is a true test of democracy,” Bacon said. 

Biggest Crowd  

 

Defend Ohio

The statehouse spokesman, Gregg Dodd, estimated the crowd at about 3,800 and said it was the largest gathering inside the statehouse since it was renovated in 1996. 

Mixing with protesters were members of Tea Party groups who staged their own rally in support of the legislation. 

Mike Wilson, who founded the Cincinnati Tea Party, said the bill is an effort to restore balance between governments and their workers, who he said are overpaid. 

“This bill is not on attack on public employees; it is not an attack on the middle class,” Wilson, 34, a technology consultant, said at the rally. “This bill is about math.” 

Joe Rugola, the former president of the Ohio AFL-CIO who also is executive director of the Ohio Association of Public School Employees, said he represents bus drivers and janitors who earn about $24,000 a year. 

“I’m still looking for this privileged class of workers,” Rugola said in an interview while waiting to testify. “This is just part of a national attack on working people.” 

To contact the reporter on this story: Mark Niquette in Columbus, Ohio at mniquette@bloomberg.net 

 

Public Worker Protests Spread To Ohio

Grace Wyler | Feb. 18, 2011 

 

http://www.businessinsider.com/public-worker-protests-take-hold-in-the-buckeye-state-2011-2#ixzz1ERDCeiwV 

All eyes are on Wisconsin as a battle unfolds between public employee unions and Republican lawmakers looking to limit their collective bargaining rights. But as overburdened state governments look to close deficits and cut costs, other states are in the middle of the same debate. 

In Ohio, a fight has been playing out more quietly over a bill that would end collective bargaining for all state workers and limit it for other public employees. The legislation would also eliminate salary schedules in favor of merit pay, a measure that has been heavily criticized by the state’s public safety workers’ unions. Unlike Wisconsin’s bill, the Ohio legislation includes firefighters and police officers unions. 

Firefighters joined fellow union members

About 3,800 firefighters, police officers, teachers and other public employees rallied outside the state Capitol during three days of state Senate hearings on the bill this week. Yesterday, about 200 Tea Party activists turned out to support of the legislation, the Columbus Dispatch reports.  

Ohio legislators are expected to vote on the bill in the next few weeks.

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ON TO LANSING FEB. 23! FOLLOW WISCONSIN’S LEAD! PROTEST IN DETROIT FEB. 22!

GO TO http://www.detnews.com/article/20110221/SCHOOLS/102210355/Michigan-orders-DPS-to-make-huge-cuts TO UNDERSTAND WHY WE NEED TO STORM LANSING FEB. 23. LANSING HAS ORDERED HALF OF DETROIT’S SCHOOLS CLOSED, AND INDICATED IT WILL APPOINT ANOTHER EFM AFTER BOBB LEAVES!

EDITOR: MICHIGAN GOVERNOR RICK SNYDER’S PLANS TO SLASH STATE REVENUE-SHARING FUNDS FOR MUNICIPALITIES, TAX PENSIONS, AND CUT FUNDS FOR SCHOOLS AND SOCIAL SERVICES ARE TIE-BARRED TO H.B. 4214,  WHICH WOULD ENABLE EMERGENCY FINANCIAL MANAGERS TO DISSOLVE CITIES AND SELL OFF THEIR ASSETS WITH VIRTUALLY NO RESTRICTIONS.

THE ATTACKS ON WORKING AND POOR PEOPLE IN MICHIGAN PARALLEL THE ATTACKS IN WISCONSIN AND OHIO: IT’S TIME FOR THE PEOPLE OF MICHIGAN TO JOIN THE BATTLE! GO TO LANSING FEB. 23! NO EXCUSES!

CLICK ON People’s rally registration formTO REGISTER FOR RALLY. EVERYONE FROM ALL OVER MICHIGAN SHOULD COME FROM THEIR OWN AREAS AS WELL!  FORWARD THIS NOTICE TO EVERYONE YOU KNOW!  

CLICK ON http://voiceofdetroit.net/?p=4622 TO READ ABOUT FRIGHTENING EMERGENCY FINANCIAL MANAGER H.B. 4214. THIS BILL WILL FORCE MUNICIPALITIES AND SCHOOLS DISTRICTS ACROSS THE STATE  INTO RECEIVERSHIP! ASK YOUR LEGISLATOR TO WALK OUT AS DID DEMOCRATIC LEGISLATORS IN WISCONSIN IF IT APPEARS THIS FASCIST BILL WILL PASS. IT’S TIME FOR A PEOPLE’S WAR TO SAVE OUR FUTURES!

PICKET MAYOR BING’S ‘STATE OF THE CITY’ ADDRESS

Tues. February 22, 6pm, Fisher Music Center, Woodward & Selden  

Dictators Bing, Snyder, Bobb, Hitler

Bing has said he is “joined at the hip” with Gov. Rick Snyder, signed U.S. District Judge Sean Cox’s order diminishing Detroiters’ power over our Water Department, has slashed city jobs and services, and plans a “Trail of Tears” to drive poor Detroiters out of their homes (otherwise known as the “Detroit Works Project”). Robert Bobb is joined on Snyder’s other hip, demolishing the Detroit Public School system. Put them all together —?

Robert Bobb takes DPS Back to Court

 Robert Bobb’s attorneys will be in Judge Wendy Baxter’s court on Tuesday, February 22 at 11 am to seek a stay in her order that bars Bobb from exercising academic authority at DPS. The Judge is being asked to delay implementation of the order, presumably so that they can seek to overturn it in an appeals court. It appears that Bobb does not want to wait to see what happens with the new takeover law and does not want to take the chance of allowing the Board to function for even a few weeks.  

At 10:30 am that same morning is the proceeding in Baxter’s court to discuss the awarding of attorney’s fees to the Board attorneys. It is important for fees to be awarded so that the Board can continue to have legal representation.  Judge Baxter’s court is room 1421, Coleman A. Young Municipal Center at Woodward and Jefferson. 

Monica Lewis-Patrick, Public Policy Analyst-Legal, Council Member JoAnn Watson, Detroit City Council. Suite 1340, CAYMC (313) 224-7892 or 224-4535  Email: patrickm@detroitmi.gov

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JUSTICE FOR AIYANA! GROUP PLANS ANNIVERSARY PROTEST

Aiyana's mother and father show their child's portrait during Geoffrey Fieger press conference

WHERE IS JUSTICE FOR AIYANA JONES?

By Roland Lawrence (aka Fige Bornu)  rolandlawrence@msn.com
 
Chairman, Justice for Aiyana Jones Committee

(Ed. note: The Justice for Aiyana Jones Committee is planning a protest on May 16, the one-year anniversary of Aiyana Jones’ murder, because her killer has not been charged. Contact the author of this article for more information.

 

Detroit police officer Joseph Weekley, resident of Grosse Pointe Woods

In a city obsessed with the fate of the Detroit Lions, it casts a disturbing pall where the sensibilities and priorities of the city’s decision makers lie.  It has been nine months since Wayne County Procrastinator, I mean, Prosecutor Kym Worthy bailed on her responsibility to determine if Detroit Police Officer Joe Weekley committed murder in the shooting death of 7 year old Aiyana Stanley Jones as she slept in her family’s home on Detroit’s eastside.  Worthy “referred” the case to the Michigan State Police citing supposed conflict of interest issues (she’s worried about the appearance of a conflict of interest).  Interesting, isn’t it?  And thus the case languishes in Lansing — no doubt in file drawer marked “who cares?”  In the meantime Officer Weekley escapes justice and justice for Aiyana escapes official daylight.

For those of you who don’t know – the murder in process was being filmed with the permission of Detroit Police Department (DPD) for a nationally syndicated cable program, The First 48 Hours, when a group of officers or should we call reality stars with guns in May of 2010 raided Aiyana’s home in search, we are told, for a murder suspect.  The premise for this all too real reality show is that police have 48 hours to try to solve a homicide case before it goes cold.   The suspect could not be found at the home.  There are a litany of stories detailing what happened during the police raid including a flash-bang grenade being thrown into a window near where Aiyana slept – (love those special effects). 

Aiyana's grandmother Mertilla Jones weeps in the arms of her daughter LaKrystal Sanders, during press conference held by attorney Geoffrey Fieger after the child's murder last May 16

Another story claims that the Detroit Police blamed Aiyana’s grandmother for trying to grab an officer’s gun.  Yet another story reports the murder suspect that DPD was looking for was seen hours earlier that day, but for reasons unknown, DPD did not apprehend him (maybe they can’t apprehend with a camera lens).  But clearly, the “real” reality story is that DPD acted in wanton disregard for the safety of citizens and residents in the rush to perform for the camera. They blitzkrieged a home, cameras rolling, and trampling over the many toys in the yard, and managed to snuff out the life of an innocent child as she slept.

We may never uncover the precise events of that fatal night. But it’s the duty of the County Prosecutor and the Michigan State Police to try.  Critics like me surmise that the investigation, having gone cold and getting colder, will not reveal the truth.  Instead, as are in the many other cases where Black men are suspiciously killed by police, the investigation will claim that the police in this case, Joe Weekley, was in compliance with his department’s training protocol when Aiyana was killed. Speaking of blitzkrieg, Himmler’s SS might have found such training protocols instructive.

Is young Black life in Detroit so cheap?  Indeed life is cheap when you’re not wealthy. GUILTY UNTIL PROVEN RICH, I guess.  Image the same scenario occurring in, let’s say, the rich Detroit suburb of Birmingham.  Would police employ the same paramilitary tactics in a white neighborhood where a Rebecca of Grosse Pointe Farms slept?

Jewel Allison with daughter Honesti at her right lead June 26 protest against Aiyana Jones murder down Woodward Avenue; photo by Herb Boyd

 Wayne County Medical Examiner Dr. Carl Schmidt, while being studied by a Hollywood actress as she prepared for her role as the medical examiner in the ABC series Detroit 187, said in an interview, “You might say that the homicide of Aiyana is the natural conclusion to the disease from which she suffered,” which is ‘The psychopathology of growing up in Detroit.  Some people are doomed from birth because their environment is so toxic.’” 

There is another disease that appears increasingly epidemic and catching. It’s called evade-your-duty-itis. Kym Worthy and the Michigan State Police should be tested for this virus.

Editor: Go to http://www.finalcall.com/artman/publish/National_News_2/article_7001.shtml to read interview with Aiyana’s family by Diane Bukowski, published in the Final Call. Also see Final Call article by Andrea Muhammad at http://www.finalcall.com/artman/publish/frontpageFeaturedArticle/article_6999.shtml; additionally click on http://www.finalcall.com/artman/publish/National_News_2/article_7130.shtml for Bukowski’s article on June 26 march in Detroit, organized by New Yorker Jewel Allison, to demand an end to no-knock raids and justice for Aiyana; and http://www.finalcall.com/artman/publish/National_News_2/article_7530.shtml for Bukowski’s article on lawsuit against 48 Hours and A&E on behalf of Aiyana’s family.

Four other articles on Aiyana’s murder by Bukowski were featured in the Michigan Citizen at http://michigancitizen.com/city-mourns-death-of-yearold-aiyana-jones-p8635-1.htm; http://michigancitizen.com/weekley-has-prior-record-p8634-1.htm; http://michigancitizen.com/community-enraged-at-nd-police-shooting-p8679-1.htm; and http://michigancitizen.com/fieger-says-childs-death-is-no-accident-p8682-1.htm, before her discharge from that newspaper after 10 years.

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STATE SENATORS PLANNED FOR HB 4214 FEB. 9

  

Kelly Smith, Russ Bellant, Helen Moore react to Robert Bobb's testimony Feb. 9

By Diane Bukowski

LANSING—During a joint meeting of the Senate Education and Local, Intergovernmental and Regional Affairs Committee Feb. 9, state senators from the Republican side laid the plans for H.B. 4214 as described above. Their discussion is moot at this point, because it is reflected in the 44 page bill itself as detailed above.

But Helen Moore of Keep the Vote No Takeover, Russ Bellant, and former DPS teacher Kelly Smith traveled to Lansing that day to be heard when Robert Bobb spoke at a committee meeting that morning.

They were not allowed to comment then, but Bellant and Moore were finally heard during the Senate joint meeting, and Smith spoke with the VOD separately.

Helen Moore testifies at Lansing committee meeting

 “I would have thought that Robert Bobb wrote the law you are planning, because everything that has been said about broadening the Emergency Financial Managers’ powers today, is what he has said,” Moore stated.

“Bobb took the entire system [including academics] into his hands even though the law does not allow it. It has been disastrous for Detroit. The children have been led astray by the emergency financial manager. He believes he is God. We are still in court now because of his takeover of academics.”

Moore said Bobb has spent $50 million of Title I funds, meant for special education and other student services, on hiring consultants. She noted that some schools still don’t have books, while many high schools have as many as 52 students in a class. She testified that Bobb’s salary is being supplemented by the Eli Broad Foundation and other privation organizations to carry out their mandates of closing public schools and opening charter schools.

“Bobb cannot close as many schools as he has and still operate the district,” Moore said. “Are you ready for cross-district bussing, because the state constitution guarantees free public education for every child. The state’s plans as carried out by Bobb and prior to him Kenneth Burnley and other state appointees have not worked and will never work.”

Barbara Byrd Bennett (l) and Robert Bobb (r) photo DPS website

Russ Bellant said, “DPS is a case model of absolute power and lack of legal rights. My son graduated from DPS and I have attended every school board meeting for the last five years. When Robert Bobb came in, he placed gag orders on DPS employees. He has not responded to 32 Freedom of Information Act requests I have submitted. He has given no public reports on contracts and spending that he has sole authority over, even though the current EFM law requires him to do so. He has hired as many as 10 additional Assistant Superintendents and other high-level staff, at inflated pay rates, and is giving bonuses of $50,000 to favored individuals.”

Bellant added that Bobb’s tenure as city manager in Washington, D.C. was marred by five separate audits condemning his hiring and contracting practices. A 2005 city audit denounced Bobb and former D.C. Mayor Anthony Williams for their no-bid hiring of friends and associates on a stadium project. The Washington Post castigated them for “failure to follow city procurement law.”

Bellant, who has done clandestine research on the district’s financial practices, said Barbara Byrd-Bennett, Bobb’s Chief Academic and Accountability Officer, is required be contract to work only two days a week for her $200,000 salary. He said she brought in a team of her friends from the Cleveland school district (where her husband still lives) at high-paying salaries and has had an otherwise checkered past (ed: reflected in the following commentary from Cool Cleveland):

“Barbara Byrd Bennett: Paid for by Corporate Club

The real problem with the high spending from a special fund by Cleveland CEO Barbara Byrd Bennett wasn’t totally about what she extravagantly spent. More important was where she got the dough. Although distasteful, the fancy dinners and trips to London and Hawaii were peanuts in comparison with the cost incurred by Cleveland schoolchildren by Byrd Bennett’s co-opting by Cleveland’s Corporate Club. She’s being pampered (fed money to entertain herself and others) by the Cleveland Foundation, Gund Foundation and Cleveland Tomorrow (so discredited that it recently changed its name to Greater Cleveland Partnership). They give her dough to do this fancy stuff so that it wouldn’t come from public funds, thus likely not be revealed in a school system now run essentially as a private club for its hierarchy, including its mayoral-named school board.

 

Byrd Bennett, the $300,000 wonder, complains she wasn’t cavorting on the taxpayers’ dime. Actually, worse – the money she’s taking came from those who siphon off gobs of taxpayer’s money – particularly from Cleveland schools – every chance they get to pocket it. Tax abatements, exemptions and reductions on property taxes are their game. The spending became public because of statements in a document of State Auditor Betty Montgomery. Pumped up TV news outlets had their own orgy with the revelations that startled Byrd Bennett, not accustomed to being treated as a mere mortal. What does this funding by private sources mean? It means that she becomes indebted to their leaders. Who are their leaders? The people who run the town and the people hired to do their bidding. This control of the public agenda by these experts in manipulation and subtle propaganda is old stuff, though. Walter Lippmann, in one of his treatise on public decision making, divided decision making into two segments: the “responsible men” – the Corporates – who make the decisions – and the “bewildered herd” – the rest of us who have to live with the verdicts of our betters.

 

So, when you think of the 600 or so teachers and 300 others ready to be laid off, when you think of the school children who won’t have proper text books, and when you think of the kids who won’t have sports and extra curricular activities, think Cleveland Foundation, Gund Foundation and Cleveland Tomorrow. Why? Because the schools should have asked for a levy last year. Why didn’t they? Because the people who run the town, i.e., the people of the institutions mentioned above, intent upon getting Cleveland and Cuyahoga County to buy them a new Convention Center.”

by Cool Cleveland contributor Roldo Bartimole Roldo@Adelphia.net

 

Thompson, Cobb and Bazilio were Bobb's largest campaign contributors in Washington, D.C.

Bellant also  reported that Bobb hired his former deputy campaign manager from Washington, D.C. to be in charge of DPS contracts and grants, and awarded a $672,000 contract to Thompson, Cobb, Bazilio and Associates, his largest campaign contributor in Washington.

“Absolute power corrupts absolutely,” Bellant said. “You are getting the waste, fraud and abuse you can predictably expect from Robert Bobb. There should be financial and other penalties for Emergency Financial Managers who abuse those positions.”

Bellant noted that out of the last 12 years, the district has been governed by an elected school board for only three years, and inherited a $212 million deficit from the first state takeover. It has lost 11,000 students per year.

State Rep. David Nathan (D-Detroit), said he had submitted four separate pieces of legislation over the previous two weeks that would provide transparency for EFM’s and school districts, and oversight and accountability to the people, but none of them has been accorded a committee hearing. He noted there is already a state board that is supposed to oversee the actions of Emergency Financial Managers, but that the board has done little to check the actions of Bobb or other EFM’s.

Famed Detroit-born pianist Alma Smith

Detroit piano legend Harold McKinney

Kelly Smith told the VOD she had come to testify about the decimation of arts and music programs at DPS during Bobb’s tenure. She formerly taught music at DPS and currently tunes pianos for them as a vendor.

“Fifty years ago DPS had the best music and arts programs in the country,” Smith said. “When you take away music and art, you take away from academics. There are three new pianos in every new school building, but they are sitting idle and are not being tuned. The Music Department of DPS has been replaced by one person who had to go to a foundation to pay two piano tuners.”

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