UAW, Rainbow PUSH, Farmworkers announce CHASE BOYCOTT

 

UAW Pres. Bob King and FLOC Pres. Baldemar Velasquez at podium; Rev. David Bullock of Rainbow PUSH second from left, Attorney Vanessa Fluker second from right

Demand two year moratorium on foreclosures, FLOC negotiations

 
 
By Diane Bukowski
 
DETROIT–Prominent labor, community and faith leaders announced a national boycott of JPMorgan Chase Bank Sept. 24. They pledged to withdraw “hundreds of millions” of dollars in organizational funds from Chase and called on members of the community to follow suit. 

In a show of determination, they cut up Chase credit cards during the press conference. Public assistance recipient Orrie Johnson even offered to cut up her bridge card because Chase gets a fee every time the social services card is swiped for funds, but was told she did not have to go that far. 

“Chase banksters are nothing but gangsters!” declared Pastor D. Alexander Bullock, chair of the Detroit chapter of Rainbow PUSH. “We want Chase to own up to its responsibility for destroying our communities. We are sick and tired of being sick and tired, and of dealing with belligerent banks.” 

In addition to Bullock, the leaders included International United Auto Workers (UAW) President Bob King, Baldemar Velasquez, President of the Farm Labor Organizing Committee (FLOC), attorney Vanessa Fluker of the Moratorium NOW! Coalition, and the Rev. Ed Rowe of the Central United Methodist Church. 

Tobacco farmworker in the hot fields of North Carolina

They demanded that Chase declare a two-year moratorium on foreclosures in Michigan, and force R.J. Reynolds Tobacco to negotiate humane working and living conditions for farmworkers in North Carolina. Chase is one of the lead banks in a consortium of lenders that has invested $498 million dollars in Reynolds American, one of the largest tobacco companies in the U.S. 

“We have spent all week with lawyers from Chase asking them to change their practice of destroying our communities by foreclosing on homes, but they were totally unreasonable,” King said. “Property values for every person in Michigan have plummeted, and this means less money in taxes for our schools and public services. If people of conscience do not stand together, this will never change.” 

King said he and Velasquez had just returned from touring R.J. Reynolds tobacco farms in North Carolina. 

“Farmworkers spend 12 to 14 hours a day in the hot sun, only to go back to decrepit, unclean housing where half the beds don’t have mattresses, and the ones that do are infested with bedbugs,” King said. “To make matters worse, they have to pay the company to live in these ramshackle huts. We demand that R.J. Reynolds sit down and negotiate with FLOC.”

He said the amount the UAW is withdrawing from Chase will amount to “hundreds of millions of dollars.”“

Pastor Bill Wylie Kellerman cuts up Chase credit card as Velasquez watches

Labor leaders say the fortunes of banks and unions are linked more than people realize,” the New York Times reported in March. “Wall Street manages union pension portfolios worth hundreds of billions of dollars. Much of that is invested in financial institutions, giving unions a loud voice as shareholders.” 

That month, the International AFL-CIO organized over 200 marches on banks in cities across the country, calling for new taxes on the banks to be used to finance a jobs creation program. 

“They [the banks] played Russian roulette with our economy, and while Wall Street cashed in, they left Main Street holding the bag,” the Times quoted International AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka. “They gorge themselves in a trough of taxpayers’ dollars, while we struggle to make ends meet.” 

At the press conference, Velasquez said, “Chase Bank is using our tax dollars to exploit us, who are at the bottom of the supply chain. We have 20,000 workers in those fields being treated like dogs, like slaves.” 

He said farmworkers don’t have the right to file complaints with the National Labor Relations Board.  Continue reading

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TRAIL OF TEARS: BING’S DETROIT WORKS PLAN, a critical analysis in five parts

Raynard Davis confronts Bing: Why can't we grow the city?

Angry residents confront Bing at first community forum

By Diane Bukowski 

DETROIT – Over the past month, Mayor Dave Bing has purported to bring a “kinder, gentler” Trail of Tears to Detroit citizens with his Detroit Strategic Framework Plan, otherwise known as “Detroit Works.”

He has said that he will not force residents from their homes in areas of the city his planners claim are sparsely populated, but gently encourage them to leave. He has claimed to listen to the community in a series of five public forums. 

“I am not down-sizing Detroit,” Bing told the audience at the first event, held Sept. 14 at Bishop Charles Ellis’ palatial Greater Grace Temple on Seven Mile and Telegraph. “Detroit will still be 139 square miles.” 

Bing has said he has no plan himself; that he is waiting for the conclusion of the September forums and future meetings with city administrators to create that plan with Detroiters’ input in mind. 

Wanda Hill said she did not believe there is no plan. She called it “disrespectful” for Bing to call the forums when residents don’t know what his “real intentions” are. 

Detroiters want to renovate homes, not tear them down

A constant refrain throughout that and subsequent forums was that Detroiters don’t want to see the PEOPLE down-sized or moved. Speakers said Detroit should be REBUILT and that the population should be INCREASED. 

Toni Griffin, an urban planner imported from Washington, D.C. and paid by the Kresge Foundation to head the Detroit Works project, has been in Detroit since March according to Crain’s Detroit.  

She and Karla Winters of the city’s Planning and Development Department introduced themselves at the beginning of the forum, then broke the angry audience of over 1,000 people into five groups using sliding partitions. Group One was facilitated by representatives of  the Skillman Foundation and Hamilton Anderson Associates. 

Bing popped into Group One for a short time, only to be confronted by Raynard Davis, who stood and pointed his finger angrily at the Mayor. 

“Why are you talking about shrinking the city instead of growing the city?” Davis asked. “The infrastructure can be repaired and improved, but the city is holding off. The private corporations and the banks deliberately let the city go, instead of bringing in industry and creating jobs.” 

Bing responded nervously, “There are changes happening as we speak. I have already authorized 1800 homes to be torn down.”  

According to reports, the demolition of up to 10,000 homes is on the drawing board, with some of the money coming from HUD’s Community Development Block Grant Program and federal recovery funds. 

"We won't be here in 20 years!"

Davis said, “Supposedly there are 85,000 empty houses in Detroit. We need to get them purchased and fix them up so the owners can start paying taxes. When one person sees you fixing up a vacant house, another will follow.” 

“People like me won’t be here twenty years from now,” said an 83-year-old woman. “I want to see our schools open again. It hurts my heart to hear all these vacant houses are being torn down. A big church like this could adopt 100 houses and provide places for us to nurture ourselves and our families. People that lost their homes should get them back. Houses are empty, schools are empty. The city can actually bring in more people; give out Section 8, put people in the skilled trades to work fixing them up. Instead, the schools are closing faster and faster and homes are getting burnt up.” 

She said Detroit should provide a computer for every household, and wi-fi access for the entire city.  Continue reading

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Who is behind Bing’s plans for Detroit?

 

People's Summit marchers protest international CEO summit May 15 09

Bing’s plan was generated long before the September meetings, by international corporate forces who want to “down-size” third world cities here and abroad. 

The Brookings Institute, a Washington D.C.-based “think tank” founded in 1918, led discussions years ago on Detroit and other cities hit hard by the global economic crisis. 

Bruce Katz, vice president of the Brookings’ Metropolitan Policy Program, told the Detroit News in February,  “There is a nothing -left-to-lose quality in Detroit, much like there was in New Orleans after Katrina.” Griffin later reiterated the comparison, portraying Katrina as a way for New Orleans to start afresh with a clean slate. (See “Detroit—the Next New Orleans?” below for more on Griffin and New Orleans.) 

On Feb. 11, according to Crain’s Detroit, over 250 city officials, corporate executives, developers, and educators met with Katz, Skillman Foundation CEO Carole Goss, Time managing editor Rick Stengel, and Steve Hemp, chairman of the the New Economy Initiative, to discuss the future of Detroit. 

No representatives of community groups like duly elected Citizens District Councils (see article below: “Detroit Works Project Violates State Law), block clubs, unions representing Detroit workers, youth advocates, or grass roots religious and education leaders were there. 

Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. leading 1963 Detroit Freedom March

 “Mentioned but not addressed in the context of Detroit reconstruction is the overwhelming (82%) African-American population,” a reader of one of Katz’s articles declared. “Do the authors envision a reconstructed Detroit with a similar population, or with a major influx of whites and others? The former would be a greater achievement, with Detroit’s history as the magnet for so many African-American families who fled other parts of the country in search of better opportunities. Not something we like to discuss in polite company, but it does make reconstruction of Detroit an even more daunting challenge.” 

“The Brookings Institution is a nonprofit public policy organization based in Washington, DC,” says its website. “Our mission is to conduct high-quality, independent research and, based on that research, to provide innovative, practical recommendations that advance three broad goals: strengthen American democracy, foster the economic and social welfare, security and opportunity for all populations, and secure a more open, safe, prosperous and cooperative international system.” 

In fact, The Brookings Institution opposed FDR’s New Deal policies and played a significant role in the Republican-backed Marshall Plan in Europe after World War II, which fostered capitalist governments in countries where socialists had led the fight against fascism.  Continue reading

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Bing’s Detroit–the next New Orleans?

 

Detroit Works chief planner Toni Griffin and P&DD's Karla Winters kick off first "community forum"

Chief planner Toni Griffin thinks so

By Diane Bukowski
 

“It is a challenging task and we take it very seriously. But I think it offers such an amazing opportunity that I can’t think of since New Orleans, I guess, which is an American city that has had the opportunity—unfortunately through a disaster—to reinvent itself, reform itself, build on its strengths and position itself in a way that it hadn’t been able to do before.” 

These are the words of Toni Griffin, the urban planner/architect brought to Detroit by Mayor Dave Bing to head his “Detroit Works” or “Detroit Strategic Framework” project. The magazine Next American City interviewed her for its current quarterly edition.

(For entire article, go to http://americancity.org/magazine/article/right-size-fits-all.) 

Despite the “community forums” Bing is holding regarding “Detroit Works,” Griffin, not the city’s residents, will have the most to say about the re-structuring of Detroit. She has been on board since March of  this year cooking up the plan Bing claimed he does not yet have. 

Katrina drowning victim, part of New Orleans re-invention?

Griffin and her staff, along with other consultants, are being paid by the Kresge Foundation, out of a first-year grant totaling $950,000 according to Crain’s Detroit Business. Griffin and Karla Winters of Detroit’s Planning and Development Department co-chaired the five “community forums” on “Detroit Works” that took place this month, making brief appearances before turning the moderation over to staff from the Skillman Foundation and architectural firms such as Hamilton Anderson, which is also being paid by the Kresge Foundation.

What has happened in New Orleans since Katrina gives some insight into Griffin’s thinking.

 Housing and population in New Orleans today 

Children protesting the demolition of the New Orleans LaFitte housing development Photo by Darwin Bondgraham

“We finally cleaned up public housing in New Orleans. We couldn’t do it, but God did.” 

These are the words of former 10-term Republican Senator Richard Baker of Baton Rouge, overheard speaking to lobbyists by a Wall Street Journal reporter in Sept. 2005. According to varying estimates, 1800 to 3500 people died in Louisiana during Katrina, with more still missing. More than 450,000 people were initially displaced and damage estimates were as high as $150 billion. 

It has now been five years since Katrina. In its wake, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, spent over $762 million to demolish New Orleans’ numerous public housing developments, most of which were sturdy structures that had survived the flooding. Former residents, 98 percent Black, were locked out of their homes, with nowhere else to go, in anticipation of the demolition. When the city council voted to approve the plan, there were violent clashes with police.

“HUD sells the demolition as a way to improve people’s lives, but the underlying reason is much different,” Jay Arena, a former Tulane professor and a member of the Coalition against Demolition, told the After Katrina Newswire at the time.

New Orleans Survivors Village demands the right to return

“This is a clear violation of international human rights.  This is how the United States judges other countries, based Continue reading

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Detroit Works project violates state law

Citizens’ District Councils not involved as law requires; CDC leader Gwen Mingo recalls Brush Park urban removal terror 
 
By Ron Seigel 

Gwen Mingo (r) talks with Jimmy Cole at Call 'em Out Dinner Feb. 2010

 DETROIT – Some who attended Mayor Dave Bing’s community forums on his “Detroit Works” plan were skeptical of his assurance that citizens would participate in the planning of Detroit. They noted that Bing did not place on his official advisory board representatives of Citizens District Councils (CDC’s). 

Gwendoline Mingo, who heads the Coordinating Council of all Detroit district councils, said state law, which established these councils, requires all Michigan cities to consult CDC’s on any “urban renewal” plan for their areas. She cited Michigan Public Act 344 of 1947, known as the “Blighted Area Rehabiliation Act.” (see below). 

P.A. 344 of 1947 reads in part: 

“The local official responsible for preparation of the development plan within the district area shall periodically consult with and advise the citizens’ district council regarding all aspects of the plan, including the development of new housing for relocation purposes located either inside or outside of the development area. The consultation shall begin before any final decisions by any local planning agency or local legislative body regarding the development plan other than the designation of the development area.   
 
 

The consultation shall continue throughout the various stages of the development plan, including the final implementation of the plan. The local officials responsible for the development of the plan shall incorporate into the development plan the desires and suggestions of the citizens’ district council to the extent feasible. A local commission, public agency, or local legislative body of any municipality shall not approve any development plan for a development area unless there has previously been consultation between the citizens’ district council and the local officials responsible for the development plan. A record of the meetings, including information and data presented, shall be maintained and included in official presentation of the proposed development plan to the local legislative body. 

 

The chief executive officer of the municipality shall give the citizens’ district council written notice of any contemplated zoning change, hearing, or condemnation proceedings within the district area. The notice shall be given at least 20 days before the effective date of the change or the date of the hearing or proceedings. Upon receiving a request from the citizens’ district council, the local legislative body shall hold a public hearing on the proposed zoning change or condemnation proceedings. Each citizens’ district councilmay call upon any city department for information.”

“What are they going to do about the millions of dollars allocated by the federal government [under Obama’s recovery act], because they promised to improve the quality of life for poor people and seniors,” Mingo asked. 

She said past mayors had “embezzled the money” and she fears the Bing administration plans will fall into the same pattern.

Mingo is still pursuing a lawsuit brought by the residents of Brush Park against the city for its demolition of that neighborhood to benefit corporate developers. 

Historic Brush Park homes

“People said they were going to help us and they did not help,” she said. “The work they said they were going to do they did not do. They got people out of their neighborhoods, as they could give the land to rich developers at low cost or for free, with no property taxes for 12 years. 

“That’s why it is necessary for elected district councils to protect the rights of citizens and make sure state and federal money to help the residents is not misappropriated.” 

Karen Marie Dumas, who leads the Mayor’s public relations department, denied the citizens’ district councils are being pushed aside.  Continue reading

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Bing’s Detroit Works “Advisory” Task Force

 Corporate, private foundation leaders and realtors dominate list 
 
By Diane Bukowski

Bishop Charles Ellis praying for auto bail-out

 
CHAIR: Bishop Charles Ellis, Greater Grace Temple
 

Mayor Dave Bing held his first “community forum” on “restructuring” Detroit at Ellis’s palatial temple at Seven Mile and Telegraph, Sept. 14. Ellis also owns and operates the Rogell golf course, which previously belonged to the city, and is negotiating to take over four other public courses. He runs two charter schools and a senior apartment complex among other revenue-producing enterprises

In Dec. 2008, Bishop Ellis conducted a well-publicized prayer service calling on Congress to vote for the multi-billion dollar auto industry bail-out. 

 “ . . .If the auto industry gets their bail-out, they are going to FIRE thousands of workers to survive a little while longer until they need another taxpayer bailout,” said ‘Professor Tracey’ on a local blog. “Bishop Ellis and his flock needed to hold a prayer service for new jobs OUTSIDE of the auto industry . . . . not something that will keep white auto executives collecting bonuses for failing at their jobs! . . . .the very idea of holding a prayer service for the auto industry when so many black folks are losing their homes, dying in Iraq, struggling with addiction to drugs or alcohol, languishing in prisons, not getting a quality education, not saving for the future, not safe in their own homes, etc. What a waste!”!”

Phillip Cooley

CO-CHAIR: Philip Cooley, owner Slow’s Bar BQ, developer

“Since launching the perpetually packed Slows five years ago, Cooley has morphed into one of the city’s most-visible urban activists . . . .Up for grabs, however, is whether longtime Detroiters will buy into the progressive agenda of this small-town transplant and his like-minded allies — mostly young, white and suburban-raised — and their affection for the city’s Rome-like ruins.” (Detroit News 5/6/10.)

 

Cooley and his brother established O’Connor Development Group, LLC in 2004, a real estate agency located in the same building as Slow’s. Today, O’Connor Development . . . .also owns about eight commercial and residential properties in Detroit,” says Crain’s. “Several of the properties have been renovated and are rental loft apartments while other properties are in the development stage.” In that article, Cooley called Detroit “a blank canvas.”

 

Several years ago, Cooley and a group of Corktown newcomers posted a controversial email establishing committees to transform the area:

 

(excerpt) “Team Bagley Market: These folks will start organizing complaints against Bagley Market, as well as rogue acts of bad will. We hope to make their operation as difficult as possible until the day when we can afford to swoop in and buy them out to open our own specialty grocery;The Bermuda Triangle: This includes . . . activism to stop the free handouts in our neighborhood that facilitate the drugs, crime and general malcontent that thrives from St Peters to the Train Station to the Mission on Michigan. Phil and I are hoping to go talk to the people at the church next week and will give an update. We’ll try being nice first.”

  

Allegedly, Cooley et. al. backed off and began cooperating with Rev. Bill Wylie-Kellerman of St. Peters, which sponsors a soup kitchen, as well as Charles Sorel, brother-in-law of Michigan Citizen publisher Catherine Kelly, and founder of another white-frequented bistro, Le Petit Zinc.

Lydia Gutierrez

CO-CHAIR Lydia Gutierrez, Mexican Foods LLC, SWDBA

Crain’s: “The president and CEO of Detroit-based Hacienda Mexican Foods LLC oversees three facilities, 80-plus employees and a company with $8 million to $10 million in revenue. Gutierrez and her late husband Ricardo started Hacienda, a manufacturer and distributor of Mexican food products, 22 years ago.” 

Crain’s quotes Gutierrez regarding some of her concerns:“What kinds of businesses will help to fuel more business in Corktown, what’s going on in Bagley, and how does that connect with Riverfront Conservancy, the greenway, the (Ambassador) Bridge, downtown Detroit?”

The Southwest Detroit Business Association joined in the One Detroit coalition of Mexican, Asian and Arab-American business owners who helped defeat the initial proposal for a city-funded African Town in 2006, despite the fact that the city has invested millions in the neighborhood known as Mexican Town.  

Alice Thompson

Alice Thompson, Executive Director, Black Family Development,  member Change for Better Schools 

 Black Family Development is a non-profit that raked in $28.9 million in revenues during 2008. According to recent grant applications, it works closely with the Skillman Foundation and their Good Neighborhoods/Good Schools Initiatives.

In a grant application linking the Osborn and Clark Park neighborhoods, BFDI is partnering with DPS, the Detroit Federation of Teachers, the Detroit Parent Network, Child Trends, Southwest Solutions, Inc. and City Year. Matching funds are expected from the Skillman, W. K. Kellogg, and Kresge Foundations.

Osborn High School and Clark Park Elementary are expected to be torn down and replaced by K-14 campuses under DPS Czar Robert Bobb’s $500.5 million bond issue.

Thompson is a member of “Change for Better Schools,” the coalition that tried unsuccessfully to get a proposal for Bing’s mayoral control of DPS on this November’s ballot.      

 

Heaster Wheeler to right of Dave Bing at ALPACT dinner

Heaster Wheeler, Exec. Director Detroit NAACP

Wheeler works closely with Rev. Wendell Anthony, who recently hosted a forum featuring speakers from numerous law enforcement agencies, addressing crime in Detroit. Wheeler himself serves on the board of ALPACT (Advocates and Leaders for Police and Community Trust), at a time of rising numbers of killings by police regionally. ALPACT was founded in the wake of 9/11, saying “all Americans are feeling a mix of pain and agony, patriotism and unity.” Its stated goal is challenge rising “bigotry and hate.”

 

Its first meeting in Detroit, featuring then Mayor Dennis Archer and numerous law enforcement officials as speakers, was swamped by victims of police brutality from metro Detroit who denounced the panelists. Protesters from the family of Imam Luqman Abdullah, killed by the Detroit FBI in a raid last November, and their supporters demonstrated outside an ALPACT dinner held at the RenCen only weeks after the Imam’s death. Detroit FBI head Andrew Agenda and attorney Nabil Ayad co-chaired the dinner, which featured U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder as a speaker. 

To date, neither the federal nor state governments have released any conclusions about their investigations of the Imam’s virtual execution (he was shot 21 times). Twelve members of his mosque, which ministered to the needs of residents of one of Detroit’s poorest neighborhoods, still face charges based on conversations reported by FBI informants. 

Wheeler also sits on the board of People and Land (PAL), “an organization focused on growth and change in Michigan, funded by the W.K. Kellog Foundation, according to its website.    Continue reading

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Solidarity with Chicago school sit-in!

Parents, students supporters occupy Whittier School in Chicago

From the Michigan Emergency Committee Against War and Injustice (MECAWI) 

Dozens of parents, students and members of the community, organized by the Whittier Parents’ Committee, have been occupying the Whittier Dual Language School’s field house, in the Pilsen neighborhood of Chicago. since Sept. 15. 

The Whittier Parents’ Committee is opposing the demolition of the field house, at a cost of $345,000, and demanding that the funds be used to remodel the field house.  The Parents’ Committee demands that a school library be placed in the remodeled field house and that much needed school programs be expanded.   Instead, the Chicago School Board wants to create a soccer field on the field house land to be used to be used by a nearby private school! 

The occupation continues to grow in strength, with hundreds of supporters stopping by every day to deliver food, water, and other supplies. There have been several attempts by the Chicago Police to break up the occupation, without success. 

Whitter occupation has brought broad media coverage

Background from the Parents’ Committee 

The Whittier Parents’ Committee is staging a sit-in to fight against the demolition of the Whittier Dual Language School’s field house (la Casita), in the Pilsen neighborhood of Chicago. The sit-in has been widely reported as the struggle of a community against the blind austerity cuts instituted by a cash-strapped school board. But in fact this struggle brings to light larger and more contentious issues in Chicago and nationally: control over Tax Increment Funding and the top-down reshaping of public education.

The Whittier Parents’ Committee has been organizing for seven years to push Pilsen alderman Daniel Solis to allocate some of the estimated $1 billion in Mayor Daley’s TIF coffers to their school for a school expansion – he finally agreed to give $1.4million of TIF funds for school renovation. Cynically, Chicago Public Schools (CPS) has earmarked a part of this money for the destruction of the school’s field house, which has been used for years as a center for community organizing and services. This would directly undermine the ability of the Whittier community to organize and struggle for educational rights. Parents are demanding to be part of the decision-making process.

CPS has been conducting an extreme makeover of public education: privatization, demolitions, school closures and turnarounds, massive firings of seasoned teachers have been part of the large-scale redesign of public education. Public funds are being used to renovate schools that are privatized, while low income neighborhood schools are being starved of the most basic resources. The fight over the survival of this little field house is an important one in the larger struggles around educational rights, community self-determination and control over public land and institutions.  

Please sign the online petition in support of the Whittier Occupation by clinking on this link: http://www.petitiononline.com/whittier/petition.html

Continue reading

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COUNCIL CONSIDERS CUTS TO HOMELESS, SENIORS, YOUTH, DOMESTIC VIOLENCE VICTIMS

 

UCHC and Michigan Legal services operate a joint mortgage foreclosure prevention project. This Grandmont homeowner lost her home to a predatory lender when she lost her job with American Axle. When she came to the UCHC/MLS project she was working as an Americorps volunteer and she and her son were facing eviction in 36th District Court. Through our mortgage foreclosure project she was able to obtain a buy out and not only did not lose her home, but now owns it FREE OF ANY MORTGAGE!

CDBG hearing brings protests

By Diane Bukowski 

DETROIT – Advocates for non-profit organizations that serve the homeless, youth, seniors, domestic violence victims and others protested  recommendations to cut funds to their programs during a Sept 21 City Council hearing.. Many of the programs have been funded for decades through the Community Development Block Grant/Neighborhood Opportunity Fund (CDBG/NOF), administered by the U.S. Housing and Urban Development (HUD). 

Such denials usually result in further cuts to organizations, who frequently use them as matches for funding from other sources. 

For this fiscal year, the city received over $40 million in CDBG funds alone. 

The Council’s City Planning Commission is recommending the cuts despite Mayor Dave Bing’s assertion to HUD that priorities in CDBG/NOF funding “are primarily for housing (homeless shelters/housing and home repair), development, and services for the homeless, youth and elderly. These decisions were based on projects submitted during the City’s CDBG proposal process, department recommendations, on-going or new development activities in the City, as well as priorities developed and considered during the proposal review process.” 

The statement is included in the city’s 2011 HUD Consolidated Action Plan. 

Marilyn Mullane, Exec. Dir. Michigan Legal Services

Marilyn Mullane, director of Michigan Legal Services (MLS), told the Council that the CPC recommended that MLS receive no funds because a back page was allegedly missing from one of three copies of the MLS application. 

MLS has provided free legal services for low-income families, including foreclosure prevention, and assistance in regaining child custody, divorce, bankruptcy, legal issues facing returning prisoners, and other matters, for over 30 years. 

“We don’t know what happens to our applications once the city receives them,” Mullane said. “The page could have accidentally been left in the envelope when city staff took it out. This is not a process that applies to for-profit organizations who procure contracts from the city. HUD allows technical defects to be corrected after they receive those applications.” 

Mullane said earlier that approximately 75 percent of the denials to all organizations were due to similar technicalities. 

Youth from Young Detroit Builders receive job training, education and counseling services

The Council has recommended that the United Community Housing Coalition (UCHC) receive a 50 percent cut in funding. 

“This year, we saved 4600 occupied homes from foreclosure,” UCHC director Ted Phillips told Council members. “We do more eviction defense work than any other agency in the city.”

 He said that UCHC, in existence for 33 years, sponsors several homeless placement programs and a landlord-tenant clinic that provides free legal services to defendants in 36th District Court. Judges from 36th District Court frequently refer defendants to UCHC for assistance. Contact numbers for the organization are included on court notices.  Continue reading

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Inferno on Moenart Street not a ‘natural disaster, according to residents and video

 
 From the Committee Against Utility Shutoffs, wsws.org/caus

Fires on Moenart Street Photo by Ian and Andrew Perrotta

Click Inferno on Moenart Street to access the video on Youtube.

This footage of the September 7 fires in the Moenart Street area of Detroit ( see link to video above) was taken by Ian and Andrew Perrotta, residents of the east side neighborhood. The two brothers, one of whom was once a firefighter, tried to extinguish the blaze that started in a neighbor’s garage. When they had done all they could, they decided to document the fire.

Anxiety and frustration gripped neighbors as high winds fanned the flames, causing the fire to spread quickly. The fire department and 911 were called numerous times by residents, but residents watched in desperation for more than an hour before the first truck came.

The fires quickly spread from the garage to the house in front Photo by Ian and Andrew Perrotta

Detroit was hit simultaneously by several raging firestorms that afternoon, which taxed the fire department’s ability to respond, due to massive budget cuts. Winds reaching 50 miles per hour that day caused poorly maintained power lines to go down, at least 750 in total.

Moenart Street residents said that the fire was a result of a power line that went down the day before. To find out more or to get involved with the Committee Against Utility Shutoffs, see link to CAUS at right on VOD website.

Residents on Detroit’s east side rejected Mayor Dave Bing’s claim that recent fires were a “natural disaster.” They said a small fire caused by a downed power line grew out of control because the underfunded fire department did not respond for at least an hour.

What remained of three houses the next day

After the September 7 windstorm brought down 750 power lines, fires engulfed 85 structures in the city of Detroit, including 29 occupied homes. In the days leading up to the fires, energy company DTE ignored repeated warnings from residents about dangerously malfunctioning electrical equipment.

According to residents on Moenart Street, a fire that swept through their block was started by a line that had actually come down the previous day. Three houses were completely destroyed, a fourth house was severely damaged, and at least six garages burned down. One block away on Bloom Street, another house was destroyed and several garages burned down.

The flames quickly spread from the garage to the house in front.

Moenart Street neighbors Tasha Butler, Andrew Perrotta, Ola and James Randolph Photo courtesy CAUS/wsws.org

“The fire started on the garage of my neighbor across the street,” Mr. Lee, said James Randolph, whose house was also damaged by the fire. “By the time the fire department arrived, the fire was out of control. Mr. Lee said the line was on the garage. He said he called DTE but they never came out.”

Tasha Butler, James’ daughter, added, “They said there was a line on the back of the house that was there on Monday. The   fire took place on Tesday.Their comments  echo statements by the Hargrave family on Robinwood Street. In that case, DTE also failed to respond to repeated calls about problems with the electrical lines.

Margaret, another resident, said, “It is not true that this was a natural disaster. I was on the porch when the fire erupted. We could smell that something was burning. We went to see where the fire was coming from and saw that it was because of the line.” Continue reading

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CLASS ACTION HEARING OCT. 14 ON 80,000 ILLEGAL FORECLOSURES

 
Rev. David Bullock speaks at press conference on illegal foreclosures, Rev. Rowe at his left, attorney Palmore and plaintiff Yvonne Cross at his right
Plaintiffs say county employees never authorized to certify sheriff’s deeds
By Diane Bukowski 

DETROIT – A federal case set for a class action certification hearing Oct. 14 at 2 p.m., before U.S. District Court Judge Marianne Battani, could invalidate the foreclosures of more than 80,000 Wayne County residents while Warren Evans was Sheriff. So says attorney Chiketa Palmore, who along with Attorney Paul Nicoletti is representing 46 plaintiffs who say Evans’ office issued legally invalid sheriff’s deeds to take their homes. 

The suit, Sherie Williams, Yvonne Cross, et. al.  v. Wayne County Sheriff, has gained the support of Rev. Edwin Rowe of Central United Methodist Church,  Rev. David Bullock, Detroit Rainbow:PUSH leader,  and others who held a press conference at Rowe’s church Sept. 10. 

It contends that Evans never authorized six Wayne County employees to act as Deputy Sheriffs in certifying the sheriff’s deeds. In some cases, no auctions leading to the deeds were conducted. The defendants are Evans, the Wayne County Sheriff’s Department, the County Board of Commissioners, and Wayne County itself. 

“Our case is based on a hypertechnicality, but we are saying that if homeowners and taxpayers are held to the black letter of the law, public officials should be held to the same standard,” Palmore said. 

Former Wayne County Sheriff Warren Evans

“If a homeowner goes one day past the six-month redemption period to pay taxes to reclaim their home, they lose their home. There’s no gray area, no wiggle reoom. Evans ignored a provision of the law which says that he himself must authorize the deed. Allegedly, he verbally told his undersheriff to appoint six or employees to do so, but there are no written documents to that effect. He issued a written affidavit after we filed suit, but that is after the fact.” 

The lawsuit specifies that Evans did not sign or authorize appointments of Deputy Sheriff, record them with the Wayne County Clerk, issue oaths of office to the erstwhile Deputies, or post the statutory bonds required. 

In some cases, says the suit, “The Sheriff’s sale was not conducted at the time and place stated in the Sheriff’s Deed that was subsequently recorded with the Wayne County Register o Deeds.” 

Palmore said District Court judges and a bankruptcy judge have issued decisions on their side in other areas of the country, while there have also been decision to the contrary. But she said, these are non-precedental decisions. U.S. District Judge Marianne O. Battani, who is hearing the case, will have the opportunity to render her own opinion Oct. 14. 

Palmore said the county is claiming “harmless error” in the case. 

“But you can’t get to ‘harmless error’ until you get past the point of the sheriff’s deed being invalid,” she contended. “How do you unring the bell?” 

Yvonne Cross with evicted belongings two years ago

The lawsuit charges fraud, gross negligence, taking without just compensation, and civil conspiracy, among other  allegations. Under terms of the Michigan Consumers’ Act, Nicoletti said earlier, property owners may be awarded compensatory damages, including costs of loss of the home’s contents and subsequent vandalism of the homes. 

In some cases where homes have not been damaged or vandalized, Palmore said, the plaintiffs may be able to move back into their properties pending re-institution of foreclosure proceedings. 

The county filed a motion to dismiss the case in July, claiming “that plaintiffs have either (1) failed to state a claim upon which relief can be granted;(2) defendants are entitled to judgment on the pleadings; or (3) there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and defendants are entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”  Continue reading

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