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 Joined: 15 Feb 2005
 Posts: 441
 
 
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				|  Posted: Sat Jan 07, 2006 9:51 pm    Post subject: Dozers In The 9th Ward |   |   
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				| Friday, January 6, 2006 at 1:00pm 
 Federal Building
 
 450 Golden Gate Ave.
 
 San Francisco
 
 
 
 Emergency Action in SF Federal Building Friday 1pm-
 
 Stop Bulldozing 9th Ward in New Orleans!
 
 
 
 
 
 Please forward, call and COME!
 
 
 
 Emergency Action!!! City of New Orleans is bulldozing
 
 people’s homes in the 9th Ward in New Orleans!
 
 
 
 
 
 Contacts:
 
 Kali Aaron Williams, Malcolm X Grassroots
 
 Organization: (510) 593-3956
 
 Lisa Milos, Bay to Gulf People’s Pipeline: (415)
 
 260-2565
 
 CC Campbell-Rock, Hurricane Evacuees Council of the
 
 Bay Area: (925) 339-6435
 
 
 
 Press Release
 
 
 
 The city of New Orleans is attempting to destroy the
 
 homes of residents in the Lower 9th Ward. This is in
 
 spite of a temporary moratorium won by social justice
 
 groups against the city which blocks attempts to
 
 bulldoze the homes of Lower 9th Ward residents. The
 
 moratorium, which ends on January 6th, 2006, is being
 
 circumvented by the city through the unconstitutional
 
 use of eminent domain. Local residents are working
 
 alongside Common Ground Collective, and the People’s
 
 Hurricane Relief Fund, a network of grass-roots
 
 organizations working for the rights of displaced and
 
 neglected victims of Hurricane Katrina, and are
 
 protesting the action and calling on citizens
 
 everywhere to get involved.
 
 
 
 The people of San Francisco call on ou! r government
 
 representatives to vehemently oppose and denounce this
 
 action by the City of New Orleans.
 
 
 
 This action by the City of New Orleans sets a
 
 dangerous precedent for all low income communities of
 
 color across the country, especially for cities and
 
 regions that are prone to natural disasters, such as
 
 the San Francisco Bay Area.
 
 
 
 Homeowners of the historically Black, working-class
 
 Lower Ninth Ward neighborhood have not been notified
 
 or consulted about the plans for their neighborhood,
 
 and the city has indicated it has no intention of
 
 contacting owners before demolition. “No one is asking
 
 the residents anything about reconstruction. We’re
 
 being thrown to the side,” said Vera McFadden, a Lower
 
 Ninth Ward tenant.
 
 
 
 Common Ground and the People’s Hurricane Relief Fund
 
 are currently fighting to have City, State, and
 
 Federal Government extend the same courtesy and aid to
 
 Ninth Ward residents that has been provided to
 
 property owners in the predominantly white St.
 
 Bernard's Parish. The residents of St.Bernard Parish
 
 (which is less than two miles away and damaged just as
 
 badly) are being afforded FEMA trailers and the
 
 freedom to decide what happens to their private
 
 property while the private properties of the
 
 predominantly black Lower 9th residents are being
 
 illegally bulldozed.
 
 
 
 Social Justice and Peace organizations throughout the
 
 Bay Area denounce the destruction of the homes in this
 
 predominantly African American neighborhood in New
 
 Orleans.
 
 
 
 As if it weren’t enough that the local, state and
 
 federal governments abdicated their responsability of
 
 adequately funding and securing the levee system to
 
 prevent such a disaster in the first place, hundreds
 
 of thousands of evacuees re! main stranded in the four
 
 corners of this country without the resources to
 
 return to defend their homes and belongings.
 
 
 
 As if it weren’t enough that the local, state and
 
 federal governments did not put into practice any
 
 semblance of a coordinated evacuation plan for the
 
 thousands of residents who had no independent means to
 
 evacuate prior to the disaster, thousands of evacuees
 
 will begin facing evictions from their hotels by
 
 February 7th.
 
 
 
 As if these and countless other documented cases of
 
 human rights violations perpetrated against the people
 
 o! f New Orleans during and after the flooding, the
 
 City of New Orleans is using eminent domain to violate
 
 the civil and property rights of predominantly African
 
 American and low income residents.
 
 
 
 The only way that low income communities of color
 
 throughout the Bay Area will feel secure that we will
 
 not share the same fate in the event of a disaster is
 
 if our elected representatives publically denounce
 
 these actions by the City of New Orleans, publically
 
 support the civil and property rights of the people of
 
 the Lower Ninth Ward and do everything within their
 
 power to stop this dangerous precedent from taking
 
 place.
 
 
 
 For more information about Common Ground:
 
 www.commongroundrelief.org.
 
 Phone: (504) 218-6613
 
 For more information about Peoples Hurricane Relief
 
 Fund: www.communitylaborunited.net. Phone:
 
 (88
  310-7473 |  |