Friday, December 31, 2010

{takebacktheland.org} Support Take Back the Land TODAY!

Greetings

In 2010, the housing crisis deepened and politicians continued to serve the interests of the financial industry over the needs of people. Through it all, Take Back the Land has stood tall and fought for what we believe: elevating housing to the level of a human right and community control over land.

As 2010 comes to a close and we walk into 2011, we are asking you to financially support our work with a year end tax-deductible contribution.


In 2010, Take Back the Land made headlines across the country with our May 2010 Month of Action, featuring housing liberations and eviction defenses in numerous cities across the US, including Portland, OR; Madison, WI; Toledo, OH; New Orleans, LA; Washington, DC; and Miami, FL. 

We provide movement support- such as training, messaging and strategic campaign planning- to local organizations fighting for the human right to housing and for community control over land. We can intensify our efforts in 2011, but only with your help, so we are asking you to make a contribution today. If you make a contribution today, your gift is tax deductible for 2010. This could be your only chance to get the government to help in this fight.


So, please give generously and stay in touch at takebacktheland.org.

forward,

Max Rameau

PS
In case you missed them, here are some of the newsworthy highlights from just the second half of 2010:

Monica Adams of Take Back the Land- Madison talks about the connections between Take Back the Land and the Landless Peoples' Movement (MST) in Brazil

Take Back the Land- Rochester liberates a home in New York

Take Back the Land on Pop & Politics with Farai Chideya

--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Take Back the Land" group.
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to take-back-the-land+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com
For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/take-back-the-land?hl=en
www.takebacktheland.org takebacktheland@gmail.com

Friday, August 27, 2010

{takebacktheland.org} Five Years Later... Join KIN to demand corporate accountability

The media spotlight will yet again shine on the Gulf Coast ascommemoration events begin to unfold for the 5th anniversary of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. As the devastating impact of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill becomes clearer, we are once again reminded that corporate profiteering and government inaction continue to stand in the way of a just recovery for the Gulf and it's residents. And, yet again, Halliburton seems to be at the center of the latest preventable disaster to wreak havoc on the Gulf. 

That's why, on KIN's 5th anniversary, we're launching a corporate accountability campaign to take on Halliburton, whose greed continues to thwart efforts toward a just recovery. 
Will you join us?

The federal government has been investigating the Halliburton corporation for allegedly making millions of dollars by defrauding taxpayers and overcharging on government contracts. So, why is Halliburton continuing to profit in the Gulf Coast from taxpayer funds and getting more government contracts?

This is not just about Halliburton--- this is about good governance.Too many companies are entrusted to do important public works and simply don't deliver. It's not fair and it wastes money. But, most importantly, it's costing lives and hurting the environment.  We can't let reckless corporate profiteering continue.

Will you join our campaign and send a letter to Interior Secretary Ken Salazar, demanding that he freeze all contracts and payments to Halliburton until they are cleared of all charges? 

The Halliburton Story

The federal government continues to do business with Halliburton at the same time it's under investigation for a laundry list of charges tied to corporate greed and negligence. 

Halliburton has been accused of war profiteering by "criminally
overcharging" the US military for fuel; billing for products and
services never delivered; and delivering sub-standard services, such as contaminated water to US troops stationed in Iraq. (1)

Halliburton may also have a role in the Gulf's devastating oil spill. The company worked on the Deepwater Horizon oil well casing just 20
hours before it exploded, leaving some observers to believe Halliburton's
shoddy work is directly to blame for the explosion and subsequent spill. (2)

And the company may have figured out how to profit on the spill itself. Just 10 days prior to the explosion, Halliburton purchased Boots and Coots, the company contracted to clean up the disaster. (3)

Halliburton's already been found guilty of this kind of thievery. In 2009, Halliburton and KBR, its military contracting subsidiary, pled guilty to violating the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act and ordered to to pay a record $579 million fine (4). The previous record was $44 million (5). Halliburton was charged with bribing Nigerian officials to the tune of $132 million in order to secure a lucrative $6 billion contract from the Nigerian government.

We know that Halliburton likes to get rich by playing outside the lines. Now, they're trying to profit from a disaster they may very well have helped create. We can't let them stand in the way of a just recovery in the Gulf by stealing our money. Tell them we're watching. 

Act NOW and tell Interior Secretary Salazar to freeze all Halliburton contracts until Halliburton is cleared of wrongdoing. 

In Solidarity,

KIN Team
katrinaaction.org

Katrina 5 Year Anniversary
Join the Katrina Information Network (KIN)

--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Take Back the Land" group.
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to take-back-the-land+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com
For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/take-back-the-land?hl=en
www.takebacktheland.org takebacktheland@gmail.com

Saturday, July 10, 2010

{takebacktheland.org} ONE DC Liberates Land in Nation's Capital

VIEW FULL STORY PICTURES AND NEWS CLIPS ON TAKEBACKTHELAND.ORG
http://www.takebacktheland.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=newsstory&newsletterID=162


Metro DC police plan to evict community from Tent City on Monday July 12

Community organization ONE DC "liberated" a vacant lot in the Shaw neighborhood of Washington, DC on the afternoon of Saturday, July 10, 2010. The contentious Parcel 42, upon which Mayor Adrian Fenty promised to build affordable housing only to break the promise and sell to developers, was reclaimed by ONE DC, local residents and supporters. As of Saturday night, ONE DC and supporters are building a tent city on the land to house people. Police said they will "allow" protesters to remain "until Monday."

After starting the day with their annual block party, ONE DC upped the ante in the Shaw neighborhood, near Howard University, by marching approximately 200 people over to the corner of 7th and S Streets NW, entering Parcel 42 and building a tent city.

After denouncing Mayor Fenty for going against his promise, organizer Rosemary Ndubuizu led the crowd from the block party to the lot as member Franklin Brooks led the chants.

Following a few speeches and some celebration, DC police arrived with the special ops unit. Executive Director and police liaison Dominic Moulden asserted the right to engage in civil disobedience and won a stay from police action. The officer in charge stated that if people wanted to remain on the lot "that is fine- until Monday."

ONE DC is demanding Parcel 42 is used to build "truly affordable" housing- intended for families making under $50,000 and under $25,000 per year- in a community where such housing is badly needed. If Mayor Fenty and other officials are unwilling to build it, they argue, then the community must create such housing itself.

ONE DC is an autonomous organization which is affiliated with the Take Back the Land- Movement, a network of organizations fighting for the human right to housing.


VIEW FULL STORY PICTURES AND NEWS CLIPS ON TAKEBACKTHELAND.ORG
http://www.takebacktheland.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=newsstory&newsletterID=162


--
takebacktheland.org
takebacktheland@gmail.com
twitter.com/takebacktheland
groups.google.com/take-back-the-land

--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Take Back the Land" group.
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to take-back-the-land+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com
For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/take-back-the-land?hl=en
www.takebacktheland.org takebacktheland@gmail.com

Thursday, June 17, 2010

{takebacktheland.org} Take Back the Land- Miami Arrest Video. A MUST watch

Ashaundra Young was arrested during a Take Back the Land- Miami eviction defense of her apartment complex, 830 NW 70th St. in Miami, FL, on June 15, 2010.  After Take Back the Land member Max Rameau was arrested, Ashaundra led the protests and chants against the police. She was arrested and charged with a felony- inciting a riot- and spent the night in jail. We have secured the video of the arrest and the actions leading up to it. You must watch this shocking video.


For the rest of her life, Ashaundra Young must tell potential employers that she was arrested and charged with felony incitement to riot, an admission which will severely curtail her job opportunities. In addition, if convicted, she will lose her right to vote in Florida, due to the Florida felon disenfranchisement laws.


In the video, Ashaundra is clearly PREVENTING a riot, by calming down a young man upset by the eviction and preventing his arrest. However, because she is leading the protests, she is targeted and arrested herself. Take Back the Land considers her a political defendant and urges everyone to email and call State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle and demand they drop the charges on Ashaundra Young.

email: katherinefernandezrundle@miamisao.com
phone:305-547-0100


The Take Back the Land Movement has arranged a lawyer for Ashaundra, but we need your support- including donations, which can be made at takebacktheland.org



WATCH the video of the entire arrest and the actions leading up to that arrest at

http://www.takebacktheland.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=newsstory&newsletterID=161


See previous coverage of the protest itself, including photos, video and news stories at 

http://www.takebacktheland.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=newsstory&newsletterID=160



Take Back the Land- Miami is part of the Take Back the Land Movement, a network of organizations devoted to elevating housing to the level of a human right and gaining community control over land. The network is coordinated by the US Human Rights Network (USHRNetwork.org). Get more information at takebacktheland.org.

--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Take Back the Land" group.
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to take-back-the-land+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com
For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/take-back-the-land?hl=en
www.takebacktheland.org takebacktheland@gmail.com

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

{takebacktheland.org} 2 Arrested in Take Back the Land- Miami Eviction Defense

Two members of Take Back the Land- Miami were arrested on Tuesday, June 15th, during an action to defend a family from eviction. Max Rameau and Ashaundre Young were arrested and charged with disobeying a lawful order and starting a riot, respectively, when they refused to move so that the Miami-Dade County Sheriff could execute the eviction of a low income family and her children. Max was released almost immediately and Ashaundre is expected out in a few hours.

The action is part of a larger defense of two apartment complexes foreclosed upon by JP Morgan-Chase, through its wholly owned subsidiary, ECP Properties, Inc. ECP Properties is the toxic asset subsidiary of JP Morgan-Chase and formerly of Washington Mutual Bank.

READ THE FULL STORY, INCLUDING 2 VIDEOS AND A PHOTO SLIDE SHOW: 

http://www.takebacktheland.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=newsstory&newsletterID=160


Take Back the Land- Miami, the residents of 820 and 830 NW 70th St., Miami, FL and their neighbors, committed to defending the home from eviction. The city of Miami arrived with 6 police cars, at least one of which remained on site from 8:00am until almost 2:00pm. The Miami-Dade County Sheriff came with the eviction officer, who called for even more backup after seeing the protesters at the complex. The eviction Sheriff remained on site from approximately 10:30am until almost 2:00pm.

In spite of the arrests, residents and neighbors considered the action a success and vowed to defend the other units from eviction.

The residents identified three (3) demands: 1). Stop the Evictions; 2). Allow residents to remain; and 3) elevate housing to the level of a human right through public policy changes.

After foreclosing on the property in September 2009, JP Morgan-Chase immediately began harassing tenants into leaving the apartment complex. After the eviction, more than half of the 20 apartments are vacant and boarded up and each remaining unit is awaiting eviction.

Worse still, the tenants did not take out mortgages they could not afford- they were paying their rent on time. ECP Properties then stopped making repairs in the building and stopped crediting tenants with rent payments. Conditions worsened quickly and some tenants left on their own, while others stopped paying rent in protest.

According to the New York Times, JP Morgan-Chase has a policy of evicting tenants from foreclosed rental units instead of renting to them. Consequently, low income renters feel the brunt of the foreclosure crisis.

VIEW DOCUMENTATION OF JP MORGAN-CHASE PRACTICES OF FORECLOSURE EVICTION OF APARTMENT RENTERS AND TENANTS

In the end, the laws which favor corporate profits over human needs are immoral and must be directly challenged.

Take Back the Land- Miami is part of the Take Back the Land Movement, a national network of local organizations engaged in the struggle to elevate housing to the level of a human right and gain community control over land. The Take Back the Land Movement is coordinated by the US Human Rights Network (USHRNetwork.org). Get more information at Takebacktheland.org


READ THE FULL STORY, INCLUDING 2 VIDEOS AND A PHOTO SLIDE SHOW: 

http://www.takebacktheland.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=newsstory&newsletterID=160



--
takebacktheland.org
takebacktheland@gmail.com
twitter.com/takebacktheland
groups.google.com/take-back-the-land

--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Take Back the Land" group.
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to take-back-the-land+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com
For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/take-back-the-land?hl=en
www.takebacktheland.org takebacktheland@gmail.com

Thursday, June 03, 2010

{takebacktheland.org} Survivors Village Protester Arrested on Trumped up Charges- CORRECTION: JASPER

CORRECTION: SHARON JASPER. APOLOGIES FOR RESEND.

Photo of Sharon Jasper [http://picasaweb.google.com/lh/photo/JBp5egCKV35Z8RTPkb3ONg?feat=directlink]

Sharon Jasper, member of Survivors Village and MayDay New Orleans, was arrested by the New Orleans police, who brought the SWAT team to apprehend this elder Black woman from her home.

Ms. Sharon is being charged with assaulting a rental agent during an action organized by Survivors Village and MayDay New Orleans as part of the Take Back the Land Movement May 2010 Month of Action. On Friday, May 28th, a group entered the Columbia Parc rental office and held a sit-in demanding the right of former St. Bernard Housing Project residents to return to their homes.

SEE VIDEO OF THE PROTEST HERE- http://www.takebacktheland.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=newsstory&newsletterID=156
SEE OTHER SURVIVORS VILLAGE AND TAKE BACK THE LAND ACTIONS HERE- Takebacktheland.org

The Columbia Parc development replaced the St. Bernard Housing Project after the City of New Orleans voted to demolish the 1,500 units of public housing and replace them with market housing. The action was part of the Right to Return Weekend in New Orleans. The Right of Return Weekend was organized in conjunction with the May month of actions called by Take Back the Land Movement (TBLM). TBLM is a network of autonomous organizations affiliated with the US Human Rights Network (USHRN) dedicated to realizing the human right to adequate housing and community control over land.

Police say Ms. Sharon assaulted a Columbia Parc rental agent during her entrance into the building. The rental agent did not complain about an assault and continued to work in the office the entire time of the occupation, including when police arrived.  While there, police made no mention of an assault when explaining to the group why they should end their protest.

The truth is that the City of New Orleans did not arrest Sharon Jasper for assault, they arrested her because she dared to tell that truth and demand that public housing residents of New Orleans have the right to return to their homes. The arrest represents a clear effort by the City of New Orleans to represent the interests of the developers of the Columbia Parc while actively working against the former residents of New Orleans.

Survivors Village organizer Endesha Juakali and others are at the jail seeking Ms. Sharon's release. The Take Back the Land Movement has arranged for legal assistance for Sharon Jackson through the Center for Constitutional Rights in New York city and local New Orleans Attorneys.

The Take Back the Land Movement condemns this political motivated use of the public police in order to protect private developers from protests.

Survivors Village is protesting in front of Columbia Parc on Monday, June 7, at 12:00noon. Columbia Parc is on the 3600 block of St. Bernard Ave. in New Orleans.

Survivors Village is asking supporters to call Columbia Parc and demand 1). drop all charges against Sharon Jackson and 2). allow for the unconditional return of former St. Bernard Housing residents. Columbia Parc: (504) 284-4769, columbiaparc.com.

Video of Sharon Jasper's arrest, as well as updates on her legal situation, can be found by visiting Takebacktheland.org. Videos of the arrest are expected to be up on June 4.

--
takebacktheland.org
takebacktheland@gmail.com
twitter.com/takebacktheland
groups.google.com/take-back-the-land

--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Take Back the Land" group.
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to take-back-the-land+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com
For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/take-back-the-land?hl=en
www.takebacktheland.org takebacktheland@gmail.com

{takebacktheland.org} Survivors Village Protester Arrested on Trumped up Charges

Photo of Sharon Jackson [http://picasaweb.google.com/lh/photo/JBp5egCKV35Z8RTPkb3ONg?feat=directlink]

Sharon Jackson, member of Survivors Village and MayDay New Orleans, was arrested by the New Orleans police, who brought the SWAT team to apprehend this elder Black woman from her home.

Ms. Sharon is being charged with assaulting a rental agent during an action organized by Survivors Village and MayDay New Orleans as part of the Take Back the Land Movement May 2010 Month of Action. On Friday, May 28th, a group entered the Columbia Parc rental office and held a sit-in demanding the right of former St. Bernard Housing Project residents to return to their homes.

SEE VIDEO OF THE PROTEST HERE- http://www.takebacktheland.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=newsstory&newsletterID=156
SEE OTHER SURVIVORS VILLAGE AND TAKE BACK THE LAND ACTIONS HERE- Takebacktheland.org

The Columbia Parc development replaced the St. Bernard Housing Project after the City of New Orleans voted to demolish the 1,500 units of public housing and replace them with market housing. The action was part of the Right to Return Weekend in New Orleans. The Right of Return Weekend was organized in conjunction with the May month of actions called by Take Back the Land Movement (TBLM). TBLM is a network of autonomous organizations affiliated with the US Human Rights Network (USHRN) dedicated to realizing the human right to adequate housing and community control over land.

Police say Ms. Sharon assaulted a Columbia Parc rental agent during her entrance into the building. The rental agent did not complain about an assault and continued to work in the office the entire time of the occupation, including when police arrived.  While there, police made no mention of an assault when explaining to the group why they should end their protest.

The truth is that the City of New Orleans did not arrest Sharon Jackson for assault, they arrested her because she dared to tell that truth and demand that public housing residents of New Orleans have the right to return to their homes. The arrest represents a clear effort by the City of New Orleans to represent the interests of the developers of the Columbia Parc while actively working against the former residents of New Orleans.

Survivors Village organizer Endesha Juakali and others are at the jail seeking Ms. Sharon's release. The Take Back the Land Movement has arranged for legal assistance for Sharon Jackson through the Center for Constitutional Rights in New York city and local New Orleans Attorneys.

The Take Back the Land Movement condemns this political motivated use of the public police in order to protect private developers from protests.

Survivors Village is protesting in front of Columbia Parc on Monday, June 7, at 12:00noon. Columbia Parc is on the 3600 block of St. Bernard Ave. in New Orleans.

Survivors Village is asking supporters to call Columbia Parc and demand 1). drop all charges against Sharon Jackson and 2). allow for the unconditional return of former St. Bernard Housing residents. Columbia Parc: (504) 284-4769, columbiaparc.com.

Video of Sharon Jackson's arrest, as well as updates on her legal situation, can be found by visiting Takebacktheland.org. Videos of the arrest are expected to be up on June 4.



--
takebacktheland.org
takebacktheland@gmail.com
twitter.com/takebacktheland
groups.google.com/take-back-the-land

--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Take Back the Land" group.
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to take-back-the-land+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com
For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/take-back-the-land?hl=en
www.takebacktheland.org takebacktheland@gmail.com

Friday, May 28, 2010

{takebacktheland.org} Survivors Village Takes Over former public housing site in New Orleans!

Press Release

For immediate release

Friday, May 28th, 2010


Survivors Village Takes Over Housing Office

Mass sit in demands the Right to Return for former

St. Bernard Housing Project Residents

forcibly removed after Hurricane Katrina



Friday, May 28, 2010, 2:00pm- At approximately 1:30pm, the Survivors Village organization stormed and sat in at the offices of the Columbia Village apartments today. The complex sits on top of the land of what used to be the St. Bernard public housing complex. The complex was destroyed after Hurricane Katrina and all 1,500 families were removed. The new units are primarily market rate housing with approximately 130 set aside for public housing.


Police on the scene were attempting to decide what to do: continue to allow Survivors Village to protest or arrest them for trespassing on what is still public land. Almost 100 protesters are in the lobby. Video and pictures will be up soon on takebacktheland.org.


The protest is part of Survivor's Village Right to Return Weekend, during which the organization asserts the unconditional right of return for all public housing residents forcibly relocated by Hurricane Katrina and the subsequent public policy actions of the local and state governments.


Right to Return Weekend continues on Saturday, May 29th with a protest against land grabs and on Sunday, May 30th to demand an end to homelessness. Both action begin at 9:00am on the 3800 block of St. Bernard Ave. in St. Bernard Parish.


Survivor's Village is an autonomous organization affiliated with the Take Back the Land Movement (TBLM). TBLM is a network of local organizations dedicated to demanding people's fundamental human right to housing housing and community control over land.


For more information about Survivors Village, visit communitiesrising.wordpress.com. For more information about the Take Back the Land Movement visit takebacktheland.org.






--
takebacktheland.org
takebacktheland@gmail.com
twitter.com/takebacktheland
groups.google.com/take-back-the-land

--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Take Back the Land" group.
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to take-back-the-land+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com
For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/take-back-the-land?hl=en
www.takebacktheland.org takebacktheland@gmail.com

{takebacktheland.org} Take Back the Land hits New Orleans

The Take Back the Land Movement May 2010 Month of Action to Elevate Housing to the Level of a Human Right kicked off on May 1st with Right 2 Survive in Portland, OR and will conclude with a bang as Survivor's Village hosts the Right to Return Weekend in New Orleans, LA.

The Right to Return Weekend was established to demand the unconditional right to come home for all former residents of public housing, many of whom were forced from their homes by Hurricane Katrina, while others were forced by cruel public policies and the economic forces of gentrification.

Survivor's Village is organizing three days of action, including:

Day 1: Saturday, May 28th • 12:00noon
Right to Return Rally & Protest
All former residents of public housing have an unconditional right to come home!
LET THE PEOPLE IN!
3800 St. Bernard Ave.

Day 2: Saturday, May 29th • 9:00am
Action against land grabs by developers & crooks!!
All vacant land should be developed by the community for the community
Our Communities Our Responsibility
3800 St. Bernard Ave.

Day 3: Sunday, May 30th • 9:00am
Action to fight against the problem of homelessness 60,000 vacant buildings, 20,000 people homeless
END HOMELESSNESS NOW!
3800 Block of St. Bernard Ave.

Survivors Village is affiliated with the national TAKE BACK THE LAND MOVEMENT

Right to Return Weekend co-sponsored by MAYDAY NEW ORLEANS

Get more information about Survivors Village at communitiesrising.wordpress.com

Get more information and ongoing updates about the action at takebacktheland.org.

--
takebacktheland.org
takebacktheland@gmail.com
twitter.com/takebacktheland
groups.google.com/take-back-the-land

--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Take Back the Land" group.
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to take-back-the-land+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com
For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/take-back-the-land?hl=en
www.takebacktheland.org takebacktheland@gmail.com

Thursday, May 20, 2010

{takebacktheland.org} FUREE in the NY Times: Subsidize Housing not Hotels

The May 2010 Month of Action is on in New York City.


Read the Full story at Takebacktheland.org or http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/05/20/with-sheraton-downtown-brooklyns-makeover-continues/


"What we're saying is, in the middle of an affordable housing crisis, stop bailing out hotels and major development and start focusing on low-income and working-class families in this country."

- FUREE executive director Valery Jean in the New York Times.


Chanting "Housing, not Hotels," members of Families United for Racial and Economic Equality (FUREE) crashed the fancy grand opening of the Sheraton Hotel Brooklyn on Thursday, May 20. The 321 room hotel was feted with a food, elected officials and media, but not many local residents.  


"If the city of New York has money to subsidize wealthy corporation like Sheraton to build luxury hotel rooms during a recession, they should have money to build housing that is affordable to residents of Brooklyn," argued Diana Smith, Board Secretary of FUREE.


Members and other residents continued the protest even after the Sheraton called in the police. The action is part of FUREE's "Take Back our CommUNITY" campaign for community control over land and housing.


Dignitaries at the ribbon cutting included Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz and Downtown Brooklyn Partnership president Joe Chan, among others. FUREE members, however, were not as happy as the Sheraton Hotel corporation to see the dignitaries.


"Joe Chan and other politicians are taking buildings that people live in, destroying them and making big condos and hotels that no one can afford," complained 19 year old FUREE youth leader and Brooklyn resident Elvin Paulino. "We are mad, so we are recruiting new members and are going to take down these politicians and developers with whatever we can."


Founded in 2001, FUREE is a Brooklyn-based, membership led multi-racial organization of more than 500 families that organizes low-income and working families to promote equality, improve economic conditions, and build collective power to win systemic changes at the local, state and national level.  Primarily led by women of color with an emphasis on community and family, FUREE uses direct action, leadership development, community organizing, and political education to achieve our vision and goals.


FUREE will host its annual convention on Saturday, May 22 at PS 67, located at 51 Edwards St. (between Myrtle Ave. & Tillary St.) in Brooklyn beginning at 12 noon. For more information, visit to FUREE.org, call 718-852-2960 or email info@furee.org.


FUREE is an autonomous organization which is also part of the Take Back the Land Movement. This action is part of the may 2010 National Month of Action to demand the human right to housing called for by the Take Back the Land Movement (takebacktheland.org), which is supported by the US Human Rights Network (USHRNetwork.org).


Read the Full story at Takebacktheland.org or http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/05/20/with-sheraton-downtown-brooklyns-makeover-continues/

--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Take Back the Land" group.
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to take-back-the-land+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com
For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/take-back-the-land?hl=en
www.takebacktheland.org takebacktheland@gmail.com

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

{takebacktheland.org} 'If this isn’t neighborhood revitalization, I don’t know what is'- Desiree Wilson

As part of the Take Back the Land Movement May 2010 Month of Action, Operation Welcome Home (OWH) hosted an open house celebration on May 10, 2010, and introduced the world to Desiree Wilson, an after-school program assistant supervisor. OWH spared this mother of two and her family from homelessness by moving them into a long abandoned foreclosed home on the westside of Madison, WI. OWH organizer Z! Haukeness said it well: "It's unjust and immoral that there's homeless people on one side of the street and empty buildings on the other side of the street." 

Desiree Wilson said it best: "If this isn't neighborhood revitalization, I don't know what is."

Operation Welcome Home is asking police and local officials to refrain from evicting the Wilson family and, instead, work with them on finding real solutions to this extreme housing crisis. They also ask that instead of the scheduled May 18th foreclosure sale, the property be handed over to a community land trust for the benefit of the community.

See the story, photos and video here: http://www.takebacktheland.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=newsstory&newsletterID=142

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e5dEKDRD_FA

On the 50th anniversary of the first civil rights era "sit-ins," this "live-in" is a part of the Take Back the Land Movement May 2010 National Month of Action, where local community organizations "liberate" vacant homes or defend families from eviction, all in pursuit of elevating housing to the level of a human right.

May 2010 has already been a busy month, with actions including:

  • The Toledo Foreclosure Defense League made national news as they helped Keith Sadler resist eviction before the SWAT team raided the home. There were no injuries and the Stony Ridge 7 are charged with 2 misdemeanors each. Story and video: takebacktheland.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=newstory&newsid=143

  • In Philadelphia, PA the Poor People's Economic Human Rights Campaign liberated a vacant city owned house and moved in a family.

  • In Sacramento, CA a small faith based group continued their good works by moving two families into foreclosed homes in May.

Additional actions are planned for New York City, Boston, MA, Washington, DC, St. Petersburg, FL, New Orleans, LA and other locations.

The Take Back the Land Movement networks local organizations engaged in housing is a human right work. The Movement is supported with staff and technical assistance by the US Human Rights Network (USHRNetwork.org) and strategic partners the Ruckus Society (www.ruckus.org) and the Center for Constitutional Rights (www.ccrjustice.org). The network includes over a dozen organizations, including the Poor People's Economic Human Rights Campaign (www.economichumanrights.org). We urge you to join and support this movement.

What Can You Do?

  • Have your organization join the movement. Go to takebacktheland.org and join a growing movement for community control over land and housing as a human right.
  • Support the Take Back the Land Movement. Log in and sign the online petition to demonstrate broad support for the movement. Make a financial contribution to defray costs associated with training and support. Both can happen from takebacktheland.org.
  • Write, blog, tweet and re-post stories about the May 2010 Month of Action. Make sure people know about what is going on and grow the story and the movement.
  • The most important thing you can do is to be an active member of an organization fighting to elevate housing to the level of a human right. Find your local organization and ask them to join the struggle. If there are none in your area, start a new organization.

A movement is growing to elevate housing to the level of a human right, in our lifetime. Join the movement to Take Back the Land.


Community control over land!

Housing is a human right!


-- 

takebacktheland.org
takebacktheland@gmail.com
twitter.com/takebacktheland
groups.google.com/take-back-the-land

--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Take Back the Land" group.
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to take-back-the-land+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com
For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/take-back-the-land?hl=en
www.takebacktheland.org takebacktheland@gmail.com

Friday, May 07, 2010

{takebacktheland.org} NEW POLICE RAID ON SADLER / TFDL HOME

At 6:30AM Woods County Police arrived at the home of Keith Sadler to attempt to evict him and the 4 others sealed inside.

The Toledo Foreclosure Defense League is helping defend Keith Sadler from foreclosure related eviction. Sadler and supporters have been sealed in Sadler's Toledo area home since Sunday in order to defend against eviction. The action is supported by the Take Back the Land Movement and is part of the May 2010 Month of Action, with similar actions taking place in a dozen US cities.

The Take Back the Land Movement calls on people to immediately call the Wood County Sheriff at 419-354-9001 and demand an end to the raid of the Sadler Home.

Regular updates and previous coverage can be found at takebacktheland.org.



--
takebacktheland.org
takebacktheland@gmail.com
twitter.com/takebacktheland
groups.google.com/take-back-the-land

--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Take Back the Land" group.
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to take-back-the-land+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com
For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/take-back-the-land?hl=en
www.takebacktheland.org takebacktheland@gmail.com

Wednesday, May 05, 2010

{takebacktheland.org} Police attempt to swarm Toledo FDL Home- May 5

At approximately 1:00EST, the Wood County Sherrif's department swarmed the property of Keith Sadler, shutting off the power and threatening arrests before media cameras showed. Just as quickly, police moved out. The presence, quick thinking and plan of the Toledo Foreclosure League (TFDL) successfully defended the Sadler home from eviction. No arrests were made, but as they pulled out, police announced they would be back.

Get the full story and the first pictures from takebacktheland.org. Additional picture updates, and possibly video, are coming soon.

The Toledo Foreclosure Defense League (TFDL) has been defending the home of Keith Sadler from foreclosure related eviction. Sadler and supporters sealed themselves in the home in order to prevent eviction, which was scheduled for May 3. Police refused to execute the eviction as the TFDL held a press conference and media awaited the police. This story has made national news in hundreds of newspapers and tv newscasts. The TFDL is supported by the Take Back the Land Movement and this defense is a part of the May 2010 National Month of Action.

The Take Back the Land Movement re-asserts support for the TFDL and the valiant struggle for housing as a human right by defending families from eviction.

We call on people to immediately call the Wood County Sherrif at 419-354-9001 and demand an end to the raid of the Sadler Home.

The TFDL is an autonomous organization which is also a part of the Take Back the Land Movement. The action is part of the May 2010 National Month of Action to demand the human right to housing, called for by the Take Back the Land Movement (takebacktheland.org). The Take Back the Land Movement is provided staff and technical support by the US Human Rights Network (USHRNetwork.org). The May Month of actions are expected in at least twelve (12) US cities and include housing takeovers and the defense of families facing eviction. The Movement is comprised of dozens of organizations and partners, notably the Poor People's Economic Human Rights Campaign (PPEHRC- economichumanrights.org).  

Defending the fundamental human right to housing is challenging work and cannot be done without resources. Please visit takebacktheland.org or the ushrnetwork.org and donate generously today.

forward,


Max Rameau

--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Take Back the Land" group.
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to take-back-the-land+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com
For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/take-back-the-land?hl=en
www.takebacktheland.org takebacktheland@gmail.com

Monday, May 03, 2010

{takebacktheland.org} TBtL by Max Rameau at Sankofa Books Friday May 7 at 6PM

After banks get billions in bailout money and families suffer from the housing crisis, thousands of foreclosures and new condos sit vacant. What are communities doing about it?

ONE DC and Empower DC invite you to the Take Back the Land Movement: a presentation by Max Rameau. The event includes presentations by ONE DC and Empower DC followed by a presentation and book signing by Max Rameau of Take Back the Land. The event is scheduled for Friday, May 7, 2010 at the Sankofa Bookstore, 2714 Georgia Ave., Washington, DC and begins at 6:00PM.

The TBtL is a network of organizations devoted to community control of land and elevating housing to the level of a human right. In pursuit of these objectives, TBtL is coordinating a May 2010 Month of Action in which organizations "liberate" vacant government owned and foreclosed homes and move families into them or defend families from eviction in the first place. Successful actions have already taken place in Portland, OR and Toledo, OH (see Takebacktheland.org for details) and more are planned in Boston, New York, Philadelphia, New Orleans, Chicago, Madison, WI and Washington, DC. TBtL is supports both ONE DC and Empower DC.

Max Rameau is a part of the Take Back the Land Movement, whose work has been featured in the New York Times, Washington Post, Associate Press, USA Today, CNN, ABC News, Democracy NOW! and the latest Michael Moore movie, Capitalism: A Love Story. He will talk about and sign his book Take Back the Land: Land, Gentrification and the Umoja Village Shantytown. This is Max's second book signing at Sankofa Bookstore.

This event is free and open to the public. For more information, visit takebacktheland.org or http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=107632045947324

ONE DC: onedconline.org
Empower DC: empowerdc.org


--
takebacktheland.org
takebacktheland@gmail.com
twitter.com/takebacktheland
groups.google.com/take-back-the-land

--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Take Back the Land" group.
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to take-back-the-land+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com
For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/take-back-the-land?hl=en
www.takebacktheland.org takebacktheland@gmail.com

Monday, April 05, 2010

Google Groups: You've been added to Take Back the Land

May 2010 Month of Action to Take Back the Land

See this article at www.takebacktheland.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=newsstory&newsletterID=90

The housing bust and faulty government policies have immersed the United States in a full blown economic and housing crisis. The cruel irony of this crisis, and what makes it so profoundly immoral, is that the commodity at its root- housing- is not at all in scarcity. To the contrary, sufficient vacant housing stocks exist to accommodate virtually everyone in need, including families forced into overcrowded and substandard conditions as well as the homeless.

In the face of this severe economic crisis, people are rising up. They rail against the bailouts and bonuses, protest the lack of lending, rebel against unfair credit card rate hikes and, most dramatically, fight back against losing their homes.

The Take Back the Land Movement is calling for a May 2010 National Month of Action to assert the fundamental human right to housing and community control over land. Participating organizations, communities and families are asserting this right in two ways: by "liberating" government, foreclosed and warehoused homes, making them available for families with nowhere else to live, and by protecting families, our neighbors, from foreclosure related evictions from houses, apartments and condos as well as income related evictions from public housing.

Every family, indeed every human being, needs and deserves decent and adequate housing that they can afford, regardless of their income. However, instead of facilitating this need, federal, state and municipal governments are instituting policies and enacting legislation protecting the profits of corporations at the expense and exclusion of families. These policies serve only to compound, rather than end, the crisis. For example, the same financial institutions which caused the crisis, are both bailed out for their "toxic assets," and allowed to evict families and keep those assets vacant. In addition, federal and local governments are actively vacating, boarding up and demolishing public housing and underfunding rent subsidy programs in order to free up monies for bank bailouts and sports facilities.

This series of policies and laws not only allow human beings to live on the street while hundreds of thousands of houses sit vacant, but the bailouts effectively compel struggling families to finance their own evictions and then subsidize hefty bonuses to the executives evicting them.

In the context of a severe housing crisis, policies and laws which impede the human right to housing are morally indefensible and, as such, must be directly challenged until they are changed. The May Month of Action will challenge those laws which prioritize corporate profits over human needs. This is an historic crisis, one which merits an historic response.

On February 1, 1960, four North Carolina A&T students sat-in at a Greensboro Woolworths lunch counter and stepped into history, sparking a movement and changing this society forever. The "sit-in" campaigns were predicated on the notion that legal equality was a human right and, as such, laws violating those rights were morally wrong, and, therefore, must be directly challenged- and broken- in order to be changed.

Inspired by the 50th anniversary of the first sit-ins, the Take Back the Land Movement asserts that housing is a human right and, as such, the policies which violate that right are morally wrong and, therefore, must be directly challenged. As such, this May, organizations across the US are engaging in "live-in" campaigns designed to house human beings and directly challenge those policies and laws that promote vacant housing during this housing crisis.

Civil disobedience campaigns directly challenge unjust laws by breaking them until they change. The Take Back the Land Movement and the live-in campaigns, however, encompass more than merely disobeying immoral laws: it is fundamentally about empowering communities to take control of their land and implementing the moral imperative of housing human beings. More than simple civil disobedience, the live-in campaign is, in fact, a movement of moral obedience.

Organizations in no less than ten (10) US cities will help their family, friends and neighbors "live-in" vacant government owned or foreclosed homes, buildings or land by either moving them in or preventing their eviction. Organizations in cities like Boston, New York, Philadelphia and Washington, DC, will be joined by others in Chicago, Miami, Sacramento and New Orleans. Smaller cities include Toledo, Ohio, Madison, Wisconsin, St. Petersburg, Florida and Portland, Oregon.

Of course, no social justice movement has ever been won in a single month or by utilizing a single tactic or strategy. As such, May 2010 is not the totality, but rather the dawn of a movement whose aims are to elevate housing to the level of a human right and to win community control over land.

The solution to the housing crisis lies in your community, even on your block, and in your hands. The time has come to Take Back the Land.


forward,


Max Rameau


See this article at www.takebacktheland.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=newsstory&newsletterID=90


--
takebacktheland.org
takebacktheland@gmail.com
twitter.com/takebacktheland
groups.google.com/take-back-the-land

Monday, March 01, 2010

Take Back the Land in South Africa

Take Back the Land is going to South Africa.

As a part of building our national Take Back the Land Movement, we asked the famed Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR- ccrjustice.org) to act as our legal Strategic Partner. As part of that responsibility, CCR invited me to join them on a trip to South Africa to research learn from organizations engaged in anti-eviction and land reform work.

This trip is particularly exciting for me both because of my Pan-African ideological perspective and because the Western Cape Anti-Eviction Campaign is one of the two organizations Take Back the Land Miami is modeled after (the other one is the MST in Brazil).

Our party of five will spend three days in Cape Town with the Anti-Eviction Campaign and Abahlali baseMjondolo (ABM) and three days in Durban with ABM. CCR will examine legal issues and responses there as well as look at how legal organizations provide support to social justice movements. For Take Back the Land, this trip has four (4) objectives:

Build an International Movement. We seek to realize housing as a human right for every person on this planet. As such, we seek to establish formal relationships with organizations fighting for those rights, thereby building an international movement for community control over land and housing as a human right.

Campaign Modeling. The WCAEC and ABM have executed mass campaigns to stop bulldozers and evictions. We in the US have much to learn from our sisters and brothers across the globe.

Network Modeling. South Africans have built a national anti-eviction and land reform movement. Take Back the Land strives to learn from their model and replicate their successes.

For the next week, I will post, email, blog, facebook, buzz and tweet from South Africa to share the experiences of Take Back the Land and the Center for Constitutional Rights.

This email is being sent from the airport in Johannesburg, South Africa.


Forward,


Max Rameau

www.takebacktheland.org

takebacktheland.blogspot.com

facebook.com/maxrameau

twitter.com/takebacktheland

google.com/profiles/takebacktheland

groups.google.com/group/take-back-the-land



--
takebacktheland.org
takebacktheland@gmail.com
twitter.com/takebacktheland
groups.google.com/take-back-the-land