Evictions of Occupy Wall St in NYC & Other Cities May Be Part of Mayors’ Coordinated Plans of Action
New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg ordered the New City Police Department to evict Occupy Wall Street participates from Zuccotti Park early this morning.
According to NBC News, “hundreds of police officers, some in riot gear, descended on Zuccotti Park after midnight Tuesday in a surprise sweep of the Occupy Wall Street headquarters.” The raid was justified by police because of what they said were health and fire hazards.
In doing so, Mayor Bloomberg made a startling statement this morning, saying that the Occupy protesters’ First Amendment rights were “not absolute,” and were trumped by the health and safety concerns of the occupation of Zuccotti Park.
New York City’s elected public advocate, Bill de Blasio responded saying, “Protecting public safety and quality of life for downtown residents, and guaranteeing free expression are not exclusive of one another. Mayor Bloomberg made a needlessly provocative and legally questionable decision to clear Zuccotti Park in the dead of night. That some media and observers were prevented from monitoring the action is deeply troubling.”
De Blasio further stated, “I know of no one – protesters included – who desires a permanent occupation of lower Manhattan. But provocations under cover of darkness only escalate tensions in a situation that calls for mediation and dialogue. I call on the Mayor to find a sustainable resolution –as other cities have done – that allows for the exercise of free speech and assembly, with respect for the rights of all New Yorkers to peaceful enjoyment of our great city.”
The New York Times is reporting some 200 arrests of protesters. Included was New York City Council Member Ydanis Rodriguez, who was arrested and charged with disorderly conduct and resisting arrest. A report had him bleeding from the head.
But, Occupy Wall St scored a short-lived victory this morning when a judge ruled that Bloomberg cannot lawfully evict protesters from Zuccotti Park and has issued a temporary restraining order against New York City. Unfortunately, a New York judge later in the day upheld the city’s dismantling of the Occupy Wall Street encampment, saying that the protesters’ first amendment rights don’t entitle them to camp out indefinitely in the plaza. Supreme Court Justice Michael Stallman denied a motion by the demonstrators seeking to be allowed back into the park with their tents and sleeping bags
As local municipalities are forcibly closing Occupy sites across the nation, extremely disturbing information is coming to light.
In an interview this morning with the BBC, Oakland Mayor Jean Quan revealed that she spoke with officials from other cities over the phone before a Monday morning raid that led to the eviction of hundreds of Occupy Oakland protesters and the arrests of many.
“I was recently on a conference call with 18 cities across the country who had the same situation,” says Quan, who goes on to claim that the movement, in her opinion, had transition from a political movement to one marred by anarchists.
Mayor Quan’s admittance that she spoke with other city leaders opens up speculation that a series of raids in recent days may have been a coordinated strategy worked out by cities around the country. Crackdowns in Albany, Denver, Salt Lake City and elsewhere in only the past few days suggest that a plan of action was developed byt the mayors of those cities and may be at the root of the mass evictions, which have been ongoing since Saturday.
Now, the Daily Kos is reporting that according to one Justice official, each of those actions was coordinated with help from Homeland Security, the FBI and other federal police agencies.
And while, here in Los Angeles, City officials have not responded in the same manner are these other cities, it was reported today that LA Police Department Chief Charlie Beck said Tuesday that protesters and officials are working on a timeline for closing down the camp.
Occupy L.A, police and city officials are scheduled to meet today. Beck said of the meeting, “I expect it will be a long one.”
On Halloween, Current TV’s Keith Olbermann named him the “The Worst Person in the World.”
In a New York Times article, his law firm is described as a “foreclosure mill” firm, meaning it represents banks and mortgage servicers as they attempt to foreclose on homeowners and evict them from their homes.
But, the truth is there are no words to describe how low this low-life individual is.
His name is Steven J. Baum and he owns one of the largest law firms representing banks in homeowner foreclosures in New York. The firm represents virtually all the giant mortgage lenders, including Citigroup, JP Morgan Chase, Bank of America and Wells Fargo.
Days before this Halloween, New York Times columnist Joe Nocera wrote a column describing the Halloween party held last year by Baum’s law firm.

For the party employees were encouraged to dress up for Halloween as homeless people, carrying bottles of booze, wearing signs that mock those who’ve been illegally evicted.
Nocera wrote that he received photographs of the party from a former law firm employee. The photos showed two Baum employees dressed up to be homeless people. One is holding a bottle of liquor. The other has a sign around her neck that reads: “3rd party squatter. I lost my home and I was never served,” which is meant to mock what they believe is “the typical excuse” of the homeowner trying to evade a foreclosure proceeding.
Another photo shows a corner of Baum’s office decorated to look like a row of foreclosed homes. Another shows a sign that reads, “Baum Estates” and is full of foreclosed houses. Most of the other pictures show either mock homeless camps or mock foreclosure signs — or both.
Earlier this month Baum’s firm agreed to pay a $2 million fine and change its practices in a settlement with the United States Attorney’s Office in New York. The fine was as a result of the firm being accused of filing misleading affidavits, mortgage assignments, and other important documents in state and federal courts.
So, as the nation’s largest banks have been committing foreclosure fraud – illegally repossessing the homes and destroying the lives of tens of thousands of Americans. And, while these big banks have helped to cause the nation’s economic crisis, gotten massive bail-outs and now report record profits, we now have scoundrels like Steven J. Baum mocking the victims.
Thus, one can only crown Steven J. Baum one of, if not the largest, royal scum-buckets in the entire universe.
Los Angeles City Council Denies Equity and Justice to Tenants
October 25, 2011 was Los Angeles’ First Annual Nonprofit Day at City Hall. In a packed City Council Chambers, Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa and the L.A. City Council spent an hour singing the praises of L.A.’s nonprofit community. Unfortunately, the pomp and circumstances presentations served as a prelude of demonstrating how much the City Council truly appreciates tenants’ rights nonprofits and the people they serve, when they then voted to saddle L.A. renters with a huge housing code enforcement fee increase.
The issue before the City Council was a Systematic Code Enforcement Program (SCEP) fee increase from $35.52 to $43.32, representing a 22% increase and a proposed Rental Unit Registration fee adjustment from $18.71 to $24.51, representing a 31% increase. The Los Angeles Housing Department (LAHD) says it needs the increase in order to prevent a deficit and to enable the Department to maintain the current operations and services of the Code Enforcement, Rent Stabilization, and Compliance Divisions.
SCEP, established in 1998, is designed to routinely inspect all residential rental properties with two or more housing units on a four-year cycle and to respond to reports of housing code violations. Inspections of 720,000 units are conducted to ensure the safety and habitability of all occupied rental dwelling units.
Tenants groups, including the Coalition for Economic Survival (CES), were on hand not to oppose the fee increase, which will help continue the crucia
l operations of the Housing Department, but to oppose the inequity of who pays the SCEP fees. Currently, landlords can pass on the full SCEP fee to tenants. The tenant groups were supporting a motion introduced by Council Members Richard Alarcón and Ed Reyes that would divide the SCEP fee payment 50/50 between landlords and tenants, similar to the Rental Unit Registration fee.
With a movement calling for economic justice spreading across our nation, with City Hall being ringed with tents filled with people demanding action, with this City Council voting to support Occupy Los Angeles which embraces these economic justice imperatives, one would think that supporting a 50/50 SCEP fee split should be a slam dunk. Sadly, this is not the case.
CES believes it is unjust for tenants, who can least afford it, to bear the full financial SCEP burden. There shouldn’t have a city policy where Social Security dependent Westlake renter Dolores Lane, having $250 left to live on after paying her rent, has to pay the full SCEP fee while multimillionaire landlord Donald Sterling pays nothing!
Everyone should be paying their fair share.
While Council Member Bernard Parks, the voice of the Apartment Association on the City Council, pushed back efforts to split the SCEP fee, he was strongly countered by Council Member Richard Alarcón who valiantly fought to gain support from his colleagues by arguing that dividing the SCEP fee will provide badly-needed balance.
However, the 50/50 fee split failed by a vote of 8 to 5 with Council Members Parks, Perry, Zine, Cardenas, Englander, Wesson, Krekorian, and Rosendahl voting to deny tenants equity and Justice, while Council Members Alarcón, Reyes, Huizar, Koretz and Garcetti voting in favor. Council Member Tom LaBonge was absent. The overall fee increases was approved on a 11 to 2 vote. And, to add insult to injury, the vote occurred without public testimony from tenants and their representatives, as well as landlords.
Contact the following L.A. City Council Members to express your disappointment in their vote to deny equity to tenants by having them to continue to pay the full and increased SCEP fee:
Paul Krekorian, District 2 (213) 473-7002 Councilmember.Krekorian@lacity.org
Dennis Zine, District 3 (213) 473-7003 Councilmember.Zine@lacity.org
Tony Cardenas, District 6 (213) 473-7006 Councilmember.Cardenas@lacity.org
Bernard Parks, District 8 (213) 473-7008 Councilmember.Parks@lacity.org
Jan Perry, District 9 (213) 473-7009 Councilmember.Perry@lacity.org
Herb Wesson, District 10 (213) 473-7010 Councilmember.Wesson@lacity.org
Bill Rosendahl, District 11 (213) 473-7011 Councilmember.Rosendahl@lacity.org
Mitchell Englander, District 12 (213) 473-7012 Councilmember.Englander@lacity.org
Contact the following L.A. City Council Members to thank them for their vote in favor of providing equity to tenants by dividing the SCEP fee:
Ed Reyes, District 1 (213) 473-7001 Councilmember.Reyes@lacity.org
Paul Koretz, District 5 (213) 473-7005 paul.koretz@lacity.org
Richard Alarcon, District 7 (213) 473-7007 Councilmember.Alarcon@lacity.org
Eric Garcetti, District 13 213) 473-7013 Councilmember.Garcetti@lacity.org
Jose Huizar, District 14 (213) 473-7014 Councilmember.Huizar@lacity.org
Wal-Mart Stores just announced it will no longer offer health insurance to new part-time U.S. employees who work fewer than 24 hours a week and will charge workers who use tobacco more for coverage.
Wal-Mart, the largest retailer in the world and the nation’s largest private employer, is also slashing the amount that it puts in employees’ healthcare expense accounts by 50 percent.
The cuts to workers healthcare benefits come after it was reported last August that Wal-Mart posted a second-quarter profit increase of 5.7 percent a net income increase of $3.8 billion.
It was also recently announced that three members of the family that owns Wal Mart, David, Christy and Jim Walton, were on the Fortune 400 list of the top 10 richest Americans, clocking in with a combined net worth of $70.4 billion.
The move is a major departure from a few years ago when the retailer, under heavy criticism for not providing health care coverage for many workers despite huge profits, expanded coverage for employees and their families.
The notoriously anti-union company had been blasted in the media for not providing coverage and, in some states, handing
employees pamphlets showing them how to apply for state subsidized health coverage for low-income workers, in effect having taxpayers pick up the tab for health insurance for those Wal-Mart employees who successfully applied for those state programs.
Wal-Mart’s plan to roll back health-care coverage for part-time workers and raise premiums for full-time employees should set off alarm bells for American workers,” said Joseph Hansen, United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW) president. “This lowering of working standards will have repercussions throughout the retail industry.”
Industry observers also say the changes could have implications for millions of other workers, as more companies on the fence could replicate its moves.
Starting next year, Wells Fargo & Co will ask employees to fund their own medical expense accounts or choose to pay higher insurance premiums and have the company fund them, following the lead of companies such as General Electric that offer account-based healthcare plans.
As the world’s largest retailer, Wal-Mart sets the industry standards for wages, benefits and corporate responsibility. By offering what amounts to poverty wages for most of its workers, Wal-Mart sets a horrible standard for all American retail workers. Wal-Mart’s average retail worker makes $8.81 per hour. This translates to annual pay of $15,576, based upon Wal-Mart’s full-time status of 34 hours per week, well below the poverty line for a family of four.
In addition, Wal-Mart passes significant costs on to the communities where it operates. Because Wal-Mart
does not provide affordable health care, many Wal-Mart workers and their families participate in publicly-funded health care and other public assistance programs. Most Wal-Mart stores also create traffic and crime problems that result in the need for more law enforcement officers. At the same time, Wal-Mart sends much of its revenue out of local communities, while local businesses keep more consumer dollars in the local economy.
It because of this and more the Los Angeles area UFCW Local 770 has been organizing a community-based campaign to get the City of Burbank to deny a proposed Wal-Mart to be built in the Empire Center.
UFCW states that a new Wal-Mart would devastate the community and would directly threaten union jobs.
Click here to get involved the stop Wal-Mart in Burbank campaign.
NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg Tells Occupy Wall St. Protesters to Be Nicer to the Banks!
There may be something funny in the water supply of the nation’s largest city. That would explain the completely ludicrous statements made by the Big Apple’s mayor. This morning, while on a local New York City radio show, New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg condemned the “Occupy Wall Street” protests, claiming that the protesters are targeting people who making “$40-50,000 a year and are struggling to make ends meet.” In reality the median salary for stockbrokers is approximately $88,000 a year.
Occupy Wall Street is the growing movement of people who are taking a stand against greed, corporate influence, gross social inequality and other disparities between rich and poor, that converged on Wall Street on Sept. 17. Since then this movement has spread to cities across the nation.
The Mayor appears to have his head in a place where the sun doesn’t shine. He completely ignores the fact that the demonstrators are not targeting the individuals who work on Wall Street, they are targeting the financial institutions and practices they represent.
Bloomberg then went on to unbelievably say people are focusing too much on the causes of the financial crisis and that we need to be nicer to the banking industry so that it starts lending again. He concluded by saying that we are “blaming the wrong people” by “blaming the banks” for the recession.
The global financial meltdown of 2008, created by these Wall Street banks and financial at a cost of over $20 trillion, resulted
in millions of people losing their homes, jobs and savings, and destroyed untold lives. Yet, not one of these financial bandits ever served one day of jail time for their crimes against America and its people. But, obviously, Bloomberg failed to mention this.
Occupy Wall Street is coming to the city you live in soon. It comes to Los Angeles tomorrow. Occupy Los Angeles will begin 10:00 am Saturday morning, October 1 at downtown’s Pershing Square where there will be a march to Los Angeles City and a rally there at 12 noon.
Pathetic GOP Prez Hopefuls Looking More Like Cast From the Wizard of Oz
While many look at the GOP presidential race as a circus and the field of candidates as a bunch of clowns But, I’m beginning to see them more as characters from the Wizard of Oz. Here’s why:
Former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney as the Tin Man
The Tin Man had no heart. A multi-millionaire, Romney has demonstrated he has no heart when workers who desperately needed work lost their jobs when a company bought
by Romney’s investment firm, Bain Capital, a Indiana office supply company and laid off all the workers.
Another example was Dade Behring Inc., a medical-testing company based in Deerfield, Illinois where Bain cut at least 1,600 jobs before the firm entered into bankruptcy in 2002. As CEO of Bain Capital, Romney profited as five of the companies under his firm’s direction went bankrupt, and thousands of workers lost their jobs.
Over objections from his neighbors, Romney wants to raze his 3,000-square-foot, $12 million vacation home in La Jolla, Calif. to build 11,000-square-foot house, quadrupling the size.
Then there was the incident at a campaign stop in Florida, where Romney, whose net worth is upwards of $250 million, joked to a group of unemployed workers that he is also unemployed.
Texas Governor Rick Perry as the Straw Man
The Straw Man had no brains. Rick Perry has been continually described as ‘Bush without the brains” and that he’s “all hat and no cattle.”
With so much to highlight regarding this cowboy, makes a hard choice what to focus on.
Remember that Perry took pride in bragging about his “crap” grades at Texas A&M. Here’s but a few examples of why he’s the Straw Man.
Perry said of George W. Bush: “Bush did an incredible job, during his presidency, defending us from freedom.”
Perry thinks he’s a tough guy because he shot an animal. “Texans, on the other hand, elect folks like me — you know the type, the kind of guy who goes jogging in the morning packing a Ruger .380 with laser sights, loaded with hollow point bullets, and shoots a coyote that is threatening his daughter’s dog,” he wrote in Fed Up.
Perry thinks being gay is like being an alcoholic. He actually said, “Even if an alcoholic is powerless over alcohol once it enters his body, he still makes a choice to drink. And, even if someone is attracted to a person of the same sex, he or she still makes a choice to engage in sexual activity with someone of the same gender.”
Perry on religion being taught in public schools, said, “I am a firm believer in intelligent design as a matter of faith and intellect, and I believe it should be presented in schools alongside the theories of evolution.”
Then there was Perry’s idiotic Social Security is “ponzi scheme” statements, saying, “It is a monstrous lie on this generation, and we can’t do that to them.”
New Jersey Governor Chris Christie as the Cowardly Lion
Christie is the newest GOP savior that right-wingers are desperately trying to convince to enter the race.
But Christie has been anything but a savior to the people of New Jersey. He balanced the state budget by putting an end to property tax rebates and slashing state aid to public schools. Christie also chose to “defer” paying $3 billion due the state’s pension fund; raided the state’s clean energy account and cut social safety net programs for seniors, the disabled, the poor and the homeless. At the same time, Christie gave corporations and the wealthiest New Jersey taxpayers substantial tax breaks.
And while many see Christie as the man with the lion roar, his reluctant response to the heavy courting he’s receiving to run for president is more in line with the cowardly lion.
Here’s some of the numerous public statements Christie has made stating that he is not running for President: “No way; Not going to happen; I’m 100% certain I’m not going to run; I don’t want to run, I don’t feel like I’m ready to run; First in your heart you’ve got to want it more than anything else, more than anything else. I don’t want it that badly; I don’t feel that in my heart that I’m ready to be president and unless I do, I don’t have any right offering myself to the people of this country. It’s much too big a job; It’s a feeling inside if your ready to take on the challenge of running and the challenge of governing. And, if you don’t feel it in your heart, you have no business running; You’ve got to feel in your heart that you are ready to walk into the Oval Office and to lead the nation and I don’t feel that I am ready; I’m not going to be the Republican candidate for President or Vice President candidate in 2012; I like the way my life is now. I like being governor. I like my family. I like the way my life is and if you run for president all of that changes. And, I just don’t want to do it; I threatened to commit suicide. I did. I said what do I have to do short of suicide to convince people that I’m not running? Apparently I actually have to commit suicide to convince people I’m not running.”
Minnesota Representative Michele Bachmann as the Wicked Witch of the West
There no shortage of statements and examples to demonstrate the epic proportions of Michele Bachmann’s lunacy and sheer ignorance.
But, last July, Bachmann spoke at an evangelical Christian church in Iowa, and offered the congregation a provocative message.
She said, “We too are at a crucial time today. And I think it is for us to remember, that if we do as Chronicles tells us, if we humble ourselves, and pray and confess our sins, and turn away from our wicked ways, and ask an almighty God to come and protect us and fight the battle for us, we know from his word, his promise is sure. He will come. He will heal our land. And we will have a new day.”
So Bachmann thinks our ways are “wicked.” The question is what ways are she referring to and what parts of the American experience would she like us to change in order to receive divine blessings or seo companies?
Thus, the part of Wicked Witch of the West seems most appropriate for Bachmann.
Corporate America as the Wizard of Oz
Pull the curtain back and you’ll find pulling the strings behind all these pathetic GOP candidates is corporate America. These are the candidates of Wall Street, the Banks, the
General Electrics and the Koch Brothers. No matter which one of them becomes the GOP nominee their sole task will be advancing policies that increase the profits of corporate America at the expense of workers, the middle class and the poor.
Thus, the morale of this story is that it is incumbent upon all of us to help pull back the curtain and expose the fraud and injustice attempting to be thrust upon Americans by becoming active and involved in efforts to organize opposition to prevent any of these dangers characters from every being able to call the White House their home.
Because as Dorothy said, “Toto, I’ve a feeling we’re not in Kansas anymore.”
Koch Brothers and Wal Mart Families Dominate Top 10 Richest Americans List
The two families that have been leading the fight to deny Americans fair wages, health care and union’s the ability to organize to secure workers’ rights, while at the same time are supporting and funding the extremist Tea Party movement, just happen to also take up half of the spots on the new Forbes 400 top 10 richest American lists.
The infamous Koch Brothers, Charles and David, are ranked 4th richest Americans with a combined net worth of $50 billion.
Following close behind are three members of the family that owns Wal Mart, David, Christy and Jim Walton, clocking in with a combined net worth of $70.4 billion.
Here are the ten richest people in America and their net worth, according to the Forbes 400.
• Bill Gates, $59 billion (software)
• Warren Buffett, $39 billion (investing)
• Larry Ellison, $33 billion (software)
• Charles Koch, $25 billion (energy)
• David Koch, $25 billion (energy)
• Christy Walton, $24.5 billion (retail)
• Jim C. Walton, $21.1 billion (retail)
• Alice Walton, $20.9 billion (retail)
• George Soros, $22 billion (investing)
• Sheldon Adelson, $21.5 billion (casinos)

Also, interesting is the fast rising fortunes of 27-year-old Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, who gained $10.6 billion to jettison him to number 14 on the list, with a net worth of $17.5 billion. Last year Zuckerberg was number 35.
You might wonder how much taxes they all paid. As the number two person on the list, Warren Buffet, has stated, likely less then their secretaries.
To Texas Governor and GOP Presidential candidate Rick Perry Social Security may be a Ponzi scheme, but the scheme he’s pulled over Texas Taxpayers to bilked them out of in excess of $294,000 is raising many eyebrows.
Perry who has no problem calling for massive cuts to Medicare, Medicaid, education and other safety net protections for the poor and middle class, appears to have used taxpayer money to subsidize family vacations, tours to promote his book and campaign events. This is according to records released by the Texas Department of Public Safety and reported in the Houston Chronicle.
The trips included the Bahamas in January for a family vacation and trips to Amsterdam, Madrid and New York by his wife Anita Perry alone under the guise of economic development.
Perry traveled to locales including New York, Washington, California and Las Vegas for events to promote his book, Fed Up!, speeches, duties related to his then-chairmanship of the Republican Governors Association and meetings with business leaders or potential supporters for his presidential bid.
Perry, who said he has no plans to reimburse the state for these expenses, explains it away by outrageously saying, “I’m going to be promoting Texas no matter where I go.” That’s as big a joke as stating his wife traveled to Europe to promote economic development.

Cal Jillson, professor of political science at Southern Methodist University, said, “Most governors have security details, and those are expensive, but one has to wonder what the security threat to a governor is, and whether they need several state policemen and black, window-tinted SUVs in order to do their business.”
But this is far from a laughing matter when this Tea Party fraud has driven his state into the economic and moral ground while
falsely claiming have created a so-called “Texas Miracle.”
This free spending cowboy can use state dollars for personal gain traveling all over the world while at the same time 4.26 million Texans live in poverty and the local government debt in Texas is over $175 billion.
Supermarket Strike Averted as Grocery Workers Standing Strong With Community Support Win Tentative Pact
A possible Southern California grocery workers strike has been averted. The United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW) has reached a tentative agreement with Ralphs,
Vons and Albertsons. The deal, which must be approved by the union’s membership, protects workers’ healthcare benefits. Union members are expected to vote on the proposal next weekend.
In a statement by the UFCW, the union said that the “agreement must still be approved by union members before it can go into effect.” But the Union and the supermarkets are happy that a possible strike has been averted.
“We have reached a tentative agreement at the bargaining table, and will present it to our members for approval later this week,” said Rick Icaza, president of the grocery workers union Local 770. “We would like to thank the federal mediator, Scot Beckenbaugh, as well as all our customers for their patience and support through this difficult process.”
Maria Elena Durazo, Executive Secretary–Treasurer of the LA County Federation of Labor confirmed the tentative agreement. “This could not have happened, first and foremost, without the willingness of rank and file grocery workers to go on strike” she stated. “It also could not have happened with the hundreds of delegations and actions done by local unions, community allies, clergy and elected officials.”
Just last night with a 7:10 pm strike deadline having passed grocery worker supporters showed up for a candlelight vigil to show community backing for the workers in front of a Pavillions market in Beverly Hills.
Talks between the grocery workers union and three supermarket chains, Ralphs, Vons (owner of Pavillions) and Albertsons continued late Sunday night, thus the actual walk out of workers, who were ready to strike at 12:01 am, was put on hold pending the outcome of the last minute negotiations talks.
Those talks appear to have succeeded in heading off a strike by 62,000 UCFW members.

Last Thursday night, unions issued a 72-hour strike notice, giving them the ability to walk out from hundreds of markets In Los Angeles, Orange and other Southern California Counties.
Union members have been working without a contract for the past 6 months, while negotiators have been attempting to reach an agreement on a new contract.
The sticking point had been healthcare benefits: how much should grocery workers pay for health insurance premiums,
provided by the supermarket chains.
Speakers at the candlelight vigil included Los Angeles County Federation of Labor Executive Secretary–Treasurer María Elena Durazo, LA City Council Member Paul Koretz, LA City Controller Wendy Greuel and California Assembly Members Felipe Fuentes and Bob Blumenfield. California Assembly Member Mike Feuer also attended the event.
United Food and Commercial Workers Local 324 president Fred Conger said, “Thanks to the unity of our members and the hard work of our negotiating team, we were successful in bargaining an agreement that grocery workers can be proud of.”
Magnificent Display of Labor/Community Unity in Support of Striking Hyatt Workers
“Hyatt workers are on strike, all day and all night!” was a chant that echoed down the world famous Sunset Strip
A cross-section of Los Angeles labor unions, as well as the Coalition for Economic Survival, rallied in front of the West Hollywood Hyatt Andaz Hotel on Sunset Strip to provide support for striking hotel workers.
The Los Angeles County Federation of Labor organized the spirited protest on September 13, 2011.

Tom Morello of Rage Against the Machine provides a drum beat to Hyatt protesters’ chants (photo by Rachel Torres)
The action was so inspiring that guitar virtuoso Tom Morello of Rage Against the Machine and fast becoming the musical voice of labor, by coincidence, was driving down Sunset when he saw the protest, pulled over and joined in the demonstration.
Hyatt hotel employees, represented by the UNITE-HERE union, in West Hollywood and three other cities launched a week-long strikes to protest work conditions.
The strike is an escalation of union efforts to move hotel giant Hyatt at the bargaining table. Many of the 3,000 striking workers have been without a contract for two years.
At the Hyatt Andaz in West Hollywood, there has been a 24/7 picket. The hotel has responded to the strike by hiring scabs, who crossed the picket line with fabric over the back windows of their cars to hide their identities, according to picketers. The scab housekeepers are being paid minimum-wage and housekeepers who remain have been imposed with dangerous workloads.
“By striking, workers are standing up for decent jobs for themselves and their families, but they are also fighting for the right to take a stand against an abusive employer that is destroying good jobs in their North American hotels. Hyatt has singled itself out as the worst employer in the hotel industry,” a union statement said.
“Injury rates for Hyatt housekeepers are high, and academic studies have shown that housekeeping can lead to debilitating injuries,” it said. “Housekeepers at some Hyatts clean as many as 30 rooms a day, nearly double what is typically required at union hotels.”
“Hyatt i
s abusing housekeepers in Los Angeles and across the country. I am on strike today–not just for a decent contract–but to fight for our right to stand up to Hyatt wherever this giant company is attacking workers,” said Cathy Youngblood, a housekeeper at Hyatt Andaz, where 100 workers walked out at 5 a.m. last Thursday.
UNITE HERE, is also asking customers to boycott 17 Hyatt-owned properties and says the company has lost about $20 million in revenue as a result.
Rousing speeches (see videos below) were given by Los Angeles County Federation of Labor Executive Secretary–Treasurer María Elena Durazo, UNITE HERE Local 11 President Tom Walsh, Hyatt Andaz Worker Cathy Youngblood, Former Beverly Hills 90210 Star and current American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (AFTRA) LA Local President Gabrielle Carteris, International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees (IATSE) Vice President Mike Miller, Teamsters Local 396 Vice President Javier Bonales and California State Senator Kevin De León.
CHECK OUT MORE PHOTOS FROM THE PROTEST – CLICK HERE
Video of the Picket Line in Front of the Andaz West Hollywood Hyatt Hotel
WATCH THE ROUSING AND INSPIRING SPEECHES
Los Angeles County Federation of Labor Executive Secretary–Treasurer María Elena Durazo
UNITE HERE Local 11 President Tom Walsh
Hyatt Andaz Houskeeper Cathy Youngblood
Former Beverly Hills 90210 Star and American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (AFTRA) LA President Gabrielle Carteris
Mike Miller, International Vice President of the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees (IATSE)
Teamsters Local 396 Vice President Javier Bonales
California State Senator Kevin De León
Calif Gov Jerry Brown Vetoes Affordable Housing Preservation Bill
Surprising many affordable housing supporters, California Governor Jerry Brown just vetoed one of the first affordable housing bills to hit his desk since
taking office at the beginning of this year. AB 1216, authored by Assembly Member Felipe Fuentes (D-Sylmar), would have given tenants and affected public entities the right to enforce provisions in state law that require owners of government assisted affordable units to entertain a purchase offer to preserve its affordability when the owner does not intend to extend or renew participation in a subsidy program.
Under current law, owners of assisted housing developments who intend not to extend or renew participation in a federal subsidy program must fulfill certain requirements. At least 12 months prior, and again six months prior, must provide to the termination of the subsidy contract or expiration of rental restrictions, the owner must provide notice of the proposed change to every affected tenant currently residing in the assisted
housing development. The owner must also provide notice at the same times to any affected public entities, such as the city or county in which the development is located, the local public housing authority, and the Department of Housing and Community Development (HCD). If the owner fails to comply, any affected tenant or affected public entity can seek injunctive relief.
Current law also requires the owner to provide an opportunity to submit an offer to purchase the development to various entities, including the tenant association and affordable housing developers and operators. The owner must provide notice of the opportunity to offer to purchase prior to or concurrent with the required notice to tenants and affected public agencies, and must also post a copy of the notice in a conspicuous place in the common area of the development.

According to the sponsor, the California Rural Legal Assistance Foundation, “HCD estimates that there are 149,000 units of privately owned, federally subsidized rental housing in California. Each year, hundreds of these units are at risk of being lost because agreements that have kept these units affordable are due to expire. As those agreements expire, owners have the option of converting the units to market-rate housing, thereby increasing rents and displacing low-income families. As a result, even as the state invests in the creation of new affordable housing for working Californians, a significant number of affordable units is disappearing through these expiring restrictions.”
Thus, the Governor’s rejection of the bill is a big disappointment to the state’s affordable housing advocate community.
In vetoing AB 1216, Governor Brown stated, “This bill would give affected tenants and public entities the right to sue owners of assisted housing developments who are ending their participation in a subsidy program.
“I strongly support preserving assisted housing units. Unfortunately, the bill fails to specify clearly the remedies available. This could lead to unnecessary litigation and delays.”
The Governor has unfortunately taken away a crucial tool to
preserving critical affordable housing. It is tenants and tenant representatives who are the ones who have the most at stake and are, likely, the ones who would take action to ensure these laws are enforced. Expanding enforcement authority to include affected tenants as well as affected public agencies is a way to ensure that there is greater compliance, thus providing more opportunities to preserve housing affordability.
Rick Perry and Michele Bachmann: Two Loons Singing the Same Tune
It’s another week and Rick Perry and Michele Bachmann, the two darlings of the extremist Tea Party, are continuing to fill the media with the most insane positions you’d ever think you’d ever hear coming out of the mouths of presidential hopefuls.

Borrowing from the old Art Linkletter TV program, these two are stars in a updated version entitled, “GOP Presidential Candidates Say the Darndest Things.”
It’s only the beginning of the week and Backmann is adding to her long list of ignorant statements that include saying the Soviet Union is on the rise, celebrating Elvis’ birthday on the day he died, placing Lexington and Concord in New Hampshire instead of Massachusetts, getting the word chutzpah wrong and pronouncing it “Choot-spa,” and saying she was proud to come from the same Iowa town as movie star John Wayne when in reality it was serial killer John Wayne Gacy.
Oh Michele, how you provide us a smile in our life and dreaded fear in our heart of the thought you can even be mentioned as a serious presidential candidate.
Starting the week off Bachmann has not disappointed. Bachmann said Hurricane Irene and last week’s earthquake in the eastern United States were a message from God that Washington needs to change its policies.
“I don’t know how much God has to do to get the attention of the politicians,” Bachmann said at a rally courting conservative and religious voters in Florida over the weekend. “We’ve had an earthquake; we’ve had a hurricane. He said, ‘Are you going to sta
rt listening to me here?’ Listen to the American people because the American people are roaring right now… They know government is on a morbid obesity diet and we’ve got to rein in the spending.”
Oh Michele, you are damn crazier then hell.
Of course being in Florida provided her the opportunity to raise the concerns of residents that one of their most treasured landmarks would be in danger under a Bachmann Administration.
Michele Bachmann said Sunday that she would consider oil and natural gas drilling in the Everglades if it can be done without harming the environment.
Bachman said the country needs to tap into all of its energy resources no matter where they exist if it can be done responsibly.
“
The United States needs to be less dependent on foreign sources of energy and more dependent upon American resourcefulness. Whether that is in the Everglades, or whether that is in the eastern Gulf region, or whether that’s in North Dakota, we need to go where the energy is,” she said. “Of course it needs to be done responsibly. If we can’t responsibly access energy in the Everglades then we shouldn’t do it.”
Bachmann, who wants to get rid of the federal Environmental Protection Agency, said she would rely on experts to determine whether drilling can be done without harming the environment. Is there any doubt that the experts she would rely on would come from those very oil companies that are drooling at a chance to drill in the Everglades?
Then there is gun-toting Texas cowboy Governor Rick Perry. Perry also has not disappointed by adding to his long list of right-wing extremist views.

Rick Perry continued his attack on Social Security over the weekend, calling it a “Ponzi scheme” and a “monstrous lie” to younger Americans who should not expect to get back their contributions upon retirement.
“It is a Ponzi scheme for these young people. The idea that they’re working and paying into Social Security today, that the current program is going to be there for them, is a lie,” Perry said, according to the Houston Chronicle.
“It is a monstrous lie on this generation, and we can’t do that to them,” Perry told a crowd at The Vine Coffeehouse in Ottumwa, Iowa.
Then Perry, who declares that climate change is a myth perpetuated by climate scientists who manipulate data to receive more money for their research, responded to the record temperatures and record drought in Texas, combined with disastrous fires that are costing the state billions of dollars, by asking supporters to pray for rain to end the “monster drought” shrinking cattle herds and killing crops.
On top of that the Associated Press is now reporting that Perry has gone back on his word to honor individual states’ rights on gay marriage. The man who famously said he has no problem with New York’s gay marriage law, has now signed a pledge to the National Organization for Marriage which states that, if elected, Perry will “send a Constitutional amendment defining marriage as the union of one man and one woman to the states for ratification, and appoint U.S. Supreme Court and federal judges who will “reject the idea our Founding Fathers inserted a right to gay marriage into our Constitution.”
Unfortunately, one thing you can be assured of with this Looney Tune cast of GOP cartoon characters is that we won’t be hearing that famous sign off, ‘That’s All Folks!”
SoCal Grocery Workers Union News Conference a Day After Receiving 90% Strike Authorization From Members
The Coalition for Economic Survival and other supporters joined grocery workers for a news conference outside a Ralphs Supermarket on the corner of Vermont Ave and 3rd St in Los Angeles’ Koreatown area on Monday August 22, 2011 a day after members provided their union with an overwhelming vote authorizing a strike.
At the news conference, Rick Icaza President of United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW), Local 770, announced that due to the strong strike authorization vote by the membership, the companies have agreed to go back to the negotiating table on August 29th.
“I think the employers were testing us as to whether or not they would give us a strike authorization,” Icaza said outside the Ralphs’ market where workers, union staffers and supporters held signs calling on the markets to improve their offer.
Union officials will take the results of a weekend vote to a federal mediator, after union members resoundingly rejected health care proposals from major supermarket chains. More than 90 percent of voters from the Southern California locals of the UFCW, which has about 62,000 members, voted against the health proposal from Vons, Ralphs and Albertsons stores and automatically authorized union officials to call a strike after 72 hours.
Union members have been working without a contract since March. Both sides announced last month that they had reached a tentative agreement on the employers’ contributions to pension benefits, but payments to
the union health care trust fund have been a major sticking point.
Union officials say the health care proposal would significantly increase out-of-pocket costs for workers who already make relatively low wages and would lead to the depletion of the fund that supports the employees’ health care benefits.
“I voted to strike because I really care about my healthcare, and I depend on my healthcare for me and my daughter, because I’m not willing to depend on taxpayers to pay for my healthcare. I want to do it on my own,” said Ralphs worker Cynthia Brambila, who has a 5-year-old daughter.
CLICK HERE TO VIEW MORE PICTURES
Video of Rabbi Jonathan Klein, Executive Director Clergy and Laity United for Economic Justice Speaking on News Conference in Support of Grocery Workers’ Demands
Los Angeles Protest in Support of Striking Verizon Workers
On August 18, 2001, loud and determined chats filled the intersection of Wilshire Blvd and Western Ave. in Los Angeles’ Koreatown.
“No more corporate greed, union jobs are what we need! Hey, hey, ho. ho, union busting has got to go! This is what democracy looks like! What’s disgusting? Union busting!”
A protest organized by the Los Angeles County Federation of Labor (Buy Here Pay Here Act), including members of the Communications Workers of America, American Federation of State, County and Municipal Workers, United Food and Commercial Workers, California
Nurses Association, Service Employees International Union, United Teacher of Los Angeles, United Auto Workers and other unions, as well as the Coalition for Economic Survival, was held outside a Verizon wireless store.
The demonstration was in support of the 45,000 Verizon Communications workers from Massachusetts to Washington, D.C., who went on strike earlier this month after negotiations broke down over a new labor contract for more than a fifth of the company’s work force.
Verizon is the nation’s largest wireless carrier. The contract that expired covers workers in the company’s wireline division, which includes local-phone operations, services for businesses and governments and long-haul wholesale traffic.
Other workers covered by the contract include 10,000 represented by the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, who serve as telephone and repair technicians, customer service representatives, operators and more.

Workers were forced to strike to stop Verizon’s Wisconsin-style attacks on the middle class, elimination of health benefits and outsourcing of good jobs.
Despite the fact that the company’s revenue rose 2.8 percent to $27.5 billion in the second quarter with its growth largely attributed to its wireless seo companies business, Verizon is refusing to bargain and is demanding that its workers add to those profits from their own pockets.
CLICK HERE TO VIEW MORE PICTURES OF THE PROTEST
VIEW VIDEO OF L.A. PROTEST IN SUPPORT OF STRIKING VERIZON WORKERS
















































