Sunday, November 6, 2011

Leave the tents where they are

Leave the tents where they are.

Whatever Occupy Oakland and the City have in their future it should not include the removal of the tents from the plaza at City Hall. 

My view is that as important as we in Oakland see ourselves, we are only a small part of a nation wide, world wide event.  Oakland should now just get used to it happening; it is not going to go away because we shoo it off our front lawn.  We can now become the place where the local government was able to get along with the protest and get ourselves off the list of cities where the local police acts like big business Pinkertons. 

Let's start with the City side of the equation.

Our city Administrator has put a one million dollar cost estimate on the table for what Occupy has cost the city. A good 3/4 of that money is really the cost of mishandling the whole thing.  Most of it was the cost to attack an illegal camp site with a riot squad and the aftermath.  

Now that we have spent a million dollars to run in a circle and damage public relations inside of Oakland while damaging our reputation outside of Oakland, do we want to do it again?   All other options cost less and have a better public relations value for this city. 

There are some practical things that need to happen and all the points on the Administrator's list do have to be dealt with, this time with some leadership.  The food kitchen needs to keep meeting fire and health regulations.  We already have had some unions paying for toilets.  With some commitment from the city we could get the Teamsters to bring their food truck back or something like that by someone like that.  We had over 35,000 people out in the street supporting Occupy on Wednesday.  A city that promised to stop tear gassing campers could hit up a lot of those people for support.  Kaiser could be asked to act like the local town company that they are.  So could some of the paramedics and so on.  Other arraignments’ need to be made for fire safety among the tents.  That includes a curb on the electric chords and some place to safely use electricity.  Occupy Oakland has already done a lot to deal with every one of the public safety and sanitation issues and the city can and should continue to help.

In the end, if we deal with Occupy Oakland better than the other cities by showing our civilization, we will make our entire city look good.  That goes for the Mayor and council, the police and includes those who do not agree with the 99% view.  This is what we showed on the day of the General Strike and we can show it on any day.

This is the nature of Oakland.  We are used to a lot of different people here. 

On the Occupy side of the equation.

After the turnout for the general strike it is very clear that Occupy Oakland reflects deep seated views of a major section of our people, especially here in Oakland.  The reason we had over 35,000 people turn out on Wednesday is because they already agreed with the Occupy Wall Street message.  We have to be respectful of this public support.  If we can stay in front of City Hall, if we have toilets, if the supply tents are brimming with sleeping bags and food for the people, it is because this movement has wide popular support.  Occupy stands for many thousands of people who do not make it to the plaza and needs to own up to presenting an honorable face for all of us. 

We are all public relations ambassadors now. 

We are very lucky that the bad reputation for sending the riot squad against our first campsite fell mostly on the backs of the city government and the police.   We then held a peaceful protest of thousands in civil strike action with no police present.  The trick right now is to preserve the good reputation that we have started.

With the duty to act responsibly because we represent so many, also comes to duty to keep acting because we now have the job of keeping the heat of this message alive.  Six weeks ago we were listening to Tea Party and other Republicans stumble over each other to show how pro big business, anti-tax and anti-Mexican they can be.  The side show was running a pool on how much Obama would give them, and how fast. 

Now the public political discourse is talking about the real problems our country has.  The problems of income inequality, tax inequality and bailout inequality are front and center thanks to Occupy movements across the USA. 

We need that tent city to message the people that we are not going away. Those who support us and those who should support us will only be helped by a strong, imaginative and active Occupy movement over this winter.  We need to reach out more, we need to push harder on the things that all people can do to help out, such as move your money away from the banks, and we need to show that we are going to stay put in out tents. 

And the local business community needs to see the light. 

Oakland local businesses did not wreck the world’s economy and we did not have anything to do with a bailout for the banks that did nothing to help the common folk get through the recession.  

I say this as both an Occupy supporter and a local small business owner.  I am not the only small business owner in support of Occupy either.  I am also a member of the local Chamber of Commerce and I am sorry Joe, but I just do not believe your claim that the local businesses are down 40%.  Most of the local businesses are not even in the kind of business that would be affected one way or another by this protest.  

So why not just make money?  There are more people downtown and every store, coffee shop and restaurant should be making some money off of this.  I do not know why Tully’s and some of the others in the plaza do not stay open later and just sell what they always sell.  

Dialog is also key.  If some businesses are disturbed by this protest, go down to the General Assembly and tell people about it.  Maybe we could set up some green tape zone to keep business entryways clear.  Maybe we could make sure people know that you are open and that everyone is welcome. 

But does any business owner thinks life for local Oakland business will get better from a second police crackdown, this time with three times the average size of the protest? 

Oakland business can thrive with Occupy Oakland just like it does with Art and Soul or anything else that brings a crowd downtown.  They will especially be able to thrive if they feel that there is not going to be another battle with the police. 

And this would be best for the police.  

The Oakland Police Department will find that their public relations with people in the plaza will be vastly improved by a promise from the Mayor not to gas and arrest everyone and destroy their tents.  The police can calmly return to providing protection and assistance to everyone in the area, protestors, local businesses and neighboring residents and office workers.  There is no small amount of healing necessary in the relationship between the police and our various local communities.  The best thing to do is start now by providing security for everyone.  

Once we have decided that Occupy Oakland and the local Oakland community and government are going to accommodate one another, our community can be in peace. 

Saturday, November 5, 2011

The Oakland Police are confused?

The Oakland Police are confused.  

That is according to themselves, as represented by their own police officers association. 
In their open letter to the public they said many things.  Many of them had some serious assumptions including about how “past protests have turned into riots” but the worst assumption of all came in one single line:

Is it the City’s intention to have City employees on both sides of a skirmish line?

This is supposing that there is a skirmish line and that the police are on only one side of it.  Here we may be getting closer to the root of the problem.  Have they totally lost perspective on the fact that protesting is one of our basic rights and that the police are supposed to protect us doing it?  If they have lost sight of that, if they were ever not confused on this part of their job, then let’s point it out to them right now.  The Oakland Police are our highest paid public workers and the Oakland Police Department is our most expensive City Hall expense outside of Redevelopment.  We pay a lot, trust a lot more, license them to carry guns in public in our name and we should expect better.  

Oakland has been ridiculed on national television for attacking a campsite with a full on riot squad.  In our city where we have a weekly tailgate party at the Raider’s games that displays all the problems Occupy Oakland is accused of.  The Daily Show made some excellent jokes at our expense and many people stood in city hall and made it clear that all the problems shown in the Plaza were in the plaza before the protest, at any Raider’s game and are in the neighborhoods on any day.  The comparison with our football tailgaters is a just one.  We expect the police to deal with the people getting out of hand.  We expect them to protect all the others, no matter how bizarre they may be.  We expect the police to treat people as gently and respectfully as possible.  We expect them to expect the obvious and be proactive.  We do not allow them to violently overreact to fans who have only committed minor infractions and are not a danger to others.  As professional police officers we expect them to understand this fine line and make it work.  They should know the difference, see the difference and act accordingly.  That is their job.  They are supposed to protect us doing what is legal.  

The police officer’s union has some legitimate complaints with management.  We all should have some complaints with both the political management and the police management of these situations.  

Start with the mayor.
I am among the people who are amazed at what she allowed to happen.  If you are going to order the plaza cleared, well you should at least be here to lead that, supervise that and take responsibility for that.   I have a lot of respect for Ms. Quan, but this was a lack of leadership and very poor judgment.  She should know better about handling protests and she should know better about how our local police do things.  She does know better.  She should tell us why she did what she did.  It is about the only thing that will save her from a recall at this point.  

But do not forget the City Administrator. 
Her description to the special session of Council on Thursday Nov. 4th was full display of a CYA bureaucrat doing the CYA.  Like so many in our US public life, she gave us a college 5 part essay, poorly written, on how she had done everything the best that could be done and how it was all the protester’s fault.  She had a smug litany of excuses, the dog ate my lunch, the dog bit the journalist, there was nothing to be done but shoot the dog… never did we hear a word of regret or responsibly for the disastrous results of having ordered the police to disperse the camp by force.  

Missing, like a gaping broken window on Broadway, is the fact that they did not try to communicate WITH the protesters; they only wanted to dictate TO them.  At one point she sounded like a cynical lawyer stretching a point saying that City memos, were on the internet, which was good enough because so many of those young people are tech savvy.  At no point did they ever offer to dialog with the protestors really.  It was all about permits and compliance, nothing to do with earning some trust from the people in the square.  It was about her representative getting permission to speak and not about having the courage to stand out there and demand to be heard.  

That is what I did, and if I can do it, anybody could have done it.  

There were problems with the first camp.  Those problems were being addressed and addressed quickly.   They were also being played up and distorted in the press version of things.  That is the version that the city administrator has now adopted.   

If people like me, and I am nobody important, could demand to speak to the General Assembly and insist on dialog with the City and advocate non violence, why not the City officials?
That they were not welcome is a coward’s excuse and that they were not welcome after sending a riot squad against a campsite is their own damn fault.  

Thanks to her antics trust will be harder to earn for the next city administrator who will have to live down her legacy.  Ms. Quan should have taken her resignation the moment she stepped off the plane back from Washington. 

But why stop at the administrator’s office, there is the mayor’s staff to talk about.
At 5 PM the night before the morning raid on the campsite some chosen, invited, community leaders were called together to speak with Quan staffers.  These are the same staffers who never returned my calls and who did not so much as acknowledge the offer of Green Party folk to do whatever was necessary to prevent the violence that ending up taking place.  

Do you think they were talking with these community members to ask them to mediate, moderate, mitigate or anything like that?  NO, they were being TOLD what was going to happen and that was that.  The administration had made up its mind.  The city was going straight to police action.  Some demonstrators had burned one of their memos in effigy and they could not think of any other way to get over the communication impasse.  

In their limited way they really thought that they had tried everything and now they were just ready to offer some 3 rate homeless service and were calling the police to clear the place out.  Ms Quan should offer them new work challenges outside of City Hall.    

Middle management at City Hall needs a wider view of what it means to “try everything”.
The results of how they dealt with the encampment made this clear. 

And now for the Police Management.
Between the bad leadership at the Mayor’s office, and the officer throwing a stun grenade is the police brass.  To start with our Chief Jorden sang a solo in the Not-My-Fault chorus along with some props of his war trophies.  Absent was a lot of explaining to do.  The first thing I would like to know is why after 2 weeks of Occupy Oakland they had not done the groundwork of having some credibility with the protestors?  

Of all the things they could have done to clear the plaza of tents, a frontal assault was exactly the wrong one to choose.  Who came up with this plan?  What was the urgent hurry?  Why was nothing else tried?  How did we go from a poorly written memo from the administration (without a deadline in it) to a frontal assault?

But my biggest question is:  What could be more important to the Oakland Police right now than public support?  Even if the protesters did not cooperate, there were better ways to stop illegal camping or to get a protest to move to somewhere else.  None of those methods were even tried.  Instead we are millions of dollars in expenses down the road with our city’s reputation tarnished again and the Oakland Police’s relationship with the community even further damaged.  

As a person who has had the job of carrying a gun and having to do what others have decided needs to be done, I still have a lot of sympathy for the police, but also some serious concerns about the quality of police work in Oakland.  

This is the same police force that:
  • ·         Lost 4 of its own members to the same man and failed to take that suspect alive
  • ·         HAS used teargas with Raider’s fans
  • ·         Fired cork bullets at an anit-Iraq war protest
  • ·         Failed to advert violence and protect the peaceful part of the Oscar Grant protests. 
  • ·         Continues to be under court supervision stemming from the Rider’s case
If we had a police commission I would advocate some hearings on quality of their work. 
And I think police management needs to be reviewed on how they came to make these choices. 

We always knew that the police are going to beat a bunch of protesters in a fight. 
Why go out and prove it unless you only view the protest as a skirmish line.  

As the police union points out, this is not the first time we have had a protest like Occupy Oakland General Strike and it is not the first time some elements came with intent to throw bricks.  Everybody seemed to know it would happen.   

What we did not see was a police force ready to act in an intelligent, prepared way.  It felt more like the excuse that they were waiting for.  If City Council holds hearings on the police response, then they should ask some hard questions: 
  • 1.       Why they could not be more proactive to cut the violent protesters off quickly?
  • 2.       Why they did they not help the protesters who were trying to stop the violence?
  • 3.       Why did they resort to teargas and mass arrests again and basically attack both groups? 
We need to ask ourselves if we are not all across some kind of “skirmish line”.

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Exactly the wrong thing to do.



Using the police to clear out Occupy Oakland was exactly the wrong thing to do.  

Questions:
  • 1.       Where was the emergency? 
  • 2.       Is it better now?
  • 3.       Was someone saved by this?
  • 4.       Is it somehow the fault of the protestors that there is so little trust in government?
  • 5.       Is there going to be better trust in government now? 
  • 6.       Will the relations between Oakland and our police force improve now?  

What struck me most was the image of the police tearing up the signs and kicking the Occupy tent people’s stuff all over the plaza.  I thought that the Police job was to arrest people and let Public Works clean up the encampment, not to do a violent victory dance over the defeat of those whose politics they oppose.  

I stuck my neck out in person, in public and on line telling the protestors to engage, to accept dialog, to back away from any confrontation and to carry ourselves with dignity out of respect for our fellow citizens and out of respect for the righteousness of our cause.  

It seems that the same message was needed inside our city government this week.  No wonder that they never returned my calls.  And in the end, the police wracked more violence in a couple hours, destroyed more property and hurt more people that Occupy Oakland did in two weeks.  Keep in mind, there was no riot, no emergency, no move made by the protestors other than to refuse to leave.  It was the city of Oakland and the police that initiated the violence and chose its time.  

Many things could have been done instead, especially since there was no urgent problem.
For one they could have given the Oakland Greens (and others) offer to act as a go between a try.   
No calls returned. 

How was that any different from the folk at the General Assembly refusing to speak with the city?
For every protestor arrested this morning, you can figure there are at least 1,000 who supported that cause and at least 100 of their community who will know the person taken away.  You can add this number of people to the already existing resentment and distrust.  You can add this to the history of bad relations between Oakland Police and Oakland.  

We had cops from the suburbs arresting our protestors, destroying poor people’s property, and relishing tearing up our signs and kicking our stuff around.  No good will come of this. 
Maybe they could burn the books from the library tent and make a full show of it. 

Yesterday I was at the Snow Park part of the encampment and we donated a tarp and a big blue ball to the kid’s tent.  My son picked that ball out for those kids from his own toys.  This morning I told him what happened and that all people in the tents, the toys and the big blue ball are now gone, to be trashed by the police.  He felt sorry for one of the kids for whom those were most of the toys he had.  

A number of the people in both encampments were living there before the protests started. Most of the big problems sited in the city’s memos already existed.  Those people will now face jail, inadequate social services and all the situations that made them homeless and living in the Plaza in the first place.  Those 6 children who lived in the camp will be badly hurt by all of this in ways that will leave a lasting effect.  But in our city, some young people smoking dope in the park protesting banks is an urgent situation worthy of high spending and violence to quash.  The hundreds, maybe thousands of Oakland residents who reside nowhere is obviously not so urgent a problem.  Now the two have met the police.  

When my 8 year old overheard adults talking about where the protests go from here he said:  “what protests? now it is more like a war” and sure enough we have something of a war on the streets of Oakland tonight, a war provoked by unnecessary police intervention.

A beautiful thing has been lost.  Occupy Oakland had its problems, but it also had its promise.  There were workshops, books, a children’s zone and some very good community bridge building going on.  The place did not look or feel like a riot, it felt more like a festival.  To quote Zennie “it was bone headed to refuse to talk to the city”.  Zennie is also right on to say that efforts inside the protest were dealing with the problems that the city was complaining about.  All of them, even opening up and inviting the city to come and talk at the General Assembly.  Most of the stories in the press were gross exaggerations and half truths.  Members of the community were also coming out with everything from port-a-potties, protest marchers and just plane willingness to speak with the protesters and promote solidarity and harmony.  Also beautiful and totally justified is the anger expressed towards those who own our economy and the government that serves them and only them. 

A beautiful opportunity has also been lost.  This Occupy Wall Street movement is a watershed in American politics.  Oakland could have been the place where there could have been harmony and cooperation between our local government and this very justified protest movement.  

We have every reason in the world to be mad with Wall Street, the big Banks and the corrupt system of lobbyist based politics that Occupy Wall Street is pulling back the curtain on. 

Now we have every reason on earth to be mad at our local government.