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DESCRIPTION:Join Occupy Redwood Cityas we rally against a new jailin San Mateo 
 County!On Bastille Day, Occupy Redwood City (ORWC) will be rallying at the 
 site of the county’s newly approved future jail to protest its 
 construction in our community (location: Maple and Blomquist Streets).We 
 are proud to be joined by our friends at Occupy San Jose (OSJ) at this 
 rally and to be standing in solidarity with other groups on the Peninsula 
 who have already spoken out and LED THE WAY on this issue, organizing 
 against the construction of a new county jail in favor of more 
 cost-efficient and just alternatives that would provide greater long-term 
 benefits for our county and for low-income communities and communities of 
 color.We invite all like-minded people to join us and show their opposition 
 to the new jail! Bring signs with phrases like: "JOBS NOT JAILS," "PEOPLE 
 NOT PRISONS," and "EDUCATION NOT INCARCERATION!"ORWC strongly rejects the 
 new jail for the following reasons:-- Our county commissioned the Center 
 for Juvenile and Criminal Justice (CJCJ) to do a study on our inmate 
 population. The CJCJ strongly recommended that the county at least explore 
 cost-effective, evidence-based ways to reduce that population before 
 resorting to building a new jail to combat overcrowding.-- For example, 72% 
 of our inmates have yet to be convicted of a crime and are being held 
 simply because they don’t have money for bail. Neighboring counties have 
 adopted innovative programs that allow many of these people to be released 
 until they have their day in court, and indeed, the CJCJ recommended 
 alternatives to solve San Mateo County’s overcrowding problem such as 
 pretrial release, expedited court processing and transfer, and expanded 
 probation supervision. The Board of Supervisors rejected all these 
 recommendations in favor of a new jail.-- Our county is already cutting 
 jobs and services. The new jail will cost the county $160 million to build 
 and will create a new, annual $44 million operating expense for the county. 
 While state government will pay a large share of the construction cost, it 
 will not pay for future operations. A new jail will require more staff, 
 locking in a larger fraction of the county budget spent on Sheriff’s 
 deputies guarding the jail instead of on those intervention workers who 
 would go out into communities to provide health, counseling, safety and 
 other services that would mitigate the problems that lead to most crime in 
 the first place.-- Under the recent state “realignment” plans, more 
 low-level offenders are being held by counties, rather than being sent to 
 state prison. This is not a bad idea, but it will only lead to truly just 
 outcomes for these low-level offenders if counties find them alternatives 
 to incarceration. Unfortunately, as a response to the injustice of mass 
 incarceration, San Mateo County is just building more jail space, and in 
 doing so is missing a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to do the right thing 
 by creating a more fair and humane justice system.-- As in most other 
 counties across the nation, it is young men from low-income communities and 
 communities of color on the Peninsula who are disproportionately 
 incarcerated in San Mateo County jails. We do not need to spend our public 
 money and go into further debt building more jails to house people from 
 these communities. The millions of dollars allotted for this new jail 
 should be going to programs in these communities instead to provide 
 critical, valuable services.-- Local building trades unions have fought for 
 a new jail in San Mateo County because they were guaranteed these 
 construction jobs, and as people who stand in solidarity with the labor 
 movement as a whole we respect the right of labor to organize for their 
 interests. However, we think a new jail represents a missed opportunity for 
 our community. A jail that is projected to be as costly to our county as 
 this one is will result in chronic budget shortfalls that will require our 
 county to continue cutting services and to continue laying off good public 
 sector union workers. We ask our labor sisters and brothers who are 
 advocating for this jail to consider the harm it will do to other union 
 jobs down the line, and to work with the county on other projects that will 
 benefit the entire community, instead of on one construction project that 
 will cause unnecessary long-term damage.-- ORWC rejects the argument that 
 the new jail will be beneficial to the community because it will have a 
 focus on rehabilitation, job training, and other programs to reintegrate 
 inmates into society. We know that such services are the first thing to get 
 cut during deficit years and lean budgets, and in light of the $44 million 
 additional annual operating expense that the jail represents we are not 
 optimistic that these programs will be permanent fixtures in the new jail. 
 We also demand that if the county is so concerned about promoting such 
 services, they can and should be funding them within the communities that 
 need them before spending millions in public funds building jails to house 
 these programs.***These are just some of the reasons ORWC will be 
 demonstrating our opposition to this misguided project, for which the first 
 $16 million has already been approved, and we hope to stop this senseless 
 misallocation of our resources. The storming of the Bastille on July 14, 
 1789 as part of a people’s uprising against the monarchy is now 
 recognized as the spark that ignited the French Revolution. ORWC will be 
 speaking out at the new jail site, connecting this past history to our 
 current culture of incarceration and systematic mistreatment of low-income 
 people and people of color.Our prison system is both a moral blight on our 
 society and an overwhelming economic burden, taking away much needed 
 resources from schools, health care, and affordable housing. The prison 
 system is corrupting our society and making us less safe, rather than 
 protecting us as its proponents claim. It is a system built on fear, 
 racism, and the exploitation of poverty, and it has no place in a society 
 that aspires to liberty, justice, and equality for all.We invite all 
 like-minded people to join us and show their opposition to the new 
 jail!***ORWC is proud and honored to be joined and supported in this action 
 by groups like the CJCJ, Californians United for a Responsible Budget 
 (CURB), Youth United for Community Action (YUCA), Silicon Valley De-Bug, 
 ACLU Northern California, and many others in opposing a new jail in San 
 Mateo County.Want "Hope" and "Change"? Then join us:Because YOU ARE THE 
 99%!Official Site :: Facebook :: TwitterOccupy Peninsula TwitterOccupy San 
 Mateo County FacebookOccupyRWC Tumblr\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2012/07/14/18717488.php
SUMMARY:Occupy Bastille Day - Rally with ORWC to Protest New County Jail
LOCATION:Maple St and Blomquist St, Redwood City, CA 94063
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2012/07/14/18717488.php
DTSTART:20120714T200000Z
DTEND:20120714T220000Z
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