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DESCRIPTION:Please bring signs, clothing, shoes, flowers, hats, toys, toothpaste and 
 toothbrushes, socks, ribbons, books, and any item that people can use or is 
 beautiful. \n\n\n\nSanta Cruz Post Office joins residents in face-off 
 over\nFood Not Bombs food distribution By Jessica A. York, Santa Cruz 
 Sentinel 03/13/17\n\nSANTA CRUZ >> A disagreement between downtown 
 residents and a nonprofit activist group over its weekly free public meals 
 has heightened with involvement of the U.S. Postal Service.\n\nOn Thursday, 
 a chain-link fence was installed around the Santa Cruz Post Office’s 
 exterior, including its Pacific Avenue and Water Street sides. The fence, 
 said U.S. Postal Service regional spokesman Augustine Ruiz, is intended 
 primarily to protect the nearly 105-year-old building from damage and limit 
 its use only to branch customers. The downtown building, he said, “has a 
 serious homeless issue” that has progressively escalated recently. Ruiz 
 added that social activist group Food Not Bombs’ twice weekly vegan meal 
 distribution nearby has added to the situation.\n\nThe Postal Service is 
 responding to an increase in customer and employee concerns about homeless 
 people, Ruiz said. Recently, an apparently homeless man threatened to stab 
 an employee, Ruiz said. Authorities will need to undertake a more formal 
 process with its Postal Inspection Services before more permanent fencing 
 can be set up, he said.\n\n“Many times they block the egress going in and 
 out of the post office lobby,” Ruiz said. “Not only have they been 
 blocking the egress, they have also been leaving great amounts of trash, 
 needles and feces/urine around the entrances and around the perimeter of 
 the building. This creates an unsafe and unsanitary environment for our 
 customers and employees.”\n\nThe building, among California’s oldest 
 continually operating post offices, is designed in a Renaissance Revival 
 style and is part of the National Register of Historic Places. Those 
 without shelter have slept and stored their possessions along the 
 building’s walls and steps for years.\n\nDowntown resident Janet Fardette 
 has zeroed in on Food Not Bombs’ twice weekly demonstrations and sidewalk 
 meal offerings as the primary problem. Fardette has worked on and off at 
 curbing the weekend effort from occurring, within blocks of her home, for 
 at least two years.\n\n“I want people fed. I am not arguing that at 
 all,” Fardette said on Monday. “We’re against doing it on the 
 streets. What he’s doing is creating a mess downtown.”\n\nThe 
 25-year-old Santa Cruz chapter of Food Not Bombs most recently began 
 gathering at the post office not long after Occupy Santa Cruz protests in 
 late 2011 and serves between 89 and 150 people a day, said Food Not Bombs 
 co-founder Keith McHenry.\n\nThe downtown location is optimal, said 
 McHenry, due to its space and high traffic visibility. The new fence 
 intensified the usual weekend effort into a “party,” as many supporters 
 gathered to decorate the fence, draping signs and donated clothing across 
 it, he said. McHenry said a number of volunteers with the group are 
 specifically dedicated to cleaning up after each event and that he believes 
 the latest outcry is part of a welling “anti-homeless” 
 movement.\n\n“The purpose of Food Not Bombs is to end the economic and 
 political system that causes people to be homeless and hungry,” McHenry 
 said when asked if he had considered relocating in order to placate 
 Fardette and others. “We do it through sharing food.”\n\nFardette, who 
 also organizes the community cleanup group Leveelies — which she says is 
 not involved in this push — has gained more than 100 supporting 
 signatures on an online Change.org petition urging the outdoor meal 
 distribution to end. Similarly, McHenry launched his own petition on March 
 1 rebutting Fardette’s, with more than 1,110 signatures.\n\nFardette 
 cited her reasons for wanting the meal offerings, currently held each 
 Saturday and Sunday at 4 p.m., to move indoors as: availability of tables, 
 chair, toilets and garbage cans. Fardette said she believes that while Food 
 Not Bombs may clean up debris while they are on site, the problem is 
 unsanitary conditions left after they are gone. She said she has observed 
 an increase in the downtown rat population since November.\n\nMcHenry said 
 the increased rat population could be attributed to the season’s flooded 
 rivers, increased plant growth and/or downtown food-serving businesses’ 
 clientele. He said there are also some people, as with any population, who 
 are careless with their trash.\n\n“What happens is these people get 
 treated so badly, like they themselves are garbage,” McHenry said of 
 Santa Cruz’s homeless population. “One, they don’t have much 
 self-esteem. But two, it’s just not practical to be carrying away all of 
 your litter when you have to guard your sleeping bag and your backpack from 
 people stealing it or the police taking it.”\n\nSanta Cruz County Health 
 Officer and Environmental Health Director Dr. Arnold Leff said in the past 
 he has urged McHenry to obtain a permit to ensure safe handling and 
 distribution of the food. Leff said Monday that he was in the process of 
 drafting another letter to McHenry along the same line. Unlike with a 
 restaurant, Leff said, he cannot simply close down a Food Not Bombs 
 demonstration. Other cities attempting to prevent sister Food Not Bombs 
 distributions have failed, Leff said.\n\n\n\n\nPOST OFFICE FENCE IS THE 
 TRUE FACE OF \nANTI-HOMELESS HATRED IN SANTA CRUZ\nBy Keith McHenry March 
 11, 2017\n\nThe anti-homeless fence at the post office puts a face on the 
 ugly campaign by Santa Cruz’s leaders to drive their poorest residence 
 out of town. The numbers of poor in our town are increasing. This fact is 
 obvious when you see the growing numbers coming to eat at Food Not Bombs. 
 Even though I’ve shared meals with the hungry for over 36 years, I find 
 it shocking the increase in people depending on Food Not Bombs.\n\nThe 
 National Center on Family Homelessness reports there are “2.5 million 
 children in America that are homeless each year.” A society that lets 
 millions of children live on its streets is a society that’s 
 collapsing.\n\nTo address this crisis, we need to change our local and 
 national priorities. That’s why Food Not Bombs shares its meals outside: 
 to encourage public dialogue about redirecting taxes from the military to 
 providing real security in the form of housing, education and desperately 
 needed services. Instead of a humane sensible response, Santa Cruz City 
 Council criminalizes the homeless making it illegal to sleep outside. To 
 make matters worse, the emergency shelter was cut.\n\nAnti-homeless 
 architecture is also common in Santa Cruz including hi-frequency Mosquito 
 Boxes in parks, removing planter boxes and free speech zones on Pacific, 
 replacing the City Hall lawn with gravel and rocks and now the ugly chain 
 link fencing at the historic downtown post office.\n\nThese policies 
 contribute to the death of our homeless, including 53 year-old Michael 
 Mears who died of hypothermia on February 17, 2017. Medical staff told his 
 sister, Jenny, that his body temperature was 70 degrees when found on 
 Potrero Street.\n\nAnother response to homelessness is to pass laws seeking 
 to end meals in public hoping that hiding the “problem” will reduce 
 pressure to fund programs to help the poor.\n\nTo justify laws against 
 sharing meals outside, advocates of repression site a theory claiming 
 “street feeding” keeps people homeless.\n\nOne of those seeking to 
 drive homeless and groups that share food outside out-of-sight is Janet 
 Fardette. In her 2009 Sentinel letter, “Time to take back downtown Santa 
 Cruz”, Janet writes “Our city no longer belongs to us. It has been 
 taken over by drug addicts, homeless, panhandlers and the like.” \nI can 
 understand it must be frustrating for property owners and businesses to see 
 an increasing number of people living outside. They worked hard and the 
 growing number of people living outside their property must be 
 disheartening and a threat to their investment.\n\nThe campaign to stop our 
 meals includes an online petition, phoning and emailing local officials. 
 Janet suggests in a February 13, 2017 email that officials look into 
 “Robert Marbut’s widely successful” theory mentioned on NPR, “More 
 Cities Are Making It Illegal To Hand Out Food To The 
 Homeless.”\n\nMarbut’s theory claims "Street feeding is one of the 
 worst things to do, because it keeps people in homeless status. I think 
 it's very unproductive, very enabling, and it keeps people out of recovery 
 programs."\n\nMarbut’s “solution” focuses on “correcting” the 
 behavior of those living on the streets, treating people as though 
 they’re naughty children. He doesn’t consider a failing economic 
 system, gross wealth disparities and obscene housing prices. In short, he 
 posits that it’s the person’s behavior that keeps them from paying for 
 housing.\n\nBlaming the victim isn’t working. Thousands of people still 
 live outside in cities that adopted Marbut’s program and many still rely 
 on Food Not Bombs. Those who would like the homeless to disappear from 
 Santa Cruz are lobbying to adopt Marbut’s “solution” and drive Food 
 Not Bombs from public view. The $5,300 a month that might be spent to hire 
 Marbut could be much better spent on maintaining 24-hour bathrooms.\n\nFood 
 Not Bombs is not a charity, sharing vegan meals in visible locations with 
 signs and literature promoting change so no one lives on the streets or 
 depends on soup kitchens. We can end homelessness if we divert some of the 
 billions spent for war on real national security of jobs, affordable 
 housing, education and healthcare. Blaming the homeless for their condition 
 is clearly not working.\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2017/03/17/18797501.php
SUMMARY:Third Anti-homeless Fence Decorating Party
LOCATION:Post Office\n850 Front St, Santa Cruz
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2017/03/17/18797501.php
DTSTART:20170318T220000Z
DTEND:20170319T010000Z
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