top
East Bay
East Bay
Indybay
Indybay
Indybay
Regions
Indybay Regions North Coast Central Valley North Bay East Bay South Bay San Francisco Peninsula Santa Cruz IMC - Independent Media Center for the Monterey Bay Area North Coast Central Valley North Bay East Bay South Bay San Francisco Peninsula Santa Cruz IMC - Independent Media Center for the Monterey Bay Area California United States International Americas Haiti Iraq Palestine Afghanistan
Topics
Newswire
Features
From the Open-Publishing Calendar
From the Open-Publishing Newswire
Indybay Feature

Reclaim MLK: Emergency Guerilla Housing To Be Built for Unsheltered Oaklanders

Date:
Saturday, January 18, 2020
Time:
12:00 PM - 7:00 PM
Event Type:
Other
Organizer/Author:
Village Oakland
Location Details:
E12th St. between 14th & 16th Ave (behind Burger King)
Oakland

[Also, come out for Sunday's build]


Oakland’s Housed & Unhoused To Reclaim Dr. King’s Radical Legacy, Message & Call For Moral Responsibility

Emergency Guerilla Housing To Be Built for Unsheltered Over MLK Weekend

Guerrilla Housing & Facilities Emergency Build
On E12th St. between 14th & 16th Ave behind Burger King
January 18 & 19, 2020
10am - 5pm

Oakland, CA - Over the MLK weekend, community members will be answering the call of The Village to construct emergency shelter and facilities for the unsheltered community behind the E12th Burger King. The Village is one of Oakland’s leading unhoused service and advocacy movements.

Calling themselves “The Right To Exist Curbside Community”, residents living on the median behind Burger King believe the City’s approaches to it’s unhoused residents are not solutions.

“The city constantly violates constitutional law, human rights law and their own policies through their eviction and cleaning practices. They destroy and throw out our properties including IDs, work uniforms, medication, family photos, laptops, tents - our entire lives. They bulldoze our homes and tow the vehicles we live in, while leaving us on the side of the road,” reads a statement crafted by residents of the curbside community.

“The City’s practices causes us deep depression and trauma, setbacks and knocks us off the one foot we are standing on. At times The City’s demolitions of unhoused residents homes and the towing of vehicles our people live in has resulted in death.”

Right To Exist Curbside Community residents assert that until the city comes up with an actual solution to permanently house the city’s housing refugees, they will work with The Village to upgrade their encampment by building more solid homes, a community kitchen, a solar shower and a bicycle powered washing machine.

This community falls victim to illegal dumping. To deter this problem, two raised garden beds will also be created.

“We are here today because we are tired. We are tired of paying more for less. We are tired of living in rat-infested slums." - Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

Before he was assassinated, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was organizing poor people across race, religious and geographic lines to fight for their civil and human rights. This weekend Oakland residents both housed and unhoused will align with King’s vision and dream by supporting, mobilizing, and organizing the city’s most vulnerable, most impoverished and most neglected neighbors.

“Though this country has reformed and edited Dr. King’s story to be one of passivity, he was not a passive man. He was a radical, militant and peaceful man who used nonviolent direct action to address the systemic inequalities in this nation,” said Needa Bee founder and organizer of The Village. “We are hoping what we have always hoped since we started building villages in January 2017 - that other housed and unhoused neighbors would be inspired to unite and work together thru direct action to address the immediate needs of our people living curbside with humane, dignified, grassroots led approaches. We join the efforts to reclaim and embrace his radical legacy this weekend.”

Through his Poor People’s Campaign, Dr. King spoke of the poverty, lack of affordable housing and homelessness that was found across the United States and the world. Not much has changed since Dr. King called for the nation’s poor to rise up and unite. In fact things have gotten dramatically worse. The inequalities, the disparities, the violence, the poverty, the homelessness has actually deepened. In Oakland alone, homelessness has doubled over the past two years even though an unprecedented $44 million has been set aside in the City’s budget for homeless solutions, and millions of private dollars have gone to build the Mayor’s infamous and ineffective Tuff Shed program.

"Almost 2/3 of the peoples of the world go to bed hungry at night. Many have no houses or beds to sleep in. Their only beds are the sidewalks of the cities and the dusty roads of the villages."
— Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

This past June 2019, homeless advocates were able to persuade city council to include $600,000 a year in The City budget to support self-governed & community supported encampments like Right To Exist. The funds are supposed to upgrade curbside communities throughout Oakland. Right To Exist hopes to be able to have some of these funds applied to their encampment for portapotty services, trash services, clean drinking water and solar power.

Last week Governor Gavin Newsom decided to release State land for the creation of temporary homeless shelters. The Village hopes that they will be able to use those lands to build the model of temporary homeless shelters it has been building since January 2017.

“We have been using empty public lands to create temporary shelter for our unhoused neighbors, but our efforts have been criminalized and sabotaged by the mayor and her encampment management team,” said Needa Bee founder and organizer with The Village. “We intend to continue to build emergency temporary shelters for our people living curbside as long as this affordability crisis and the homeless state of emergency it created exists. We hope we can be a model of what community led approaches, co-governed curbside communities, and autonomous curbside communities should look like.

Check out these links to learn more about the work...

The Village in Oakland:
http://www.thevillageinoakland.org

Feed The People:
https://vimeo.com/247394052

Meiklejohn Civil Liberties Institute:
http://www.mclihumanrights.org

510Day:
3rd annual — https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IvMIoQ3vIrE
4th annual — https://www.instagram.com/p/Bxck8CchgNP/

####

Anita De Asis Miralle
aka Needa Bee aka The Lumpia Lady
Program Director, Meiklejohn Civil Liberties Institute
Co-Founder and Lead Organizer of Feed The People & The Village
Mentor of Young Oakland
Founder of 510Day
Chef & Owner of The Lumpia Lady & The Lumpia Shack
Added to the calendar on Thu, Jan 16, 2020 3:16PM
We are 100% volunteer and depend on your participation to sustain our efforts!

Donate

$95.00 donated
in the past month

Get Involved

If you'd like to help with maintaining or developing the website, contact us.

Publish

Publish your stories and upcoming events on Indybay.

IMC Network