Mayor To Meet With School Closing Opponents After Threat Of Home Demonstration

Cross-Posted from DC’s Independent Media Center By Luke

On the 13th of December, a “Save Our Schools” rally was held at Malcolm X Elementary School in Anacostia, targeted by Mayor Gray to be closed along with 19 other schools in DC. The event was organized by Ward 8 State Board of Education Representative Trayon White.

Originally the parents, teachers, students and others were going to march on Mayor Gray’s home a couple miles away-but he agreed to meet with them when he got word that he was in for an evening of “pitchforks and torches” protesting outside his home. We shall see if the Mayor follows through on his commitment to meet with these folks.

Parents and students of Malcolm X Elementary School at Save Our Schools Rally.

The Mayor has been ducking a meeting with homeless advocates for months, with his schedulers saying it would be three months before he can get around to meeting with SHARC. Perhaps the only way to get a meeting with Mayor Gray is to plan a march on his home in a middle class section of Anacostia and make sure he knows you’re coming?

Background on the issue:

The school closings are one of the “suggestions” from the Walton Foundation, the Wal-Mart funded outfit Mayor Gray’s government is accepting funds and school “reform” advice from. The Walton Family Foundation page on the “DC Public Education Fund” gives glowing reviews among other things to the IMPACT testing program used to fire so many DC teachers.

The DC Public Education fund homepage lists in their “what’s new” section “Proposed Consolidations and Reorganization of Schools,” meaning closing schools like Malcolm X Elementary. Since they receive funding from the Walton Foundation, in effect we have Wal-Mart paying DC to close down public schools in favor of charter schools like the notorious and fascistic KIPP, or even a charter school that is designed to teach people specifically to work at Wal-Mart.

Housing Cuts in Mayor’s 2013 Budget Draw Protests Outside Hearing

Crossposted from DC Independent Media Center, Written by Luke

On the 18th of April, the City Council held hearings on Mayor Gray’s budget, the one with tens of millions in housing cuts and a proposal to infest DC’s road intersections with compined speed/red light cameras. The housing cuts in the proposed budget drew a substantial protest outside, even as the hearings continued inside.

The rally outside the Wilson Building while the hearing continues.

The Amazing Disappearing Budget

Kwame Brown at Housing Rally

Raw Audio of April 18 Housing Budget Rally: [haiku url=”http://www.grassrootsmediaproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/housing_budget_rally_4-18-2012_raw_audio.mp3″ title=”April 18 Housing Budget Rally Raw Audio”]

Table of contents of raw audio:

Disappearing Housing Budget Kwame Brown Formerly Homeless #1 Formerly Homeless #2

Yes, you heard that: Kwame Brown, who has previously voted against services like libraries, put the hearing in recess so he could speak at the protest to float his proposed modification to the budget: Take half the money to be used to pay back 4 days of unpaid furloughs against DC government workers and put it back into the housing programs.

The demands of the rally were as follows:

Fully fun the Housing Production Trust Fund

Fund permanent solutions to homelessness

Maintain the Home Purchase Assistance Program at its current level

Countering Kwame Brown’s partial proposal based on the current budget surplus, here’s a proposal of my own:

The housng crisis is due in large part to the invasion of DC by upscale white-collar types. An increase in the income tax on DC’s wealthy would either fund the Housing Production Trust fund and other housing programs, or else drive some of the wealthy out of town, reducing the incentive to destroy affordable housing for condos. At the same time, increase the gas and/or pay parking lot taxes by $30 million in expected gross revenues, using that money to offset cancelling the intersection speed/red light camera program that Mayor Gray proposed as a revenue item in the FY 2013 budget.