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Today's Top News
Taking Back Homes from the Banks: Exercising the Human Right to Housing
May has seen an upsurge in local organizations exercising their human rights to housing. Most people recognize that international human rights guarantee all humans a right to housing. With the millions of homeless living in our communities and the millions of empty foreclosed houses all across our communities, groups have decided to put them together.
Organizations across the US are engaging in "housing liberation" and "housing defense" to exercise their human rights to housing. Here are a few examples.
Madison
In Madison Wisconsin, the grass-roots organization Operation Welcome Home helped Desiree Wilson, 24, a mother with small children to move into a vacant house, hook up utilities and change the locks, according to nbc15.com in Madison. The home was vacant due to foreclosure. Bank of America owns the home now. "It's not against the law, "said Ms. Wilson. "This is above the law. It's just so much bigger than me. Housing is a human right."
Operation Welcome Home held a press conference criticizing the billions of dollars in bailouts to mortgage lenders. "We're asking them to turn over the property to the community whose tax dollars are funding what they are doing." One of the spokespersons for the group, Z!Haukness, reminded people that "housing is a human right, no matter what income, no matter what rental history." The group plans more "liberations" of other vacant property.
A local land trust, Madison Area Community Land Trust, says if the activists convince the bank to donate the home the trust can find the resources to turn it into affordable housing. Taking over the vacant foreclosed property is "a brave move" says Michael Carlson of the Madison trust. Carlson told the Madison Cap Times "They're compelling the citizens of Dane County to confront the very real contradictions in the way we provide housing - massive surpluses in the market that led to a collapse in credit and simultaneously people without shelter and permanent affordable housing."
Toledo
A Toledo, Ohio, factory worker, Keith Sadler lost his home of 20 years at a foreclosure sale for $33,000. When it came time to be evicted, Keith had had enough. According to the toledoblade.com, he and 6 friends barricaded the house up to resist the foreclosure eviction. All were all members of the Toledo Foreclosure Defense League. After 5 days the house was raided by the local SWAT team and all were arrested on misdemeanor charges and released.
Portland
In Portland, Oregon, a local group, Right 2 Survive, seized control of vacant land in front of an abandoned school. They set up tents for the un-housed. "This is a celebration because we are taking our rights back, " Julie McCurdy told Take Back the Land. "What we're doing is coming up with the solutions tailored for our community. We are tired of waiting for city hall to come up with revised plans and rehashed ordinances that do not meet the needs of un-housed Portlanders."
Sacramento, Philadelphia, Chicago, Atlanta
A faith-based group has been moving families into vacant homes in Sacramento. The Poor People's Economic Human Rights Campaign moved a family into a vacant home in Philadelphia. The Chicago Anti-eviction Campaign marched to protect a family from eviction and the Malcolm X Grassroots Movement protested auctions of family homes on the county courthouse steps of Atlanta. Other community actions across the country are expected during the rest of May.
Housing as a Human Right
Housing is a human right recognized by a number of international human rights laws. For example, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, adopted after the Second World War, promised "Everyone has the right to a standard of living adequate for the health and well-being of himself and his family, including food, clothing, housing and medical care and necessary social services, and the right to security in the event of unemployment, sickness, disability, widowhood, old age or other lack of livelihood."
Still, the National Coalition for the Homeless estimates of the number of homeless people in the US range from 1.6 to 3.5 million.
Foreclosures are soaring. Some housing experts say 4 million foreclosures are possible in 2010. There were 3.4 million homes which got foreclosure notices, auction sale notices or bank repossessions in 2009. In the first quarter of 2010, RealtyTrac reported there were 932,000 foreclosures. Auctions were scheduled on 369,000 homes in the same time. Banks repossessed 257,000 homes during that time
Organizations working to exercise peoples' human rights to housing include Take Back the Land and the US Human Rights Network. Both are working with local community organizations to support their campaigns.
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13 Comments so far
Show AllThe FED isn't the only problem. Far greater is Goldman Sachs, for whom the FED is just a subsidiary. See my comment at the Weisbrot article for more info.
RANK HAS ITS PRIVILEGES
Our darling 1% High Society create all the laws and standards that govern society, including our bubble-burst economy, making sure their mansions are second to none in all the world.
The 10% Country Club class administer government and industry, making sure their million dollar homes and upper class neighborhoods are of such a quality, that a highest priority to be rich has all of society.
The 40% educated middleclass, in order to enjoy the terrific homes they feel high achievers so deserve, import illegal aliens by the millions, and raise the rents for their slum housing investments until we have homeless by the millions.
The 49% laboring class, now they could take care of the 1% homeless, but that would be degrading to have sleeping and eating in their living rooms the homeless, and in the eyes of society make a laboring man not much better then the homeless.
"All were all members of the Toledo Foreclosure Defense League. After 5 days the house was raided by the local SWAT team and all were arrested on misdemeanor charges and released."
Clear evidence how our Fascist government intends to deal with people with legitimate grievances.
There are still Tribes In Canadas North that live this way. If a Hunter kills some Cariboo he takes a cut for himself then puts the rest into the Community freezer.
There is no lock on the freezer nor is it monitored. Those that need food , be they the elderly or the infirm or even the poor hunter or the lazy, just drop in when they need some and take it.
They never take more then they need even though it could be sold for money to businesses in the South.
It has been INGRAINED into us that we NEED Jobs in order to get MONEY and the only way to get FOOD or housing is to pay money.
It does NOT have to be that way.
And so, the purpose of this world is not only to allow harm to reach its ultimate conclusion, not just to establish that harm will always expire in a convulsion. But also to show how rewarding and beneficial is good, and that nothing more honorable can a man do with his life then to take a stand for some cause that is just and good.
The land owners wouldn't be able to bring Him the Titles to the land tho', that's been the problem with the economic disaster - finding out who has them. In a good way, ownership can't be proven until they show up - which some people are aware of and are asking "show me the Title" before they move an inch.
I grew up in a company town. One man owned all the buildings, paid the police and firemen in cash, and could squeeze the last ounce of strength from each worker every day.
The people worked for low wages, but lived in rather decent houses for very low rent. The houses were kept in good repair at no cost to the tenant.
He built all the churches and schools---The very best for their day, but the gospel of -------was preached and taught, and the law was what -----said it was.
All things considered he wasn't a bad man, but when my father retired from the company, he received all the money he had put into his retirement fund plus one percent.
He was afraid. There was a warehouse full of weapons: machine guns, water cannons, etc. which were deployed whenever a 'communist plot' was being talked about. As far as I know they were never used.
The point is that even he saw decent, affordable housing as a right to which everyone was entitled.
Greet article and Great Comments here.
And they say higher foreclosures will happen this year and many more mortgages will adjust until 2011! Bailouts to the banks and forget the homeowners but they use our tax dollars to do bail them out and forget where the monies came from to begin with. This country is not what it once was... But I am still proud to be an american but for how long, I don't know...
Again great article and comments here
MaryAnn
Groveland Ca
www.bodyharmonymassages.com
There is no "RIGHT" to shelter over your head. Look what Mother Earth can destroy in a moment...There is no "Right" to food, observe all the people starving after devastation. There is a HOPE that one day those things might happen.
I was a homeless shelter supervisor and work at a food pantry now. I was almost homeless and have had periods where I had no food. I think that I would live in a tent rather than illegally live in a house that I broke into.
On the other hand, I do think that it is to the advantage of everyone from the Mortgage Holders, to the neighborhoods that the properties are not left empty.
This is a total passive-aggresive topic. I guess if you are assertive you get your ass kicked. Talk about textbook illness on an economic system and the people that participate in that system. It is totally fucked up if you ask me.