Canadian Group Will Bring Water to Detroit Residents Who’ve Had Water Shut Off

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our nation has to do better


Canadian Group Will Bring Water to Detroit Residents Who’ve Had Water Shut Off

http://breakingbrown.com/2014/07/ca...o-detroit-residents-whove-had-water-shut-off/


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Nicole Hill

In 2009 Detroit’s unemployment rate was reported at 50 percent and now draconian budget cuts and a nine percent rate increase have led to thousands of residents having their water shut off. A group in Canada hopes to assist Detroit residents who aren’t able to pay their delinquent water bill in full.

CBC News reports that Council of Canadians are planning to help the 3,000 Detroit residents per week who are having their water shut off.

Maude Barlow, chair of the Council of Canadians, calls the plan to shut off the water to Detroit residents appalling and says it’s common in failed states, but not developed countries.

“I’ve seen this in the poorest countries in the world,” Barlow said. “This is what we call failed states, but to see this in North America, it’s a disgrace.”

Barlow continued: “We’re sitting on the Great Lakes, supplying a fifth of the world’s surface water. It’s appalling.”

On July 24 Barlow says she will be a part of group bringing “good Canadian, public, clean water…..our water is their water.”

She also wants to know why President Obama hasn’t intervened in the situation and has one question for him.

“There are potentially 500,000 people who are going to spend a good part of the summer, in the heat, in the summer, without water. Is that OK with you?” she asked.

United Nations experts have criticized the government for cutting off water to people who can’t pay.

“Disconnections due to non-payment are only permissible if it can be shown that the resident is able to pay but is not paying,” said Catarina de Albuquerque, UN Special Rapporteur on the right to safe drinking water and sanitation, according to the Huffington Post. “In other words, when there is genuine inability to pay, human rights simply forbids disconnections.”

Detroit resident Nicole Hill made national news last week when she told reporters that even though she has paid $3,000 to the Detroit Water and Sewerage Department over the past two years, the city still refuses to turn her water back on.

Detroit water bills are nearly double the national average.
 

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Mon Jul 21, 2014 at 03:44 AM PDT

Military device used on Detroit protest against #WaterShutoffs

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Nine persons were arrested at the entrance to Homrich, a demolition contractor working on a $5.6 million deal to perform the water shutoffs on residents. The rally outside the gate started at 6:30am and went for seven hours before arrests were made. Police believed the group would disperse and head to the rally downtown at Hart Plaza. The group however showed their commitment holding the gate after that rally had started. This is the second week of arrests at the entrance and the second time in the last 10 years protesters were arrested in Detroit. Last week 10 persons were arrested and released on bail awaiting trial for disorderly conduct.


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The first arrested of the group was Baxter Jones, a former Detroit Public Schools teacher wrongfully dismissed is in a wheelchair. Baxter had put himself on the front line during last week's blockade which had 10 arrested as well, but the police chose not to arrest him and dragged his chair out of the way.
The group doesn't appear to be letting up on the pressure. During the protest several televised interviews were shown. One of which was with Valerie who spoke of her household and her neighborhood going through mass shutoffs as Homrich moved through a three block area. She mobilized in the moment, saving her house from being shutoff and opened up a neighborhood water location. In our worst of times community becomes very essential in getting through.
Broadcast video from activist.



Military Weapon Deployment

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A LRAD (Long Range Acoustic Device) was used to disperse a rally at Hart Plaza in downtown Detroit on Friday, July 18, 2014 at 2:43pm. There has been previous use of an LRAD in Detroit on May 1, 2012 when Occupy Detroit gathered on the public sidewalk outside Grand Circus Park after park closing hours of 10pm. The use in 2012 was as a public address. The use in 2014 was to cause distress to those hearing the sound.
You can hear the sound emitted in the video footage at 50 minutes into this clip (the final minute of the clip). Those who were on the platform to speak felt vibration throughout their body and some clutched at their chest during the deployment which last about 2 minutes.



The sound dispersed the crowd which had a peaceful assembly with speakers discussing the human right to water, and the hypocrisy of Michigan's Emergency Manager Law (PA 436 of 2012), which was brought forth after the public voted down the Emergency Manager Law (PA 4) during the November elections. Rally speakers brought the position of Detroit is being ruled by an implanted dictator who is dismantling sections of local government. Those assembled resist the interest of Kevyn Orr, the EM of Detroit, in moving the public water to a privatized service. They also resist privatization of all public services placed in the trust of our local government to provide for the well-being of our citizens. Detroit has seen public lighting turned over to a new authority which has darkened major streets such as Gratiot, Grand River, and Woodward - streets where pedestrian deaths have occurred at night in the past year.


Advance 50 minutes into the video to hear the LRAD deployment


Background On Shutoffs
Volunteers with the Peoples Water Board Coalition have heard from residents of rental properties that were not notified by their landlords of high water bills that resulted in water being turned off. It is inappropriate for people to have water - a human need - removed without notice. Detroit Water & Sewerage Department (DWSD) have contracted Homrich (a demolition company) to perform up to 3,000 shutoffs per week. Addresses are listed with no information about occupants of the locations being shutoff. Elders and families with small children are all treated the same. If the property is on the list it gets shutoff and those affected are told to come to a water payment center to work out arrangements. Thousands of Detroiters have experienced their water being turned off for at least 24 hours. Hundreds have been found that have had no water service for months. Sanitation concerns around the city are increasing.

Several water stations and a number of neighborhood water friends have been setup through the Peoples Water Board Coalition (PWB) and Detroit Water Brigade. The demands of the PWB are to enable the Water Affordability Program proposed in 2006 by Michigan Welfare Rights Organization (MWRO). DWSD has opened up DRWAP (Detroit Residential Water Affordability Program) in the last month as a response after having shutoff thousands. One of the stipulations of DRWAP is 1/3 of outstanding balance must be provided to enter into the program, that is not present in MWRO's WAP.

If the city can demonstrate the ability to bring residential accounts current it will push the value behind privatization higher.
There are many complex angles to this story that deserve further discussion - the shutoffs themselves are a symptom of a greater problem that is being avoided by the press. Emergency Manager Law has placed the city under a State of Michigan appointed "dictator" able to dissect City of Detroit operations, dissolve union contracts, and cram changes in public services upon the people.
The suburbs are opposed to the cram-down being pushed by the State of Michigan as well. Rate hikes have been coming each year - this year 4.3% for the suburbs and 8.7% for Detroit residents. Changes in Detroit are being felt by its neighbors. More than half of Michigan's municipalities controlled by Emergency Manager Law are in Metropolitan Detroit.

http://www.dailykos.com/story/2014/...sed-on-Detroit-protest-against-WaterShutoffs#
 

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List of municipalities currently under Emergency Manager Law

From the State of Michigan Treasury Department site.
• City of Flint
• City of Inkster
• City of Pontiac
• City of Allen Park
• City of Hamtramck
• City of Benton Harbor
• City of Ecorse
• City of River Rouge
• City of Detroit
• Royal Oak Township
• City of Lincoln Park
• City of Highland Park
Snyder said the accelerated payments would result in an annual rate hike of $2.50 per household for the regional water system’s 4 million customers, but save them $500 million in 30-year retiree legacy costs.
It was the first time the Republican governor has acknowledged that suburban water ratepayers have to chip in to help get Detroit out of bankruptcy. Snyder said the water department payments help the city contain base cuts to retirees in the General Retirement System to 4.5 percent.

“Instead of paying your mortgage over 30 years, you pay it over 10 years, saving even more money,” Snyder told The News. “It doesn’t cost the ratepayers any more. It’s just an acceleration of the payment schedule. It actually saves the ratepayers money in the long-term.”

Patterson, of Oakland County, and Hackel, of Macomb County, are trying to get senators to amend Detroit bankruptcy legislation to block the city’s accelerated payments. It’s a condition they want lawmakers to attach to the state’s contribution of $194.8 million to the so-called bankruptcy “grand bargain.”

Detroit attorney Heather Lennox told Rhodes water rates need to be hiked in the city’s debt-cutting plan to pay for capital improvements.

“We are predicting modest rate increases,” she told Rhodes during a hearing.

Rhodes has said Detroit’s bankruptcy “offers a unique opportunity” to give counties long-sought input into management of a utility that services 4 million customers across the region. Detroit has pushed for cash payments from suburban users to upgrade city services and pay legacy costs.

The department covers nearly 1,100 miles and serves about 40 percent of the state’s population in 125 suburban communities. --- From The Detroit News

This acceleration plan on debt is part of the premise Detroit was subjected to Emergency Manager Law. Governor Snyder has been pushing municipalities toward short term positions, causing an erosion of trust in local governance.
Monday's Activities in Bankruptcy Court - Orr Demanded to Justify Shutoffs
The City of Detroit is currently in Municipal Bankruptcy court and Judge Steven Rhodes is requesting Detroit Emergency Manager Kevyn Orr to provide rationale for the water shutoff program on Monday July 21. Kevyn Orr has shown an interest in privatization of the water department. Considering this interest, if the city can demonstrate the ability to bring residential accounts current it will push the value behind privatization higher. Numerous studies have shown privatization of water leads to higher prices, lower quality, and poor service. Public water enables the voice of the people to check rate hikes and service requirements. The concern of fees and interest on bond swaps that have been carried out illegally needs to be brought into the bankruptcy proceedings.

The public is being encouraged to sit as observers in court and carry protest outside the federal courthouse (on Lafayette between Washington and Shelby) Monday regarding Kevyn Orr's interest in privatizing Detroit water and the ongoing shutoffs.

The ACLU Fund of Michigan and NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund have written a letter July 18, 2014 to Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan, Emergency Manager Kevyn Orr, and DWSD management - James Fausone (Chair) and Sue McCormick (CEO), with a courtesy copy to Judge Rhodes and Governor Rick Snyder. This letter details the problems with the practice of water shutoffs and related issues surrounding the bankruptcy.

Freedom Fridays Series of Events
Freedom Fridays are organized weekly in Detroit to protest various takeover and austerity activities that are ongoing. The usual time is 4:00pm outside the Water Board Building at 735 Randolph, Detroit.

The People's Water Board Coalition is in dire need of donations - use the link
http://bit.ly/... and enter "People's Water Board Coalition" in the designation field.

July 24 from 4-6pm the Canadian Water Convoy's arrival will be announced at the Spirit of Detroit with Maude Barlow (Council of Canadians and assisted in bringing UN Human Rights violation). The caravan will bring water delivered to the Peoples Water Station at St Peter's Church. Water Stations are being established across the city near communities in distress.

Information at http://peopleswaterboard.blogspot.com/...
 

DaddyTime

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There has been previous use of an LRAD in Detroit on May 1, 2012 when Occupy Detroit gathered on the public sidewalk outside Grand Circus Park after park closing hours of 10pm. The use in 2012 was as a public address. The use in 2014 was to cause distress to those hearing the sound.
Not once, but twice? :dahell:

Again, and again I keep hearing "they don't really care about us" in my head. :snoop:
 

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George Carlin
"and the vanishing pension that disappears the minute you go to collect it. And now they're comin' for your SOCIAL SECURITY MONEY. They want your fukkin' retirement money. They want it BACK. So they can give it to their criminal friends on Wall Street. And you know something? They'll get it. They'll get it ALL from you sooner or later"



Detroit Retirees Back Pension Cuts by a Landslide
DETROIT — Jul 22, 2014, 9:13 AM ET
By ED WHITE Associated Press

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A year after filing for bankruptcy, Detroit is building momentum to get out, especially after workers and retirees voted in favor of major pension changes just a few weeks before a judge holds a crucial trial that could end the largest public filing in U.S. history.

Pension cuts were approved in a landslide, according to results filed shortly before midnight Monday. The tally from 60 days of voting gives the city a boost as Judge Steven Rhodes determines whether Detroit's overall strategy to eliminate or reduce $18 billion in long-term debt is fair and feasible to all creditors. Trial starts Aug. 14.

"I want to thank city retirees and active employees who voted for casting aside the rhetoric and making an informed, positive decision about their future and the future of the city," said Kevyn Orr, the state-appointed emergency manager who has been handling Detroit's finances since March 2013.

General retirees would get a 4.5 percent pension cut and lose annual inflation adjustments. They accepted the changes with 73 percent of ballots in favor. Retired police officers and firefighters would lose only a portion of their annual cost-of-living raise. Eighty-two percent in that class voted "yes."

Voting ended July 11, and the counting was done by a private company.

Support for the pension changes triggers an extraordinary $816 million bailout from the state of Michigan, foundations and the Detroit Institute of Arts. The money would prevent the sale of city-owned art and avoid deeper pension cuts. The judge, however, still must agree.

In a statement Tuesday, Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder said the vote is recognition that the state has pulled together in support of the city. He noted that many people faced "difficult decisions" and said their sacrifices are appreciated.

"We have farther to go down this road," Snyder said. "But the vote tallies show how far we've come in the past year, and that Detroit's future is increasingly brighter."

Anthony Sabino, a bankruptcy expert who teaches business law at St. John's University in New York, said results of the voting are a big win for the city.

"It will pave the way for a confirmation hearing. Detroit will be able to move forward, not with absolute financial certainty but far more than Detroit has enjoyed in decades," he said.

Indeed, a Boston-based restructuring expert hired to advise the judge said Monday Detroit's overall bankruptcy plan is "feasible," a key standard at the upcoming trial. But Marti Kopacz warned that antiquated computer systems, a pledge to spend more than $1 billion to improve services after bankruptcy and a "cultural malady" among workers all will be challenges.

"There are ... employees who don't grasp that their job is to provide a service to the taxpayers versus the taxpayers owing them a job," Kopacz said in a report released Monday.

There are tens of thousands of creditors in Detroit's bankruptcy, from bond holders to businesses that provide soap, but much of the focus of the last year has been on the roughly 32,000 retirees and current and former workers banking on a pension. They have put a real and often anguished face on the process.

The judge set aside a day last week to hear the personal stories of retirees frightened about getting smaller checks.

The average annual pension for police and fire retirees is $32,000, while most other retired city workers get $19,000 to $20,000. Orr has said pension changes are unfortunate but necessary because two funds are underfunded by billions. If investment performance improves in the years ahead, he said, the cuts could be restored.

Many retiree organizations had urged a "yes" vote, insisting the pension changes were the best option under tough circumstances. But Dorothy Baker, 64, disagreed. Besides the pension cut, the library retiree who lives in suburban St. Clair Shores would lose a portion of her annuity earnings.

"Don't they sell assets in bankruptcy? They haven't sold any assets. There are parking garages and golf courses," said Baker, who worked for Detroit for nearly 39 years.

The Michigan Constitution says public pensions can't be cut, but Rhodes said in December that federal bankruptcy law trumps that shield. It was a groundbreaking opinion that could influence local governments across the country that go broke.

Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette believes the judge is wrong, but he won't appeal now that retirees have voted for the cuts.

"I will respect their decision," Schuette said in a statement.
 
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