Occupy St. Louis Press Release Re: Eviction
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Official Press Statement
Contact: occupystlouis@gmail.com
Occupy St. Louis Cites City for Violations
November
7, 2011—Today OccupySTL is issuing an open statement regarding the group’s
presence in Kiener Plaza. The statement reads:
Occupy St. Louis is one of many cities that exist as a solidarity movement with
the Occupy Wall Street movement, which formed to publicly attest to the fact
that corporations control far too much of our economy and political life. This
movement has received vast support across the country. How ironic, then,
that Mayor Slay has decided to stop listening to the complaints of the people
and instead heed the complaints of the corporate groups who control the city.
This week, Downtown Partnership met with the mayor’s office and told him
to shut us down. He responded to their call. No more fitting example could
illustrate who is pulling the strings. (For a list of who voiced the words
behind the Mayor's blog: http://www.downtownstl.org/AboutUs/PartnershipforDowntownStLouis/PartnershipBoard.aspx)
The Occupy St. Louis movement is further disappointed that the mayor has chosen
to hide behind false accusations to sway public opinion and to indicate that he
has spoken to Occupy St. Louis. There has been no conversation from the
Mayor's office to Occupy St. Louis, only blog posts that have not been sent to
Occupy St. Louis. The mayor’s chief of staff is quoted as saying that
Kiener Plaza “reeks of urine.” Anyone is welcome to come to the site to see
that this is not true. The occupiers have done a remarkable job of maintaining
a clean and orderly space. The other allegations issued by the Parks Department
are equally untrue in blaming the occupiers for a host of grievances, ranging
from the ridiculous, (glass bottles) to the obscene, (public urination).
Occupy St. Louis has always adhered to the idea that public spaces are public
spaces and we have no grounds to tell people to leave, other than to encourage
everyone to adhere to our safe space policy. The Mayor blames Occupy St.
Louis, (which is not an organization but a group of autonomous individuals
coming together to make decisions collectively) for behaviors that are almost
universally the actions of individuals not participating in Occupy activities
and would most likely have occurred regardless of our presence. The
mayor’s other concern, that the occupiers must give way to allow for other
events, is equally unfair. We have shared the Plaza with other groups on
several occasions so far; it is everyone’s space and everyone is welcome. On
the other hand, a Macy’s display with the occupiers evicted might just be
enough to convince many in the area to Occupy the Holidays by shopping only at
smaller local businesses.
To put these accusations in perspective, we are issuing today our own list of
violations committed by the city, of which Mayor Slay has been the chief
executive for eleven years. Some of the violations cited illustrate the
inconsistent application of laws that the mayor now wants to use against Occupy
St. Louis. These are cases of hypocrisy and raise serious questions about
unequal protection under the law. Other violations show the city’s cooperation
with Big Business and demonstrate complicity in the economic oppression being
raised by Occupy St. Louis. And of course, the violations include the
incredible disparity and racial injustice that this City has long been guilty
of towards African Americans. In total, these violations make the trivial and untrue
accusations raised against us pale in comparison.
Occupy St. Louis urges all people to stand with us and not corporate
influence. We realize that our politicians continue to let themselves be
used by Big Business and we are currently in a world where we let those who
have money dictate who can be elected. It is up to all of us as
individuals to decide where to stand as this movement sweeps the country.
Occupy St. Louis' issue is with abuse of corporate power. It is
unfortunate that our elected officials have decided to continue to uphold that
abuse. Individuals can let their voices be heard
by joining OccupySTL and/or at the voting booth in 2012.
Violations
City of St. Louis
2000-2011
|
Charge |
Citation |
|
$15 million+ in corporate tax giveaways, including $2 million+ to Peabody Coal, in just a 2 year period |
|
|
Failure to provide Missouri Constitutional right to an education
|
Removal of city schools’ accreditation after mayoral interference |
|
Failure to supervise police during towing scandal costing taxpayer money |
$700,000+ unpaid to city by towing company |
|
Veto of the Civilian Review Board passed by the Board of Alderpersons
|
Board Bill 69, 2006
|
|
Racial profiling—all-time high disparity index of 1.42
|
|
|
Failure to adequately fund the firefighters and police pensions
|
Firemen’s Retirement Fund et al v. City of St. Louis
|
|
Firing the city’s first African American fire chief without adequate cause
|
Sherman George
|
|
Discrimination against Black Deputy Fire Chief Charles Coyle, wasting taxpayer money
|
$350,000 judgment in Coyle v. City of St. Louis
|
|
LRA abuse: Hindering individual economic development for Corporate consolidation
|
|
|
Encouraging the misrepresentation of taxpayer costs for the China Hub
|
http://showmeinstitute.org/publications/report/corporate-welfare/534-china-hub-tax-incentives.html
|
Violations (Cont’d)
City of St. Louis
2000-2011
|
Charge |
Citations |
|
Failure to protect the taxpayer interests over those of the 1%
|
Ballpark Village |
|
Using the homeless as unpaid slave labor |
Johnson et al v. City of St. Louis
|
|
Illegal destruction of homeless persons’ property |
|
|
Failure to stop North City land grab and failure to enforce nuisance property ordinances against him
|
Paul McKee |
|
Moving North City’s highest voting ward, costing that area development money and influence
|
Re-districting after 2000 census |
|
Failure to enforce littering, lack of permit to block traffic, demonstrating near or on a street, public urination and noise ordinances |
World Series 2006 and 2011
|
|
St. Louis Infant Mortality Rate in mid-decade 3 times higher among blacks than whites and STL average well above Missouri’s |
http://www.stl-mcfhc.org/images/docs/FIMR_Annual_Report_2007.pdf
|
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