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  • Archive: 2011

    Judge Denies Occupy Boston’s Injunction, Mayor Issues Midnight Deadline to Leave Dewey Sq.

    Today, December 7th, 2011, Boston Judge Frances A. McIntyre ruled against Occupy Boston, effectively lifting the injunction which prevented the police from evicting us from Dewey Square. Download the full ruling.

    Occupy Boston has not issued an official response, but anyone who can be at camp, please make the effort. We need all of your support. We have lost our safety net and encourage everybody to be present at Dewey as much as possible in the days ahead.

    Update: Mayor Menino has threatened “further action” if we do not leave Dewey Square by midnight. If you stand with the Occupy movement, please make your way to Dewey Square TONIGHT! We need you!

    OB Expresses Solidarity With Millennium Daycare Workers

    The General Assembly of Occupy Boston passed the following resolution on December 3, 2011:

    Occupy Boston supports the Millenium Daycare workers, and all workers like them, who are among the most disenfranchised of the 99%.

    In March 2011, the Millenium Daycare Center in Chinatown closed when the owner filed for bankruptcy. The day it closed, twenty workers showed up for their shift to find the door locked and a note telling them not to come back. Last year, workers were paid once a month, but each time their paychecks bounced and they were left to pay bank penalties. They have still not been compensated for bounced checks and overtime fees. Now the owner has filed bankruptcy to absolve herself of all responsibility.

    Wage theft affects the least visible and most vulnerable among us. The experience of the Millenium daycare workers reflects a common problem experienced by immigrant workers, many of whom work at-will or are otherwise unprotected by existing bankruptcy legislation. Immigrant workers in Chinatown, the Boston area, and the country have a long history of organizing for justice. After almost half a year of waiting for their pay, these workers are now planning to take public action with help from the Chinese Progressive Association, which has worked tirelessly to advocate for their right to fair compensation.

    We join these workers and their allies in solidarity to speak out against wage theft as a symptom of a broken political and economic system.

    General Assembly Preview: Dec. 6, 2011

    It’s definitely going to be an interesting general assembly tonight! Foreclosure actions have begun in mass across the country. Occupiers (including a strong contingent from OB) have arrived in DC for a week of action. We have lots on our minds about winterization and next steps for our movement.

    Possible proposals for tonight include an investment opportunity in a mobile food truck, whether to pick a date to end the encampment in spring, and more. Should be very interesting, to say the least!

    See you at 7:00pm at Dewey! It’s going to rain so dress warmly and bring your umbrellas! Do it for quorum! 🙂

    Meet the Occupiers: Rene

    [Video courtesy of Liam Leahy and the Boston Herald]

    Winter Tent Denied Today

    The following is a statement by John Ford, a member and resident of Occupy Boston:

    This morning we attempted to bring in another military tent, a 16’x16’, which would be used for sleeping. We were stopped in our attempt and told a permit would be needed.

    When we have asked how to go about permitting a tent, we have been told not to bother, as no tents we seek to permit will be approved, on principle that no permit was ever issued to be here, in Dewey Square, in the first place; or ever would be. This was stated on the stand in Suffolk Superior Court, by Mister Bart Shea, the City Fire Marshall. This ties our hands while demanding we scratch our own backs, or leave.

    That’s fine for the paper, but what’s happening on the ground is that the various city agencies, covering their own liability, are telling us to come into code, while still other city offices, apparently, are using the police to enforce the prohibition of new materials; effectively halting our ability to come up to code without obfuscation.

    The police will argue with us all day, they have an order barring in new materials, simple; it is the other, higher offices, which refuse to negotiate. We, at Occupy Boston, once again, would like to extend an invitation, to the Mayor of The City of Boston, Mr. Thomas Menino, to the Fire Marshal, noted above, and any other city regulators or officials willing to engage in this debate; to come and have an open dialogue, with the people, on the issue of how we can come to terms, on issues of safety, sanitation, and higher philosophy,  to relate, and mediate our mutual interests, so that we can all move forward.

    As for this morning, a general assembly was called at 11:30 to discuss the action. It had been discussed previously, in the wake of the sink incident, that a more cooperative and coherent demonstration was needed to best portray our particular situation to the public. We called on the various city agencies acting in apparent collusion to prevent us from coming into accord with their wishes, as well as the media, and you, to hear our polite requests for answers, as well as to raise further public awareness on this issue.

    We were offered no answers, only that we needed a permit; a permit which we have been informed would never be granted. The tent was removed peaceably, only after we felt our message was heard; that we would like to become safer, more comfortable, more efficiently arranged, organized and accessible, so that more people may come, and be involved in this open discussion.

    -John Ford

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