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  • Category: Passed Resolutions

    GA Ratifies Declaration of Safety and Health

    The General Assembly of Occupy Boston passed the following proposal on the morning of November 30, 2011:

    Declaration of Safety and Health

    Occupy Boston will be proactive and self-regulate to meet all reasonable safety and health inspection standards of the city. We also invite city and ISD inspectors to come to Occupy Boston General Assembly, our decision making body, to announce their concerns.

     

    GA Ratifies Declaration of Occupation

    The General Assembly of Occupy Boston passed the following proposal on the evening of November 29, 2011:

    Declaration of Occupation

    We, the people of Occupy Boston, have occupied Dewey Square in the heart of the financial district, in order to express dissent over the state of our political and financial systems. We are practicing a form of horizontal participatory democracy in the shadows of anti-democratic institutions that dominate our government and our lives. Through our occupation, we are creating an exemplar society in which no one’s human needs go unmet.

    The Occupy Movement has started a nationwide conversation about the realities of economic inequality and the meaning of Constitutional rights.  We are committed to living the values of transparency, equality, accountability, awareness, sustainability, and compassion as we struggle against corporate predation, injustice, and oppression. We are actively seeking to include the diverse voices of the 99%. Together, we set a precedent and provide a foothold for people to demand a truer, more horizontal democracy, in which greed has no influence.

    Regardless of media spin, police brutality, or sub-zero temperatures, we will continue to peacefully exercise our first amendment rights by occupying, holding general assemblies, and planning for the American Spring. Our goal is a society that prioritizes the needs of all before the profits of the few. We are the 99%.

     

    OB Approves Money for Occu-bagos

    The following passed proposal is summarized from the minutes of the November 22, 2011 General Assembly:

    Winterization proposes to use up to $1000, in addition to the same sum already received by donation for this purpose, to build 16 – 20 “Occu-bagos.” The Occu-bagos will be built on bicycle trailers and provide sleeping space for one or a few individuals, with a few kept as guest space in rotation for visiting occupiers. The building process and any design improvements will be documented and made available in the library.

     

    Medical Tent Receives Approval to Purchase Supplies

    The following passed proposal is paraphrased from the minutes of the General Assembly held on November 22, 2011.

    The medical tent proposes to spend $241.11 on five stethoscopes, an ear thermometer, a pulse oximeter and several other items necessary to the continued operation of the medical team. In addition, several vests will be purchased to help identify members of the medical team.

    OB Ratifies Proposal to Boston City Council

    The General Assembly of Occupy Boston reached consensus on the following proposal November 22, 2011:

    A RESOLUTION supporting the peaceful exercise of the First Amendment carried out by “Occupy Boston.”

    WHEREAS, Boston residents like people across the United States, are alternately angered and frustrated by the continuing economic and political crisis that threatens individuals’ and our city’s fiscal stability and our community’s quality of life; and

    WHEREAS, Occupy Boston is a peaceful protest and rally fueled by Boston residents and people from throughout the region from all walks of life who have come together to support the national movement started by the “Occupy Wall Street” protests; and

    WHEREAS, additional Occupy protests have taken root across the country, and across the globe and are a growing movement with the shared goal of urging residents to peaceably assemble in public spaces in order to create a shared dialogue to address the problems and generate solutions for economically and politically distressed people; and

    WHEREAS, the roots of the Occupy Wall Street protests are various, including unemployment, underemployment, growing income disparity, banking system failures, police brutality, environmental justice, the home foreclosure crisis, discrimination based on race, ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, undocumented status, disabilities, and/or homelessness; ongoing health and wealth disparities, and lack of corporate and political accountability; and

    WHEREAS, the Occupy Boston Movement expresses the message that there is the possibility for a more just, democratic, and economically egalitarian society through the symbolic conduct of creating an exemplar society, tent city, and direct democracy in the heart of Boston’s financial district;

    WHEREAS the causes and consequences of the current economic and political crisis erode confidence in the social contract upon which the Constitution of the United States of America is based; namely, the ability of We the People to come together and form a more perfect union, establish justice, insure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defense, and promote the general welfare; and

    WHEREAS, human beings from all walks of life, whether economically comfortable or destitute, recognize the destructive effects of our governing bodies and the political gridlock that protects corporations and their lobbying interests allowing corporations to control the welfare of the people and of the Earth’s environment.

    WHEREAS, the Seattle and Los Angeles city councils have recently passed similar resolutions in support of Occupy protestors’ right to peaceably assemble; and

    WHEREAS, a recent Boston Superior Court ruling has granted the temporary restraining order to prevent the City of Boston from removing the Occupy Boston protesters; and

    WHEREAS, Boston residents can and must resolve the divisive economic and social realities facing the City of Boston in a peaceful way that honors our commitment to truth, equality and justice, and;

    NOW THEREFORE,

    BE IT RESOLVED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF BOSTON CONCURRING:

    Section 1. By the adoption of this Resolution, the City of Boston recognizes and supports the peaceful exercise of First Amendment Rights by “Occupy Boston.”

    Adopted by the Boston City Council the _____ day of _____________, 2011, and signed by me in open session in authentication of its adoption this _____ day of ________________, 2011.

    ________________________________________

    President __________ of the City Council

    Filed by me this ______ day of _________________, 2011.

    ______________________

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