*** Before reading this please get an update by clicking over to
http://www.esperanzacenter.org/freespeech/index.htm Today April 27th Oral arguments to this case are being heard as we speak.. the implications to this are frightening...
There's an old saying that reads 'The price of freedom means one has to be forever vigilant', meaning folks, especially those who are in power or feel threatened will always be scheming to find ways to limit or outright take away your power. What has been going on in San Antonio since November 29 2007, is that the Mayor and City Council voted to give the police power to charge for 'Free Speech' in public space at their discretion. Such a move is a blatant assault one of our core basic freedoms-The right to assemble FREELY. Below is a video that gives a brief backdrop as to what's happening...
This law is fortunately being challenged by a coalition of groups including San Antonio Free Speech Coalition. The Esperanza Peace and Justice Center and the International Woman's Day March and Rally Committee who have filed a lawsuit and will be headed down to New Orleans later this month to have this case heard in the US Fifth Circuit Cour of Appeals.
The plantiffs have wisely connected the dots and not made their situation in San Antonio an isolated one. They have noted that similar ordinances are happening all over the country including one in New Orleans where the 100+ year tradition of Second Line is now being hit with city fees. The New Orleans saga reminds me of the attacks and prohibitions that were suddenly placed on African Bongo Drummers in Marcus Garvey Park in Harlem as the neighborhood got gentrified. A 40 year tradition that was actually a tourist attraction was nixed with police suddenly asking for permits, fees etc..
Not too far removed from these parade ordinances which seem to be disproportionately impacting Black, Brown and marginalized communities are aggressive and expensive gang injunctions which are being deployed by police departments in cities like LA, San Francisco, El Paso Chicago and New York. Currently in the city of Oakland there's a huge fight to prevent them from being implemented there because they 1-drain money and resources away from the community and into the police departments and 2-these tactics tend to impact and impede residents and innocent folks more than they do the so called 'gang bangers' who simply move to another area when such measures are put forth.
We can get more into this in another column, but the point being made here is that people coming together to hang out, protest or culturally express themselves is under attack. We applaude the folks in San Antonio for standing up and we encourage everyone to pay close attention to this case. Below are two videos that comes from the The Esperanza Peace and Justice along some richer information that comes courtesy of the Queblog in the San Anontonio Current. We also encourage folks to check out the April 17th Mock Trial at Esperanza
-Davey D-
Our Streets Will Not be Silenced
http://www.sacurrent.com/blog/queblog.asp?perm=70254
Last month, the San Antonio Free Speech Coalition learned oral arguments in their case against the city and its revised parade ordinance would be heard by the U.S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, located in New Orleans. I squeezed into the group's serious meeting on April Fool's Day to see how the exhaustively active group would handle the April 27 one-hour-plus hearing. It couldn't have been a better meeting for a neophyte like me to get briefed (albeit one-sidedly) on the history of the contentious parade ordinance and its implications for free speech.
The Esperanza Peace and Justice Center, the primary soldiers in this particular battle, hosted the event and provided the bulk of the 30 or so attendees. Others included the proud octogenarian member of the Communist Party to my left and his friend, Susan Ives, the leader of the local Peace Center to my right. Amy Kastely, the lead attorney for the Free Speech Coalition, launched into her clients' grievances with a Star Wars-like beginning: "The long saga of this challenge that we're bringing begins many years ago ... "
The updated, quick-and-dirty version is as follows: The City of San Antonio has long charged fees for parades and assemblies held on its streets and requiring some sort of traffic blockage, police presence and clean-up. Kastely and the Free Speech Coalition claimed that after massive immigration rights marches in 2006, a new parade ordinance quickly appeared applying a different fee schedule for First Amendment and non-First Amendment events. And who decides what event constitutes "First Amendment" and thus lowered fees? Why, the San Antonio Police Department, of course. Law enforcement has an awesome record with those sorts of determinations. Moreover, some proven, popular events like the Diez y Seis Parade and the Martin Luther King Day March would be exempted. Giving the police the broad power to decide who marches, revels or protests and how much they should pay seemed a tad unconstitutional to U.S. District Judge Xavier Rodriguez, who issued an injunction halting enforcement of the ordinance on February 21, 2008.
Judge Rodriguez insisted the City meet several requirements limiting the chief of police's discretion, distinguishing between traffic-control costs and the more nebulous security costs, and no longer exempting funeral processions and government agencies from paying for their pain-in-the-ass, traffic-stopping details. The City Attorney's Office even seemed pleased with the outcome, saying they could institute some "pretty easy fixes," as Michael Bernard put it in a February 22, 2008, phone conversation with the Current.
And they did, to a degree. The chief of police still determines what is a "First Amendment" event and what isn't. However, the new ordinance requires the chief to consider several specifics in determining the amount of traffic control needed, making fees more transparent. They also don't exempt funeral processions or VIP motorcades. Is that enough to pass Constitutional muster?
Judge Fred Biery, who took over the case after Judge Rodriguez recused himself, thinks so. He both lifted the injunction and granted the City summary judgment, advising, in his folksy way, that the plaintiffs "apply for permits early to avoid last-minute egg beater pleadings," in his motion granting the summary judgment.
But Kastely and the Free Speech Coalition aren't satisfied. To the group, the cost of a parade permit is still unreasonably high, especially the $2 million insurance policy the City strongly suggests, and its alternative for cash-strapped marches, a non-obstructing march on San Antonio's cracked, curbed and narrow sidewalks, is laughable. They appealed the summary judgment motion, and the case was recently chosen as one on which the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals hears an oral argument. Decisions at this level can set binding precedents. Even though the court is, according to Kastely, very right wing and very Republican presently, "so much of the Civil Rights movement happened there. They are bound by some decisions made during that period," and some of those relate directly to public protests.
“We’ve given every opportunity to allow people to have those [First Amendment] events at no cost,” Klein said, pointing out that the City picks up the first $3,000, and will make arrangements for expenses above that amount in some cases. She also notes that applicants can indicate whether they believe their event qualifies for First Amendment status when they apply for a permit, and the police department consults with the City Attorney’s office. “We err on the side of caution and presume it’s a First Amendment event.”
Klein said she expects the loser at the Fifth to appeal to the United States Supreme Court.
Many of the Esperanza Center's buena gente are excited to go to New Orleans in support of the case. For one, the city is a subject of Naomi Klein's The Shock Doctrine, which could be the book of the month at the Esperanza Center, given how many times it's been mentioned there lately. The book details the movement to privatize New Orleans' public schools and housing, which I suppose factors into the Free Speech Coalition's fear that steep permit fees for public demonstrations will only be feasible if financed privately. The coalition also wants to use the opportunity to join up with local groups like New Orleans' renowned Second Line brass band, who have lately faced major permit increases for performing at street funeral processions and public events. Though they've not yet finalized when they'll go or how they'll get there, the Free Speech Coalition is confident they will have more than adequate representation.
"When we've gone to court here in town, we've packed the place," said Graciela Sanchez of the Esperanza Center. She hopes they'll do the same at the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, even if it's just for an hour. We'll be there, if only to hear what the court has to say about that whole egg beater thing.
Comments
Forceful tera gold and angry
were c9 online gold all there
Christian Louboutin shoes
reply this post
reply
reply this post
re
answer
reply this topic
The Best Collection of new era hats !
Ultimately, he said, the
And it would grow with his
how awful
Entrepreneur Siamak
ffxiv gil,
Taghaddos said it was not clear right away that securing compensation would become a top priority. ffxiv gil,By keeping some distance until that issue clarified, Obama might have strengthened his hand in obtaining the compensation fund from the oil company.
ffxiv gil,
If Obama had pushed harder and for more, Taghaddos said, BP might have seen the demand as no better than a bankruptcy filing. "His being able to go in and get a $20 billion guarantee, minimum, and in that way, shows great negotiating skills."
Swiss replica watches
beaded bag
re
best hats
gps navigator
gps navigator
Nike air max 90
reply this post
casual dresses
I just stumbled upon your
Great info.I like all your
cheap jerseys
Unlike other products, hermes
choose clothes clothes
Post new comment