LOS ANGELES: ‘Bail out Main St.—not Wall St.’
By
LeiLani Dowell
Los Angeles
Published Sep 25, 2008 9:10 PM
In the middle of a work day on Sept. 17, more than 60 people attended a protest
and press conference at the downtown Los Angeles Federal Building to demand a
moratorium on foreclosures and evictions. The event was organized by the
Labor/Community Coalition to Stop Foreclosures and Evictions, under the theme
“Bail out Main Street—not Wall Street.”
Marta Rojas denounces bank auctions of people’s homes.
WW photo: LeiLani Dowell
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John Parker, West Coast coordinator of the International Action Center and
member of the Harvard Blvd. Block Association, explained that “The
mortgage companies have been playing with and gambling on people’s
lives.” He urged: “We have to change the government’s
priorities by demanding what we need. They don’t count on the will of the
people.”
Father Richard Estrada, associate pastor of Placita Olvera Church, described
how many of the people who attend his church have recently had their homes
foreclosed by the banks. He told the assembled crowd, “The only way the
people will get through this is to stand up and march.”
Gloria Saucedo of Hermandad Nacional Mexicana said: “We all know families
who spent years saving money to pay for their mortgage. Months later the banks
tell them they have to pay exorbitant interest rates. All they are doing are
working and trying to have a home for their children. The government is giving
money to the rich, but what about the communities?”
Fernando Fernando of BAYAN-USA said about the world’s largest insurance
company: “AIG was bailed out for $85 billion, but there are more
homeless. Where is the justice? This country’s taxpayers demand a
moratorium on foreclosures!”
Sharon Black of the Ad Hoc National Network to Stop Foreclosures and Evictions
explained the legal basis for the moratorium demand: “The law says that
every time there is a disaster, there is supposed to be a moratorium on
foreclosures. This economic crisis is clearly a state of emergency.”
Marta Rojas, a member of the Service Employees International Union who narrowly
avoided the foreclosure of her home this year, denounced the auctions of
people’s homes taking place throughout Los Angeles, calling them
“vultures preying on the community.” The Ad Hoc National Network to
Stop Foreclosures and Evictions had protested one such auction a week before
the Sept. 17 action.
A representative of the youth group FIST—Fight Imperialism, Stand
Together—described how the foreclosure crisis has extended to affect
students, who are seeing student loan offers disappear. This is occurring
particularly at community colleges, where working class youth and youth of
color often begin their higher education.
Other speakers included Rosie Martinez and Marva Burgess of SEIU Local
721’s executive board, and Caroline Hughes of the Neighborhood Assistance
Corporation of America, a non-profit community advocacy and counseling agency
that fights discriminatory and predatory lending.
Dowell represented FIST at the Sept. 17 demonstration.
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