What's Happening Elsewhere

In the shadow of the casinos: Health care crisis in Atlantic City

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As casino companies and government officials continue to claim that putting predatory gambling institutions in the heart of our city will benefit us (and a month after Temple University Health Systems shut down one of the last remaining hospitals in the city that accepted all Medicaid plans), check out these stories of health care crisis from the people of Atlantic City. The first casino in Atlantic City opened in 1978, with the promise of revitalizing the city's economy. But as I watched these interviews in "Health Care Crisis U.S.A."--some of them shot literally in the shadow of the Taj Mahal casino--I wondered: revitalized for who?

Real Estate Roulette”

Check out this from Gihan Perera with the Miami Workers Center

Harlem Rally Against Displacement

Demonstration/Rally in Harlem Against Displacement & Gentrification

Saturday, June 21, 2008

HARLEM TENANTS COUNCIL, Inc.

21 West 130th Street New York, NY 10030

Email:Harlem tenants@gmail.com

Contact: Nellie Hester Bailey 646-812-5188

New Orleans: STOP the demolitions now!!

Asfolks in New Orleans are fighting to keep public housing alive, and as we here of the attacks on protesters by police today in New Orleans during a city council meeting,here is some info on what the fight is really about.

Erika

Click on any link below.

Save New Orleans public housing

New Orleans Indymedia

Benign Ethnic Cleansing

A New York Times report on a conference about New York City and whether gentrification will kill what the city has been known for. The comment section is quite lively. New York Calling

Alternet: Los Angeles Police Are Gentrifying the City' Skid Row — with Force

I'm sure this is not the first you've heard of this, but alternet offers a short analysis of what is going on in LA:

The LAPD's "Safer Cities Initiative," launched on Skid Row last summer, is based on the "broken windows" theory of law enforcement... What the theory is doing is reading poverty as disorder and using those 'signs of disorder' as an excuse to bring additional police attention and additional sanctioning to areas where poor people live."

Full story >>

Movement for Justice en el Barrio

(espanol abajo)

Movement for Justice in El Barrio in Philadelphia for two special events.

The East Harlem based organization of Mexican immigrants will link their local antigentrification work to the larger global struggle for dignity and against neoliberalism. The presentation will feature short videos documenting the dialogue between Movimiento por Justicia del Barrio and the EZLN (Zapatista Army of National Liberation) who send a message to those struggling for justice all over the world and include a special message for historically marginalized peoples.

Fighting for the Rights of Public Housing Residents in NOLA

Community organizations and public housing residents from across the nation, along with Miami Workers Center and Power U Center for Social Change, stormed the Housing Agency of New Orleans (HANO) office at around 12:30 PM today. The organizations we are acting in solidarity with displaced residents of New Orleans public housing.

HANO, under federal HUD leadership, has fenced off four public housing projects and will not let people return to their homes even though the units were not damaged by the storm two years ago.

A Note From Miami

This article does a good service of covering how gentrification is happening systematically all across the country. The article addresses the issue in Miami, but it links the 'redevelopment' in Detroit to the same corporations that are 'redeveloping' Miami. A good read.

via colorlines.com

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