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Afrika Town is a community garden in what was long a vacant lot in Oakland next to the Qilombo social center. On March 26, the landowner came with a bulldozer to raze the garden, backed up by Oakland police officers. Activists quickly gathered and were able to convince the landowner to return a week later. On April 3, dozens of community members turned out to defend the garden. The owner backed down, giving Afrika Town the opportunity to buy the land. Afrika Town is now in dire need of funds to survive.
On March 30, Mumia Abu-Jamal collapsed in the prison infirmary at SCI Mahanoy from diabetic shock before being hospitalized in the ICU at Schuylkill Medical Center. Despite his serious condition, he was transferred back to the prison just two days later. The National Lawyers Guild is calling for immediate and independent medical attention for him, and on Friday, April 10, community members in Oakland will participate in a National Day to "Stand Up for Mumia" at the Federal Building.
The only oil company to sue San Benito County over a local ban on fracking and other high-intensity petroleum operations announced on April 6 it has dropped its lawsuit, leaving the voter-approved ordinance in place. Citadel Exploration’s decision to dismiss its own case means that local fracking bans in California face no remaining active legal challenges, despite threats from the oil industry.
Community members opposing the City of Monterey's new sit-lie ban held their third sit-in on Alvarado Street on April 3. Individuals with Direct Action Monterey Network (DAMN) and other supporters returned to the same location of the previous two demonstrations and faced increased pressure from business owners, who expressed more aggressively their desire for the group to either move the location of their gathering, or leave the downtown area altogether and stop protesting.
Holding plastic “torches” and “pitchforks,” activists formed human barricades at both entrances to the Nestlé Waters bottling plant in Sacramento at 5:00 a.m. on March 20, effectively shutting down the company's operations for the day. Members of the “Crunch Nestlé Alliance" shouted out a number of chants, including ”We got to fight for our right to water,” “Nestlé, Stop It, Water Not For Profit," and “¿Agua Para Quien? Para Nuestra Gente.” The protesters stayed until about 1 pm, but there were no arrests.
On the grassy lawn in front of Hewlett Packard headquarters, demonstrators held a "virtual" meeting dubbed "The People's Shareholders Meeting" on March 18. Board members in silk-screened HP insignia ties joined a Meg Whitman character in blonde wig. CEO Whitman fielded questions about the company's complicity in Israel's oppression of Palestine from a group on lawn chairs portraying shareholders. Testifiers, including two Israeli citizens, spoke to the shareholders from a mock podium.
On March 28 in Monterey, about 75 people joined a broad coalition of activists in a rally and march starting at the Monterey Wharf to protest white supremacist police brutality in Salinas and nationwide. Thirty protesters marched to Highway One, blocked all four southbound lanes, and closed the highway for 45 minutes. Eight people in total were arrested. The action was organized in the context of the killing of five unarmed Latino men since March 2014 by white Salinas police officers: Angel Ruiz; Osman Hernandez; Carlos Mejia; Frank Alvarado, Jr.; and Jaime Garcia.
As community members mark the one-year anniversary of the police killing of Alex Nieto, none of the four San Francisco police officers involved in Alex’s death face any charges. In response, Stop Police Impunity held a peoples’ court in front of the SFPD's Mission District station on March 23. This trial complete with a peoples’ judge, jury, and prosecutor found all four officers guilty. Demonstrators locked themselves together, and the entire block of Valencia in front of the police station was blocked for four hours.
A newly completed assessment has found that monarch butterflies in North America are vulnerable to extinction. The assessment was undertaken by NatureServe and the Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation, and results were published in a report released by the U.S. Forest Service on March 9. “The time is now to intensify continent-wide efforts to reduce the threats to this iconic species and prevent it from succumbing to the fate that has befallen far too many other species,” said Bruce Young, NatureServe’s Director of Species Science.
Autonomous Students UCSC write: Before dawn on March 3, a group of six students at the University of California Santa Cruz went to the fishhook connecting Highways 1 to 17. Evoking the practice of highway blockades popularized during the Black Lives Matter movement, they chained themselves to aluminum trashcans filled with cement and blocked traffic for nearly five hours. The traffic jam this caused stretched over the hill to snarl Silicon Valley commutes, an act of peaceful civil disobedience that has since become the most controversial of the “96 Hours of Action” declared across the UC system for the first week of March, in protest against tuition hikes and police violence.
On March 24, the Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors voted 3-2 before an overflowing room to ban the cultivation of cannabis in all unincorporated territories of the county, with limited exceptions. Personal grows of 10×10 square feet are still permitted, with restrictions. Outdoor cultivation is entirely banned in the 2nd District, represented by Zach Friend, and includes the communities of Aptos, Corralitos, Freedom, and portions of Watsonville.
On March 23, coordinated actions were held statewide in California to oppose the use of solitary confinement in prisons and jails. Protests were planned for Eureka, Los Angeles, Oakland, San Diego, San Francisco, and San Jose. In Santa Cruz, community members gathered on West Cliff Drive for a rally and candlelight vigil. Organizers say future actions will continue to be held statewide on the 23rd of each month to symbolize the 23 hours per day prisoners in solitary are held in the "complete isolation" of their cells.
Before dawn on March 21, a fire erupted in a warehouse on 24th Street in Oakland. Two resident artists died. The fire quickly spread to the adjoining warehouse on 23rd Street commonly known as the AK Press warehouse. On the AK side, three residential units sustained severe damage, at least one being totally destroyed, with a beloved cat succumbing to the smoke and heat. Other units have borne varying degrees of damage. Businesses on the first floor are struggling with major water damage. Even worse, with both warehouses now red-tagged by the city, residents and businesses are not allowed inside either building, leaving dozens homeless. A new relief fund has been created that will be evenly split three ways between AK Press, 1984 Printing, and affected neighbors.
On March 14, farmers and neighbors of the Gill Tract turned out to disrupt business as usual at a local Sprouts supermarket. Activists, a brass band, and a large delegation of workers from the Fast Food Workers Union converged on Sprouts in Walnut Creek, holding a sit-in to block the main entrance to the store and rallying around a 600-pound stump that had been recently cut down by contractors preparing for the construction of Sprouts at the Gill Tract. One week later, Sprouts management sent protestors legal documents suggesting that the parking lot in front of their Petaluma store was not a "free speech" zone.
Supporters packed a Santa Cruz courtroom on March 17 for preliminary hearings concerning the six UCSC students who were arrested for blocking traffic on Highway 17 on March 3 to protest tuition increases. The hearing was the first time all six of those arrested have appeared together in court, and they all have legal representation now. None have pleaded guilty to the charges they face, which include misdemeanors for "resisting arrest" and creating a "public nuisance."
On March 12, the Pit River Tribe and their Native American and environmental allies optimistically left the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco following oral arguments in their long legal battle to protect the Medicine Lake Highlands from geothermal destruction and desecration. The Pit River people, the lead defendants in the case, are fighting in court to defend the Highlands, known to them as “Saht Tit Lah," an area that has been used for healing, religious ceremonies and tribal gatherings for thousands of years.
A video has surfaced of Santa Cruz Police hitting and tasing Oliver Howard in front of the Court House on October 13, in what multiple witnesses called excessive force at the time. The woman who recorded the video can be heard saying, "I hate cops" and "this is so fucked up" as the events unfolded. After the violent takedown by officers, Howard was taken directly to the hospital. He was never booked into jail and apparently was never charged with any crime. Since that time, a witness complaint with Santa Cruz PD has triggered an external review.
Amilcar Perez-Lopez was a 21-year-old man from Guatemala, living and working in the Mission District. Amilcar and his household were facing eviction at the end of March. On February 26, plain clothes SFPD officers Craig Tiffe and Eric Reboli shot and killed Amilcar. Police have stated he was in the process of stealing a bicycle, but that claim is called into question by a number of witnesses, some who say the cyclist had stolen Amilcar's phone. Witnesses have reported being intimidated and bullied by SFPD since Amilcar's murder.
Students at UC Santa Cruz concluded four days of protests against tuition and fee increases with a campus-wide strike and shut down on March 5. Dubbed "96 Hours of Action," demonstrations were held March 2 to 5 at schools across California to highlight the relationship of racist mass incarceration to the privatization of education. Thousands of people in Santa Cruz were affected on March 3 when six students locked themselves together to block highway traffic.
hanna quevedo writes: We received eviction papers from our landlords, Ahuva, Emanuel, and Barak Jolish. Their legal documents aim to displace us from our affordable, eleven-year-old home, Station 40. It is no coincidence that Station 40 is being evicted on the same intersection as the proposed development by Maximus Real Estate Partners of a 350-unit luxury apartment building in what is a predominantly working-class neighborhood.
Early in the morning on February 26, sixty trees were cut down on the southern acreage of the Gill Tract. The UC’s move to begin clearing the way for their proposed housing and shopping complex came as a shock to farmers and neighbors, as there is an active lawsuit on appeal in the county courts, contesting the development’s detrimental environmental impact. Knowing the community would mobilize to defend the trees, the UC cut down the trees with lightening speed. The last trees were in the process of being destroyed at 9am, as farm supporters arrived.
A group of sixty graduate students led a teach-in and mediation at UC Berkeley’s School of Welfare on February 24 in response to racist comments made by tenured professor Steven Segal. The action was organized in support of twenty-five graduate students enrolled in Segal’s Mental Health Policy course. During class on February 10, Segal shared statistics citing Black-on-Black crime as the real cause of harm to the Black community. He then encouraged the class to join him in a rap, with lyrics that stated the movement “needed to stop scapegoating the cops.”
In October, a new law went into effect in the City of Monterey making it illegal to sit or lie on sidewalks in commercial districts. In response, activists staged a sit-in on the sidewalk along Alvarado Street in Downtown Monterey on February 13, and they say they plan to make it a regular event. Individuals with Direct Action Monterey Network (DAMN) organized the demonstration because they believe the law targets individuals without homes, travelers, and the impoverished.
On February 7 an Oakland Police Department officer shot at — but missed — a man who was reportedly having a mental health crisis. Later that day, Oakland city officials bragged in a press release that OPD had not shot anybody for twenty months. However, in the last thirteen months five people have been shot and killed by law enforcement in Oakland, it just happens that they were not killed by members of the Oakland Police Department. Jacorey Calhoun was shot and killed by an Alameda County Sheriff’s Deputy in August of last year.
Steve Schnaar writes: Nearly two years ago, a Santa Cruz police officer injured a homeless man who was already in handcuffs, slamming him face-first into the ground. Caught on video by a bystander, the incident got a lot of attention and the SCPD promised to do a formal investigation. However the results of that investigation have been kept secret, and meanwhile the offending officer is still on the job with no apparent consequences.
Yuvette Henderson was gunned down by Emeryville police officers Michelle Shepard and Warren Williams on February 3 within minutes of an incident at the Emeryville Home Depot about a block away. Concerned that Yuvette was killed because she was a Black woman, and that police agencies are involved in a massive cover-up, the Anti Police-Terror Project held a rally at Emeryville PD headquarters on February 21 before marching to the Home Depot, where activists used chains and lockboxes to shut the store down for most of the day.
FireWorks writes: In September of 2014, the City of Oakland began to make attempts to displace and remove people in public plazas in the wake of the WOSP (West Oakland Specific Plan) being passed. Then, in December, as the Ferguson inspired Bay Area uprising was raging, people armed with bolt-cutters took down the fences encircling the park to the cheers of those on the streets. Wanting to know more about the anti-gentrification struggle and how it connects to the battle against police and white supremacy, we caught up with long-time Oakland organizer and militant, Linda Grant.
Workers at the Santa Cruz Dream Inn held a two-day strike on February 20 and 21, prompting the hotel to close its restaurant, Aquarius. Cooks, Waiters, Bartenders, Bell Persons, Front Desk Clerks, Room Cleaners, Maintenance Workers, and all other employees refused to work, and picket lines were held in front of the hotel all day for both days of the strike. Workers approved the action after months of failed contract negotiations with owners, who have been expecting them to accept a three-year wage freeze.

04/13/15 Community Members Troubled by Suspension of UCSC Students Following Highway Blockade     education | santacruz
04/13/15 Latino Children More Likely to Attend Schools Near Hazardous Pesticide Use     poverty | santacruz
04/11/15 West Oakland Neighborhood Garden Wins Reprieve from Bulldozer and OPD, Chance to Buy Land     poverty
04/08/15 HP Developed System Used for Population and Territorial Control in Palestine     peninsula | palestine
04/08/15 Beverage Company Drains 80 Million Gallons of Water a Year from Sacramento Aquifers     environment | centralvalley
04/08/15 Oil Industry Drops Lawsuit Over San Benito County's Fracking Ban     environment | santacruz
04/08/15 Monthly Sidewalk Sit-Ins Rile Downtown Business Owners     poverty | santacruz
04/07/15 Stop the Execution of Mumia by Medical Neglect — Independent Medical Attention Needed     police
03/30/15 Community Members Lock Arms and Surround SFPD Mission Station for Four Hours     police
03/30/15 Eight Arrested in Monterey for Blocking Highway 1 During Black & Brown Lives Matter March     police | santacruz
03/30/15 Groups Work to Restore Landscape with Milkweed in Response to Monarch Decline     environment | california
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Mendocino County Suspends Contract With Rogue Federal Wildlife-killing Program Center for Biological Diversity
Monday Apr 13th 4:57 PM
Police violence getting worse says Berkeley Copwatch founder KPFA Weekend News/Ann Garrison
Monday Apr 13th 2:20 PM
Questions Remain After UC's Tree Removal at People's Park Molly Batchelder
Monday Apr 13th 12:22 PM
Santa Cruz: Report Back From Alix Tichelman Support Demonstration Free Alix! (1 comment)
Monday Apr 13th 11:11 AM
Highway 6 Statement of Concern and Support Steve Pleich (1 comment)
Monday Apr 13th 10:21 AM
Fight for $15 on 4/15 March, Oakland to Berkeley John Torok
Sunday Apr 12th 10:42 PM
Community raises funds for Oakland activist Jabari Shaw Rasheed Shabazz (2 comments)
Sunday Apr 12th 7:55 PM
Anti Police-Terror Project returns with demands to Home Depot and OPD Anti Police-Terror Project (1 comment)
Sunday Apr 12th 1:49 PM
Seniors Act Up at SF Housing Authority MPetrelis (1 comment)
Sunday Apr 12th 12:19 AM
US Marshall's can be SO rude! WeCopwatch (1 comment)
Friday Apr 10th 4:50 PM
Nurses Call on Sutter to Keep Open Thunder Road Teen Treatment Center via California Nurses Association
Friday Apr 10th 10:24 AM
Richmond Rally for Pedie Perez (3/17/15) Ed Rippy
Thursday Apr 9th 11:43 PM
Capitola City Council Approves Purchase of Body Cameras for Police Alex Darocy (3 comments)
Thursday Apr 9th 10:21 PM
California's Clear Lake Hitch Closer to Federal Endangered Species Protection Center for Biological Diversity
Thursday Apr 9th 8:14 PM
Western Pond Turtle Moves Toward Endangered Species Act Protection Center for Biological Diversity
Thursday Apr 9th 8:08 PM
More Local News...
ACLU, Detroit Agree On Interim Rules To Protect Free Speech In Public Parks American Civil Liberties Union
Monday Apr 13th 2:06 PM
This Week in Palestine, April 10th, 2015 IMEMC
Saturday Apr 11th 11:02 PM
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Saturday Apr 11th 2:13 PM
Initiate a World Peace Conference - To Mikhail Gorbachev World Beyond War
Saturday Apr 11th 7:14 AM
Mumia Delivers New Commentary & National Day of Action Noelle Hanrahan, Prison Radio (1 comment)
Friday Apr 10th 9:55 AM
New Orleans Cooperative Development Project WTUL News & Views (1 comment)
Friday Apr 10th 8:05 AM
Groups Challenge Major USDA Change to Organic Rule via Food & Water Watch
Thursday Apr 9th 5:46 PM
Federal Judge OKs Uranium Mining Next to Grand Canyon National Park Center for Biological Diversity
Wednesday Apr 8th 1:08 PM
NLG Calls for Immediate, Independent Medical Attention for Mumia Abu-Jamal via National Lawyers Guild
Tuesday Apr 7th 2:43 PM
Send a Postcard to Albert Woodfox of the Angola 3 in Solidarity w/ Baton Rouge Vigil International Coalition to Free the Angola 3
Tuesday Apr 7th 2:20 PM
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Tuesday Apr 7th 8:21 AM
More Global News...
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Monday Apr 13th 12:01 PM
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Monday Apr 13th 4:20 AM
Rojava's Revolution - Dear Mr Anarchist JJ
Saturday Apr 11th 11:59 AM
Anarchist News Site Ana
Saturday Apr 11th 6:58 AM
The Shortwave Report 04/10/15 Listen Globally! Dan Roberts
Thursday Apr 9th 4:27 PM
DC-XKEY-SCORE: The Ultimate Anti-Corruption DIY Tool Anita Nuello
Thursday Apr 9th 8:24 AM
UN Accuses Saudi Arabia of Killing Yemeni Civilians Stephen Lendman
Thursday Apr 9th 2:08 AM
Iran: World's Leading Proponent for Nuclear Weapons-Free World Stephen Lendman
Thursday Apr 9th 1:49 AM
KPFA, the PNB and "local control" Ann Garrison
Wednesday Apr 8th 10:49 PM
Property Tax Related Issues! Verdi Tanriverdi
Wednesday Apr 8th 2:47 PM
A select few in Chicago Ted Rudow III, MA
Wednesday Apr 8th 1:55 PM
Bashing Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras' Moscow Visit Stephen Lendman
Wednesday Apr 8th 7:16 AM
US-Sponsored Slow-Motion Genocide in Yemen Stephen Lendman
Wednesday Apr 8th 3:50 AM
Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras in Moscow Stephen Lendman
Tuesday Apr 7th 12:15 PM
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