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Berkeley, CA. PRESS RELEASE: WHERE DO WE GO PRESS CONFERENCE at Protest Encampment on OCT 16, 2024 @ 2pm

October 16, 2024 by Jonathan Leave a Comment


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact:
 Ian Cordova Morales, President and Advocate
 Where Do We Go (Also known as Where Do We Go Berkeley)
 510-575-1158
 imorales@wdwg.org

Yesica Prado, Union Officer
Berkeley Homeless Union
510-575-0563
Berkeley.Homeless.Union@gmail.com


Unhoused Berkeleyans Demand an End to Inhumane Homeless Policies

Berkeley, CA – Three homeless encampments have been recently established on public land to protest the current homeless policies that allow the violent removal of unhoused residents without legal protections. These NEW occupation encampments, and those yet to be built, are a direct response to executive orders by Governor Gavin Newsom and local governments to destroy all encampments across California. They also protest the Supreme Court’s ruling in City of Grant’s Pass v. Johnson, which allows the criminalization of homelessness in the country. 

In the past month, executive orders and policy changes have led to state-sanctioned violence against unhoused people on the West Coast—resulting in the destruction of curbside communities, arrests of camp residents and their advocates, and the seizure and destruction of their personal property.

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A press conference will be held tomorrow at the 4th Street and Bancroft encampment, where lead advocates from Where Do We Go, the Berkeley Homeless Union and organizations part of the Berkeley Outreach Coalition will speak on the issues of homelessness, the recent protest encampments, and the People’s demands for policy changes. 

WHEN: Wednesday, October 16, 2024 at 2 p.m.

WHERE: 4th and Bancroft Protest Encampment (2285 4th Street Berkeley, CA 94710)

How We Started

On September 28, 2024, the first protest encampment was established with the assistance of the Berkeley Homeless Union, the Berkeley Outreach Coalition, and the nonprofit organization “Where Do We Go,” where housed and unhoused community members joined together in solidarity to demand an end of the inhumane policies that have been recently enacted against unhoused people. The first protest encampment sits on the lawn of Berkeley’s “Maudelle Shirek Building” also known as “Old City Hall.” The protest camp, through the generous donations of the community provides free food, tents, tarps, sleeping bags, blankets, pillows, camp lights, clothes, hygiene products, a free library, board games, literature, porta potties and a host of other resources 24 hours a day to anyone in the surrounding area. 

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On the evening of October 13, two more parcels of public land were occupied and liberated for public use by unhoused residents of Berkeley. One encampment stands at the corner of Milvia and Center Streets, and the other was established on Bancroft and 4th Streets.

The decision to occupy public land for protest was made by unhoused community members to demand an answer to the question: “Where do we go?” If unhoused people cannot afford rent and do not want to be arrested or cited during violent encampment removals, where can people find safety and sanctuary? No federal, state or local government will answer that question. 

Andrea Henson, Executive Director of Where Do We Go, highlights that the hardships facing unhoused people have multiplied without legal protections. “If you are unhoused then your human existence in private and public spaces is unlawful. If you are not a property owner or a tenant you are defined as a trespasser,” said Henson. “Every single day is one lived in fear of where you will end up next or if you will be harassed by a community that has made it clear that you are not welcome. Yet despite knowing that our most vulnerable citizens have no protection under the law, our government continues to segregate and discriminate against them. It is inhumane and wrong.” 

Nearly 200,000 people are sleeping on the streets of California while Governor Gavin Newsom has issued threats to every state agency to target and remove the most vulnerable people in our community without providing them safe and adequate alternatives. Corporate interests—landlords, banks, government leaders, and developers—after lining their pockets have contributed to the erosion of affordable housing and created a housing market that is increasingly inaccessible to many people in the Bay Area.

Local governments, mayors, and city council members often target individuals sleeping on the streets, while ignoring the agencies that fail to provide essential social services and misuse public funds intended to support vulnerable communities. Service providers have received over $24 billion in state funds without any accountability. Additionally, billions in federal funding have been funneled into California, fueling an industry that profits from a “homeless crisis” driven by unregulated rent increases and government contracts for inadequate housing and services.

A Call for Collaboration

On September 10, Berkeley passed a resolution to clear homeless encampments with reliance on enforcement actions, citations, and arrests in cases where shelter offers cannot be made. This policy will perpetuate a cycle of displacement, trauma, and injustice for those already suffering. 

Unhoused people propose an alternative path forward, one that prioritizes care, dignity, and meaningful support. Below are the Berkeley Homeless Union Agreements, which serve as a step towards solutions that can address the city’s concerns while protecting the basic rights of unhoused Berkeleyans:

  1. Protect the Right to Sleep Safely
    The City must commit to decriminalizing and ceasing the penalization of unhoused people for sleeping in public spaces when there are no adequate alternative shelter options. This is a fundamental right and aligns with the human decency that Berkeley stands for.
  2. Focus on Care, Not Punishment
    The Berkeley Homeless Response Team (HRT) should prioritize humane care and harm reduction over enforcement. Improve communication with residents living in unhoused communities. They must avoid destroying personal property and implement a fair, transparent process for cleaning encampments.
  3. Create Sanctuary Spaces
    Establish safe and welcoming spaces where unhoused people are protected from harm and harassment. These spaces should be used to provide shelter and security until permanent, adequate and accessible housing is available.
  4. Work Together on Health and Safety
    Collaborate with unhoused residents to address health and safety issues at their communities by providing adequate sanitation and providing safe alternatives to fires such as community kitchen, charging stations and warming shelters before considering any clearing operations. Work with unhoused communities to develop fire safety plans.
  5. Access to Health Services
    Ensure unhoused people have access to essential medical and mental health services. Provide proactive mental health outreach to support healing from the trauma and challenges of living on the streets. Mental health counselors should be present at cleaning operations to help people stay calm. 
  6. Keep Communities Together
    Unhoused people rely on community networks for support, well-being, and a sense of belonging. We urge the City to respect and preserve these networks, which are often the last thread of support for those living on the streets. Breaking up these communities only deepens isolation and suffering.
  7. Protect the Right to Have Animal Companions
    Many unhoused people rely on their pets for emotional support, companionship, and protection. We call on the City to recognize the importance of these relationships and ensure that people are not forced to choose between shelter and their beloved animal companions.

These agreements reflect our deep commitment to a humane and equitable approach to homelessness. Let us work together to create a fair social contract that prioritizes human dignity, health, and community support, rather than punishment and displacement.

Demanding Justice Across the Ninth Circuit and the Country

Today, we call on every city within the Ninth Circuit (Alaska, Arizona, California, Guam, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Northern Marina Islands, Oregon and Washington) to join us. We invite Sacramento, Oakland, San Francisco, San Jose, Los Angeles, San Diego, Humboldt, Portland, Seattle, Boise, Missoula, Denver, Phoenix and every city where homelessness exists throughout the United States to create protest encampments that allow the unhoused to exercise their rights to freedom of speech and protest. 

It is time to rise up, it is time to resist. If they take our tents, sleeping bags, vehicles and RVs we have literally nothing left to lose.

In Berkeley, we pledge that for every encampment that is swept, we will establish an occupation encampment in the most visible public spaces we can find. We are going to show the public and the world that when an encampment is destroyed, the people do not just disappear. If we are no longer allowed to exist in the shadows then we shall step into the light.

Our resistance will continue until the following is achieved:

First: The immediate cessation of encampment “sweeps” and the end of criminalization of homelessness. Any act of state violence against the poor is completely unacceptable and undermines all attempts to provide actual solutions.

Second: The emancipation of all vacant bank and state owned property so that it may be used for housing. It was reported in 2022 that there are approximately 1.2 Million vacant properties in California. This means there are six vacant properties for every unhoused person in the state.

Third: A permanent moratorium on rental evictions for non-payment of rent. The only way to address the homelessness crisis is to prevent any more people from becoming homeless. The traumas associated with living on the streets often lead to permanent physical and mental health conditions making it far more difficult and expensive to navigate a person into housing.

Fourth: The complete overhaul and restructuring of the HUD coordinated entry and Section 8 housing processes. The current wait for permanent housing is anywhere between 1-10 years. Navigating homeless housing through coordinated entry is so difficult and inaccessible that despite their want for housing, many people will never be able to get close.

Fifth: The implementation of oversight for all non-profits receiving government funding for the purposes of homeless housing, shelters, and services. At this moment there is little to no accountability for the behavior and spending habits of major non-profits. Current homeless shelter conditions in California are deplorable and dangerous. If a program can not maintain a person’s safety and dignity, it should have no right to public funding.

Sixth: An accessible and non-carceral approach to mental health care. The United States has completely failed to defund its police forces in favor of improving mental health care services. Instead, 5150 holds, medical incarceration, and forced conservatorships through Gavin Newsom’s care courts threaten to circumvent due process and other constitutional protections.

Seventh: Creation of laws that protect individuals who are experiencing homelessness or who are formerly homeless that are similar to tenant protections. When you are not a tenant or a property owner, your very existence is unlawful. That must change so that individuals who cannot afford to pay rent, who are forced into shelters or substandard living conditions, are not victimized by a system that uses poverty as a vehicle for profit. 



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About Where Do We Go:

Founded in Berkeley, California by unhoused individuals living in the four largest homeless encampments along the I-80 corridor, Where Do We Go has grown into a nonprofit organization dedicated to providing legal aid, advocacy, and material support to the unhoused population. www.wdwg.org

About Berkeley Homeless Union

Founded in Berkeley, California, the Berkeley Homeless Union is a grassroots organization led by unhoused and formerly unhoused individuals committed to advocating for the rights, dignity, and well-being of our community. We work to challenge unjust policies, fight against the criminalization of homelessness, and create a platform for those directly affected to have their voices heard. Our mission is to ensure that the most vulnerable among us are treated with respect and compassion, and to push for systemic changes that address the root causes of homelessness in Berkeley and beyond.


END

—

Andrea M. Henson
Executive Director and Legal Counsel
Where Do We Go
2726 Martin Luther King Junior Way
Berkeley, California 94703-2146
Tel: 510-999-WDWG (9394)
Cell: 510-640-7390

Ahenson@wdwg.org | www.wdwg.org 

Filed Under: #wheredowegoberk, Berkeley, California, Uncategorized, Where do we go?

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