National protest confronts mortgage bankers in D.C.
By Abayomi Azikiwe
Detroit
Apr 24, 2008
A delegation of Detroit activists traveled to Washington, D.C., on April 16
to participate in the national demonstration called by the Ad Hoc Network to
Stop Foreclosures and Evictions. The action took place outside the Mortgage
Bankers Association Annual Policy Summit held in a hotel just two blocks away
from Capitol Hill.
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Activists stop eviction in Detroit,
April 17.
Photo: Agnes Hitchcock
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Chanting, “Mortgage bankers lie and cheat, people get thrown out on
the street,” a large crowd of protestors coming from New York, Baltimore,
North Carolina, Florida, Boston and other places hit hard by the foreclosure
crises like Detroit marched to the venue of the Mortgage Bankers meeting, the
Washington Court Hotel, and immediately blocked the hotel’s driveway and
entrance.
Hiding inside the hotel were several hundred mortgage bankers, including top
executives of Bank of America, Wells Fargo, Countrywide Finance, JP Morgan
Chase and most of the other banks that have been evicting millions of people
from their homes.
Scores of D.C. Metro police and private security personal positioned
themselves in front of and around the hotel, as victims of home foreclosures
testified, turning the protest into a public hearing against the actions of the
mortgage bankers meeting inside.
People who were outside the Washington Court Hotel provided firsthand
accounts of how their households and communities have been devastated by the
mortgage banking crisis that has rendered at least two million dwellings vacant
throughout the country.
Sandra Hines of the Michigan Emergency Committee Against War & Injustice
(MECAWI) told the security personnel and bankers standing outside the hotel
where the summit was being held, that “You may think this is funny, but
this crisis impacts people everyday in the city of Detroit.”
Hines, who is a former Detroit Public School social worker, ran a grassroots
campaign for a district seat on the local school board and was subsequently
evicted from her childhood home as a result of predatory lending.
Also addressing the protest, organized by the newly formed National Ad Hoc
Network To Stop Foreclosures and Evictions, were the Rev. Grayland Hagler, a
leader of the Neighborhood Assistance Corporation Of America (NACA); the Rev.
Lennox Yearwood, leader of the Hip Hop Caucus; Brenda Stokely of the
Katrina/Rita Survivors Network; Pam Africa of the Families and Friends of Mumia
Abu-Jamal; and Tyneisha Bowens of Fight Imperialism—Stand Together
(FIST).
Activists stop eviction in Detroit
As soon as the MECAWI delegation returned to Detroit on April 17, a call
went out about a young woman being evicted in the heavily depressed Linwood
Corridor area on the city’s west side. The homeowner has three children
and an 84-year-old mother, whose wheelchair was thrown out of the home by thugs
acting on behalf of the Wayne County bailiffs who enforce the mortgage
banker’s evictions against hundreds of families throughout the region
everyday. It is estimated that approximately 72,000 homes are in foreclosure in
southeastern Michigan alone.
Around 50 activists went to the young woman’s home and took the
furniture, appliances, clothes, family photos and documents and moved them back
into the house. These household items had been dragged out of the home and
thrown violently into a dumpster parked outside the property.
Furniture and appliances were broken in the eviction process. Food bought
for the children living at the home was thrown out. Telephone lines were ripped
out and a bathroom sink was knocked from the wall and thrown outside in the
yard by the agents hired to carry out the bidding of the mortgage bankers, who
incidentally are represented by a Wall Street-based security firm.
Community meeting to build broad coalition
As a result of the national demonstration in Washington, D.C., and the
announcement by Michigan State Sen. Hansen Clarke that he would introduce
legislation that would impose a two-year moratorium on foreclosures in the
state, MECAWI called for a meeting to press for the formation of a broader
coalition to push for the passage of the bill.
The meeting was attended by State Sen. Hansen Clarke and members of his
staff along with other community activists in the areas of housing, religion,
education and labor. The Rev. Edward Rowe, pastor of the Central United
Methodist Church, where the meeting was held in downtown Detroit, pledged
office space to house the new coalition which constituted itself as the
Moratorium Now Coalition to Stop Foreclosures and Evictions.
Coalition committees were established in the areas of eviction reversals,
legal strategies, publicity, outreach and office staffing. Data is being
accumulated on city councils, county commissions, community organizations and
other institutions throughout the Detroit metropolitan area and the state. This
data will be utilized in a massive mobilization campaign to win the
moratorium.
Atty. Jerome Goldberg, along with another lawyer, Vanessa Fluker, discussed
the persistent efforts on the part of the mortgage bankers to drive thousands
from their homes in the region.
“This moratorium will not be won through traditional lobbying but will
be achieved through putting people in the streets throughout the state and at
the capital in Lansing,” said David Sole, president of UAW Local 2334.
Sole, who committed himself to work on the outreach committee for the new
coalition, said that seven homes were vacant as a result of foreclosures on his
block alone on the east side of the city.
A follow-up meeting of the Moratorium Now Coalition to Stop Foreclosures and
Evictions will be held on Saturday, May 3 at 3:00 p.m. at Central United
Methodist Church. By this time the activists hope to have set up the office at
the church with a phone and donated equipment. A team of volunteers will staff
the office.
The Michigan coalition will be working with the national network that
organized the April 16 protest in Washington to plan follow-up actions in June
and beyond as the mass struggle against the foreclosures grows wider and
stronger.