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Kamis, 09 Juni 2011

We Are Being Lied To - MoveOn Civic Action & The Other 98% Flash Mob

I participated in this action on Monday June 6th, if you look closely you can see me in the top left hand corner holding a piece of the letter "W" (see the still photo below)...


Earlier this week, our amazing members joined MoveOn in putting together a flash mob of concerned citizens standing on the steps of Federal Hall on Wall Street, with one simple message for financial elites: We Are Being Lied To.

Click on photo to enlarge

thanks to Dennis P. Osorio for the photo

Kamis, 28 April 2011

New Yorkers to Wall Street on May 12: Make Big Banks & Millionaires Pay


COALITION PLANS WEEK OF ACTION TO STOP BLOOMBERG’S BUDGET CUTS WITH TAXES ON MILLIONAIRES AND ENDING GIVEAWAYS TO BIG BANKS

National Movement Connects the Dots to NYC, Demands Reform and Fair Share in Taxes from Financial Sector
A growing coalition of community, labor, and progressive groups announced today plans for a week of events starting May 9th, calling for Mayor Michael Bloomberg to end taxpayer-financed giveaways to Wall Street and ask for fair-share taxes from millionaires to mitigate his proposed budget cuts. The week of action will culminate in a major mobilization in Lower Manhattan on Thursday, May 12.

The coalition, uniting under the banner “Make Big Banks and Millionaires Pay” will contrast the corporate welfare, property tax giveaways, and seemingly endless local and national tax cuts enjoyed by the financial sector with Bloomberg’s proposed cuts to childcare, classrooms, public safety, and dozens of other services working New Yorkers rely on.

“The big banks wrecked our economy and are back to making billions in profits and lavish bonuses, while the rest of us are still cleaning up the mess they created,” said Mary Brosnahan, the Executive Director of the Coalition for the Homeless. “Now Bloomberg has a choice: ask Wall Street bankers to contribute their fair share to fixing New York City, rather than enacting devastating cuts to working families.”

The organizers promise more than a typical “rally” on May 12
th, with a day of diverse, creative actions across the downtown financial district. Michael Mulgrew, President of the United Federation of Teachers, said: “On May 12, tens of thousands of New Yorkers will descend on Wall Street, creating a giant school without walls throughout the financial district. Together, we will educate our city and expose the people and institutions that are destroying our jobs and our economy, and the politicians who are letting them get away with it.”

The week of actions coincides with a growing national movement by communities increasingly questioning the practices of the financial industry and fighting back against attacks on working people. “We are connecting the dots from the big banks that crashed our economy, destroyed millions of jobs and foreclosed on millions of family homes to the human impact here in the financial capital of our country, ” said Michael Kink, Executive Director of Strong Economy for All Coalition.

As the week of action approaches, organizers plan to release new data detailing the tax breaks and giveaways New York City doles out to the banking industry, as well as the effect of Wall Street-caused foreclosures on New York’s communities and tax revenue. “When New Yorkers see the skewed choices this city has made, it is no longer an abstraction,” added Kink. “Homeless shelters are bursting at the seams, and child care and senior centers are closing down -- not because we have gone broke, but because Bloomberg has chosen to spend hundreds of millions in subsidies for the people who need it least.”

The following community groups and unions have joined the May 12 coalition (list in formation):

Center for Children Initiatives
Center for Working Families
Citizen Action of New York
Coalition for the Homeless
Community Voices Heard
Housing Works
Make the Road New York
New York Communities for Change
New Deal for New York Campaign
Organization for a Free Society
Picture the Homeless
United Students Against Sweatshops
Urban Youth Collaborative
VOCAL-NY
1199 SEIU
SEIU 32BJ
CWA 1104
CWA 1180
CWA District 1
Professional Staff Congress – CUNY
United Federation of Teachers


Learn more at www.Onmay12.org
On Facebook:
http://www.facebook.com/OnMay12
On Twitter:
http://twitter.com/onmay12

Rabu, 30 Maret 2011

Senin, 28 Maret 2011

Rich Bro/Poor Bro - Britehorn.com


Once upon a time there were two friends named Wall Street and Main Street and somehow or other their lives went in two drastically different directions.


Film by John T. Kramer. Starring Cory Sylvester, Josh Segovia, Betsy Stone, Niq Schwartz and Sherman Edwards.


http://www.britethorn.com

Selasa, 15 Maret 2011

Rep. Weiner Study Shows Bank Explosion in New York City (But Only For Some)

Queens Residents Being Passed By

Today, Rep. Anthony Weiner (D – Queens and Brooklyn), a member of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, released a report showing that although the number of banks in New York City has increased by 191 since 2006, many outer borough neighborhoods are being left behind. Over the last four years, the wealthiest borough, Manhattan, has gained 73 more banks; while only 37 additional banks stand in Queens, the City’s largest borough.

Even in the midst of an economic recession, the number of bank branches in New York City has increased by 12% since 2006. The boom, unfortunately, has largely been concentrated outside of Queens, leaving local residents without the benefits that a financial institution can offer.

Over the last four years, the number of banks in the Queens has only grown by 37. Conversely, the number of bank branches in Manhattan, the richest borough in the City, has increased by 73 – twice the growth in Queens.

Access to banking institutions and their credit and investment capital is essential to creating and retaining jobs, developing affordable housing, and supporting small businesses. But, banks in this city are disproportionately serving those of us who live in Manhattan.

In South Jamaica, only one additional bank has opened since 2006 – increasing its total from zero branches to one. Similarly, no new branches have opened in Corona, Queens over the past four years, leaving residents with access to only three banks. During that same period, Soho has added six additional banks for a total of 45. Small businesses are the life-blood of many communities here in Queens, and we need to make sure the flow of funding is made available to Queens businesses.

On average, there are 19 banks for every 100,000 Queens residents – one of the lowest averages in the City. In Manhattan, there are 43 branches, on average, for every 100,000 residents. In the least populous borough, Staten Island, there are 22 banks, on average, for every 100,000 residents.

"Neighborhoods in Queens are being squeezed out of the benefit a local bank can provide,” Weiner said. “We need better incentives and a stronger regulatory authority to increase the presence of banks in neighborhoods that need them the most. Banks can't keep getting a free pass when they are not meeting standards set by Congress."

Highlights of the Weiner Study:
  • Since 2006, New York City has seen the addition of 191 bank branches. The borough of Queens, however, accounts for only 19% of that net growth.
  • On average, there are 19 banks for every 100,000 Queens residents. Manhattan, on the other hand, averages 43 branches for every 100,000 residents, and Staten Island residents benefit from 22 banks, on average, for every 100,000 people.
  • Nearly 70% of the bank growth in the last four years occurred in neighborhoods where the median income was above $40,000.
  • In neighborhoods with a median household income above $53,000, there is a bank for every 2,300 New Yorkers, whereas neighborhoods with a median household income below $31,000 have only one bank for every 9,000 people.
  • Queens, the City's largest borough, added 50% fewer bank branches than Manhattan.
  • In Corona, Queens, residents are presently served by only three banks. In Manhattan’s Turtle Bay, there are currently 64 banks open.


Washington and Albany have both established programs meant to encourage banks to provide services in poorer neighborhoods – but they have proven to be insufficient. The New York State Banking Department offers tax breaks, job training, and public fund deposits to banks that set up shop in underserved communities. And in 1977, Congress created the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) to prohibit financial institutions from under-serving low-income areas and ensure equal access to housing finance resources, consumer and business lending, community investments, and low-cost services.

Four federal agencies were selected to rate banks on their effort to serve the needs of low-income neighborhoods. But the regulators, representing the Federal Deposit Insurance Agency (FDIC), Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS), Office of Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), and The Federal Reserve (The Fed) rated over 98% of banks as either Outstanding or Satisfactory even though the banking industry continues to deny the mortgage loan applications of African Americans and Latinos twice as frequently as those of whites. Further, the agencies are largely without the authority and power to require banks to open branches in underserved areas.

To help address the banking disparity in Queens, Rep. Weiner proposed the following measures:

The Weiner Plan:
  • Revise the Community Reinvestment Act’s (CRA) bank examination ratings so that branch distribution and low-income services receive more weight
  • Allow CRA administrators, i.e. FDIC, to penalize banks that receive poor ratings through fines and through denying expansion and merger requests
  • Incentivize banks to offer and actively market a portfolio of safe, no fee services to low income customers. This can be achieved by revising the CRA’s service test to give banks who offer these services higher ratings. These ratings could then be used to reward banks in a variety of ways.