SPREAD THE INFORMATION

Any information or special reports about various countries may be published with photos/videos on the world blog with bold legit source. All languages ​​are welcome. Mail to lucschrijvers@hotmail.com.

Search for an article in this Worldwide information blog

maandag 30 juni 2014

World: Canada, Common Cause: Linchpin - This is Parkdale

Editor's Note: Parkdale is a historic working class neighborhood in west-end Toronto and 
has been a first home in Canada to many successive groups of immigrants to the city. Since 
the late 90's Parkdale has undergone gentrification, though not to the same extent as 
other downtown neighbourhoods. Along with Toronto's Downtown East, Parkdale is one of the 
most difficult downtown neighbourhoods to fully gentrify. This is largely due to its high 
concentration of rental housing, including many apartment buildings in deteriorating 
condition. ---- By a member of Common Cause Toronto ---- To the east, developers have 
swallowed up every viable square foot of available land and packed them with condos at a 
break-neck pace. Up and down the north-south streets, rental houses, duplexes, and 
triplexes are being ?updated?,?flipped?, and renovated into ?homes?.

The last of the rooming houses are giving way to real estate agents and their contractors. 
The past year has seen the systematic removal of almost all Roma residents through 
deportation, eviction, and rent increases. Renovations on mid and high rise apartment 
blocks are quickly followed by harassment or eviction of current tenants - with huge rent 
increases for their replacements. When called, police show up by the truck-load. When left 
to their own devices they troll the streets like ne'er do well teens ? but with guns and 
bats. Two consecutive years of staff reductions at the three local schools. Staff, hours, 
and program cuts at neighbourhood community services and library. It's all been said 
before, and more.

What should we, as anarchists in Parkdale, do? Talk class war from the bar stool? Two day 
squat? Scare yuppies off with righteous graffiti? Appeal to and/or shame local councilors 
and parliamentarians? Infoshop? Front group? Something that more accurately amounts to 
nothing?

Probably not. How about this: instead of deciding 'what is to be done' right off the bat, 
we decide where to look for potential answers. So, where in Parkdale did we look? The 
buildings - Thousands of working class tenants, hundreds of families, units in disrepair, 
harassment by management, jacked up rents, pest problems, and the very real and present 
threat of losing their homes. We looked, and were impressed.

Recently, a major international real estate and investment firm bought up four apartment 
building properties in Parkdale. The firm's business model is apparent: purchase property, 
renovate common areas, push out current tenants, move in new tenants at absurdly higher 
rent, and voila. Hey, you don't get to be a multi-billion dollar international firm by 
being less than despicable.

Faced with this, tenants in one building chose to forgo agency-based leadership, 
reciprocal politician pandering, or simply going it alone. Flyers calling for a meeting in 
the lobby were distributed door to door. Tenants discussed not only the new landlord's 
intimidation tactics but also pre-existing concerns such as disrepair of their units and 
lack of maintenance staff. Each neighbour added to the chorus of grievances and each 
neighbour shared experiences of their grievances going totally ignored when they tried to 
deal with management solo. They were looking for backup and they were looking to each 
other. A building committee, an organization made up of each of their neighbours so no one 
of them would be left unprotected, they decided, was in order.

More than that - they wanted more tenants and more buildings involved. Firstly, the other 
three buildings recently acquired by their new landlord. And thereafter? Well, there's 
plenty more buildings with shitty landlords and angry tenants. Why not link up.

Tenants' issues aren't enough though, right? Exactly right. We can't focus on the problems 
of tenants in local buildings to the exclusion of all the other issues in our 
neighbourhood. There?s the schools, police brutality, deportations, and service cuts (not 
to mention ?austerity? and ?food-sovereignty?). Where would we suppose the kids from those 
schools, the people being brutalized by cops, those threatened with deportation, the 
people that access the programs at the library and community centres live? The re-purposed 
artist's lofts and $800k Victorians? They live in the buildings (and austerely shop at the 
No Frills). For now.

An organization comprised of, and lead by tenants to directly contend with the issues we 
face within our buildings is a well-situated organization to then take on the issues we 
face in our neighbourhood, generally. All the more so when connected to other tenants' 
organizations engaged in similar struggles. Organizations that can contribute to and be an 
example for the further reaching struggles of the workplace and those of the homeless.

That's what we found when we looked. We got direction from our neighbours, with a purpose 
? our neighbourhood. Not a struggle we, as anarchists instigated, not something we'll 
lead, and not something that can be easily hijacked. Rather a struggle we can participate 
in, something we can contribute to, something we can learn from, and something that may 
actually work.

It's early days yet. Days of outreach, door knocking, flyers, posters, lobby meetings, 
public events, and actions ? all very familiar. Days to follow will no doubt have more 
than their share of the same. This time, though, it feels viable. We'll keep you posted.

Geen opmerkingen:

Een reactie posten