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Recent Articles about North America / Mexico Community strugglesNo more Presidents Nov 03 20 Is President Donald Trump a threat and danger? Jul 02 20 Estados Unidos, tierra fértil para un nuevo municipalismo Aug 21 18 "Riot" at Greenbridge: Three Arrested at Anti-Gentrification Occupation in Chapel Hill, NC
north america / mexico |
community struggles |
news report
Monday June 20, 2011 15:38 by Jericho
...class war in the neighborhood... On Saturday, June 18th, dozens of anarchists and other community members staged an angry protest against gentrification and green capitalism at Greenbridge, a “green” development of condos for eco-yuppies. Demonstrators held banners outside while others occupied the lobby in an expression of outrage against the displacement of renters from the neighborhood. Three people were arrested and charged with felony “inciting a riot” and misdemeanor property destruction, and have been released on bail. The demonstration drew attention to the ongoing tolls inflicted by the development, which was built by a coalition of multi-millionaires over the protests of community members to profit off the bourgeois craze with all things “green.” But money is the only thing green about Greedbridge, as it has been nicknamed by neighbors. Green Capitalist Development and ResistanceFor more than the past two and a half years, anarchists in Chapel Hill, NC have joined a broad constituency of tenants, homeowners, churchgoers, service workers, and students to fight the construction of a massive luxury eco-condo called Greenbridge. Many believe that the development has hastened the pace of gentrification and displacement in nearby Northside, a historically African American neighborhood that, despite influxes of students, remains largely multi-racial and working-class in character. This neighborhood is also home to anarchists, who along with other neighbors and friends have lost homes due to development companies and speculators buying up all available real estate and raising rents.The protest that occurred Saturday, June 18th against Greenbridge was only the most recent act in a long narrative of resistance to this project. This resistance has taken many forms, including community forums at a local radical bookstore, church-hosted gatherings, media hoaxes designed to undermine the project's image, banner-drops, a call for a city-wide boycott signed by over 60 Northside households, smashed windows at the development's office, an “eviction” of the project's general contractor, the founding of a center aimed at preserving Northside residents' life stories and history, graffiti, and literally thousands of wheatpasted posters, and telephoned bomb threats. This struggle has deepened longstanding fissures between the predominantly White liberal Left, who maintain a strong political hegemony in Chapel Hill, and various groupings of local black institutions, students, tenants, service workers, and anarchists (which are overlapping demographics). Encouragingly, despite the support of wealthy developers and the local Left, the opposition (along with an economic recession) has succeeded in bringing the development to its financial knees. Greenbridge has only been able to sell 36 of its 97 residential units and has been unable to pay back its debt. Almost the entire first floor of commercial space remains empty and unfinished, and Bank of America recently began foreclosure proceedings. While foreclosure is currently on hold, there is a lien on the property, preventing Greenbridge from selling more units. Without more investment capital, they are dead in the water and ripe for occupation. Speaking more qualitatively, the highly public opposition has succeeded in rendering a supposedly welcomed, popular project into a highly controversial symbol of racist liberalism and wealthy elitism. Though the amorphous process of rent increases and gentrification has continued, a panel of mayoral candidates unanimously declared last year that they want “no more developments like Greenbridge,” and even the City Council has called for a moratorium on development in the area. In Chapel Hill, “greenbridge” has become a dirty word. The text of the flyer distributed at Saturday's occupation OCCUPY THE OCCUPIERS!We're here to express our rage about the displacement of renters from Northside. Greenbridge has been instrumental in causing property values in the neighborhood to skyrocket; families and households have been forced out as investors like Engelhardt Ventures buy up all the property. This demonstration is the latest chapter in a narrative that has included public opposition, a boycott campaign, posters, graffiti, and more.In the midst of a nationwide housing crisis, it is especially ironic that so many tenants have had to leave their homes on account of a development that remains mostly empty. This shows how the system of property rights prioritizes capitalist investment over the human beings it affects. Well-behaved citizens will object that we are disturbing the peace. Have they so much as batted an eye as families have been forced out of this community? Developers will charge that not all of us live in Northside. But they can bring in investors and wealthy homebuyers from the other side of the country to finance the developments that make it impossible for us to live here. Property owners will object that this is private property. But before this was a high-rise gated community defended by key cards and security guards, it was the church that hosted the charter school, the Ethiopian restaurant. This space used to be a part of our community; now the wealthy have stolen it from us. Politicians will insist that we should focus on bureaucratic reforms when the solution is obvious: the displaced should be permitted to move into the empty units in Greenbridge itself. This isn’t just about Northside. The displacement of renters from Northside is a microcosm of the story of all the service workers and poor people in Chapel Hill. We are constantly being forced to relocate, working in town but commuting from Durham or the country. This makes it impossible for us to maintain ties and stand up for ourselves together; it means that the privilege of being a recognizable community with legitimate interests is reserved for the property-owning middle class. This protest is the only meaningful alternative we have to being silenced and written out of history. Against landlords and developers - Occupy the occupiers! Pictures: http://i99.photobucket.com/albums/l308/greenvilleposico...3.jpg http://i99.photobucket.com/albums/l308/greenvilleposico...t.jpg http://i99.photobucket.com/albums/l308/greenvilleposico...s.jpg More information on Greenbridge and local resistance: http://zinelibrary.info/files/sustainabilityzinetotal.pdf “Sustainability, TM” Derrick Jensen and Aric McBay convincingly debunk the myth of “green” industrial architecture and development, focusing on architect William McDonough, who designed Greenbridge. http://m.indyweek.com/triangulator/archives/2009/08/31/northside-residents-advertise-their-greenbridge-anger-claim-project-will-ruin-neighborhood http://www.dailytarheel.com/index.php/article/2010/01/g...lized - news article on more anti-Greenbridge activity http://www.treehugger.com/files/2009/07/greendbridge-pr...s.php a friend of millionaire Greenbridge co-founder Tim Toben laments the anti-capitalist rage against “green development” http://www.chapelhillnews.com/2011/04/17/63817/a-brief-....html - news article discussing the impending foreclosure of Greenbridge by Bank of America And finally, http://www.orangepolitics.org/2011/06/breaking-rioters-...25272 a hilarious posting from a blog popular among Chapel Hill liberals (anarchists armed with anvils!) |
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