At ONE DC, our mission is to exercise political strength to create and preserve racial and economic equity in Shaw and the District. We have three main organizing areas: One Right to Housing, One Right to Income, and One Right to Wellness. As with our overall organizational development, these organizing areas have grown out of the work of Manna CDC, but we now have a stronger focus and city-wide perspective. Learn More About ONE DC.

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An Update on Kelsey Gardens by Boris Ozuna
Wednesday, 15 February 2012 19:45

On January 31, 2012, the Kelsey Gardens Tenants Association had their first general tenants' meeting of the year with Jefferson Apartment Group (JAG) to continue exercising their right to return to the place they call home. One by one, members of this tenants association, led by African American women, gathered to hear the developer's plan and timeline in the construction of the new 281-unit building. JAG has promised a one-for-one replacement of the 54 Kelsey Gardens units that are being torn down. Developers fielded questions from the tenants about the entire process, from ground breaking to the expected completion of the building in 2014.

The representatives of JAG presented the drawings of the new building,which includes a swimming pool, computer rooms, a fitness area, and green areas for all the tenants. However, the most important issuesfor the Kelsey Gardens tenants are concerns about the cost of rent, utility bills, and conditions for returning, all of which could become barriers preventing many tenants fromreturning to Kelsey Gardens. Tenants questioned the use of JAG's preference for the term "affordable housing," rather than the term "low-income housing."Affordable housing in DC is based on 60 to 80 percent of the area median income. In practical and economical terms, this definition may not include many low-income residents. JAG restated their commitment to the settlement agreement signed by the former developer and the tenants association; they also expressed their willingness to evaluate every case individually.

After five years of legal disputes and eight years of organizing with Manna CDC and now ONE DC, the tenants association continues to be engaged in the process that will ultimately return them to Shaw.

 
To Get at the Roots of the Matter, We Need Movement Culture! By John Tuzcu
Wednesday, 15 February 2012 19:44

*rad-i-cal : (adjective) deriving from the Latin root radicalis: of or having roots; going to the origin, essential; relating to or affecting the fundamental nature of something

The Criminal (in)Justice Committee is a bright example of how previously unimagined collaborations can coalesce when public space is utilized for phenomena other than commerce.

The CiJ Committee arose from a teach-in, occurring at McPherson Square during the occupation last autumn, on the prison industrial complex. An assemblage of intergenerational, multi-ethnic, multi-racial, and formerly incarcerated DC organizers felt the urgency to bring the prison industry, political prisoners, and the New Jim Crow to the center of any serious discussion regarding change and resistance.

We came together with an understanding that a broad-based, multi-racial, anti-sexist movement could be led by the wisdom and imaginations of sisters and brothers most affected by this country's thirst for prison and its hunger for profits. Such a movement must develop in order to eradicate the stigma of criminalization, severe ties between prisons and profit, end the New Jim Crow, andfundamentally uproot and transform today's "criminal justice system." We need a far-reaching movement to dismantle decades of prison building, punitive legislating, and racist policing and judging. We need a powerful culture based in love, justice, and resistance to sustain such a movement.

The CiJ Committee comprises activists, artists, workers, educators, students, musicians, and returning citizens who have been working for years around issues of prisoner re-entry, affordable housing, and land liberation. Popular education, campus activism, and labor organizing are the avenues for the movement's and committee's success.

ONE DC is one of many organizations involved in the CiJ Committee that envisions social change via protracted cultural transformation, not solely through isolated campaigns. The CiJ Committee and ONE DC understand this struggle involves interconnections among property rights, land development, mass incarceration, private prison industry, gentrification, big banking, government corruption, racist judicial enforcement, food justice, and failing U.S. schools. While each organization might focus on one critical area, we must all remember a vision of unity.

 

The Criminal (in)Justice Committee has launched a boycott campaign against Wells Fargo for its investments in the private prison and immigrant detention industry. The committee has found this issue a productive nexus between people who empower themselves by closing accounts with financial institutions that deal in repressive industries and educational tools that illuminate the intimate dynamic at play among incarceration, government, police harassment, racial profiling, big banking, and corporate opportunism.

 

Though all four of the "too big to fail" banks engage in blood-soaked investments, Wells Fargo is currently being targeted because of its DC connection. Wells Fargo received a notorious $43 billion taxpayer funded bailout, but yet it continues to foreclose on thousands of homes in the DC-metro area, leaving many families homeless. As the chief investor in GEO Group, the world's second largest private prison corporation, Wells Fargo is contributing to locking up more than 1,000 DC residents at the GEO-run Rivers Correctional Institute in Winton, NC. Rivers is widely known as an abusive facility where guards engage in abuse and where scant opportunity is given for prisoners to positively develop themselves.

As the global economy tanks, prison industry is booming, and those with profits on their minds understand how lucrative incarceration and prison labor can be. We know these cold-blooded prison-builders and their courtiers are organizing for more prisons, assuring more of our people will be inside them. This fact alone should be a motivating force behind us getting better organized and transcending the narcissism of small differences that too-often hamper our collaboration. We must work through the difficulty of preventing and dismantling these oppressive systems, instead of absorbing and accepting the latest injustice.

 

With over 2.5 million people in lock-down, millions more are under some kind of "correctional supervision." Hundreds of thousands are being held in detention. In protest, people should be flooding the streets everyday! As of yet, this is not happening.

 

The coming spring will be exciting given the political possibilities that have opened up over the last year in light of the spate of popular rebellions around the world and the Occupy Wall Street and Take Back the Land movements here in the United States. There is an opportunity to organize our lives in unimaginable, positive ways. 

By believing in love as a fierce political concept and winning each other over with commitments and relationships, we can build a culture in opposition to the death culture that runs through mainstream America. We can overturn the ruthless logic of profit and property over people and life. None of this can happen without organizing. Join ONE DC! Join the Criminal (in)Justice Committee and any other radical* organizations that are getting at the root of the matter, poised for a movement and assembling a complex culture of resistance to sustain one. All Power to the People!

John Tuzcu is one of many people working to develop a powerful movement in the U.S. to topple the prison industry and dismantle the New Jim Crow.

 
Event Invitation: "Discovering Technology: Bridging the Digital Divide"
Wednesday, 15 February 2012 19:28

When: Saturday, February 25th, 12-4 p.m.
Where: Thurgood Marshall Academy, 2427 Martin Luther King Avenue SE (Anacostia Metro, Green Line)
What: Learn about how public policy impacts the internet, how the internet impacts our community, and how we can work together to pursue digital justice; learn how to use and fix a computer; and create an e-mail account
For more information:
text "Disco" to 202-505-2010 or e-mail us at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it Also please visit www.broadbandbridge.org

 
Connect with ONE DC on Twitter!
Thursday, 26 January 2012 21:35

ONE DC has a new Twitter account! Follow us at http://www.twitter.com/ONE_DC_Voices for updates!

Last Updated on Thursday, 26 January 2012 21:56
 
Upcoming Meetings and Events
Wednesday, 25 January 2012 18:52

For more information, e-mail Gloria Robinson at  This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it or call the ONE DC office at (202) 232-2915.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 25 January 2012 20:06
 
Homelessness Prevention Hotline
Wednesday, 25 January 2012 18:51

While we celebrate the new year, we realize that as the weather gets colder and utility bills rise, many tenants and homeowners are in serious trouble maintaining their homes. Families in need should call theHomelessness Prevention Hotline for more information at 202-667-7339.

 
Take Back The Land
Wednesday, 25 January 2012 18:47

The Occupy Movement's bold and inventive methods of confronting the one percent are how the movement got its name: by "occupying" spaces that challenge the moral accountability of the powers that be. This movement has swept the world and can easily be argued to have roots outside U.S. borders.  Within the United States, the movement's 1970 antecedents, more frequently referred to as "take-overs," have frequently been overlooked. The most contemporary Occupy expressions have been embodied in the Take Back the Land movement (TBL), which has been able to make concrete differences in the lives of those most acutely affected by the indiscretions of the one percent.

 

On January 26th, the Institute for Policy Studies invites you to a cutting edge and interactive forum featuring one TBL leader, Max Rameau.

Accompanied by a video presentation, Mr. Rameau will lead a discussion about the historical context of this movement; an analysis of how the Occupy movement relates to TBL; and the differences, similarities, and synergies between the Occupy movement and TBL. An integral part of the discussion will be about race, class, and international issues.


Max Rameau is a Haitian-born, Pan-African theorist, campaign strategist, organizer, and author. After moving to Miami, Florida, in 1991, Mr. Rameau began organizing around a broad range of issues impacting low-income Black communities, including immigrant rights (particularly those of Haitian immigrants), economic justice, LGBTQ rights, and voting rights (particularly for ex-felons and police abuse).

 

As the housing "boom" took off, giving way to the devastating impacts of gentrification, Mr. Rameau shifted his attention to housing. In thesummer of 2006 he helped found the organization which eventually became known as Take Back the Land, to address "land" issues in the Black community. Mr. Rameau relocated to Washington, DC, in 2011, where he lives with his family and is the director of Movement Catalyst, a movement strategy and support organization.


The Occupy to Liberate and Take Back the Land meeting will be held on January 26th, from 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m., at the Festival Center, 1640 Columbia Road, NW.

 

For this meeting, there is a suggested donation of $5 to help cover the cost of the event; however, no one will be turned away for lack of funds.

 
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