LauraFlanders's blog
Protecting the Vote
Voter registration deadlines are just over a week away in many states. Polls open in just over a month. In an election that could well be decided by new voters, voter registration efforts are in overdrive. But signing people up might be the easy part: after that, there's voting. As the last two elections have shown, just showing up at the polls isn't a guarantee of a smooth ride to the ballot box.
Ground Zero of the Housing Crisis: Report from Miami
As the Bush administration unveiled a publicly-financed plan to "save" mortgage giants Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, local residents at a town hall forum in Miami were calling for criminal prosecutions of the loan-shark mortgage brokers and investment firms that profited from poor people's housing despair.
It would be hard to think of a better place to hold a public forum on the housing crisis and and sustainable development than Overtown, one of the poorest neighborhoods in Miami, Fla. While Overtown is just minutes from downtown geographically-speaking, it's worlds apart economically and culturally.
On Saturday, The Lyric Theater, was host to the second of the five part nationally broadcast town hall series, , Hundreds of community members gathered to talk about how massive foreclosures, bad loans and gentrification had impacted their city--and what could be done about it in a town hall forum dubbed, "Magic City; Hard Times."
Miami is widely known as for the national housing crisis. "Miami's the canary in the coal mine of our economy," Gihan Perera, Executive Director of the Miami Workers Center told the engaged crowd. "In terms of rich vs. poor, uneven development, the impact of global trade and immigration: Miami is the cutting edge," Perera added.
And the Lyric Theater, once at the heart of what was called the Black Broadway, is right where that edge cuts. Over-shadowed now, literally, by the vast condominium skyscrapers rising over downtown, the Lyric, founded in 1915 by a wealthy businessman (who was part of a large middle-class Black Miami community in the first half of the 20th century,) was almost destroyed in the 1960s when developers BUILT a highway through these parts. From "the Harlem of the South," the area became, "Overtown," a community the road drove over – and into destitution.
Today, the Lyric survives thanks to money from the local redevelopment council, but the neighbors are worried that "development" for others will steal the last land they've got.
"You can understand why gentrification's a threat," Denise Perry of Power U – a community empowerment project based in Overtown, one of the Live From Main Street panelists told me after the event. "In the 1960s developers had a choice whether to build the road near the water, nearer downtown, or smack through a thriving black community – and they chose the last."
The desolation of neighborhoods is a pattern that has rippled across this country. But where is the national media's coverage? Well, here's a typical newspaper headline from the past the weekend, "Which Candidate will Benefit from the Housing Flap?" A quarter of a million foreclosures in June is hardly a "flap." And which politician will gain advantage is hardly the most important point.
This is exactly that sort of reporting which Live From Main Street puts into harsh relief. At the Lyric, tenant organizers, green builders, political advocacy groups and Miami residents (on the stage and off) got a chance to speak. Latasha Jones, a tenant organizer in Liberty City and panelist on Saturday, lives in an apartment with no hot water and leaks in her roof. The families she knows didn't walk willingly into sub-prime mortgages. Miami currently has four people waiting for each of the city's 10,000 units of public housing. Jones herself is on that waiting list.
''I've spent about 13 years on the waiting list for public housing,'' Jones told the Miami Herald, one of several local media outlets that came to Overtown, drawn by the national event.
At the same time, local residents are entering into bad loans due to shady mortgage practices by lenders or because their only other option was homelessness. Do you think it's fair that "relief" for the profit-makers should come from public coffers (which are already slashing public services) while immense profits remain in private hands? Darin Woods, a financial advisor from Countrywide Home Loan – got an earful from his critics at LFMS where he appeared as a panelist, but, he concluded, "[Live from Main Street] is just the sort of forum we need more of." (Florida's Attorney General joined the AG's of three other states in suing Countrywide for deceptive practices July 1.)
The presidential candidates are unlikely, ever, to talk about today's housing crisis and sustainable development in a place like Overtown.
"That's why we're here," said Tracy Van Slyke, director of The Media Consortium, a network of some 45 national, independent media outlets, which is the producer of Live From Main Street. "Live From Main Street's goal is to tell real stories from real people about the issues that effect their communities, and our country, during this election season. We're cutting through political spin and horserace coverage." Pooling resources (as the Consortium has, to make LFMS possible) and working together, independent media can bring national attention to places like Overtown, and put key issues into national context.
There will be more. LFMS is a five-part series, taking place in five states in five months in the run up to November. The first event
occurred June 7 in Minneapolis. The next will be in Denver, at the start of the DNC. After that, the project goes to Columbus, OH, where the topic will be voting, and finally Seattle, where the producers are convening an all–female panel to talk about national security.
Live From Main Street is a production of the Media Consortium with GRITtv.org. Portions of the program will appear on GRITtv this Thursday, July 17th, and on both satellite networks – Dish Network, CH. 9415 (Free Speech TV ) and Direct TV (Link TV) later this week.
This is a community-supported reporting project (made possible also with funding from the Wallace Global Fund and the Arca Foundation.)
Together, we really can make a new media world.
Laura Flanders is the host of Live From Main Street and the daily news and culture program, GRITtv with Laura Flanders. Watch GRITtv on Free Speech TV (Dish Network Ch. 9415) or at GRITtv.org.
Welcome to Live From Main Street
Welcome to Live From Main Street, a series of live, public gatherings that will bring real people’s voices to the table in the 2008 Election season. We know the candidates want people’s votes, but what do the people want? More importantly, what solutions to today’s problems are local people finding? And what are independent media outlets reporting that their profit-driven contemporaries are not?
I’m so excited to be hosting this dynamic series. Live From Main will be in five cities leading up to the election, including Minneapolis, Denver, and Miami. Produced by the Media Consortium and featuring the work of independent journalists, bloggers and the people they cover, these town-hall style events will offer a different snapshot of the country this election season—the snapshot from the bottom up.
Keep checking back on LiveFromMainStreet.com for blog posts and updates leading up to our first town hall in Minneapolis in June. After which, we’ll re-launch the site to bring bringing you the latest video, audio and text from our show.
Don’t let the presidential campaign horse-race run you down. Come out to find facts, make friends, share stories and celebrate the independent media. We look forward to seeing you there, and we appreciate your support.
Best,
Laura Flanders



