Coalition Demands Moratorium on Construction of Youth Jail

This article originally appeared on publicnewsservice.org 20 March 2018

by Eric Tegethoff, Public News Service – WA

SEATTLE – Opponents of a new youth jail are asking King County to place a moratorium on its construction, which is already underway. No New Youth Jail Coalition delivered a letter to King County Executive Dow Constantine on Monday, urging him to nix the facility.

The group and others say the jail will exacerbate racial disparities already present in the juvenile justice system. In early March, groups blocked traffic in front of Constantine’s office in opposition to the project.

Angelica Chazaro with No New Youth Jail Coalition says the number of groups against the project has been steadily growing since its approval six years ago.

“There have been dozens of organizations that represent legal services, nonprofits, different immigrant groups across the county who have all spoken out in opposition,” she says. “And so, this is not a fringe group – this is a growing consensus that this is the wrong project.

“If Dow Constantine wants this youth jail to be his legacy, that’s on him, but we’re going to be pushing back every step of the way,” she adds.

A $210 million tax levy to build the jail was approved by voters in 2012, but a Thurston County appeals court partially overturned some of the language underlying that levy last year. Constantine says the new facility is needed to keep kids and the community safe.

Chazaro contends the initial ballot language calling the facility a “children and family justice center” was misleading and that voters did not actually understand they were approving a new youth jail.

Since the jail was approved, King County has committed to the long-term goal of zero youth detentions. But Chazaro says building this facility runs in opposition to that goal.

“We just see that those two things cannot be compatible and that real public safety comes from giving youths and families the support that they need in order to thrive – not building a youth jail and courts,” she explains.

Some of the push-back against the facility has been successful. In 2015, King County officials agreed to reduce the number of beds from 154 to 114. The county plans for the new facility to provide more support for families with juveniles in the justice system.

A Letter For Dow and County Council

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The No New Youth Jail Coalition has been part of a six-year fight against the $233 million project to build a new youth jail and court complex at 12th and Alder in Seattle. In March, the Coalition delivered a letter to Constantine outlining the widespread opposition to the project and demanding a moratorium on construction. When Constantine did not reply, the Coalition declared a “People’s Moratorium” and has engaged in sustained protest aimed at stopping construction and redirecting the resources for the project and the site itself toward unmet human needs rather than youth incarceration.

The No New Youth Jail Campaign Shows No Signs Of Stopping

by DJ Martinez

At 8am Friday March 2, I joined four anti-racist White collectives who were supporting the No New Youth Jail campaign as they united to take the streets of downtown Seattle, initially locking arms (literally) and posting themselves in front of King County Executive Dow Constantine’s office at the Chinook Building before continuing down 4th avenue and locking down at multiple intersections. The direct action created major delays on both I-5 and I-90, with buses needing to be re-routed.

The march ended at The Westin, where Constantine was reportedly supposed to attend the Golden Tennis Shoe Awards, a “social justice” fundraiser and “desirable destination” for top Democrats around the nation, hosted by Washington Senator Patty Murray.

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A couple of the collective members unlocked their arms from their lock boxes  and entered the fundraiser, at one point taking the mic and demanding that Constantine stop the construction of, despite the County’s justifications, they and many others feel is an illegal $210 million youth jail at 12th and Alder. Dow was reportedly not at the event. His chief of staff, Rachel Smith, however, agreed to come out and speak with the demonstrators. Once outside, she was given a bullhorn and said, “We are committed to zero youth detention, we are committed to a public health approach to juvenile detention and we want to work with all of you in getting there.” (Emphasis mine.)

Those locked down in the intersection asked fellow activists and demonstrators who had joined the protest, “Is that enough?” to which they responded “No!” emphasizing that the collective are committed to prison abolition, which means eliminating prisons and replacing them with more humane and effective systems.

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“As a King County Public Health employee, I have witnessed a hush-hush culture when it comes to speaking out about the youth jail,” Kelsen Caldwell, a lead organizer with the Coalition of Anti-Racist Whites said in the collectives press release. “This is a form of White silence and White violence. We need county employees to speak out and break this silence. I want to know how Dow Constantine can lead a County with an Equity and Social Justice Initiative, which leads with undoing racism, and simultaneously invest in building jails that we all know will disproportionately cage Black and Brown children. How is that equity or justice?”

Organizers of the protest say this has been a long historic fight involving legal and other strategies to try and stop the construction of the youth jail, beginning 6 years ago, led by youth and communities of color. “The No New Youth Jail coalition has tried many different tactics since 2012, even direct conversation with county officials. Dow and the county haven’t been responsive, so we escalated our tactics. Shutting down traffic was a strategic decision to disrupt business as usual. Once the traffic stopped and the cameras turned on, we wanted to expose the ways Dow Constantine is exploiting the jail for his own profit, that the jail is part of a system of racism, and to show White folks that we have a stake in ending the jail.”

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In a statement by Olivia Smith, a member of social justice groups Youth Undoing Institutional Racism and European Dissent, “This action was an opportunity for anti-racist White people to build community with each other and the Black and Brown youth leading this movement. The longer it takes Dow to cancel the jail, the stronger we get. Next, I’d like to see human services and affordable housing advocates join the No New Youth Jail campaign. There’s no doubt in my mind that that’s where the budget cuts will come from when the Supreme Court affirms that King County has been illegally collecting property taxes for this jail.”

The action lasted 6 hours, with “surprisingly” no arrests.

I have attended many rallies, protests, and direct actions in the for 4 years that I’ve lived in Seattle. Something that was glaringly different to me than any other protest I’ve been to here was the behavior of the Seattle Police Department. Demonstrators locked themselves down in multiple major city arterials, created a “traffic nightmare,” and disrupted a fancy Democratic event, all with minimal police presence. It’s hard to imagine that the city would have responded this way if the action was done by Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC).

Not even a year ago, I went to a block party put on by Bloc The Juvi at the youth jail site where a BBQ took place and community artists performed to bring attention to the construction, and to show solidarity with the youth currently inside. While no major traffic thoroughfares were blocked, and no arrests would be made, officers arrived in riot gear and were equipped with batons and large canisters of pepper spray. Also noticeably missing at last week’s protest were Blue Lives Matter patches on their uniforms, something I see consistently at Black Lives Matter and anti-racist protests in the city worn by officers. Which makes me wonder, is Seattle finally becoming the “liberal” progressive city it so badly wants to be, listening to and learning from the city’s organizers and activists pushing for freedom and social justice? Or does the Seattle Police Department only use excessive force and intimidation tactics when the actions are lead by BIPOC organizers?

I asked Smith for her thoughts: “This action made it clear that police exist to protect White people. The cops were incredibly relaxed and respectful the whole day. I don’t think they would have reacted that way if it were Black and Brown youth in the streets. It’s unacceptable for our county to continue to invest precious resources into a criminal justice system that upholds White supremacy and cages kids.”

Although the action was covered by all major news outlets, their main focus seems to be two things; the angry drivers, including a video of two women trying to run over demonstrators and yelling “Those kinds of kids killed my daughter,” misreporting that there was an injury (there was none) while offering no other context or comment. “Hurt people hurt people,” I told my friend, half-jokingly (bad jokes are my trauma response, that’s why I became a comedian.) “Hurt people kill people” they quipped back.

The second thing the media has focused on is the messaging, also without context or comment.

Despite organizers of the action naming Ending the Prison Industrial Complex (EPIC) and YUIR in their press release, if those news outlets reached out to anyone at all, they chose Constantine for further comment. Leaving out context or commentary from those making the demands and simply reporting without doing their own research leads to confusion:

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There are plenty of statistics that back up the collectives claims that investing in community-based alternatives makes more sense, and that there are glaring racial disparities in youth detention and arrests. There’s even article after article describing efforts by community members and our own county for healthier alternatives to youth detention, including Seattle’s own Creative Justice. The question then becomes, is the information not available? Or is there a willful (racist) ignorance or ulterior motive?

New Jersey Democratic Senator Cory Booker, who was attending the fundraiser inside The Westin at the time, gave the protesters outside a shout out: In his celebration of youth activism, however, Booker seemed to liken anti-jail protesters paralyzing downtown Seattle traffic with Parkland, Florida students who survived the Stoneman Douglas High School massacre.

If Democratic/liberal/progressive Seattleites are truly committed to “resisting” the current Trump regime, then, it would seem to me, that they would also be against deportation, detention, and this youth jail.

Last week’s action showed what it can look like when White folks look past the click bait, stop passing the buck, and really show up for the youth. And what that looks like, is listening to and taking directions from the youth, and apparently gaining a response from the media, police force, and public officials not usually seen by BIPOC.

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The No New Youth Jail campaign shows no signs of stopping. What can we do to honor the work that’s already been done in this campaign, learn from those efforts, use this new attention and energy to imagine and manifest a future that refuses to support outdated racist systems and commit to creating a better future for our youth? I guess time will tell.

Youth jail protesters block traffic in downtown Seattle

Article first appeared in sfchronicle.com 2 March 2018

by

A group of people protesting the construction of a new juvenile detention facility in Seattle blocked a busy downtown intersection Friday morning, snarling the morning commute as police worked to remove them.

Protesters began the day outside the King County Administration building at the southern end of the downtown core around 8 a.m. By the time the protest ended more than six hours later, they had moved north, with the last demonstration blocking the intersection of Fifth Avenue and Stewart Street.

In the middle of the morning commute, dozens of demonstrators from the No New Youth Jail Campaign sat or lay on the street outside the King County Administration building at the intersection of Fourth Avenue and James Street. Some locked arms inside pipes to prevent police from separating them. They held signs and banners bearing slogans like “No new youth jail,” “Stop caging kids,” and “Build homes, not jails!”

A Twitter video from KING-TV reporter Alex Rozier showed one frustrated driver slowly driving through a group of protesters. No injuries were evident.

Seattle police arrived on the scene and traffic was rerouted. Police briefly closed the James Street off-ramp from northbound Interstate 5.

The state Department of Transportation reported major traffic buildups on both I-5 and Interstate 90 as a result of the protest. King County Metro reported “significant delays” for buses.

The construction of a new youth court and detention facility has remained controversial well after King County voters approved a levy for its funding in 2012.

Construction on the new facility at 12th Avenue and Alder Street in Seattle’s Central District began over the summer. In September, though, a state appeals court ruled that the 2012 levy included flawed language that may have made it unclear to voters what the property-tax increase was funding.

King County said it would appeal to the state Supreme Court while construction, scheduled to be completed next year, continues.

Proponents say the $210 million Children and Family Justice Center is badly needed in order to replace the 25-year-old Youth Services Center, which they say has deteriorated over the years.

Last year, after continued criticism of the new facility, King County Executive Dow Constantine announced plans to create two “welcome centers,” with services and temporary housing to keep youth facing “homeless, family crisis, suspension or expulsion from school and other challenges” out of detention.

“This is the challenge: To travel together the long road toward our goal of zero youth detention,” Constantine said. “King County is united on pushing forward with the best ideas in juvenile justice reform.”

Opponents call the construction of the new facility “unlawful,” and argue that youth incarceration disproportionately targets children and families of color.

“This fight goes beyond the brick-and-mortar building,” activist Senait Brown said in a statement. “This is about fighting structural, systemic racism, and it has been about that from the beginning.”

In November, Constantine signed an executive order directing the county’s Public Health department to draft a proposal reorganizing juvenile detention services in order to “reduce traumatization of youth in detention, eliminate racial disparities in the juvenile justice system and advance the goal of zero youth detention.”

 

Press Release for today’s action: FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Original post on EuropeanDissentSeattle fb page

Seattle, WA — March 2, 2018

Youth Jail Opponents Shut Down 4th Avenue Outside County Administration: Activists Call on Dow Constantine to Immediately Halt Construction of New Youth Jail and Courts

What: Activists Locked Down Outside County Administration Building

Where: Fourth Avenue and James

When: 8:00 A.M.

Today, organizers supporting the No New Youth Jail Campaign shut down Fourth Avenue in front of the County Administration Building to demand Dow Constantine put an immediate stop to the unlawful construction of the new youth jail and courts. For the past five years, Ending the Prison Industrial Complex (EPIC), backed by 60+ grassroots organizations and faith communities, has been fighting a vital battle in the courts and on the streets to stop the construction of the youth jail and court complex, changing the conversation about youth imprisonment in the County, and pressuring the county to adopt a goal of zero detention for youth.

Today’s action follows the 2017 Court of Appeals ruling finding that King County has been unlawfully collecting property taxes for the proposed youth jail, a ruling that effectively eliminates the majority of the funding for the project. Following the ruling, without any alternative funding source in place, Dow Constantine, the King County Executive, broke ground on the $210 million project, effectively punching a hole in the County’s budget that puts at risk other vital county services.

The continued construction at the 12th and Alder site runs directly counter to Constantine’s stated commitment to zero detention for youth, instead committing the county to a building designed to cage youth for the next fifty years. According to Senait Brown, a lead organizer with EPIC and Youth Undoing Institutional Racism (YUIR), “This fight goes beyond the brick and mortar building. This is about fighting structural, systemic racism, and it has been about that from the beginning. We’re asking the county to really invest in the power and leadership of our young people and our communities. They need to let us build our own solutions.”

When the project was proposed in 2012, voters were led to believe that a new facility was necessary due to the “deterioration” of the current jail. However, as the current jail is only 25 years old, a facilities analysis conducted by the county itself showed that it is “generally in good condition.” Members of the NNYJ Coalition blocked the streets outside Constantine’s office today to demand that Dow and King County not spend one more penny on an unnecessary, harmful, and undeniably racist jail building project.

Organizers blasted the County’s misleading language and positive messaging surrounding the project, emphasizing that the construction of the facility would uphold racist systems and strengthen the school to prison pipeline. In the past 10 years King County has reduced youth detention by nearly 75%. However, despite making up only 10% of the King County population, more than 50% of incarcerated youth are black, and the planned facility holds more than double the number of cells currently in use, cells that will be filled with youth of color.

As Members of the No New Youth Jail Coalition, four anti-racist white collectives took participated in today’s sit-in, calling on fellow white community members to challenge their role in upholding a white supremacist system and to join the fight to deconstruct it. “As a King County Public Health employee, I have witnessed a hush hush culture when it comes to speaking out about the youth jail,” said Kelsen Caldwell, a lead organizer with the Coalition of Anti-Racist Whites. “This is a form of white silence and white violence. We need county employees to speak out and break this silence. I want to know how Dow Constantine can lead a County with an Equity and Social Justice Initiative, which leads with undoing racism, and simultaneously invest in building jails that we all know will disproportionately cage Black and Brown children. How is that equity or justice?”

Love the Youth Stop the Youth Jail

“Love the Youth Stop the Youth Jail” campaign to ask Dow Constantine to stop construction of New Youth Jail begins. Activists deliver black balloons with “No New Youth Jail” written on them to Dow Constantine’s office

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City Council Hearing: Changing the Law to Allow Permit Appeal?

Tuesday night, May 16, people opposing the new youth jail project turned out in force to tell the Seattle City Council we want them to fix a loophole in the law that the Hearing Examiner used to avoid ruling on the appeal of the jail’s Master Use Permit.  Local news covered the hearing and included some coverage of the May Day protest at the youth jail.

Watch the video here:

http://www.kiro7.com/news/local/seattle-council-may-breathe-new-life-into-fight-against-new-youth-jail/523425212

Don’t miss this article about how Seattle activists blocked a police bunker project!

While we continue to struggle to stop the youth jail building project, it is inspiring to celebrate a major victory that happened this past year in Seattle. Due to the bold, disruptive, unstoppable efforts of Seattle organizers and activists, the City tabled its plans to build a $150 million new bomb-proof police bunker! Here is a new article about that work.