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Occupy Sandy

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2012 organized relief effort

Occupy Sandy
An Occupy Sandy directional sign inFar Rockaway, Queens.
Formation2012,New York City,New York, United States
PurposeDisaster relief,mutual aid
Budget$874,039 (2013)
Volunteers60,000 (November 21, 2012)[1]
Websitewww.occupysandy.net

Occupy Sandy was an organized relief effort created to assist the victims ofHurricane Sandy in the northeastern United States. Like otherOccupy Movement offshoots, such asOccupy Our Homes,Occupy University,Occupy the SEC, andRolling Jubilee, Occupy Sandy was made up of former and presentOccupy Wall Street protesters, other members of theOccupy movement, and former non-Occupy volunteers.[2] The effort worked in partnership with many local community organizations inNew York City andNew Jersey and has focused onmutual aid in affected communities rather than charity, and long-term rebuilding for more robust, sustainable neighborhoods.

Background and history

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Main article:Occupy Wall Street

The Occupy Wall Street organization and the Occupy movement in general began in New York'sZuccotti Park in 2011, where a number of protesters grouped together to change "the public discourse about economic inequality" and created the idea of the1%'ers versus the 99%'ers. After the breakup of the group in the park and elsewhere, the Occupy movement has focused on "more intellectual, less visible projects, likeOccupy Farms, fighting debt and theorizing on banking".[2] The movement's connections and "altruistic drive" has led to them being somewhat more effective in the Hurricane Sandy relief movement than "larger, more established charity groups".[2][3]

The coordinators of the Occupy Sandy relief effort have been working in conjunction with supply distributors, such as the Red Cross and theFederal Emergency Management Agency, while relying on theNational Guard for security. There has also been some collaboration with the office ofMichael Bloomberg, New York City Mayor, and the rest of the New York City government, though past interactions between Occupy Wall Street members and the city government has caused the Occupy Sandy relationship to be "tenuous".[4]

Organization

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Sandy aid distribution hubs

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As the storm was still making landfall an email was sent theOccupy Faith Email Listserve requesting locations for possible disaster response & resource distribution locations.

After the destruction resulting from Hurricane Sandy, members of Occupy Sandy set up two distribution sites inBrooklyn at the borough'sChurch of St. Luke and St. Matthew andSt. Jacobi Evangelical Lutheran Church for New Yorkers to collect clothes, blankets and food.[5]

The initial "Occupy motor pool" ride share was formed to help get members more readily into the areas affected by the storm at Jacobi Church. These members include "construction teams and medical committees", as well as weather being forecast by an Occupy weatherman.[2] The effort has since spread to several more distribution hubs that filter received aid to the worst of the affected areas, such asConey Island, Staten Island, Rockaways (Queens), Sheepshead Bay (Brooklyn), and the Jersey shore.[6]

The Sandy Aid distribution Hub nicknamed 520 Clinton located in Clinton Hill's Church of St. Luke and St. Matthew being the largest of locations mobilized for the effort demonstrated many of the Occupy Mutual Aid values and projects side by side that were once on display at Zuccotti Park in 2011.[7] The church was set a blaze by unknown individuals on Christmas even causing extensive fire & smoke damage.[8] With the forced closure of the location all Sandy Aid operations moved to the affected areas, effectively decentralizing the efforts.

Occupy Sandy only operated their own hubs, and actively supported and cultivated the creation of neighbor-run locations. Midland Avenue Neighborhood Relief & Cedar Grove Community Hub were both run by longtime New York residents and provided 24-hour support through the first winter post-Sandy.[9]

Online collaboration

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Occupy Sandy's online presence is coordinated through a website organized and run by members of InterOccupy and OWS Tech Ops. Social networking sites, such asFacebook andTwitter, have been used extensively by Occupy Sandy members to inform others involved in the relief effort and elsewhere on what supplies and assistance are needed in which parts of the affected areas.

After comparison of websites, awedding registry was created onAmazon.com to list items and materials needed in the relief effort, allowing people in the US and the rest of the world to donate goods. As of January 25, 2013, more than $717,900 has been spent on the items in the registry. Amazon.com has not been cooperative with Occupy Sandy to give the group for specific details about the numbers.[10]

A local business registry was created modeling similar concepts to the Amazon relief item registry but putting 100% of the funds raised for needed tools, materials and goods directly in the hands of locally owned businesses in the areas hit hardest by Superstorm Sandy. The items purchased from the Occupy Sandy Local Business Registry were delivered directly from local stores to affected neighbors through the Staten Island Tool Lending Library.[11]

Long-term mutual aid projects

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From its start mutual aid principles were worked into the volunteer skill share orientations[12] and in the participation of its members with the affected communities encouraged the creation of small projects, co-ops, and neighbor-led efforts.

Placing a focus on individuals becoming empowered, Occupy Sandy was able to encourage a culture of innovation & social business incubation in the hardest hit areas. The Brooklyn,Lower East Side, Rockaways and the Staten Island Long Term Recovery Organizations all were facilitated by Occupy volunteers using NY General Assembly-style meeting tools including the Occupy hand signals.[13]

Their work through the Occupy Sandy Project Spokes Council provided large grants using a participatory budgeting frame work to the affected communities and fostered grassroots micro local projects such as Respond & Rebuild, Staten Island Tool Library, The People's Recovery Summit, Feeding Families Community Garden, Midland Avenue Neighborhood Relief, The May Edwards Chinn Memorial Food Pantry & Clinic, Hart & Soul and a citywide network of home cooks to supply the support hubs.[14]

Mold removal and remediation

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Due to the unique circumstances of the combination of ocean tidal surge during Sandy and the type of low incomebungalow homes affected, extensive education and community outreach had to be done about propermold remediation. Canvassing, mold skill shares, volunteer mold removal was offered as a first response by Occupy Sandy. Without any national certification, education, or accurate information available Occupy Sandy coordinators had to becomeself-taught experts in the subject.[15]

References

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  1. ^Bill de Blasio (November 21, 2012)."Giving Thanks to the Heroes of Hurricane Sandy".Public Advocate For The City Of New York. RetrievedFebruary 6, 2013.
  2. ^abcdAlan Feuer (November 9, 2012)."Occupy Sandy: A Movement Moves to Relief".The New York Times. RetrievedNovember 10, 2012.
  3. ^Meghan Barr (November 10, 2012)."Occupy Sandy: Onetime Protesters Find New Cause".ABC News. RetrievedNovember 13, 2012.
  4. ^Jared Malsin (November 13, 2012)."Best of Enemies: Why Occupy Activists Are Working with New York City's Government".Time. RetrievedNovember 13, 2012.
  5. ^Feuer, Alan (November 9, 2012)."Occupy Sandy: A Movement Moves to Relief".The New York Times. The New York Times. RetrievedJune 7, 2014.
  6. ^Carolyn Weaver (November 8, 2012)."Post-Storm, 'Occupy Wall Street' Becomes 'Occupy Sandy'".Voice of America. RetrievedNovember 13, 2012.
  7. ^Hoffenberg, Sophia (17 November 2012)."Occupy Sandy Offers Alternative Hurricane Recovery Effort - The New School Free Press". Retrieved18 October 2017.
  8. ^Ohlheiser, Abby (25 December 2012)."Occupy Sandy Church Damaged In Suspicious Fire". Retrieved18 October 2017 – via Slate.
  9. ^"Staten Island Residents Rally to Save Sandy Relief Hub".DNAinfo New York. Archived fromthe original on 19 October 2017. Retrieved18 October 2017.
  10. ^Matt Heindl (January 25, 2013)."Occupy Sandy's Happy Hackers".Razorfish Social Media Blog. RetrievedFebruary 6, 2013.
  11. ^Andrea (December 17, 2012)."Donate to Sandy Survivors & Support Local Businesses via Occupy Sandy Local Business Registry".OccuWorld Global Occupy News. Archived fromthe original on January 10, 2014. RetrievedFebruary 6, 2013.
  12. ^Feuer, Alan (9 November 2012)."Where FEMA Fell Short, Occupy Sandy Was There".The New York Times. Retrieved18 October 2017.
  13. ^Nir, Sarah Maslin (30 April 2013)."Occupy Movement's Changing Focus Causes Rift".The New York Times. Retrieved18 October 2017.
  14. ^"What Happened to the Money That Occupy Sandy Raised?". Retrieved18 October 2017.
  15. ^Lawrence, Stratton."Abandoned by the U.S. government, hurricane-ravaged Staten Island turns to the Occupy movement".Charleston City Paper. Retrieved18 October 2017.

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