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UCLA Students to Occupy Banks in Los Angeles' Financial District Downtown Today

Categories: Occupy L.A.

occupy la scarf girl nanette gonzalez.JPG
Nanette Gonzalez
Occupy denim shorts.
Updated at the bottom: Arrests in Westwood and now the occupation of a Bank of America downtown. First posted at 12:09 p.m.

Following Bank Transfer Day, a movement that started here in L.A., local college students will march on banks today to protest higher education cuts and a free tax lunch for Wall Street and Big Finance.

The event organized by a group called Refund California and said to include Occupy LA and UCLA students will take place in the downtown Financial District at 4:30 p.m., according to a press release.

Here's part of the Refund organization's statement:


Make the big banks, corporations and millionaires in our state pay their fair share. We didn't cause the economic crisis--they did. It's time for them to take responsibility and pay their share--to stop cuts to higher education, restore needed state revenue and improve the economy for all Californians. That's why we asking the 50 corporate elite that sit on the boards of California's public colleges and universities to sign the ReFund California pledge to make Wall Street pay for refunding public education.

We surely understand Occupy's problem with Wall Street and the bailed-out big banks that got us into the Great Recession via greedy home loans and derivatives.

But connecting the banks to California's higher education cuts is a stretch (protesters should look closer to home at things like prison spending and Prop. 13 limits on business property taxes).

There's no way the big banks are going to bow down and say, Oh yeah, UCLA's tripling of fees in the last 10 years is our problem, we'll pitch in.

Still, organizers expect 2,000 people to show up at California Plaza (350 S. Grand Ave.) for the festivities:

... The demands include raising income taxes on California's wealthiest, which would generate needed revenue for public services and education, and the reduction of underwater mortgage debt, which would put more money in the pockets of middle class families.

Good luck.

[Update]: UCLA reports that about a dozen protesters blocking traffic at Wilshire and Westwood boulevards as part of the statewide anti-bank, anti-tuition-hike demonstrations were arrested this afternoon. UCLA:

The protesters who sat in the intersection were expressing concern about income inequities, the role of banks and the future of public education, among other issues. They were believed to include union members, students and others.

Another 100 protesters gathered on campus.

[Added]: City News Service reports the exact number of arrests was 11:

The Westwood march began at UCLA's Bruin Plaza, with participants marching to a Bank of America branch. The group then moved to the intersection of Wilshire and Westwood shortly after 1:30 p.m. While many of the participants stood on the sidewalks, 11 people walked into the middle of the intersection and sat in a circle. One person was seen doing cartwheels around the circle.

[Update No. 2]: Around 5 p.m. we started seeing reports from the SEIU Local 721 that protesters successfully made it inside a Financial District Bank of America. One woman even camped out in a tent. No word if any arrests were made. The LAPD wasn't sure when we called. It wouldn't be the first time B of A in the Financial District has been occupied.

Video.

@SEIU721 bank america occupy.JPG
@SEIU 721

[Added]: City News Service says the number of protesters at the B of A in California Plaza on Grand Avenue number in the "hundreds."


View Larger Map

They did this once before.

[Update No. 3]: At about 5:44 p.m. ABC7 reported that protesters were marching away from the bank "with police escort."

[@dennisjromero/djromero@laweekly.com/@LAWeeklyNews]


My Voice Nation Help
14 comments
anonymous
anonymous

To the Occupy movement:  Never forget the trillions spent in the Iraq & Afganistan war.  It was justified but regardless, there is less money to spend locally and for jobs.  

Guest
Guest

Hey, aren't the bank tellers part of the 99 per cent? Bummer they had to get oppressed by this...

Boy, those students who got arrested sure showed those banks, huh?

It was HILARIOUS to see them beg the police to arrest them...

True martyrs. They did it for all of US!!!

anonymous
anonymous

UCLA students, if you research, one of the genesis of the problem both on UC campuses and public/state/local institutions are the high compensation and even higher/unsustainable pensions of employees.  Till recently, UC professors did not contribute a penny into the retirement system & yet will retire with more money than most of you will ever make.  The top 1% certainly need to pay higher taxes but they alone are not the panacea.  The pension time bomb is what will kill california and no one in government is willing to do anything about it.  We support the Occupy movement  as an excellent start to correct serious inequities and corruption in our society.  Focus at the problem sources rather than shooting at banks only.

Noems
Noems

Occupy everywhere!!!!!!!

Soquel by the Creek
Soquel by the Creek

Who is ReFund California and what do they want?http://soquelbythecreek.blogsp...

Which ReFund California member organization pushed for relaxed lending standards for unqualified home buyers, thus inflating the subprime mortgage bubble and driving up home prices for low-income buyers?

Which ReFund California member organization were themselves the beneficiary of a massive bailout from the federal government?

Which ReFund California member organization has a seeming vendetta against Bank of America? Could it be because they owe tens of millions of dollars to Bank of America?

Which ReFund California member organizations are the top two spenders in California politics, according to the California Fair Political Practices Commission (FPPC)?

Which ReFund California member organization is one of the key architects behind the Occupy Wall Street movement?

Why is ReFund California's top policy goal or raising taxes on California's "wealthy" misguided and counterproductive?

perspective2
perspective2

University of California hijack’sour kids’ futures: student loan debt. Ilove University of California (UC) having been student & lecturer. Buttoday I am concerned that at times I do not recognize the UC I love. Like somany I am deeply disappointed by the pervasive failures of Regent ChairwomanLansing, President Yudof, Chancellor Birgeneau from holding the line on risingcosts & tuition increases. Paying more is not a better education.

Californians arereeling from 19% unemployment (includes: those forced to work part time; thoseno longer searching), mortgage defaults, loss of unemployment benefits. And thosewho still have jobs are working longer for less. Facultywages must reflect California'sability to pay, not what others are paid.

Current pay increasesfor generously paid University of California Faculty isarrogance. Instate tuition consumes 14% of Ca. Median Family Income!

Paying more is not abetter education. UC Berkeley(# 70 Forbes) tuition increases exceed thenational average rate of increases. Chancellor Birgeneau has molded Cal. into the mostexpensive public university.

UC President Yudof,Cal. Chancellor Birgeneau($450,000 salary) dismissed many much neededcost-cutting options. They did not consider freezing vacant faculty positions, increasingclass size, requiring faculty to teach more classes, doubling the time betweensabbaticals, cutting & freezing pay & benefits for chancellors & reformingpensions & the health benefits.

They said such facultyreforms “would not be healthy for UC”. Exodus of faculty, administrators? Whocan afford them and where would they go?

We agree it is farfrom the ideal situation, but it is in the best interests of the universitysystem & the state to stop cost increases. UC cannot expect to do businessas usual: raising tuition; granting pay raises & huge bonuses during a weakeconomy that has sapped state revenues & individual Californians’ income.

There is noquestion the necessary realignments with economic reality are painful. Regent Chairwoman Lansing can bridge the public trustgap with reassurances that salaries & costs reflect California’s ability to pay. The sky above UC will not fall when Chancellor Birgeneau is ousted.

 

Opinions? Email the UC Boardof Regents  marsha.kelman@ucop.edu

 

Guest
Guest

Yeah, and the CSU system is lookin' awfully sad also...

perspective2
perspective2

University of California hijack’sour kids’ futures: student loan debt. Ilove University of California (UC) having been student & lecturer. Buttoday I am concerned that at times I do not recognize the UC I love. Like somany I am deeply disappointed by the pervasive failures of Regent ChairwomanLansing, President Yudof, Chancellor Birgeneau from holding the line on risingcosts & tuition increases. Paying more is not a better education.

Californians arereeling from 19% unemployment (includes: those forced to work part time; thoseno longer searching), mortgage defaults, loss of unemployment benefits. And thosewho still have jobs are working longer for less. Facultywages must reflect California'sability to pay, not what others are paid.

Current pay increasesfor generously paid University of California Faculty isarrogance. Instate tuition consumes 14% of Ca. Median Family Income!

Paying more is not abetter education. UC Berkeley(# 70 Forbes) tuition increases exceed thenational average rate of increases. Chancellor Birgeneau has molded Cal. into the mostexpensive public university.

UC President Yudof,Cal. Chancellor Birgeneau($450,000 salary) dismissed many much neededcost-cutting options. They did not consider freezing vacant faculty positions, increasingclass size, requiring faculty to teach more classes, doubling the time betweensabbaticals, cutting & freezing pay & benefits for chancellors & reformingpensions & the health benefits.

They said such facultyreforms “would not be healthy for UC”. Exodus of faculty, administrators? Whocan afford them and where would they go?

We agree it is farfrom the ideal situation, but it is in the best interests of the universitysystem & the state to stop cost increases. UC cannot expect to do businessas usual: raising tuition; granting pay raises & huge bonuses during a weakeconomy that has sapped state revenues & individual Californians’ income.

There is noquestion the necessary realignments with economic reality are painful. Regent Chairwoman Lansing can bridge the public trustgap with reassurances that salaries & costs reflect California’s ability to pay. The sky above UC will not fall when Chancellor Birgeneau is ousted.

 

Opinions? Email the UC Boardof Regents  marsha.kelman@ucop.edu

 

Frawsty
Frawsty

I'm all for people having the right to protest against the evils of the financial institutions, but isn't going inside a bank and disrupting monetary transactions a federal crime?

TODOS SOMOS PUTOS
TODOS SOMOS PUTOS

Bravo to the UCLA students for getting off their asses and doing something, rather than grousing from the sidelines.  

anonymous
anonymous

You'd think that UCLA students would show more intelligence than the Occupy movement.  The banks have not failed them, but their poor high school education & their politicians have.  So easy to pick on a nameless villain rather than their local politicians whom they elect on a regular basis.  But that would mean that they are part of the probem.  It would actually require them to study local politics and how the malaise in the country starts at the local level.  NAH--too hard.  Let's blame the banks.  They are great when they lend you the money so you can pay more than the house is worth & make a killing but terrible when the market goes down & you lose your equity.

There are enough inequities in the country, however, they all start at the local level.  Start paying attention to whom you elect in your hometown.  In LA, most of our problems emanate from the worst Mayor & City Council who have shown that they are the most corrupt ever elected. 

Guest
Guest

The fact that their official statement claims "That's why we asking" is proof that their education failed them. Further, raising income tax on Cali's wealthiest will send more jobs overseas. Instead of marching into banks, they might be better served marching into a classroom. And how will these demands be enforced???

MrBrown1302
MrBrown1302

Cali's wealthiest have already sent jobs to other countries.  Why can't they pay their fair share? Why do the wealthiest of californians enjoy tax breaks that allow them to pay almost nothing?  They are wealthy because of the working class.  The major consumer group includes those who make $250,000 and below, so they are wealthy because of us.  They need to pay their fair share.  Or they can TRY and continue the with what they are doing and see how that works out for them but I am pretty sure it is going to cost them more in the end... and for those who say taxing the wealthy is going to kill jobs, let them shut down... that will give small business a better chance with big corporations out of the way. They are wealthy because WE allow them to be.

anonymous
anonymous

How does the wealthy 1% paying more taxes resolve the economic malaise in the country?  It is a given that they should pay more taxes.  What then?  To keep claiming that the country is where it is because of the 1% or jobs being set abroad is utter nonsense.  Prove it and the dollars lost and make sure you include benefits derived from selling more US products abroad.  It is the corporations and the obscene wages their CEOs make that are part of the problem.  Let's face it that the world economics are far more complicated than what we'd like to reduce it to: slogans.  Is this not how we elect politicians? Where do you think they get their election monies from?  The Occupy movement despite their lack of stated goals highlights an existing problem and we all hope that it results in an examination of all the problems we face & opportunities to save money. 

To name a few; high wages and even higher pension of all public employees, especially police and fire; high wages of professors and administration in public universities; corrupt politicians such as in LA where they make thousands in the 12 years they serve in "public" service; and the all encompassing lawyers who screw everyone to lead the high life.  None of the few jobs mentioned here add any economic benefits to the economy other than to add costs for everyone.  Let's not waste the moment created by the Occupy movement.  Picking on just one target keeps most of us out of the movement.

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