Tents back up in Seattle as the Occupy Wall Street movement scores another big victory
After weeks of constant harassment from police at Westlake Park in downtown, Occupy Seattle successfully moved its occupation to Seattle Central Community College (SCCC) just up the road in the Capitol Hill neighborhood. The new location offers a more viable base camp for the occupation and the movement. It also has the potential to strengthen the fight against budget cuts to education at Washington’s struggling public colleges.
The big move was accompanied by another day of protest. Although not as large as the protest on the international day of action on October 15 when 3,000-5,000 marched through the streets of Seattle, the day did see hundreds of people come out. First, teachers led an action at Chase Bank in downtown. Later, a crowd of 400-500 marched without a legal permit from downtown to the new base camp at SCCC, chanting, “Banks got bailed out! We got sold out!” and “We are the 99 percent.”
Big Victory
The move was a huge victory considering the organizing efforts needed to pull it off successfully. SCCC was proposed, first, because it is outside the jurisdiction of the Seattle Police Department, which has relentlessly harassed Occupy activists in Westlake Park downtown. They have kicked sleeping activists, torn down tents, and even arrested people for sitting under umbrellas propped up on the ground.
Second, SCCC has a park area suitable for camping, and it is centrally located in a busy Seattle neighborhood. But most importantly, the school has faced a series of budget cuts, tuition hikes, and layoffs, and Occupy activists knew they could count on support of the faculty and students to support the movement. “We have no shortage of friends here,” said SCCC student and Socialist Alternative member Jordan Martinez.