Pubdate: Tue, 02 Apr 2002 Source: Oakland Tribune (CA) Copyright: 2002 ANG Newspapers Contact: http://www.mapinc.org/media/314 Website: http://www.oaklandtribune.com/ Author: Chauncey Bailey PROTESTERS CALL 'ONE-STRIKE' EVICTION RULING UNFAIR FOR BLACKS Rally In Front Of Offices Of Housing Authority OAKLAND -- A "one-strike" policy against drugs in public housing is unfair and racist, according to East Oakland activists who rallied Monday in front of Oakland Housing Authority offices. "This is a blatant disregard for the rights of blacks and other oppressed people," said Bakari Olatunji, president of the Oakland chapter of International Peoples Democratic Uhuru Movement. "Mostly black people live in public housing in Oakland." Last week, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that public-housing tenants can be evicted for their relatives' or visitors' drug activity on public property, even if the tenants didn't know about it. The ruling upheld the one-strike policy for federal subsidized housing operated by the Department of Housing and Urban Development and local housing agencies. The law was challenged by four Oakland tenants, all of whom are African American. The Oakland Housing Authority estimates that 79 percent of its tenants are black. A half-dozen picketers showed up at a Housing Authority property at 1619 Harrison St., where one of the four tenants who challenged the regulation lives. "Blacks are already victims of a drug economy they do not control. The government has used the drug economy to lock up black men, and now this same government wants to use the presence of illegal drugs to justify making families homeless," said Olatunji. "President Bush lives in public housing and his daughters have used drugs. Is he on the streets?" The protesters carried signs and shouted, "One strike is Jim Crow, the government has got to go..." Officials say race is not a factor. "It just so happens that the four tenants (in the lawsuit) were African American," said Lily Toney, a spokeswoman for the agency. "But this applies to all of our tenants and these (four) are not truly 'one-strike' cases because each of them were given multiple warnings." The agency is now reviewing each of the four cases. No other cases are under review at this time, Toney said Monday. There are more than 11,000 Section 8 tenants whose rents are subsidized. And, in 3,300 conventional public-housing units, there are an average of 3.5 tenants in each unit. Nick Jones, a Housing Authority police officer, showed up at the demonstration with his dog Stash. Jones said he made a drug bust at a tenant's unit last year, at 1619 Harrison. Administrators are in the first three floors and tenants in the upper floors, he said. "It took us six months to get the person out after we found the drugs." Asked how much drugs he has found during the past five years, Jones said, "a lot...cocaine and marijuana." He said he hopes the court ruling will curb drug use. One public housing tenant who has lived at 1619 Harrison many years also showed up for the rally. "It's not fair," said the man, who declined to give his name. "Someone who doesn't like you can plant drugs and call the police, and I don't trust the police." - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk