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On Tuesday,
September 24, 2002, Home Depot Canada sent a small army
of private security guards backed by a small army of Toronto
police to forcibly evict about 125 people from a homeless encampment
on their unused property in downtown Toronto, Canada. Home
Depot needs to be held in account for its actions.
Due to the urgency and seriousness of this matter, please respond
immediately to our international call for solidarity and action
against Home Depot.
Please
find below, an action pack that includes:
1. Background guide (includes info on our demands
and what you can do)
2. A tip sheet on how to organize your own information
picket
3. Sample text for flyer that can be distributed
at your information picket.
For formated
copies of the materials, visit our website at www.tdrc.net.
Due to the urgency of this matter, please participate right
away in this international call for action against Home Depot!
Any questions,
don't hesitate to give us a call at 416-599-8372 or email tdrc@tdrc.net.
Thanks.
Musonda
Toronto Disaster
Relief Committee
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1.
BACKGROUND GUIDE: An International Call for Solidarity
Here's why
- and how - you should take action against Home Depot.
On Tuesday,
September 24, 2002, Home Depot Canada sent a small army of private
security guards backed by a small army of Toronto police to
forcibly evict about 125 people from a homeless encampment on
their unused property in downtown Toronto, Canada. The site,
known as Tent City, has been the home to Canada's largest homeless
encampment for several years. There were about 55 structures
in Tent City, most of them built by the residents. The Toronto
Disaster Relief Committee has been working with residents for
more than two years. We moved several pre-fab homes onto the
site, supplied portable toilets, fireplaces and even showers.
Just three days before the raid, TDRC organized a clean-up day
with 60 volunteers (from university students to seniors) who
worked alongside Tent City residents to improve the site.
Home Depot
has spent tens of thousands of dollars to move against the homeless
residents of Tent City. Within minutes of occupying the site,
they had erected a new, nine-metre high barbed wire fence, a
new security road around the perimeter and high-intensity search
lights, not to mention the private security staff and construction
crews brought on site. Home Depot removed the residents so quickly
that they didn't have a chance to gather medicine, identification
or other personal items. It took hours of intense pressure to
arrange for residents to have access to their homes and their
belongings. And even then, access was very restrictive. Home
Depot has said that it will only guarantee to protect the dwellings
and belongings for seven days. And it made no plans for relocation
of the residents, not even for temporary shelter. After a great
deal of pressure from TDRC and others, the City of Toronto has
made an offer to help Tent City residents find proper housing.
But Home Depot offered no help at all.
The United
Nations Commission on Human Rights says that "forced evictions
are a gross violation of human rights". The International Convenant
on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, which Canada has signed,
guarantees the right to housing. The International Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights, which Canada has also signed,
says that everyone has the right to be protected against "arbitrary
or unlawful interference" with their homes. The U.N. says that
if people have to be moved, they should be given enough notice
so that they can prepare for the move, new homes at another
location and practical help in relocating.
Home Depot
didn't do any of this. They spent a lot of money to throw 125
people who had been peacefully living in Tent City off the land
without any thought as to where they would go. Home Depot says
that the site was unsafe, but the streets of Toronto are even
more dangerous. And there were only 14 beds in homeless shelters
in the entire city of Toronto (population 2.4 million) on the
night that the Tent City residents were forcibly evicted - another
sign of the city's overcrowded and unhealthy shelter system.
Here's
what Home Depot needs to do:
1. Treat
Tent City residents with respect. They should have access to
their dwellings. Their property and their homes should be protected
- not bulldozed after seven days. The portable structures may
be moved. Home Depot should help with transportation and storage.
They should help residents salvage as much as possible of the
structures which cannot be moved.
2. Acknowledge
the error of their ways. Home Depot was wrong to evict the residents
without any notice and without any help in relocating. Home
Depot can make amends by offering $50,000 per unit in capital
funding for construction of 55 units of new social housing -
the same number of units that were on the Tent City site - for
a total bill of $2.75 million. That's small change for a company
that boasted in May of 2002 that it had "a record $5.2 billion
in cash on the balance sheet". An apology is not enough. Home
Depot should pay.
3. Adopt
the One-Percent Solution. A growing number of groups, including
socially responsible corporations, are calling on the Canadian
government to restore housing programs that were slashed in
the 1980s and cancelled in the 1990s. Home Depot should be an
active partner in the One Percent Solution, the campaign for
a fully-funded national housing program.
You
can make a difference:
The Toronto
Disaster Relief Committee is calling on individuals and
community groups, unions, faith communities and all others in
Canada and
the United States to join in a campaign against Home Depot.
This is not
a boycott, although consumers of conscience may decide to shop
elsewhere. This is a mobilization to force Home Depot to take
the
specific actions outlined above. The TDRC has already talked
to senior
officials at Home Depot. But they need to feel community pressure
before
they will respond seriously.
Some
tips for action:
1. Contact
Home Depot and tell them to meet our demands. Make sure to ask
for a response. Organize a letter-writing party in your neighbourhood,
union local or faith community. Send a letter directly to Annette
Verschuren, President, Home Depot Canada, 426 Ellesmere Road,
Scarborough, Ontario, Canada, M1R 4E7. The telephone number
is 416-609-0852 and follow the prompts to get to her office.
Or send a fax to 416-412-4215.
2. Organize
a Homeless Depot solidarity group in your area and arrange for
an information picket of a local store. TDRC has tips for organizing
an action on our Web site, along with a flyer that you can copy
and hand out to customers.
3. If you
are a customer of Home Depot, or know others who might be personal
or commercial customers, then contact the store to tell them
that you expect corporations to show social responsibility.
Tell them that you want them to take action on the basic demands.
Stay
in touch:
Look for
updates on the Homeless Depot action on the TDRC Web site at
www.tdrc.net.
Call us at 416-599-8372. Send an e-mail to tdrc@tdrc.net.
Or write to Toronto Disaster Relief Committee, 6 Trinity Square,
Toronto, Ontario, Canada, M5G 1B1. Send us copies of any letters
that you sent to Home Depot. And make sure to send us copies
of any replies that you receive.
2.
TIPS FOR ORGANIZING AN INFORMATION PICKET
Tips for
organizing a Homeless Depot information picket
1. Look
for a Home Depot store in your community. Check out the site.
Most stores won't allow information pickets on their property,
but entrances to parking lots can be effective places to hand
out flyers. If you have trouble with private security officers
or police, call the Toronto Disaster Relief Committee.
2. Round
up a handful of supporters. You don't need a big crowd (although
the bigger the numbers, the less likely you will experience
trouble from security). Three or four people per parking lot
entrance is enough.
3. Make
up some picket signs with snappy slogans: Homeless Depot, honk
if you hate forced evictions, and so on. Check out our Web site
for some ideas. If your group, union local or faith community
has a banner, bring it along.
4. Download
the information flyer from our Web site. Feel free to make some
changes and add local contact information.
5. Pick
a day for your event. You might want to send a news release
to local media. It's a good way to build support and get the
message out. Send a letter to the president of Home Depot Canada
(with a copy to the TDRC) explaining why you are picketing the
store. Send a letter directly to Annette Verschuren, President,
Home Depot Canada, 426 Ellesmere Road, Scarborough, Ontario,
Canada, M1R 4E7. The telephone number is 416-609-0852 and follow
the prompts to get to her office. Or send a fax to 416-412-4215.
6. Politely
offer the flyers to customers as they come and go from the store.
Don't get into extended arguments with angry people. It just
raises everyone's blood pressure. Be prepared with a quick response
when people ask why you are there.
7. Local,
provincial, state and national laws on information pickets and
trespassing can be different from area to area. If you have
any doubts, contact a local legal clinic or progressive lawyer.
In most places, if you are not blocking traffic and not on private
property, then you have the right to an information picket.
Stay in
touch. Look for updates on the Homeless Depot action on the
TDRC Web site at www.tdrc.net.
Call us at 416-599-8372. Send an e-mail to tdrc@tdrc.net.
Or write to Toronto Disaster Relief Committee, 6 Trinity Square,
Toronto, Ontario, Canada, M5G 1B1.
Send us
copies of any letters that you send to Home Depot. Make sure
to send us copies of any replies that you receive. And, please
send us copies of any newspaper clippings, if you manage to
make some news in your area.
3. SAMPLE TEXT FLYER (Visit our website for
formatted copies of this.)
<<
side one >>
Home Depot
didn't cause homelessness,
but they shouldn't make it even worse
On September
24, 2002, Home Depot ordered a small army of private
security guards, backed by a small army of police officers,
to forcibly
remove about 125 homeless people from some unused property they
own in
Toronto, Canada. The people lived peacefully in a community
they called
Tent City for several years in 55 dwellings, most of which were
built by
the residents. Home Depot - which boasts "a record $5.2
billion in cash
on the balance sheet" didn't give them any warning, they
didn't offer
any help in relocating and they even tried to stop residents
from
collecting medicine, identification or other personal belongings.
An apology
is not enough. Home Depot should pay for the error of its
ways. The Toronto Disaster Relief Committee is calling on Home
Depot to:
1. Treat
Tent City residents with respect. Give them access to their
dwellings. Protect their property and their homes. Help them
move or
store portable structures. Help residents salvage the homes
that cannot
be moved.
2. Acknowledge
the error of their ways. Home Depot should make amends by
offering $50,000 per unit in capital funding for construction
of 55
units of new social housing - the same number of units that
were on the
Tent City site - for a total bill of $2.75 million.
3. Adopt
the One-Percent Solution. A growing number of groups, including
socially responsible corporations, are calling on the Canadian
government to restore housing programs that were slashed in
the 1980s
and cancelled in the 1990s. Home Depot should be an active partner
in
the One Percent Solution, the campaign for a fully-funded national
housing program.
<<
side two >>
Tired of
big corporations that push around poor people?
Here's what you can do. . .
Tell Home
Depot that, as a customer, you expect them to be a good
corporate citizen. And that means treating homeless people fairly.
You can
make a difference - if you raise your voice!
When you
shop in a local store, tell the clerk, the store manager or
other employees about your concern regarding the company's actions
in
Toronto. And ask the employee to pass those concerns along to
the
Canadian head office in Toronto.
Send a letter
directly to Annette Verschuren, President, Home Depot
Canada, 426 Ellesmere Road, Scarborough, Ontario, Canada, M1R
4E7. The
telephone number is 416-609-0852 and follow the prompts to get
to her
office. Or send a fax to 416-412-4215.
For more
information about the Homeless Depot campaign, you can log onto
the Toronto Disaster Relief Committee Web site at www.tdrc.net.
Call us
at 416-599-8372. Send an e-mail to tdrc@tdrc.net. Or write to
Toronto
Disaster Relief Committee, 6 Trinity Square, Toronto, Ontario,
Canada,
M5G 1B1. Send us copies of any letters that you sent to Home
Depot. And
make sure to send us copies of any replies that you receive.
Or contact
<< add local contact information here >>
******************************************
Toronto Disaster Relief Committee
6 Trinity Square, Toronto, ON M5G 1B1
Phone: 416-599-8372, Fax: 416-599-5445
NEW EMAIL: tdrc@tdrc.net
NEW WEBSITE: www.tdrc.net
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