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The Logic Of Occupy Mendo

By casting 99% of the US population as collective victim of a miniscule minority's monumental greed, the American branch of the Occupy Movement has provided a brilliant framework for bringing together a broad coalition to take on the worst manifestations of what, for the past 35 years or so, has been an almost entirely one-sided class war waged by the ruling elite. Students, their grandparents, heretofore apolitical people, the employed and unemployed, veterans, the housed and the homeless, and people of all ages and colors have partaken in the Occupy Movement (all, of course, to varying degrees).

This framing has profound limitations, however, which are evident in places like Mendocino County, where the vast majority of those who identify themselves as being on the “left” seem to have little interest in delving deeper into the local class structure. As a result, the political interests of a large segment of the so-called 99% — needless to say, the bottom 50% or so — are almost entirely marginalized. It's difficult to graft the Occupy framework onto each and every place.

Speaking only for myself, I've lived in inland Mendo for over three years, and I've almost never heard of or participated in a public discussion about structural inequality. Perhaps the greatest contribution of the Occupy Movement so far is that it has changed the focus of political conversation, opening up the national discourse so that frank conversations about class in America are actually possible. A a cursory look at the state of Mendo's housing, employment, healthcare, education, and politics — in other words, its economic and social structure — is an important point of departure.

In short, although many of us here in Mendo labor under the conceit that we are more politically righteous than people in most other parts of the country, a look at economic conditions “on the ground” in our far-flung county paints a strikingly different picture. None of this is to take away that the local counter-culture is decidedly anti-war, non-conformist, and environmentalist, and in many other ways far ahead of the curve as compared with the rest of the country.

Start with housing. Across the United States, a country devastated by several decades of virtually one-sided class warfare, 19 million housing units lie vacant. On the other hand, approximately 3.5 million people are homeless, according to data compiled by the federal government. The ratio of homeless people to people-less houses, then, is roughly one to five.

Of those who lack a place to rest their heads at night, roughly a third are younger than 18. Homeless shelters and other assistance for the young and poor are being rapidly de-funded, thanks to the austerity being fostered and promoted by both major political parties, with avid sponsorship courtesy of the wealthiest segment of the population.

Ponder for a moment this state of affairs and what it says about the violence inherent in the capitalist system, especially in its present toxic configuration. More than 35 years of “neo-liberalism” have gradually unleashed a quasi-neutron bomb when it comes to housing conditions, severely damaging or ruining the lives of the actual human beings, but leaving the buildings standing.

According to some reports, roughly half of the participants at many Occupy movement encampments are homeless. In what might be deemed the “early days” of the Occupy Movement (impressive, given what it has already accomplished, that it is little more than two months old), author and sociologist Mike Davis noted in the Los Angeles Review of Books, “One of the most important facts about the current uprising is simply that it has... created an existential identification with the homeless.” He later added that “we’re seeing the rebirth of the quality that so markedly defined the migrants and strikers of the Great Depression, of my parents’ generation: a broad, spontaneous compassion and solidarity based on a dangerously egalitarian ethic.”

While such an ethic is manifest in places like Oakland and Zucotti Park, it has not gained much traction here in Mendocino County. Yet, homelessness is rampant here in Mendo, relative to the size of the population. There were 772 men, women, and children reporting homelessness in 2001, according to Project Sanctuary, and that figure is likely far higher today. In its 2010 Annual Report, the Mendocino County Community Development Coalition reported 280 families awaiting assistance — more than in previous years.

In many ways, housing inequality and houselessness are more severe here in Mendocino County than in the US at large, on average. Median household income in the county is roughly $36,000 — significantly lower than the national average of $54,000. In spite of this 50% lag in wages as compared with the US as a whole, Mendo housing prices are nearly equal to the national average. In the US at large, the average is $272,000 for a house; in Mendo, $254,500.

Marijuana and other sectors of the underground economy fill the gap for a vastly disproportionate share of the regional population, of course (something extremely difficult to quantify). Anyone who actually relies on the mainstream economy, though, is at a severe disadvantage right out of the gate.

A 2004 report by Mendocino Council of Governments, funded by California Department of Housing and Community Development (online at http://www.abag.ca.gov/planning/interregional/stateirp/state_program.htm ) for the purpose of documenting the “jobs/housing imbalance” in California, provides a devastating picture of the extent of gentrification in this region of California. The study looked at housing and employment trends in the so-called “California Wine Country Region,” which consists of Napa, Sonoma, Lake, and Mendocino Counties. The gap between prevailing wages and the cost of housing is severe. The study projected that in Anderson Valley, seven people would need to work full-time given the prevailing wages in order to afford an average house. The two-tiered economic system that has long been unfolding on the coast, dominated as it is by tourism and real estate speculation, is nearly as painful.

It's not hard to identify those chiefly responsible for these conditions: that much-maligned economic sector known as the “1%.” Again, in the case of Anderson Valley, 82% of vineyard acreage was owned by people who don't live in Mendocino County as of the early-2000s, when David Severn completed a study on the subject. These people are nearly all independently wealthy. In fact, most of them are not people at all, being corporations with hundreds of millions in annual revenue

A similar dynamic is at play in the local rental market. Labor historian Cal Winslow, a founder and director of the Mendocino Institute based in Fort Bragg, compiled a valuable report on Mendo's housing in 2002, available here.

His conclusions concerning the crisis in local housing are even more valid today than they were nine years ago. As Winslow notes in the report, the one% dominates the field:

“A quick visit to the offices of the specialists in vacation rentals is revealing. Between them, Shoreline Vacation Rentals, Coast Getaways, Mendocino Coast Reservations, Seacrest Properties, and Century 21 manage hundreds of such properties. Most often, they rent for $300 per night, more in the peak seasons. The economics here are clear enough — $300 a night equals $2,100 in a week, a high income, probably more than a month’s rent from a steady tenant. Of course, there are expenses, but there are also tax breaks and other incentives for landlords.

“The title companies and the realtors also list the addresses of property owners. I looked at addresses for Mendocino and Caspar, 1603 in all. 584 — more than a third — of these were owned by absentee landlords, people and companies found elsewhere, often in the Bay Area but also throughout the country and a few places beyond. Once again, there will be an overlap with vacation rentals. Still, it is clear that a considerable portion of the housing stock is not available to those who would like to live and work on the Mendocino Coast.” [emphasis added]

Next week, I'll examine other aspects of Mendocino County's profoundly unequal economic conditions, again including the extent to which they are being determined by the 1%, and suggest how these understandings might influence the local manifestations of the Occupy Movement.

Contact Will Parrish at wparrish@riseup.net.

3 Comments

  1. Charles Becker November 26, 2011

    “By casting 99% of the US population as collective victim of a miniscule minority’s monumental greed…”

    The Achilles heel of the entire Occupy movement is claiming to represent the 99%, instead of presenting a plausible claim. The approximate reality is that there’s a fraction of 1% at the top: the capitalist, media/entertainment/government elites who can get national camera time, or an editorial published in a major newspaper. And roughly the bottom third of America has broken away and is drifting off toward despair and poverty.

    But that leaves the 66%ers, who are bearing the brunt as they always have and always will, and they are being alienated by the Occupiers. There are plenty of 66%ers who would naturally ally with the cause of economic equity, if they weren’t being affronted by Occupy.

    The French Revolution offers a good lesson. On Jefferson:

    ” Like most Americans, when the French rebelled against Louis XVI, he generally praised their action, hesitated over it, and finally recoiled from it.”

    http://www.monticello.org/site/research-and-collections/french-revolution

    In authoritarian countries, a revolution needs the military on their side, Mubarak held on until he lost the military. In America, a revolution needs the middle class on their side, Nixon held on until he lost the middle class. The middle class is up for grabs right now, and the difference is clear. The 1%ers are carefully displaying a reverence for the middle class. The Occupiers are heaping scorn and abuse, “My way or the highway, if you’re not with us you’re an idiot” upon the very middle class that their cause needs to succeed.

    The middle class will support the claim that the economy is

    • Charles Becker November 26, 2011

      not equitable, but they won’t support the accusation that they are victims. (accidentally hit the ‘post’ button).

  2. Harvey Reading November 29, 2011

    Naw, Chuck, you’re trying to belittle the movement, for all your high-sounding prose, just like the media and so-called intellectuals, both of whose livelihoods derive from the same sources of wealth. Truth is, the wealthy and their well-compensated yuppie servants (the only middle class that exists in the U.S.) are shaking in their boots. As a result, they have sent in their brutal pigs (whose prime directive is to protect business interests) to quell the movement in its early stages because they correctly perceive that it could easily ignite into a revolution that would bode nothing but ill for their lying, greedy selves. A new day is coming, my boy. The Working Class, which for years fell for the propaganda of being middle class and identified more with the interests of its masters than its own, has finally had enough.

    Oh, by the way, this country has always been authoritarian, for all the blathering we hear about “freedom”. Whenever anyone or any group presents a serious perceived challenged to the status quo, out come the pigs and often the brutal military, often disguised as the national guard.

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