Water Resistance
Trial Underway in Detroit
By Bill Quigley
November 20, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - A
jury trial is underway in Detroit for human rights
activists arrested for blocking trucks which were going
to cutoff water to low-income families.
On July 18, 2014,
dozens of people successfully blocked the trucks of the
Homrich Inc., a private wrecking company that the City
of Detroit contracts with to carry out water shutoffs.
The trucks were leaving to cutoff water for Detroiters
who were more than $150 past due on payments. After an
eight hour blockade
nine people were arrested.
Those on trial said
civil disobedience was their only option to address the
grave public health crisis of mass water shutoffs, since
the City of Detroit was under emergency management,
which effectively strips all elected officials of
decision-making power. One of the people on trial is
Bill Wylie-Kellermann, pastor of St. Peter’s Episcopal
Church in Detroit. He told
The Detroit News “It was, at the time, the last
vestige of democracy in the city.”
Defendant Marian
Kramer of the Michigan Welfare Rights Organization and
Highland Park Human Right Coalition highlighted what she
sees as the irony of the City criminally charging and
prosecuting defendants for nonviolent defense of
Detroiters’ right to water. “The true crime is that
thousands of people who are struggling to pay their
water bills are being deprived of a basic necessity of
life. Instead of implementing the Water Affordability
Plan, which would tie water rates to income and which
Detroit City Council supports, the Mayor chooses to shut
off the water of thousands of Detroiters. Who is the
real criminal?”
Detroit announced
last month it
has already cut off water to more than 16,000
residences and warned another 49,000 that their water
will be shut off soon. People
whose water has been shutoff are living in homes
using buckets of water from neighbors and family.
In October 2014, two
United Nations experts insisted Detroit restore water to
people unable to pay their bills saying
failure to do so is a violation of the human rights
of residents. The City’s response to the UN was
dismissive. “This is the same organization that's
trying to achieve world peace –
it's not going to happen.”
A coalition of
organizations has created
The Peoples
Water Board which advocates to place a moratorium on
the water shutoffs, restore service to those whose water
has been cutoff and to implement a Water Affordability
Plan. The WAP was created by economist Roger Colton and
the Michigan Welfare Rights Organization who run a Water
Rights Hotline: (844) 42WATER [844-429-2837].
People interested in providing help to families facing
cutoffs can contact
We The People
of Detroit.
There is widespread
resistance to these human rights violations. There is
good news. The Legislative Policy Division staff of the
Detroit City Council recently issued a
legal opinion saying a water affordability ordinance
which would adjust water rates based on income levels
can be legally created.
Bill Quigley is a law professor and Director of
the
Stuart H. Smith Law Clinic and Center for Social Justice and
the
Gillis Long Poverty Law Center at
Loyola
University New Orleans. Bill has been an active public interest
lawyer since 1977. Bill has served as counsel with a wide range of
public interest organizations on issues including human rights,
Katrina social justice issues, public housing, voting rights, death
penalty, living wage, civil liberties, educational reform,
constitutional rights and civil disobedience. Bill served as the
Legal Director of the
Center for Constitutional Rights for two years and has litigated
numerous cases with the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund,
Inc., the
Advancement Project, and with the ACLU of Louisiana, for which
he served as General Counsel for 15 years.