Tuesday, September 3, 2013

Lielt Samuel,one of the Poor People March organizers at the Dallas City Hall

Story and photo credit: Jim Schutze, Elliot Kaise/Photos by Evan Clinton

At the Poor People's March, Davis and Caraway Demanded Tax Hike to Cover Budget Shortfall


Categories: City HallSchutze
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Photos by Evan Clinton
Carolyn Davis briefly joined John Fullinwider, left,
at the Poor People's March in front of City Hall today.
About 75 people gathered outside Dallas City Hall today -- accompanied by 

a 20-foot banner that said, "To Redeem the Soul of America" -- and accused
 city leaders of waging ideological war on the poor. The Poor People's March on City Hall Plaza 
didn't march anywhere but did aim a fusillade of sharp verbal barbs at elected officials. 
Two of them even joined them.

John Fullinwider, longtime community organizer and former member of the 
Mayor's Special Commission for the Homeless, took aim at the city budget that 
council members six floors above him were hammering out at that very moment.

"Ladies and gentlemen," he told the modest crowd gathered beneath shade trees,
 "when you read a city budget you're reading a lot of numbers. But when you 
read between the lines of the budget you can see the meaning of the budget."

Citing drastic swimming pool closings and 50-percent cuts to cultural centers, 
even though the total budget shortfall predicted for next year is only 12.5 percent,
 Fullinwider said the budget being planned by the city council carries a consistent theme:
 "In order to hold down taxes for the wealthy, the mayor and the manager are willing
 to tear down programs for the poor."

Mayor Pro Tem Dwaine Caraway left his post at the budget briefing to come down 
and speak briefly to the rally. Calling for a tax increase to stave off cutbacks to vital programs, 
Caraway told the crowd the only resistance is from white neighborhoods: 

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"The only folks who don't support a tax increase are the people up in the north,

" Caraway said. Council member Carolyn Davis echoed the theme.
 "I support a one percent tax increase," 
Davis said.

The Rev. Derrick Bowman, president of the Dallas chapter of the 
Southern Christian Leadership Conference, and former Dallas city council member
 Diane Ragsdale railed against plans to close city recreation centers.
 A crowd of young children stood and sat cross-legged nearby, 
some holding placards that said, "Save Our Rec Center."


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