Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa gave a lengthy tribute to Occupy LA protesters before telling them they must leave their encampment on the lawn of City Hall by 12:01am tomorrow, citing public health and safety concerns.
Villaraigosa, who has expressed sympathy for the protest’s aims from its beginning seven weeks ago, announced the ouster at a Friday afternoon news conference with police Chief Charlie Beck. He said the movement that has spread in two months from New York to numerous other US cities has “awakened the country’s conscience” — but also trampled grass at City Hall that must be restored.
“The movement is at a -crossroads,” the mayor said. “It is time for Occupy LA to move from holding a particular patch of park land to spreading the message of economic justice and signing more people up for the push to restore the balance to American society.”
The camp of about 485 tents was unsustainable because public health and safety could not be maintained and the park had to be cleared, cleaned and restored for public access, he said.
Outside City Hall, Occupy LA protester Opamago Casciani, 20, said he found the Mayor’s priorities insulting, and he intends to continue demonstrating peacefully through the deadline.
In response to the mayor’s -comments, Casciani said: “What I got from it is: ‘I value grass more than the people.’”
Immediately after the mayor announced the deadline, protester Jeremy Rothe-Kushel, who was in the audience among the reporters, interrupted him, shouting that the group would not obey the order.
Villaraigosa told campers to start packing up their tents and said he believed the move would be peaceful, unlike the tumult other cities have seen.
“I am proud of the fact that this has been a peaceful, non-violent protest,” he said. “I trust that we can manage the closure of City Hall Park in the same spirit of cooperation.”
The mayor said that in the hope of keeping the peace, social workers would begin walking through the camp offering help to protesters, 50 shelter beds would be made available for campers who are homeless and special parking set aside to facilitate the exit.
Beck said police would be patient with laggards who were still packing belongings and working to leave at the time of the deadline — but law enforcement would no longer look the other way.
“After 56 days of not enforcing three city laws that prohibit the use of that park, the time is now,” Beck said.
Anti-Wall Street protesters also took their message about corporate greed to “Black Friday” shoppers, staging demonstrations in commercial areas around California on one of the busiest days of the year for retailers and bargain-hunters.
In San Francisco, protesters demonstrated in the streets near Union Square during the annual Macy’s Christmas tree lighting ceremony on Friday evening, disrupting traffic but otherwise causing few other problems.
Some protesters sat down in the middle of intersections backing up traffic and causing massive traffic jams in the area during the evening commute. Commuter bus traffic in the area was also delayed.
No arrests were made during the protest, said police spokesman Carlos Manfredi, said.
Earlier on Friday, some protesters from the Occupy movements in San Francisco and Oakland clashed with police when they briefly blocked the city’s iconic cable cars until officers pushed them out of the street.
A group of about 20 Occupy protesters in Sacramento marched from a park to a small outdoor mall where many of the storefronts are empty. A few puzzled shoppers, many toting large shopping bags, stopped to stare at the crowd as they read a manifesto asking people to support local merchants.
Along with identifying new protest targets, the Occupy movement has also energized more established awareness campaigns.
In Emeryville, a small city on San Francisco Bay that has been transformed from a manufacturing area to a shopping destination, more than 60 people attended a Native American community’s 10th annual Black Friday protest of the Bay Street Mall.
Corrina Gould, a lead organizer for Indian People Organizing for Change, said the goal is to educate shoppers that the mall was built in 2002 on a sacred Ohlone burial site.
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