Archive for the 'local events' Category

Raising the Bar: How Some Downtown Flagstaff Bar Owners are Combating Sexual Assault

Wednesday, February 2nd, 2011

While students understand the events that mark Tequila Sunrise as the most widespread college drinking weekend of the year, where participating bars open their doors at 6AM, to coincide with Homecoming events at Northern Arizona University, less realized is that this weekend is also commonly characterized by an increase in sexual assaults.

This year was different because the spike never quite subsided. People, mostly women, were being drugged and sexually assaulted throughout the month of November. Stories about what Myra Ferell-Womochil, director of community education at Northland Family Help Center, refers to as “non-alcohol drug facilitated sexual assaults” continue to be circulated across town.

“We are basing the increase in non-alcohol drug facilitated sexual assaults purely from word of mouth and informal disclosures …Women are simply coming forward and telling us or telling someone who is close to them, who then shares with us, that they have been drugged while being at a bar.”

Flagstaff DJ Emmett White, who spins regularly in many bars downtown, comments on how widespread sexual assault is. “A majority of the people I know in this town, including myself, have been drugged and/or targeted for sexual assault, and that’s not confined to the bar scene. It happens at house parties, it happens on campus, it happens at restaurants.”
While Mr. White regards the recent increase in sexual assaults stemming from downtown bars as cause for concern, he believes it is also a good opportunity to engage bar owners and bar staff, as well as patrons, in these issues.

Northland Family Help Center, Northern Arizona Center Against Sexual Assault and the Flagstaff Police Department have been working together for the last three years to assist the bars in making sure they have the tools they need to meaningfully address a few realities.

1) Alcohol is the most commonly used substance to facilitate date rapes and sexual assault.
2) Sexual assaults can and often do happen at any bar in town, all year round.
3) As bystanders to the potential for violence, bar staff who have been trained in prevention strategies can play a critical role.

This past Tequila Sunrise marked the third year in a row where NFHC offered sexual assault prevention training to local bar staff, and through their partnership with NACASA and the Flagstaff Police Department, also delivered posters to bars for the event with sober messages about watching your drink, looking out for your friends, and the popular “in your hands, you hold the power to stop rape,” which is intended to be placed above urinals in the men’s bathroom.

The Green Room was the only bar in town that had these posters hung up in the bar on the morning of Tequila Sunrise. Community educators for NFHC, Ms. Ferell-Womochil and the author of this article surveyed patrons on their reactions to the posters. We wanted to get a sense for how these messages were being received.

Despite one very intoxicated guy who was upset by the messages, slurring, “I don’t come to bars to have to hear about this kind of sh*t, I come to get my rape on,” most people appreciated the messages. Women shared stories of being drugged, harassed, and assaulted. Many men were appalled it happened it all. “If people feel the need to hang these posters” said one guy, “it is clear there is a problem, and that is really sad.”

When owner Rand Jenkins heard word his bar was being victimized, his response was “Shock and dismay, the typical ‘I never thought this could happen to me’ response. Then anger and frustration with the world, followed quickly by problem solving and crime fighting.”

Ms. Ferell-Womochil praised the bar for what it already does and his commitment to have his staff trained by NFHC’s community education staff. “Rand is really trying hard to create a climate within his bar that is not conducive to sexual assault. He is re-educating his staff.”

Says Mr. White: “There seems to be a sort of silent inaction on the part of most bar staff and owners when it comes to this, I think because they are afraid that addressing it will affect their business, and also because it requires a sea change in the mentality of people that work in the bar.”

At 1PM on February 28, The Green Room is hosting the first of three sexual violence education and prevention trainings given by community educators from NFHC. The trainings are specifically geared toward bar staff to meaningfully and appropriately combat sexual assault, highlights the important role bars can play in creating a safe space for their patrons, and are open to the public.

“I think that this education will hopefully start some conversations, raise awareness, and dramatically reduce the chance of this happening,” says Mr. Jenkins. “One of the biggest reasons why I decided to go into business for myself was the belief that I could help the community.”

As a DJ, Mr. White understands the role he plays in setting the mood, and recognizes the responsibility he has as a bystander with a microphone. “Some guys in particular think it’s cool to stand in groups at the edge of the dance floor and ogle the girls as if it’s a show or something, or to continue to pursue a dance or conversation after someone has said ‘no.’ All of these things contribute to an atmosphere I don’t want to be a part of, so … I’ll change the music, play something you can vogue to, that can do the trick.”

“If the creep factor in the room gets too high, you can feel it, something shifts in the air. I’ve been known to stop the music and point ‘em out, and remind people that they don’t have to be sleazed upon, that if someone is being creepy or predatory, to let me or the bouncers know, and we’ll get them out of the bar, no questions asked.”

It is important that men become active bystanders to the potential of sexual assault. Says Mr. White: “I’ve witnessed people trying to take advantage of the most clearly wasted woman in the bar. In this situation I’ll intervene and ask the woman if she wants this person around and if her friends are nearby, or if I can get her a cab.

“In cases where the person is too drunk or maybe even drugged to be coherent, I’ll try to get the perpetrator 86’ed or at the very least make sure the bouncers know not to let them leave together. These situations are tough because sometimes they are too out of it to even remember their address. For this reason and more, I hope people adopt and stick with the buddy system.”

Mr. White continues: “Men, join The MARS Project* (men against rape and sexism) on campus. Talk to other men about consent. Don’t be afraid to take things seriously and stand up for what’s right. Know that these problems are not going to disappear anytime soon, but if we don’t continue to talk and implement effective and creative ways of dealing with them, they will stay the same or get worse. To affect cultural change takes decades, and knowing what is right, educating yourself and others, and sticking to your guns can make it happen.”

• Someone cannot legally give consent if that person is intoxicated. Legal consent can only be given if it is: Verbal, Sober, and enthusiastic.
• If someone is intoxicated and “accidentally” rapes someone, that person is still accountable for the rape. It is not an excuse.
• Most drug-facilitated rapes involve alcohol, despite what is happening in the bars now.
• Most sexual assault victims personally know the perpetrator; most sexual assaults do not involve strangers.
• It is never a victim’s fault for being raped.
• Friends don’t let friends sexually assault someone. There is an important place for the bystander.

Resources:
Northland Family Help Center (24-hour crisis hotline): 928/527-1900 or
877/634-2723
Northern Arizona Center Against Sexual Assault (NACASA): 928/213-6112
Flagstaff Police Department: 928/774-1414
NAU campus Police: 928/523-3611

*women can join the MARS Project too!

Save the Peaks supporters confront Borowsky

Thursday, July 22nd, 2010

July 20, 2010. Phx, AZ – This is Eric Borowsky, majority owner of Arizona Snowbowl and Phx water baron, being interviewed by a conservative Christian radio station. This was during a rally that took place in front of the courthouse immidiatly following oral arguments between the save the peaks coalition and Arizona Snowbowl teamed up with the USFS. I wish I had enough space on my camera to continue filming as the crowd continued to swarm. Follow the case, there is a lot coming up: www.truesnow.org

Taala Hooghan Infoshop, grand opening @ new location

Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010

This must be, what, the third new location opening for the Taala Hooghan Infoshop? Another opening party! Sweet. This is a great space, in a neighborhood that really needs a working, all-ages, community space. About a month ago, I spent a day digging out plumbing and pouring concrete to secure the foundation. I haven’t been back since Liberate Earth Day workshops, but I know everyone has been working hard, dry-walling, wiring, painting. I’m looking forward to saturday to see how it’s all progressed.

Grappling with Hunger: Locally and Globally

Sunday, March 29th, 2009

April’s issue of The Noise just hit the streets. View full schedule here.

It is safe to say that the majority of people reading this article know little about what it means to be really hungry, this writer included. I recall a few weeks during the fall semester of my first year in graduate school when I misjudged how my loans should be spent. I gave it all to my landlord and left little to myself to buy food. During the time between then and my first paycheck, I subsisted on nothing but apples I stole from my neighbor’s trees in the neighborhood on the north side of town. After a while I got creative: apples with peanut butter, fried apples, and apples and cinnamon, among others. This only lasted a couple weeks and soon enough I was back on my feet.

I do remember one homeowner who yelled at me because he enjoyed the apples as “ornaments,” to make his property look nice. I lashed back with something snippy, wishing him luck in explaining this to all the birds, squirrels, mice, bugs, and worms in his yard who will see the apples as a meal, just as surely as I did. “If I can’t eat them and you won’t eat them. Somebody will.” And for the record, I came back that night with a canvas bag and a ski mask.

Still, while I couldn’t run down to Safeway and buy food, I was never really hungry, and I knew my situation wouldn’t last long. Of course, I hear the statistics, but it’s hard to react to faceless numbers. Over a billion people in the world are undernourished. Over two million people die of starvation ever year. Ninety percent of the hungriest nations on earth are net exporters of food to rich nations. Meanwhile, 80 percent of harvested corn and soybeans in the US and Europe go to feed livestock. And the New York Times reported last May that in the US, over 30 tons of food goes to waste every year. It doesn’t take a genius to figure out that the global food system is seriously and fundamentally broken.

It is no easy task to make these statistics real to those that will probably never experience true hunger. There is no way I can relate to a coffee farmer in Guatemala who has sold his coffee at a loss for the last 5 years and will never climb out of debt. I don’t live in a village where I have to constantly fight off oil and mining companies who threaten my ability to be self-sufficient. I wouldn’t know what to say to a cotton farmer in Mali whose yields this year just might make it possible to get married, or a single mother in Mozambique whose corn crops were devastated by floods, crying as anticipated income is literally washed away. I will never know what it is like to destroy my own local environment, working my fingers to the bone, trying to get higher yields per acre in service of the corporation that bought my land years ago because my country took out a loan and the IMF says the best way to make a profit is by allowing foreign investors to set up shop.

Still there are organizations that are trying to make hunger more realistic to those who will probably never experience it. In 2004, Tony Hall, US Ambassador to the United Nation’s anti-hunger agencies in Rome, invited colleagues to his house under the pretense that a lavish Thanksgiving dinner would be served. If guests weren’t immediately suspicious of a large meal given by a man who works on global hunger issues, they soon became uncomfortable when asked to draw a card from a basket that assigned them to one of three categories of wealth based on the most current statistics from the World Development Report.

Fifteen percent of the guests were lucky enough to draw a card placing them in a high-income status. They enjoyed gourmet meals with a set table lit with candles and lined with fine silverware. Thirty-five percent were given rice and beans, while the remaining majority were given a handful of rice and were told to eat outside in a tent.

The meal, based on Oxfam’s famous “Hunger Banquet,” is a social experiment of sorts, where guests are forced to look beyond the statistics and experience the numbers first hand. It is a dramatization of the inequitable distribution of food and resources in today’s world.

And anything can happen. Maybe the rich will create a system of police to keep the poor away from their table. Perhaps the poor will work together to take food from the rich, or the corruptible rich will help to facilitate a black market, where food is exchanged under the table. Each of Oxfam’s “Hunger Banquets” turns out a little different depending on the level of participation and enthusiasm for the experiment.

After dinner, guests are invited to speak about their experiences. Did the rich feel guilty for eating so well knowing there were hungry people outside? Did the poor become spiteful? What about the middle class–can they eat their meal avoiding both guilt and spite? According to Oxfam, “few participants leave with full stomachs after the dinner, but all possess a greater understanding of the problems of hunger and poverty and will hopefully be motivated to do something about them.”

For more than three decades, this event has brought together students, teachers, community groups, faith congregations, and others to learn about world hunger, increase their awareness of global poverty, and raise money for Oxfam. The Oxfam Hunger Banquet will take place in Flagstaff on the last day of “Hunger Awareness Week” from April 6th to the 10th.

Hunger Awareness Week is being organized by both graduate and undergraduate students from the Department of Politics and International Affairs at Northern Arizona University, under the guidance of Dr. Geeta Chowdhry, who is teaching courses on Hunger and Food Security this semester. Hunger Awareness week will also feature many events throughout the week: a panel discussion, a talk by Bill Aal from the Community Alliance for Global Justice, a film, and a benefit show. The goal of the week-long events is to introduce the Flagstaff community to hunger and homelessness issues from around the world, and inspire individuals toward active participation in ending these injustices.

“We’ve been studying the way U.S. corporations have huge influence in developing nations,” says Katie Sullivan, an undergraduate student helping to organize the Oxfam Hunger Banquet and the keynote speaker. Because a country might be in debt or need money to build infrastructure, corporations are invited and contracts are signed. “They have the power to tell people what to make. It’s a sad story that happens all over the world.”

When I asked Ms. Sullivan if she thinks the majority of Americans are familiar with these issues, she said that from her experiences, most people keep a self-imposed distance between the source of food and how it arrives on your dinner plate. “I’ve become more aware of where my food comes from. Once you start digging, it becomes more personal.”

I spoke with Bill Aal, one of the founders of the Community Alliance for Global Justice in Seattle, who will be speaking on Tuesday night during Hunger Awareness Week. CAGJ took off on the coattails of the famous 1999 World Trade Organization protests in Seattle, which successfully shut the meeting down. “Before the WTO protests in ’99, we organized across different issues like fair trade and NAFTA. Afterwards we realized there is real power in the interconnectedness of all the different groups and we knew we needed to create a vision to move toward.”

While many groups organize around a particular issue, they often fail because of a lack of clear and specific goals. The mission statement for CAGJ is: We aim to transform the global economy by identifying local and global impacts of trade and monetary institutions, by using education, grassroots mobilization, media and legislative strategies, and by building solidarity across diverse movements. “Our goal is to work together to strengthen local economies every where. Strong local economies provide food security, justice for farmers, and strong connections between small farmers across borders,” he said.

There is another group that works on global hunger issues that are also headquartered in Seattle: Microsoft and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. Mr. Gates, along with the Rockefeller Foundation, privately fund the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa, or AGRA. Because Mr. Aal and CAGJ were interested in what the Bill Gates Foundation is doing to address the same issues, they decided to attend a meeting. “We were horrified by the contrast of their stated goals and their practices. While we were looking at ‘biodynamic agriculture,’ which develops markets within the context of a particular region and has been shown that it allows communities to be resilient, AGRA pushes industrial farming techniques and genetically modified seeds.”

You mean Monsanto? I ask. “Yes, I mean there are others, but Monsanto has been at the table throughout all their planning. And of course they have a huge history of trying to control the seed people use,” he said.

And it’s all done in the spirit of philanthropy, which is an efficient way to, as Mr. Aal explains, “use private money to push public policy.” So CAGJ started “AGRA Watch,” which was formed to “challenge AGRA to be as transparent as it says it is and be more accountable to it’s stated goals.”

CAGJ attempts further to frame the discussion around the reality of the issue. There are, after all, more overweight people in the world than there are undernourished people. One of the major problems with AGRA is that it frames the issue as “an African production problem rather than a food distribution problem.” The ‘Third World’ tag originally signified a third way of doing things, an alternative to the Cold War division of Western capitalism (the First World) and East Bloc communism (the Second World). But recently the term took on a negative connotation, as in third class.

Now we also use the term, “developing world,” but one could easily argue that many “third world” countries have become much worse off when they began to “develop.” So what does “development” mean anyway? And, perhaps more importantly, given the state of the world today, when is a country “over developed?” Ultimately these terms are misleading at best. These labels suggest that everyone on their respective side—first world/ developed and third world/ undeveloped—must be equal and we know that is not true. There are poor people in “first world” countries, just as surely as there is a rich elite in “third world” countries.

Community Alliance for Global Justice looks at hunger as a world problem, a food system problem, rather than an “African problem,” as the issue is often framed. “What we need is a diversity of farming systems, farming techniques, and food distribution system. Farmers, people everywhere, need to be able to choose how they will live without the corporations and banks telling them.”

Hunger Awareness Week will kick off with a panel discussion regarding homelessness and food scarcity in Flagstaff. Among panel members will be Mayor Sara Presler, City Council representative Coral Evans, a representative from Food Not Bombs, Eric Wolverton from St. Mary’s Food Bank, Brett Ramey from Urban Lifeways, Stephanie Boardman from Hope Cottage, and Mik Jordahl, a local human rights lawyer. Bring your questions.

FlagSprints in honor of Mustache March!

Tuesday, March 24th, 2009

It’s finally happening – FlagSprints! I don’t have time to grow a mustache, but I’ll be racin’!

And I assume they’ll give women the same pbr deal regardless of mustache…