
Atlanta City Councilmember THREATENS TO LOCK UP PROTESTERS who show up at her house to Stop Cop City
On Monday, June 7th, 2021 — the same day that the Atlanta city council unanimously voted to increase the Atlanta Police Department budget, District 12 councilwoman Joyce Sheperd introduced an ordinance to allow Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms to issue a ground lease of 381 Acres of land at the Old Atlanta Prison Farm to the Atlanta Police Foundation for $10 per year. APF plans to use 150 acres of that land for the development of Cop City—a massive training facility and mock city for the Atlanta Police Department to train in.
This ordinance to Build Cop City on the Old Atlanta Prison farm shows the direct, white supremacist line connecting slavery to convict leasing to policing and the Prison Industrial Complex.
It is an attack on Black people, our planet, and humanity as a whole. This project is built at the intersection of the climate crisis and the prison industrial complex—both of which harm poor people, working people, and Black people at disproportionate rates.
On Wednesday, June 16th, Atlanta City Council’s Finance Executive Committee was set to hear the ordinance and vote on whether or not to send it through the committee, but that did not come without activists and organizers making some noise.
People from all over the city called in to voice their opposition to destroying a forest in order to build Cop City. The public comment line was filled with 3 hours and 41 minutes worth of comments, most of which were in opposition to Cop City. One young person, who identified herself as Candace Owens, had this particularly hilarious and snarky comment to leave on the public comment line:
In addition to the 3 hours and 41 minutes of public comment, during the meeting, protesters showed up at Joyce Sheperd’s house, rang the doorbell, and chanted, “No Cop City, Keep Atlanta Green,” while standing outside of her house.
Sheperd’s response was… well… heavy-handed.
She quickly had units of police cars staged outside of her house for the rest of the afternoon.
In addition to Shepherd’s heavy-handed response about protesters not having the right to come on her property, fellow council member Natalyn Archibong said what happened to Sheperd was “appalling”.
But let’s talk about that. What is more “appalling”? The fact that a few protesters rang a politician’s doorbell and chanted about the environment or the fact that activists and organizers have been calling into city council for over a year at this point to try to close the jail or reallocate money from the police into services that actually keep our communities safe and not one of the demands has been met? Better yet, there is no way to tell whether or not city council people even have to listen to public comment.
In fact, Joyce Sheperd held her press conference during the public comment portion of the meeting when most of the public comments were about her ordinance.
So, tell me what the community is supposed to do other than show up at her house??? Because it’s obvious that she isn’t listening to public comment and she said it herself—she still supports the legislation and will continue to support it.
The question is, whose interests are Joyce Sheperd representing. When faced with the question about whether her campaign takes, or will take money from executives on the police foundation, she quickly became an apologist for the police foundation:
While Sheperd may think police foundations save kids “from their communities”, Sheperd fails to ask herself why those kids are, in her words, “at-promise” in the first place.
The police foundation is an undemocratic institution funded and directed by wealthy Atlantans and C-suite executives who do not pay nearly enough in taxes and who receive a tax break when they “donate” their money to the foundation while they use that money to protect their own power, boost their profits, and make Atlanta in their own image.
Perhaps the most important thing to say is this: After the public comments, the protests, the press conference, and the council meeting, the council unanimously voted to hold this ordinance for 60 days.
No matter how much Sheperd and crew want to villainize people exercising their rights, direct action works. People power works. Keep going.