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Protests and marches have started at the G20 ! March for Jobs, Healthcare. in Pittsburg

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annm4peace Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-20-09 10:35 AM
Original message
Protests and marches have started at the G20 ! March for Jobs, Healthcare. in Pittsburg
Edited on Sun Sep-20-09 10:36 AM by annm4peace
Join us Tomorrow for the National
MARCH FOR JOBS
September 20 Pittsburgh - Before the G20

MONEY FOR JOBS - NOT FOR WAR!

SINGLE-PAYER HEALTH CARE NOW!


HOUSING IS A RIGHT - STOP FORECLOSURES & EVICTIONS!
http://www.bailoutpeople.org/tentcityschedule.shtml

If you can't make it, then can you donate for those organizing and protesting?

Call you local news and ask them to cover the marches, (didn't the cover the tea baggers?)

Post comments if you newspapers report about it online.

Corporate news will try to censor people speaking out.



As we write, caravans are already on the road to Pittsburgh, some from as far away as California and Florida. Over the next few days, community organizers, activists, students, veterans, unemployed people and trade unionists will be arriving in Pittsburgh for the March for Jobs and Tent City. As the G20 assembles to discuss the global financial crisis, this broad coalition of people across the U.S. is building for this major protest to ensure that the voiceless are heard. This will be a week-long effort, starting on on Sunday, September 20 with a March for Jobs, and continuing with the Tent City which will last through Friday.

The jobs marchers will be dedicating their efforts to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., who devoted the final days of his life to opening what he called a second civil rights movement, a movement for the right of all to a job or an income.

That movement is even more needed today than it was in Dr. King’s time.

We need your help today to make this a success. We're counting on you to do whatever you can to help make the March for Jobs and Tent City a success. Join us in Pittsburgh for the March for Jobs on Sunday, and the Tent City lasting until Friday; You can also click here to make a an urgently needed donation to cover the many expenses of mobilizing

Now is the time to be in the streets! Millions are out of work, foreclosures and evictions continue, and more than 47 million people in the U.S. have no medical insurance. Meanwhile, Washington is spending trillions of dollars for bailouts for corrupt bankers and for the ongoing wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The economy is in ruins and millions of working people, especially from poor communities and communities of color, are suffering as a direct result of the war spending and the draconian cuts in essential social services.

Staying in the streets and building an independent people’s movement is more important than ever. In order to keep building this struggle, the Bail Out the People Movement needs your help now.

If you are committed to fighting back against the corporate bailouts and endless war, if you believe that everyone has a right to a job, health care, and housing, join us at the March for Jobs and Tent City. Also, please consider making a donation to help cover substantial costs related to sound, tents, porta-johns, and many other expenses for the March for Jobs and Tent City - as well as buses to Pittsburgh. Whether you can donate $5 or $50, $1 or $1,000 we need your donations now! Every single dollar will help make the March for Jobs and Tent City a success.

Click here to make a much needed donation now!

http://bailoutpeople.org/donate.shtml





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Driving to Pittsburgh

Map

Highways to Pittsburgh

From the North and South, Pittsburgh is easily accessed via I-79. Coming from the North you will exit I-79 onto I-279 at a point just south of Wexford, PA. This road is officially named the Raymond P. Shafer highway, but you will hear locals refer to it as the Parkway North. Coming from the south on I-79, you will also exit onto I-279, aka US 22/30, Penn Lincoln Highway, and the Parkway West (there is no Parkway South). From here you can also connect with Route 60 to the airport.

The main access to Pittsburgh from the East/West is via the Pennsylvania Turnpike, I-76. There are four Pittsburgh exits: Exit 28 in Cranberry (Route 19, Perry Highway), Exit 39 in Gibsonia (Route 8, Butler Valley), Exit 48 in Harmarville (Allegheny Valley) and Exit 57 in Monroeville (best access to Pittsburgh). Coming from the East you will exit the PA Turnpike in Monroeville (Exit 57) to connect to the Parkway East (also known as I-376, US 22/30 and the Penn Lincoln Parkway). Coming from the Northwest (Cleveland) you exit at Route 19 (Exit 28) and follow Route 19 (Perry Highway) to I-79S. Interstates 70 and 68, which both connect to I-79 south of Pittsburgh, also provide access from the East/West.

Bus Service to Pittsburgh

There is a Greyhound Bus Terminal located in downtown Pittsburgh at the corner of Liberty Avenue and Grant Street., just a few blocks from the David L. Lawrence Convention Center. A second bus terminal is located in Monroeville at 220 Mall Circle Drive, near the Monroeville Mall. They also provided limited service to/from a bus stop at the Pittsburgh Airport.

Train Service

Pittsburgh's Amtrak train station is located right across from the Greyhound bus terminal, just east of Grant Street on Liberty Avenue, in the basement of the Pennsylvanian. Two Amtrak passenger routes service Pittsburgh daily: the Capitol Limited (Washington D.C., Pittsburgh, Chicago) and the Pennsylvanian (Pittsburgh to New York City). Pittsburgh has access to the full Amtrak system, but some destinations may require a bus/train combination.


Getting Around Pittsburgh



Public Transportation
The Port Authority of Allegheny County has more than 875 buses, 83 light rail vehicles and the Monongahela and Duquesne Inclines to help you get around Pittsburgh

Subway - The 'T' - Pittsburgh's small but clean and safe 25.2-mile subway and light rail system, the 'T' serves downtown Pittsburgh with a four-stop loop including stops at Steel Plaza at Grant Street, Gateway Center Plaza (Liberty Avenue and Stanwix Street), Wood Street, and the First Avenue Parking Garage. Underground, the music is classical, the art whimsical and travel within downtown Pittsburgh is free. The subway will also deliver you across the river to Station Square on the South Side for a minimal fare. After traveling under the Monongahela River, the 'T' runs above ground along three different light rail lines into Pittsburgh's south suburbs. List of stations here.

Public Bus - Multiple bus routes connect downtown Pittsburgh to cultural and other attractions on the North Side and Oakland as well as to the majority of the neighborhoods surrounding Pittsburgh. The Port Authority also sponsors the ACCESS program, the nation’s largest paratransit program of its kind for senior citizens and persons with disabilities.

Sign up for updates on the Port Authority of Allegheny County & the G20 here: http://www.portauthority.org/PAAC/CustomerInfo/G20Summit2009/tabid/500/Default.aspx

Info on fares and passes here: http://www.portauthority.org/PAAC/FaresPasses/Fares/tabid/122/Default.aspx
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Sinistrous Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-20-09 11:15 AM
Response to Original message
1. Pittsburg? I thought the G20 was going to be in Pennsylvania.
Not Kansas, or Texas, Or California
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Hestia Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-20-09 12:49 PM
Response to Reply #1
2. Where do you think Pittsburg is? It's in PA
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Sinistrous Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-20-09 11:16 PM
Response to Reply #2
3. No. Pittsburgh is in PA, not Pittsburg.
Sorry for the snark. It's a 'burgh thing.
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