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Youth to Mayfair: 'Being young is not a crime'

Bryan G. Pfeifer, 09.04.2007 22:28


The young people of Milwaukee are angry about this discriminatory policy and we feel that it should be changed. This is the purpose of the proposed public hearing: to come up with alternatives. We’re fighting for all young people across all racial backgrounds. We’re trying to unite the entire city and county around this issue,” said Jayme Montgomery of Campaign Against Violence, a co-sponsor of the protests.

Being young is not a crime!
Being young is not a crime!


For the second consecutive Saturday dozens of youth took to the streets in front of Mayfair Mall April 7 to protest a new mall policy targeting youth.

Between the previous protest March 31 and the April 7 action the youth-focused community organizations Campaign Against Violence, Running Rebels, and Urban Underground gathered 3,500 signatures for a petition demanding a public meeting with mall management. Thus far there has been no response from management.

The new mall policy was a unilateral change by mall managers with no community input. It came after sensationalist media coverage of minor incidents regarding Black youth at or near the mall.

Mayfair Mall implemented its Parental Guidance Required or PGR program the weekend of March 30. Similar policies are increasingly becoming policy nationwide.

According to a circular issued by mall management, “visitors” 17 and under are required to have a parent or supervising adult aged 21 or older with them after 2 p.m. on Saturdays and Sundays. At their discretion private security stationed at every door are now asking youth they deem to be 17 or under for ID. If the person “carded” refuses to procure an ID they are forced off mall property. If they show ID and they are 17 or under without an “escort” they are forced off the property. Those youth 17 and under working at the mall which number approximately 300 are required to have special work ID’s and are required to show them anytime they are asked by security.

Mayfair is the largest mix-use shopping center in the state with an 86-acre business complex that includes four office buildings with over 1,400 employees. The mall is located in Wauwatosa, a suburb of Milwaukee, and at Wisconsin’s busiest highway interchange, the site of the two protests.

Mayfair is owned by Chicago-based publicly traded General Growth Properties that owns, develops, operates, and/or manages shopping malls in 44 states. Currently GGP has ownership interests in and/or management responsibility for more than 200 regional shopping malls totaling approximately 200 million square feet of retail space. GGP is also the largest third-party manager for owners of regional malls. Over 4,700 workers work for GGP nationwide (www.mayfairmall.com).

‘Being young is not a crime’

Chanting “Out of sight, Out of mind: Being young is not a crime,” and carrying signs with the same message the youth and their allies braved bitter cold winds for over an hour on both days.

“The young people of Milwaukee are angry about this discriminatory policy and we feel that it should be changed. This is the purpose of the proposed public hearing: to come up with alternatives. We’re fighting for all young people across all racial backgrounds. We’re trying to unite the entire city and county around this issue,” said Jayme Montgomery of Campaign Against Violence, a co-sponsor of the protests.

Adults also stood in unity and solidarity with the youth.

Brian Verdin, a long time progressive community activist and a member of the Milwaukee Teachers Education Association (MTEA), said he is telling his family and friends not to shop at Mayfair because of it’s “racial profiling.”

“The message is: The youth can work here but they can’t shop here. The message to our youth is very clear: they’re not welcome. The real issue here is that Mayfair Mall doesn’t want and hasn’t wanted Black children or young people in this mall for years.”

One protester mentioned how he thought it was ironic how at age 17 a youth can join the military but couldn’t enter Mayfair to shop or visit. Others said the anti-youth policy reminded them of Jim Crow and apartheid.

The youth and their allies are fighting on many fronts to abolish this policy.

“I feel like this is a discriminatory issue with our youth so that if we just all believe in each other and just keep standing up we can make a difference. All our voices count. If we just believe in each other and everybody just have faith in each other we can make a change in the city and probably the world,” said Lanisha Martin a student at Milwaukee Area Technical College speaking at the April 7 protest.

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- e-mail:: bgpfeifer@sbcglobal.net




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Jim Crow? Apartheid!?
11.04.2007 - 19:59
Oh woe is me. I can't go shopping on Friday or Saturday after 2pm without a grownup. DO SOMETHING ELSE THEN. GO SOMEWHERE ELSE. Shop at Brookfield Square or Southridge. Get a hobby. Good god. To liken it to Jim Crow and Apartheid is a travesty. You kids obviously have no idea what those periods in time were actually like. When you have a race issue, then complain about a race issue. This is an age issue, plain and simple. It's pretty obvious that the actions of a few have ruined it for the rest of you. Maybe you should be taking your anger out on kids you know who CAN'T behave in public.
You have no idea.>


step into a slim
12.04.2007 - 14:17
It doesn't appear that the people that post and talk about this on the site are kids.
jim>


nicley done
12.04.2007 - 16:45
The problems at Mayfair Mall can not be solved by keeping the unattended youth out. Mayfair was a very decent place to shop and spend the afternoon until they added the theater about 5 years ago, maybe longer. Along with the theater came aggressive groups of urban youth/adults lingering in the mall after hours, since the last business to close was the theater. Then the riots and stabbings. Congratulations, you're filling stereotypes left and right, to the T. Don't do that. Due to unacceptable, idiotic behavior from a select group of neanderthals you've ruined the freedom of the mall for youths on weekends, and there is nothing you can do about it. When people act like that, everyone suffers. Next thing you know the buss line will no longer run right to the parking lot and they will cut it off at Burleigh and North.
MAKER>