Great piece on Rockaway in The Nation.
I'm getting closer to finishing up the work I have to do to get closer to normal and I'm hoping to get over to Occupy Sandy at YANA out here to lend a hand. But at the rate they are going helping people they may be done before I am.
By the way -- rumor out there that Bloomberg came out by helicopter today and went to The Wave offices. Gotta do some checking on that.
 
In the wake of one of the worst hurricanes to ever hit the East  Coast, stories have surfaced about the phenomenal job Occupy Sandy has  done to bring relief to some of the most affected sites in the New York  area. For anyone who has not experienced the organized chaos that have  marked Sandy volunteer efforts, it may seem surprising that Occupy, the  group which US media outlets have criticized for disorganization and  lack of clarity, has emerged as one of the most effective implementers  of hurricane relief efforts.
Not only does Occupy continue to successfully manage 
two major distribution hubs  in Brooklyn, which daily disperse thousands of materials to other  hurricane relief sites, but Occupy volunteers have proven their ability  to provide aid to affected populations even when government agencies  have not.

While FEMA was setting up its relief stations miles from some of the  most vulnerable populations, Occupy volunteers were hiking up dark  stairwells in buildings without power, bringing supplies and medical aid  directly to doors. When FEMA 
abandoned relief efforts  during the nor’easter which hit the region shortly after Sandy, Occupy  volunteers were still on the ground, dispersing supplies and helping  residents clear out their waterlogged homes. 
Pictures snapped  since then have documented FEMA workers turning to Occupy organizers  for information about how to best serve the neediest communities.

Ironically, one year after its organizers were routinely rounded up  by the NYPD for arrest, Occupy has turned out to be the most invaluable  asset to New York’s largely unprepared first responders during this 
$42 billion crisis.  The aftermath of this hurricane has proven that the months of group  discussions and deliberation surrounding economic justice in Zuccotti  Park last year were not “occupied” in vain. Today, anyone who walks into  one of these Sandy relief centers will see those same communication  systems in use. 

Volunteerism in the Rockaways is a brilliant example of Occupy’s  mutual aid in action. The Rockaways’ narrow strip of land, which juts  westward at the bottom of the Long Island peninsula between Jamaica Bay  and the Atlantic Ocean, is one of the areas hit hardest by Sandy. At one  point during the storm, the water from the bay and the ocean met on the  Rockaway peninsula, filling the first story of many homes and  storefronts with water and destroying hundreds of parked cars. Streets  were left filled with piles of sand. It is also an area where Occupy’s  organized volunteerism has had the biggest presence.

The surge also 
twisted the A train tracks  off their course, which stripped residents and visitors without cars of  their main means of commuting to and from the rest of the city.  Immediately, the Rockaways were at a volunteer disadvantage because of  its now (even more) remote location. One of Occupy’s first major  contributions to volunteer relief was to establish 
St. Jacobi Church in Sunset Park as a place where volunteers could self-organize carpools.
At the end of each day, volunteers make sure everyone who makes the  trip down has a ride back to Sunset Park before dark. On multiple  occasions, I have asked a volunteering stranger if they knew of a ride  back to Brooklyn. Each time, word would travel to another stranger, who  would walk up to me to offer a free seat. That is the power of mutual  aid.

Once volunteers and supplies make it to the Rockaways, there are  several locations where one may go to drop off or pick up materials like  cleaning products and yard tools along the peninsula. The main Occupy  hub in the Rockaways is located at the 
YANA community center on Rockaway Beach Blvd, between Beach 113th and 112th streets.
YANA, which stands for You Are Never Alone, opened as a worker  training facility only a week before Sandy hit. Barely surviving a  massive fire that destroyed the block of property just a few storefronts  west of its own facilities, YANA was badly water damaged and required a  complete gutting. Occupy volunteers and Greenpeace members came  together at the site to support the effort. Now, powered by Greenpeace  solar energy generators, the entire block hosts medical relief. hot food  and the supply center where volunteers keep lists of residents who call  in for assistance, whether it be a medical need, material request, or a  need for manual labor.

The volunteers at the YANA site then assign people to attend to each  request. Partnership efforts made with local organizations and small  businesses have connected Occupy volunteers with local residents, who  play a critical role in advising the unfamiliar eyes and ears, creating a  relaxed, shared learning environment amid overwhelming scenes of  destruction.

One YANA site volunteer, Rasul Murry, explained that Occupy Sandy  volunteers are beginning to understand both the short-term and a  long-term scope of needs in the Rockaways. Partnerships with local  organizations and faith centers have spurred discussions about ways to  support local leadership, during the storm cleanup and beyond.
“Something impressive is that we see residents go in to supply  centers for help and then later come back to volunteer,” Murry  explained. “There is real evidence of the beginnings of a local  infrastructure that can begin to look at the longer-term needs of the  disaster that Rockaway has seen for several decades.”
Murry is referring, in part, to the razing of large swaths of beach  bungalows during New York’s period of urban renewal that produced large  vacant land plots, and their recent infill by mass suburban style luxury  condominiums, which are generally seen as paying little respect to  local community needs.

Tenants on the peninsula tell me they suspect the recent real estate  surge has prompted some Rockaway building owners to prefer that their  properties be condemned. This way they may stop providing services to  tenants, collect insurance, destroy property and repurpose it for  profit. “My landlady, she’s from Brooklyn and she wants me out. She  knows she can make a lot more money off someone new to the Rockaway  Beach area, so she’s not turning the heat or electricity back on. She  says she wants me out by the end of the month,” one resident explained.
Among the Occupy volunteers are a few lawyers who are helping  organize rent strikes and pushing for mechanisms whereby the government  will not condemn a building without prosecuting the landlord for failure  to provide services. Murray added, “We need to assure that residents  have a long lasting real voice and that Rockaway recovery does not  become a replication of New Orleans, not an opportunity to  systematically remove people of color.”

The horizontal leadership model used by Occupy (wherein no one is “in  charge,” and volunteers may start initiatives without the official  clearance of a head figure), on the one hand, makes it difficult to know  if the organizing is as effective as it could be. On the other, it's  working at least as well as other, more traditional relief efforts and  much better than most.

A Sandy Relief Resources newsletter was started recently by a few  volunteers and distributed in South Brooklyn, South Queens (including  the Rockaways) and Staten Island. The newsletter provides information  about disaster unemployment and hiring opportunities, staying warm  without heat, emergency snap benefits, FEMA disaster relief, cleaning  up, shelters and care and food and supplies. Another similar publication  that came out of the Occupy splinter organization 
Strike Debt is the 
Debt Resistors’ Operations Manual,  which provides tips to those who will have to take out FEMA loans to  rebuild their destroyed properties. As Murry put it, “the Occupy  movement is a sort of organism—it generates cells that move out, bound  by a broad supra-ideological consensus.”

Technology has, of course, played a huge role in the success of  Occupy Sandy’s relief efforts. At the end of each day, each distribution  hub submits a list of needs for the following day to 
Celly, a website that forwards messages to any cell phone tapped into the social network. The affiliated 
Twitter and 
Facebook channels  which are updated several times per day to tell volunteers where they  are needed and which supplies to bring. Camera phones have also proved  useful: a sign taped up in YANA’s headquarters instructs volunteers to  “Take a picture of this with your phone,” referring to a map of the  Rockaways with relief headquarters marked.

Perhaps it is the adopted motto “Another World is Possible” that has  mobilized thousands of volunteers to join the newly directed Occupy  movement. “Last year Occupy was criticized for promoting class warfare,”  said one first-time volunteer, “It’s much easier to stand behind Occupy  now that we are not only critiquing the government’s assistance granted  to big banks and business, but are actively stepping in to provide  assistance to the individuals and small businesses that are being  ignored.” For several volunteers I’ve spoken with, the Occupy Sandy  effort is their first experience working within the mutual aid  framework.

Occupy volunteers continue to spend donation funds as needed, with an  eye towards the future. In times of crisis, New Yorkers do come  together, though many residents have expressed worry that as soon as  Sandy headlines begin to wane, so too will the much-needed volunteer  support and supplies. “The Rockaways is New York’s ugly stepchild,”  remarked one resident, expressing frustrations the Rockaway community  has had with Mayor Bloomberg’s lack of attention to community concerns,  both before and after Sandy hit the peninsula. While the community was  still reeling in response to storm damage, the Mayor’s administration  was still championing the construction of a 
natural gas pipeline  to be built straight through the Rockaways’ Jacob Riis Park—a move  which many environmental groups believe will endanger local wildlife and  residents, in light of recent pipeline leaks and explosions elsewhere.
Gasland Filmmaker Josh  Fox has been on the ground since Sandy hit to create a documentary  “guerilla” film which will air today (November 27, 2012) somewhere in  the East Village (text @climatecrime to 23559 to stay in the loop.)  Meanwhile, Occupy Sandy intends to hold a long-term occupation in the  Rockaways, and will use the donated funds that continue to come in to  provide further support for the community’s reconstruction. You can make  a donation to the ongoing effort 
here.