Dayton Daily News

Seeing BLM in chalk, city declares it a crime

- Mike Baker

First came the warning: A police officer in the small city of Selah, Washington, told a group of young people that if they continued drawing “Black Lives Matter” chalk art on the sidewalk in front of City Hall, they would be charged with a crime.

Then came the pressure washer.

As the 10 protesters covered parts of their artwork with their bodies, a city worker walked between them, spraying away the exposed parts of their messages and sending tubs of chalk tumbling into the street. The young activists, wet from the washing, watched in silence and held up signs that were outside the reach of the pressure washer.

“Hate has no home in Selah,” one of them said.

The standoff last week was just one of a growing series of conflicts between conservati­ve leaders of Selah, a central Washington community with only a few dozen Black residents, and young people from a wide range of background­s who believe the city is long overdue for a conversati­on about race.

As Black Lives Matter events spread from urban centers to thousands of smaller communitie­s around the country, town officials who saw little reason to explore percolatin­g racial prejudices are finding themselves confronted by residents who have decided it is time to step forward.

In Selah, where rich soils on the dry side of the Cascades have nurtured a global fruit-growing industry, city officials profess to be perplexed about the sudden activism. The city administra­tor, Don Wayman, said he did not see any racial issues to address, calling the Black Lives Matter movement “devoid of intellect and reason” and characteri­zing the activists as a “mob.”

Chalk art has long been a tableau for social activism, a form of instant commentary that takes political expression quite literally onto the streets. Cities have at times targeted it, such as in San Diego, where a man was charged with 13 counts of vandalism in 2013 for writing anti-bank messages on a public sidewalk. A jury acquitted him.

The issue has also come up before in Washington state. A prosecutor in Ferry County filed charges against a political activist for chalk messages she wrote on a walkway leading into a meeting of county commission­ers in 2018, according to court records. The judge later dismissed the charge, and a federal judge has since noted that while the state’s “malicious mischief ” law prohibits writing on public buildings, it does not directly address public walkways.

Selah’s chalk activism began with Gabriel Fabian, 20, who was not politicall­y active until after seeing the video capturing the arrest in May that led to George Floyd’s death in Minneapoli­s. Fabian, who is Latino, decided he needed to play a role in halting the oppression of Black people and that it would need to start at home.

“I basically said, ‘Enough is enough,’ ” Fabian said.

In early June, he began drawing the words “Black Lives Matter” on the street outside his home, which lies on a dead end. He included references to Black people whose deaths in recent years around the country have sparked protests over racial injustice.

By the end of the week, a city crew came by with a street sweeper to clean it off.

Some friends came by to draw more, and a cleaning crew again washed them off. They did it again. Then again.

At one point, a letter from Police Chief Richard Hayes arrived addressed to Fabian’s older brother. It said the chalk drawing “is, by definition, graffiti” and could result in a citation.

Fabian’s mother, Laura Perez, said it was clear to her that the city’s crackdown had everything to do with the content of the message and the fact that it was produced outside the home of a Latino family. To her, it reinforced everything she had felt about the town since moving her family there from California eight years ago.

She had already seen her children being profiled at school. She had been surprised that the district offered little in Spanish despite the large number of Latinos who had settled in the region, originally drawn by agricultur­al work but now an integral part of many communitie­s in eastern Washington. While her boys were told not to wear rosaries at school, they noticed that white students were not confronted when they wore similar items.

She said the family was stunned to see the Confederat­e flag openly flown by some people in the community and emblems of it worn at school.

Still, Perez said she wanted to be a good neighbor in her overwhelmi­ngly white neighborho­od, and she worried that when the young people started drawing the chalk art that the military veteran who lived across the street might frown upon their work.

After the letter from the police chief, the family had a lawyer respond, objecting to the city’s handling of the art. Rob Case, Selah’s municipal attorney, responded with a more detailed warning, saying the drawings were a violation of the malicious mischief statute “that is punishable by 364 days in jail and a $5,000 fine.”

The city insisted that it had a policy of cleaning away any chalk art it found, no matter the message, though Perez said she had seen no efforts to remove recent chalk art tied to school graduation­s.

The lawyer working with Fabian’s family, Joseph Cutler, said that the city’s targeted cleaning of the protest messages amounted to an infringeme­nt on free speech.

Courtney Hernandez, who is Black and has been organizing Black Lives Matter events in the area, said it was clear to her that the city was attempting to silence protest. She grew up in Selah, she said, and knows that it has not always been welcoming to people of color.

Yet Hernandez said she was in tears during the first rally she organized in Selah because of how many people showed up. More people showed up at later events, which often now feature new chalk art.

Fabian said several white neighbors have invited him now to draw on their driveways, out of reach of the city’s pressure washers.

 ?? JOVELLE TAMAYO PHOTOS / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? From left: Gabriel Perez, his girlfriend, Melissa Martinez, and sister Solimar Perez chalk messages promoting racial equity on a neighbor’s driveway July 11 in Selah, Wash.
JOVELLE TAMAYO PHOTOS / THE NEW YORK TIMES From left: Gabriel Perez, his girlfriend, Melissa Martinez, and sister Solimar Perez chalk messages promoting racial equity on a neighbor’s driveway July 11 in Selah, Wash.
 ??  ?? Laure Perez outside her home in Selah, Wash. As Black Lives Matter events spread from urban centers to smaller communitie­s, towns are finding themselves confronted by residents who decided it is time to step forward.
Laure Perez outside her home in Selah, Wash. As Black Lives Matter events spread from urban centers to smaller communitie­s, towns are finding themselves confronted by residents who decided it is time to step forward.

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