Ted Hayes, Original “god-father” of Wall
		Street Occupation of 
		
		City Hall History of Occupation
		 
		Includes Tents Outside and Sleeping 
		Bags inside Chambers
		
 Homeless people sleep on 
		the floor of City Hall's Council Chambers on  Right: Workers erect a large tent next door to 
		City Hall in December of 1984 for the first of two tent cities on the 
		site  | 
	
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		 DOWNTOWN 
		LOS ANGELES — 
		The protesters of Occupy Los Angeles have been sleeping on the lawns 
		outside City Hall for three weeks now, but so far the group's journeys 
		into the building have mostly been confined to trips to give public 
		comment at City Council meetings. 
		That wasn't the case in January of 1987, when for 
		just a few days the floor of the Council chambers was opened up as a 
		temporary homeless shelter. 
		 The move, prompted by a cold 
		front that dropped Downtown temperatures near freezing, was part of a 
		multi-year advocacy effort that included homeless individuals sleeping 
		in a tent city on the state building footprint across the street from 
		City Hall, in the tunnels of the County's Civic Center complex and 
		eventually in an Arts District campground that came to be known as the 
		"Dust Bowl Hilton." The tent 
		city next door to City Hall came 
		first, set up in December of 1984 by a coalition of agencies that called 
		itself the Homeless Organizing Team. 250 people made a temporary home in 
		and around a pair of large tents, set up both to provide a few weeks of 
		shelter and to dramatize the plight of the homeless. Just as with 
		today's protests, the action was also designed to get media attention. When the site was shut down in 
		early January, some former residents followed organizer 
		
		
		Ted Hayes—who would go on to 
		be a central figure in Los Angeles homeless advocacy—to a site at 6th 
		and Gladys. There they set up a shantytown dubbed "Justiceville," but it 
		was shut down in May of 1985 by officials over health and safety 
		concerns. 
		Hayes and his Justiceville 
		followers staged marches 
		throughout Downtown and the city, and continued the struggle for a 
		permanent site. At the end of 1986, 
		Hayes 
		organized "Tent City II" across from 
		City Hall, using a 5,000-square-foot circus tent that could sleep 200. 
		Again, though, the site was only good for a few days. City Hall's doors were opened on
		 None of these efforts, though, had the scale of the 
		"Dust Bowl Hilton," a 12-acre campground on the site of Metro's 
		present-day subway rail yard in the Arts District. 2,600 people passed 
		through in the three months that the site was open.  The urban campground had dust in 
		the air, too little drainage and leaky showers. The last residents were 
		moved out on    | 
	
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