The surefire method to find occupations in small cities is to  head for the center of town. After leaving Philadelphia on our Occupy  America tour, we drive an hour north to Allentown. Pennsylvania’s  third-largest city at 118,000 residents, Allentown has been weathered by  years of deindustrialization in the steel, cement and textile industries that once made it an economic powerhouse.
Along  MacArthur Boulevard, one of Allentown’s main drags, tidy but weary  brick row homes line outlying neighborhoods. Close to Center Square,  site of the requisite Civil War monument, the neighborhoods are heavily  Latino and buildings exhibit signs of disrepair.
 Occupy  Allentown has taken up residence in Center Square, inhabiting one of  the four red-brick plazas on each corner. There are a handful of tents, a  well-supplied kitchen pavilion and an information desk. A large blue  and gray nylon tent, which 12 people crammed into the first night of the  occupation, has laundry hanging off a clothesline in back and a  cardboard sign on the front that reads “Zuccotti Arms,” in reference to  the original Wall Street occupation.
We’ve come in search of Adam  Santo, said to be the local leader of a leaderless movement. A handsome,  boxy-glassed youth a few years out of college, Santo says he knew about  the planning for Occupy Wall Street prior to Sept. 17.
“I wanted  to go to New York, but I’ve been unemployed and finances were tight, so I  thought wouldn’t it be cool to have an occupation in the Lehigh  Valley,” where Allentown is nestled. Eight months earlier he and three  co-workers were laid off from their jobs at a local bank because of a  “lack of work.”
Santo says when Occupy Wall Street “really took  off. I thought, I’m going to make this take off in the Lehigh Valley,  gather support, get people into the streets.” Santo set up a Facebook  page on Sept. 30, the day before the 700 arrests on the Brooklyn Bridge,  and “harassed my friends to join.” Next, he designed, photocopied and  handed out thousands of fliers to spread the word.
I mention Asmaa Mahfouz,  the woman who helped ignite Egypt’s uprising with powerful video blogs  and by handing out thousands of fliers in the Cairene slums. He wasn’t  familiar with her story but he does take Egypt’s revolution as  inspiration.
Occupy Allentown is very much defined by the local.  According to Davina DeLor, a 39-year-old freelance artist who is  painting slogans on her tent when we encounter her, residents initially  assumed the occupation was in protest of a planned hockey arena, which  she says “they are using our tax money for.”
It’s one of those familiar enterprises of our time: socialism for the well-to-do. Allentown is using eminent domain to buy up businesses next to the encampment –  including a Wells Fargo branch – that will be demolished to build an  8,500-seat arena for the Phantoms, a minor league hockey team. The city  has authorized borrowing up to $175 million to pay for the multi-use facility, while the Phantoms’ team owners are willing to throw in perhaps 10 percent of the cost.
While  anger is widespread over what is seen as shady political dealings for a  taxpayer-funded stadium that will displace dozens of local businesses,  many residents are more consumed just trying to survive the grinding  economic crisis. Allentown’s official poverty level in 2009 was 24 percent, twice the state average.
In  a departure from big-city occupations like the one in New York City,  beat cops are openly supportive, says Santo. “They drive by, they wave,  they honk. They give us handshakes and hugs … because they realize they  are part of the 99 percent.” Local clergy are encouraging their  congregations to donate goods and “[supply] us with warm bodies, which  we definitely need,” says Santo.
At the same time, local  conditions have limited the growth of the occupation. DeLor says many  supporters have to juggle multiple part-time jobs, which limits the time  they can spend protesting. During the week the number of campers and  occupiers dwindles. This also may be why the day we were there, Oct. 18,  the occupiers were mostly unemployed or retired.
Despite a Latino  community that comprises 41 percent of Allentown residents, few appear  to be involved in the occupation. Santo speculates that newer Latino  communities aren’t as active possibly due to fears of immigration status  and cultural divides, while younger Latinos are not involved simply  because “it’s just not the cool thing to do.”
Occupation with an expiration date
Youngstown,  Ohio, is an elegiac city a few hundred miles to the west of Allentown.  What was once the manufacturing district  is a mausoleum of industry. A  brick smokestack stands sentinel over acres of cavernous shells that  once poured out streams of goods. Crumbling brick buildings sprout trees  two stories up, while inside pancakes of concrete drip toward the  ground, suspended precariously by a bramble of rusted rebar.
Demolition is one of the few signs of economic life. Starting in 2006, the city tripled its budget for  razing abandoned buildings. In an open-air yard in the industrial  quarter, heavy machines whine and billow exhaust as they pound large  concrete slabs, surrounded by small mountains of rubble sorted according  to size.
With more than 43 percent of the land vacant,  Youngstown is slowly being erased. In some neighborhoods boarded-up  houses and empty lots island the remaining inhabited homes, which shrink  behind spreading foliage lest they be next.
Since 1950, the population has declined from a high of 218,000 to less than 67,000 today. The poverty rate is a stratospheric 32 percent, and the median value of owner-occupied homes is a paltry $52,900. Manufacturing dropped from 50 percent of the workforce in 1950 to 16 percent in 2007. This includes a staggering loss of 31 percent of manufacturing jobs in the region from 2000 to 2007 – and that was before the economy fell off the cliff.
At  the downtown crossroads, Occupy Youngstown has taken up position in the  shadow of three different banks, including a Chase branch. The  occupation is a latecomer, having started on Oct. 15, with a rally more  than 400 strong at its peak, according to Chuck Kettering Jr., an  aspiring actor who has been unemployed for a year from his previous  position as an HVAC technician.
“We were once a huge steel city  for America,” says the cherubic, 27-year-old Kettering. “In the 1970s  they started closing up all our steel mills, taking all the jobs and  shipping them down south and overseas where labor is cheaper.  Youngstown’s been a city that has been going through this economic  struggle for almost 40 years now, and I think we have a valid voice of  addressing these issues on a national scale.”
His family is living  proof of the toll of deindustrialization. In a phone interview, Chuck  Kettering Sr. calls himself “the poster boy for the Rust Belt.” A  Youngstown native, he went to work in 1973 at age 19 and worked at two  local U.S. Steel plants that shuttered, one in 1979, the other in 1982.  Next, he landed a position with Packard Electronics in 1985 making  electrical components for GM cars. After GM spun off Delphi in 1999,  Packard was subsumed by the auto-parts maker. The company started moving  jobs overseas.
“Local operations were pressured by wages, and  most operations moved south of the border” because of NAFTA, he says.  Following Delphi’s bankruptcy in 2008, Kettering and some co-workers  were given a one-time chance to work for GM itself and keep their wages,  benefits and pensions.
“It was a no-brainer,” he says, but their  seniority did not transfer to plant assignments. Despite nearly 25 years  at Packard and Delphi, Kettering says, “I found myself at the age of 54  starting at the bottom, working alongside 21-year-olds trying to keep  up on the line. Many of us who transferred were not spring chickens and  it was hard to keep up.”
His wife, hired by Packard in 1979,  worked her way into management, was forced to retire after 30 years with  a monthly pension that was slashed in half to $1,600 and with  expectations of further cuts. Now he’s on disability.
“I’m really  proud of our local guys,” he says. “The police and the firefighters  really support the occupy movement. Our mayor supports it. We have a  united front here in Ohio.”
Unlike the seven other occupations I  have visited, Occupy Youngstown embraces electoral issues. Kettering and  other occupiers wave signs and wear buttons opposing Issue 2, which  would strip some 350,000 public sector workers of collective bargaining rights.
Karen  Joseph, a soft-spoken 59-year-old mother of two whose family spends  one-third of its household income on health insurance, is by no means  the only one who is against Issue 3, which would exempt Ohio from the  incoming national healthcare law.
Everyone is against privatizing  the Ohio Turnpike, which is being pushed by Republican Gov. John Kasich.  All the occupiers we talk to express dismay at the prospect of hydrofracking in Mill Creek Park, which Kettering describes as “the jewel of the area with waterfalls, streams and lots of wildlife.”
This  occupation comes with an expiration date. The city asked the occupiers  to “take down the tents before business hours on Monday, Oct. 17, when  the banks were opening,” according to Chuck Kettering Jr. He says they  complied, but Occupy Youngstown still maintains a 24-hour presence and  has pledged to do so until Nov. 8, Election Day.
Toledo blues
In  Toledo, Ohio,  occupiers are struggling with trying to live outdoors in  a harsh climate because the city is making life difficult for them.  Christopher Metchis, an energetic 19-year-old student who will be  attending the Musicians Institute in L.A. next spring, explains that  City Hall has denied them use of tents and generators, and dispatched  city crews to cut off their access to electricity. He has just spent the  last two nights outdoors in a wind- and rainstorm, huddling under tarps  with a few hardy souls on a grass plaza in the downtown business  district near the baseball stadium for the AAA Toledo Mud Hens.
While  we talk, a few people come by to help with consolidating supplies,  folding tarps, stuffing blankets into a crib and kitchen work. A local  pastor has also stopped by with words of support. Candice Milligan, a  30-year-old trans woman, says the living conditions make it “difficult  for people who aren’t able bodied.” She also admits that concrete  support is not as forthcoming because much of the public does not know  what Occupy Toledo is trying to accomplish. And they have to contend  with a police force that is indifferent at best and a local media that  is hostile at times.
Awareness of the occupation movement coexists  with despair. During dinner one evening at an Italian restaurant in  Toldeo, our waitress, Dawn, tells us she supports it because “the people  need a voice, not just the corporations and politicians.” A few minutes  earlier, she lit up in excitement when she found out we are from New  York, but her face crumpled instantly, exclaiming quizzically, “But now  you’re here?!”
It has been a common sentiment on the trip  so far. After decades of economic decline, Americans in this part of  the country are beaten down. Their prospects are limited. Civic  embarrassment is more prevalent than pride. They lament the end of the  “American Dream,” the notion that hard work and sacrifice would be  rewarded with a comfortable retirement and a better life for their  children and grandkids. But in the hundreds of occupations around the  country they have found a space where they can speak of their struggles,  burdens and aspiration. People listen and they hear similar stories,  creating a genuine sense of community. They say it is giving them  dignity. And perhaps most important, it is giving them hope.
 
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