FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: July 18, 1997
San Diego, CA -- To San Diegans over 18, the
curfew law passed by the San Diego City Council
seems like a bedtime. But to those individuals
under 18, the curfew is more like house arrest. To
visually convey this point, the people protesting
against the curfew in Mission Bay Park, will
enclose themselves in chicken wire during Friday
night's entire rally.
"The curfew has turned all individuals under 18
into a second-class citizens and transformed their
homes into prisons," said Dave Doctor, organizer of
the rally. "Under the guise of crime control,
Warden Golding has sentenced people under 18 to a
nightly prison term."
The curfew law requires that citizens under 18
remain in their homes after 10 p.m. The government
granted these individuals certain exceptions. These
exceptions include, but are not limited to, being
accompanied by an individual's parent, guardian, or
by a responsible adult. Citizens that are over 18
may travel freely without fear of criminal
prosecution.
"Once again, the government is sponsoring
discrimination," said Doctor. "About 35 years ago,
the government forced black people to sit on the
back of the bus. Now, in 1997, because of their age
rather than their skin color, people under 18
cannot move freely at night."
Doctor said that he and the other protesters
will not accept anything less than full repeal of
the law. "If Mayor Golding offered to change the
curfew to Midnight, that would be like allowing
Black people in the 1960s to sit in the middle of
the bus."
"We will not stop rallying until all individuals
are treated with respect," said Doctor. "People
under 18 are being treated like second-class
citizens. The chicken wire on Friday night will
make that clear." The rally will be held in Mission
Bay Park, across from the Belmont Roller Coaster,
from 10 p.m. to Midnight.