PORTLAND — City officials inspecting Occupy Maine’s Lincoln Park encampment Thursday found some health and safety issues that must be addressed if the protesters want to continue camping there, officials say.

Members of the fire, police, inspections, parks and public services departments walked through the park with a small group of protesters, looking for possible hazards or threats to public property. A list of issues they found will be forwarded to the group in the next two or three days, said city spokeswoman Nicole Clegg. She declined to provide examples of what items need to be addressed.

The protesters didn’t get any immediate feedback either.

“It was a good walk through,” said protester Alan Porter, who has been active in the maintenance work at the camp. “We couldn’t get any immediate response, which was OK … we’ll be on pins and needles waiting for the response.”

Also Thursday, the Occupy Bangor members struck a deal with city officials who said they had to leave a city park. Members of the group met with city officials, and agreed to leave the park, but city officials said they could continue their activities elsewhere.

Bangor City Manager Cathy Conlow had said the park had canopies and structures that were being used as storage areas, an “inappropriate” use of the park near the public library.

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The Bangor conflict came amid reports of a crackdown on Occupy sites nationwide and violent clashes with police and mass arrests at some Occupy sites.

On Thursday, protesters across the U.S. clogged streets and tied up traffic in demonstrations to mark two months since the movement’s birth and signal they aren’t ready to quit, despite the breakup of many of their encampments by police. Hundreds of people were arrested, most of them in New York.

The demonstrations — which took place in cities including Los Angeles, Las Vegas, Boston, Washington and Portland, Ore. — were for the most part peaceful.

In Portland, about 50 Occupy protesters gathered in Monument Square, then marched to the Merrill Lynch offices on Fore Street. Initially they entered the lobby and were shouting slogans and banging a drum, police said.

The company called police who moved the protesters out to the sidewalk. When merchants complained about the noise of the drum, police ordered the drumming to stop.

The group then marched to TD Bank on Union Street and then to Bank of America at One City Center before ending up back in Monument Square. No one was arrested.

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Some members of the public have criticized the city’s decision to allow the protesters to stay in Lincoln Park in violation of city ordinances that forbid overnight camping.

The group also has been the target of vocal criticism, with some observers saying they are just lazy and don’t want to work, and that the encampment has become a haven for the city’s homeless, some of whom are mentally ill.

Protesters say the park has about 75 campers, though the number fluctuates, sleeping in about 50 tents. They are open to anyone who wants to join them, and do not pick and choose who can be part of the movement.

The mechanism by which the group resolves interpersonal issues is a lengthy one that seeks consensus but requires patience and tolerance. Some observers with experience in counseling commended several of the protesters for how they have handled challenging individuals and disruptive behavior.

“This is a model community that has been developed for the public’s benefit to remind each other and the public at large what a community based on democracy and concern for one another can look like,” said John Branson, an attorney who is representing the protesters.

The group is mobilized around a distrust of an economic system that gives the richest one percent control over the fate of others, he said.

“The Occupy encampment is the only place where there is no distinction between the homeless and those who have a home,” he said. “The homeless are not segregated or labeled or isolated as they are by society at large … not treated like vagrants or bums, but treated like human beings which they are.”

Some of the chronically homeless are experienced at living outdoors and are passing on pointers, just as others in the movement are teaching them about political expression, he said.


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