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As the the 4:30 p.m. start time for the “Good Trouble Lives On Day” approached on Thursday, July 17, march participants began placing this sign on the railings of the newly opened Humboldt Bay Trail across the Eureka Slough Bridge. -
The Good Trouble Lives On march/protest got underway at 4:30 p.m. on Thursday, backed by the singing Raging Grannies, starting on the new Humboldt Bay Trail South behind Target in Eureka. About 250 participants walked/rollerbladed/bicycled/rolled/skateboarded north out-and-back for a mile with their signs for the passing rush hour traffic on U.S. Highway 101. -
The Good Trouble Lives On march/protest got underway at 4:30 p.m. on Thursday, starting on the new Humboldt Bay Trail South behind Target in Eureka and crossing over the Eureka Slough Bridge. About 250 participants walked/rollerbladed/bicycled/rolled/skateboarded north out-and-back for a mile with their signs for the passing rush hour traffic on U.S. Highway 101. -
“The Eureka Slough Bridge bridge with its rainbow of colors and the new trail is a good place for our protest,” said Marlee Nelson, local Humboldt Democracy Connections organizer, who said they switched time of day and location for this protest from the county courthouse to the new Humboldt Bay Trail South behind Target in Eureka to increase visibility of their protests. -
Several protest signs referred to Congressman John Lewis, a Georgia Democrat who, while an advocate of peaceful protests, called for “good trouble” during the Civil Rights era. The event occurred on the five-year anniversary of his death. -
The recently opened Humboldt Bay Trail South saw about 250 participants who walked/rollerbladed/bicycled/rolled/skateboarded north out-and-back for a mile with their signs for the passing rush hour traffic on highway 101. -
The recently opened Humboldt Bay South trail held about 250 participants who walked/rollerbladed/bicycled/rolled/skateboarded north out-and-back for a mile with their signs for the passing rush hour traffic on highway 101. -
The recently opened Humboldt Bay South trail held about 250 participants who walked/rollerbladed/bicycled/rolled/skateboarded north out-and-back for a mile with their signs for the passing rush hour traffic on highw -
Julie Crowell, of Korbel (left), and Karen Rector, of McKinleyville, paused for a moment with their “Good Trouble Lives On Day” protest sign as they walked on the recently opened Humboldt Bay Trail South out-and-back for a mile. -
John Thayer, of Buena Vista, New Mexico, was in town visiting friends and brought his sign along to bring to the “Good Trouble Lives On Day” protest. He said that he had made the sailing-ship protest sign in Trump’s first administration and was bummed that he now had to bring it out again.
