NEWS

Post date: Tue, 01/06/2015 - 09:56

By Barbara Nielsen, Nominating Committee

READY, SET, VOTE!!! Our membership direct vote for national board positions (2015 Term) is under way. Ballots should be received by all members in good standing within the next few weeks and must be returned with a postmark no later than February 11.

We’ll be having a Meet and Greet telephone conference with our candidates on an evening during the week of January 12, most likely Tuesday the 13th or Wednesday the 14th  -- notice and call-in information will be forthcoming in a separate email to all members.

WHAT’S ON THE BALLOT??? This second annual election cycle is for three “regular” and one “completion” Board Positions and a Proposed Ballot Amendment to add the Membership Development Committee chair to the Steering Committee.

WHO’S ON THE BALLOT??? We have four dedicated members who have stepped up to volunteer for national board service in these positions:

  • At-Large Board Member – Ann Fleischli (Madison, Wisconsin Branch)
  • Development Committee Chair – Fran Foulkrod (Greater Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Branch)
  • Program Committee Chair – Deb Garretson (Bloomington, Indiana Branch). This is one of two chair positions on the committee. Odile Hugonot Haber (Ann Arbor, Michigan Branch) continues in her role this year.
  • Secretary – Candace Perry (Cape Cod, Massachusetts Branch)

The Washington, DC, branch has graciously agreed to count the ballots for this election. We will post the results of the election on Monday, February 23, 2015.

The 2012 membership election that approved a staggered election cycle for the Section’s board terms set in motion a new way for us to seat members on the national board.

In January 2014, we elected members to the 2014 board term for one-, two- or three-year terms that were undertaken as of the beginning of 2014. Three of the 2014 Board Term positions (At-Large, Program Committee, Secretary) were for one-year terms and in this election we will be electing candidates who have applied for these positions for the 2015 Board Term – each for a period of three years. A fourth position is to fill out the two-year term of the 2014 Board Term

Please contact the chair of the Nominating Committee, Barbara L Nielsen, at bln.sf.ca@gmail.com, or the chair of the ad hoc Bylaws Committee, Darien De Lu, at conjoin@macnexus.org, with any election or ballot questions.

Here are the candidate statements of our quartet.

 

AT-LARGE MEMBER OF THE BOARD
(2015 Board – Three-Year Term)

Ann E. Fleischli
Madison [Wisconsin] Branch

I have practiced law in Wisconsin for over 40 years. My bachelor’s and law degrees are from the University of Illinois. My first job was as a poverty lawyer in South Carolina in the late 1960s. I’ve engaged in many progressive activist activities in Wisconsin. For instance, in the ‘90s I filed four lawsuits in an attempt to stop the building of a convention center on a conservation park.

In the late ‘70s and early ‘80s I was a member of the Madison, Wisconsin WILPF Branch, mentored by Elizabeth Link. I became a member, again, of that branch in the fall of 2012, after getting a master’s degree in environmental journalism at the University of Montana. I am that very active branch’s membership chair and treasurer.

My personal goal is to help establish a WILPF system of proxy voting so that members can attend the Congress meetings and vote the proxies of the members of their branch who could not attend.

I am deeply impressed by the activities of the branches, issue committees and all the members who work so hard for a better world. I would appreciate your vote.

DEVELOPMENT COMMITTEE CHAIR
(2014 Board – 2015 Is Final Year of Two-Year Term)

Fran Foulkrod
Greater Philadelphia [Pennsylvania] Branch

My experience includes teaching in Los Angeles and Philadelphia; Administrative Support and Management; IT Consulting; and Trainer on fundraising software. I graduated from the University of Pennsylvania and co-authored a textbook on Adolescence.

I have been an active Member in two Branches, and am presently Branch Co-Chair. I served on our national Detroit Congress Committee, and serve on our Bylaws and Communications Committees. Presently I chair the Rapid Response Team of our Program Committee.

As Chair of Development, I would like to enhance the relationship Members and Donors have with WILPF-US. Program, at all levels, is the heart of our organization. As Development Chair, I would therefore like to coordinate with both Membership Development and Program to enhance fund raising. I also consider it a responsibility to know the financial health of our organization; to see that funds are well used. We owe this to our Donors. Additionally, I want to develop analytical tools for effective Development planning. I would like to widen the base of regular Donors in order to achieve greater income stability. I believe that if we support our Members, they will support WILPF US.

Finally, I hope to carry on the enduring legacy of Robin Lloyd.

PROGRAM COMMITTEE CHAIR
(2015 Board – Three-Year Term)

Deborah Garretson
Bloomington [Indiana] Branch

I am a retired clinical psychologist and I have taught at the university level and served as executive director of a domestic violence shelter in the Chicago area. I received my Ph.D. from Ball State University. In 2005 I attended my first WILPF meeting and have been chair of the Bloomington Branch ever since. I previously served as Secretary on the U.S. National Board and am now completing a one-year term as a Program Chair. Prior to this term I served on the Personnel Committee, the Site Committee, and the Selling the Building Committee for WILPF. Other board experience includes The Sierra Club Indiana State Board, the Park Forest, Illinois Public Library Board and the Temple Beth El in Muncie, Indiana. WILPFers have always impressed me with their intelligent approach to studying issues that contribute to war. There is so much knowledge and experience among members. What has been missing, to me, is efficient processes for communicating across the section. My specific interest is to help design and encourage processes that maximize the impact of our work. Further, I want to see WILPF become a microcosm of the democracy we want to live in.

SECRETARY
[Officer of the Corporation]
(2015 Board – Three-Year Term)

Candace Perry
Cape Cod [Massachusetts] Branch

As a writer, activist, and social worker, I hold the audacious hope that the work we do can change the world. I have an MSW in Clinical Social Work and a BA in Russian/Spanish. I’ve been a Local2Global participant at the UN Commission on the Status of Women and have served as Editor of Peace and Freedom. An active member of the Cape Cod Branch since the late 1980s, I’ve co-produced the Peace and Justice Theater Festival, served as cast and crew on our community television show, and helped develop and present the “Roots of Violence/Seeds of Change” community college course and conference. I’m running for Secretary because I want to support the current leadership and transition to a more functional organization. Clear communication of Board decisions and actions would go a long way to help advance our work. The Secretary needs to be organized, able to write concise minutes and arrange to have these minutes approved in a timely manner. I’m able to do this. I’m also able to take ideas and convert them into writing which can be shared with others. How we communicate with each other matters, and I’d like to contribute to our Section’s voice in speaking out against injustice and working for peace.

 

Photo: Rama, Creative Commons License from Wikipedia.

Post date: Tue, 01/06/2015 - 09:48

By Cindy Domingo, Cuba and Bolivarian Alliance Issues Committee

The Cuba and Bolivarian Alliance Issues Committee celebrates our peoples’ victory and commends President Barack Obama in reestablishing diplomatic relations between the US and Cuba governments and the release of the remaining members of the Cuban Five, Antonio Guerrero, Ramon Labanino and Gerardo Hernandez. 

This momentous step comes after five decades of failed US foreign policy towards Cuba and the further isolation of the US in the Caribbean and Latin America.  See the WILPF US statement on resumption of relations. And the Facebook link.

Now more than ever, it is important to thank the President for his actions and to let your Congressional delegation know that you want the US blockade lifted now.  Contact your delegation today!

WILPF is a member of the coalition led by the Latin American Working Group.

To learn more about the WILPF committee, contact Cindy Domingo.

PHOTO: Street in Trinidad, Cuba by Y. Becart
3/22/2014, Creative Commons

Post date: Tue, 01/06/2015 - 09:43

Women from five WILPF Branches will participate in the Local2Global program at the Commission on the Status of Women March 7-15. They will be joined by 11 university students taking part in the Practicum on Advocacy.

The programs sponsored by the US Section offer members the opportunity to attend sessions at the UN in New York City and share that experience with others back home. Selected for Local2Global are Anandi Kimmel, Essex County NJ; Barbara Nielsen, San Francisco; LaShawndra Vernon, Milwaukee WI; Lucinda Tate, Portland OR; and Maureen Ngozi Eke, Detroit MI.

Practicum participants include Abdulrahman Alhalawani (Brandeis University), Alejandra Suazo (University of Washington), Brianna O’Steen (University of South Florida), Inas Miloud (Minnesota State University, Mankato), Mridu Markan (University of Wisconsin, Madison), and Elizabeth Frost, Luana Da Silva and Yvonne Mendoza (all of University of Houston).

Returning for a second year with the Practicum are Jenna Cooper (University of Houston), Ayça Mazman (University of Cincinnati) and Brandy Robinson (Portland WILPF).

To learn more about these programs, contact Dixie Hairston.

Post date: Tue, 01/06/2015 - 09:31
Honoring Jane, Emily, Elise, Dorothy, Kay

 

by Heather Wellman
 

Selecting five women to honor at The Hague was a daunting task. However, after deliberations and voting concluded in December, the five US women to be honored at the anniversary celebration are Jane Addams, Emily Greene Balch, Elise Boulding, Dorothy Detzer and Kay Camp.

Because so many US women have been contributors to both international and domestic peace building, five additional US women are under consideration to be honored in April. They are Mildred Scott Olmstead, Peg Mullen, Ava Helen Pauling, Grace DeGraff and Annette Jacobi Roberts

You can see photos and biographies of all the women who are being honored as Foremothers of WILPF at The Hague in April. Don’t forget to register now for the conference April 27-29, 2015. Be part of the historic 100 year celebration of the women peace builders of WILPF making an impact on the world! Visit www.womenstopwar.org to register today!
 

Post date: Tue, 01/06/2015 - 09:12
Stop the Pipeline Massachusetts

“What’s good for women is good for the world.” Riane Eisler. “Hope is something you do, not something you have.” Joanna Macy.  Read Randa Solick’s inspiring report of the 2014 Women’s Congress for Future Generations she attended with two colleagues from Santa Cruz thanks to mini-grant funding. 

In 2011, Randa and Mathilde Rand from Santa Cruz, Jean Hays from Fresno, and Nancy Price from Davis – all from California, attend the 2011 Women’s Congress for Future Generations in Moab, UT, which led to the Earth Democracy leadership team deciding to make Guardianship of Future Generations one of our core framing initiatives.

And Hattie Nestel of Athol, MA, a new member of the Earth Democracy team, is doing exactly what Joanna Macy recommends: “It’s best,” Hattie says, “to tell your own story and let people take what’s for them.” Here are wonderful videos Hattie’s made of people along the pipeline route concerned about the impact telling their personal stories, including Katy Eiseman and Rose Wessel, the founders of No Frack Gas in Mass. Their eloquent personal stories tell what moved them to work tirelessly to defeat the proposed Kinder Morgan natural gas pipeline across northern Massachusetts.

Read the Archives on the left of the No Frack Gas in Mass homepage to see what they have accomplished already as a model of hope to action. You may sign up for the Newsblog and a wealth of materials at this excellent website about the pipeline and Kinder Morgan, the towns along the route, alternatives, and the state and federal process, and more are available.

Let’s be clear, natural gas is not a transitional fuel to truly green, clean and renewable energy…and neither is nuclear, nor carbon-based mono-crop bio-fuels that take land out of agriculture. Massachusetts WILPF members can engage with this campaign at www.nofrackgasinmass.org  and be sure to sign up for their newsletter.

Focused, organized grassroots action makes a difference. The voices raised against the environmental impact of the pipeline highlight how people were misled about impacts in their backyards and communities. This led Kinder Morgan to propose a new route through New Hampshire leading to mobilization there as well. Let’s be clear this pipeline is not needed, regardless of the route and opponents stand united.

Even if you don’t live in Massachusetts, you use Facebook and Twitter be sure to “Share” and “Like” this campaign and “Tweet” out their messages. Social media are great tools and we need to support this campaign. .

PHOTO  Stop the Pipeline Massachusetts • Homeowners Speak Out: Lynn and Rob Chesebrough of Hollis, New Hampshire        Video by Hattie Nestel

Post date: Tue, 01/06/2015 - 08:58

By Carol Urner for Disarm/End Wars Issue Committee

A New Year begins with  New Years Resolutions. Let’s resolve in 2015 to use our power as committed WILPF women to abolish nuclear weapons and to end all wars! And let’s work to make it so! 

OK, so our reason tells us that this is not possible within a single year, even if those are reasonable long term goals. So, we believe, are general and complete disarmament and human rights and human security for all whether in Russia, the United States, Europe, Latin America or the deserts of Africa. All of our members, Branches, Issue Committees and international work are for realization of these inter-related goals,  

But unless we work as women at full power we will never make any of them so! And we cannot do it alone.  We have to work with other women, and children and with men. We have to love them, labor alongside them and grow in our ability to follow in the ways of non-violence as our foremothers did 

Refer to our DISARM annual calendar for significant dates to help us organize together to reach our goals.

At this point DISARM  priorities continue to be nuclear abolition and ending wars as a continuing threat to sustainable peace. Join us in supporting legislation that promotes nuclear weapons abolition and a carbon free and nuclear free environment as well as deep cuts in the military budget and people before profits in all legislation.

Follow the new nuclear disarmament initiatives on WILPF Reaching Critical Will and organize to send local members –new or old – to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Review Conference in New York in late April and May. Also send members to the  Alliance for Nuclear  Accountability D.C. Days or even to the Global Network International Conference in Kyoto. Ambitions to control and dominate earth from space are of course intimately related to both nuclear weapons development and to the waging of devastating modern wars. Some branches have bequests left to them by members who would appreciate such use of their gifts.

Or work closer to home  on low budget projects like closing down a nuclear power plant,  resisting militarized drones or working to clean up dangerous nuclear waste surrounding abandoned uranium mines, at our nuclear power plants, or left to pollute air, water and soil at former US military bases or bombing and battle sites.

Or join in one of our new action sub groups continuously forming. Check out Joan Ecklein’s contribution on behalf of our committee: Stop Expanding and Arming NATO as an Aggressive Military Alliance. And we’re still waiting for at least one or two WILPFers to step forward on ending militarization of our community police or on more extensive gun control. Members and branches were asking for this at our regional gatherings last year. And on December 19  Obama signed into law the bill authorizing formation of a Manhattan Project national park. The purported text is here. This will need watch dogging to make sure the story is told fairly by the National Park Department, and not presented as pro-military propaganda.

Of course we in WILPF, and those who came before us over the past 100 years, have been working for disarmament and an end to wars since 1915. We have many victories to celebrate and there were moments when we seemed to be coming very close to our goals. One was in 1929 when the Kellogg-Briand Pact, which outlawed war, became international law. It was celebrated as a great victory that year, and nations were still ratifying and signing on in 1934, the year that Jane Addams died. But, though never rescinded, the treaty was soon forgotten as Hitler and the Nazis began to ravage Europe. It is, however, still international law, and already makes US instigated wars over the past 86 years clearly international crimes. And there are many lessons to be learned from both successes and failures in past attempts such as this one as we keep working to realize our goals.

So, in 2015, which is our Centennial Year, let us work with renewed energy to abolish nuclear weapons, to begin general and compete disarmament, to overcome human violence and to put an end to war.

US Department of Energy photo (in the public domain) of the 1954 Castle Bravo nuclear explosion over the Marshall Islands, 1000 times more powerful than the bombs exploded over Hiroshima or Nagasaki.

 

Post date: Tue, 01/06/2015 - 08:53
NATO Excercises

By Joan Ecklein, Boston Branch and WILPF Disarm/End Wars Issue Committee

During 2015 our WILPF Disarm/End Wars members will be watching closely the actions of NATO, which is rapidly expanding into an aggressive global military alliance. NATO can lead us into a new Cold  War -- or plunge us into Hot Wars, or into nuclear holocaust either by accident or design.

Join us in ferreting out the information we need to act wisely.  I suggest reading Striving for Armageddon: How the Obama Administration Learned To Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb by Theodore A. Postol in the Nation,  December 29, 2014. You can read it on line. Dr. Postol points out that actions of NATO are actually increasing the dangers of nuclear war, rather than protecting us or our allies. This is true of NATO maneuvers in both  Ukraine and  in the Pacific Pivot threatening China. Currently, the US government’s push to have Ukraine join NATO is causing great consternation in Russia. This coupled with the planned upgrading of the US nuclear arsenal to the price tag of a trillion dollars is leading to the increased probability of a nuclear accident.  Postol , a former adviser to the chief of naval operations   makes clear that “the stated goal of the program is to increase the reliability of US nuclear forces. But a close analysis reveals a technically sophisticated effort to ready US forces for a direct confrontation with Russia “

Another recent article  says Russia Declares  NATO Is Top Military Threat.  It is by Nadia Prupis , staff writer for Common Dreams and is on line here. Prupis says:“NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg declared that the alliance could deploy its troops ‘wherever we want’ in Eastern Europe. The announcement came shortly after NATO vowed to create ‘rapid response’ military forces to fight Russia.

”Stoltenberg’s comments -- and NATO’s years- long military expansion in Baltic states and recent presence on the Russian border -- seemed to defy the  1997 NATO  Russia Founding  Act, in which the alliance agreed to avoid ‘permanent stationing of substantial combat forces’ to Eastern and Central Europe.” 

We not only invite you to help us ferret out information we need, but to devise approaches that can help us use our power as women to stop both wars and nuclear disaster. We will have wonderful opportunities to explore possible joint actions with women from other WILPF Sections at our Centennial Congress in The Hague starting April 26.  Six of the official ten delegates and alternates to that WILPF Congress, including myself, are on our Disarm/End Wars Committee and we, and other US WILPFers who attend, can bring back new insights and concepts to all of us in the US Section.  At the international conference which follows we will have additional opportunities to learn from and work with other peace building activists from around the world.

We invite the cooperation of any who share our concerns for abolishing nuclear weapons and ending war.

Contact Joan Ecklein

Photo: Luxembourgian-registered NATO E-3 AWACS flying with three American Air Force F-16 Fighting Falcon fighter aircraft in a NATO exercise. Wikipedia.

 

Post date: Tue, 01/06/2015 - 08:44

The next mini-grant deadline is February 1. There are three mini-grant periods per year. You can apply for up to $2500. Grants are made to Branches and to Issue Committees. Branches receive the funds up front. Issue Committees are reimbursed. To apply, send your request by email to Barbara WestSee details here.

Post date: Tue, 01/06/2015 - 08:30
Human Trafficking

HumanTrafficking Subcommittee, Advancing Human Rights Committee

Use your January renewed energy to prepare and to take action locally as part of the national campaign, “Intercept Human Trafficking” around football’s Super Bowl! Demonstrating, leafleting, writing letters to the editor will all help get the word out.

WILPF US has again teamed up with the United Methodist Women (UMW) women to raise awareness on the very real issues of human trafficking (HT) that intensify around this iconic American sports event, set for February 1, 2015.. This is our second year working on this in coalition with the UMW women and other organizations.

Leafleting at the Super Bowl and by participating branches locally will assist in bringing awareness of the wide-ranging sets of criminal activity that are engaged in during this popular sports phenomenon to the consciousness of the mainstream of our communities and out of the shadows. In addition to the flyer and postcard downloads available at this website

The UMW INTERCEPT campaign website has information and resources that you can use as part of your activism on the Intercept campaign. UMW also has a Web page of useful information overall about human trafficking at www.unitedmethodistwomen.org/human-trafficking.

If you’re energized by this, please contact Jan Kubiac. Jan can also let you know when we will have some more information available for this year’s action for our members that is currently in production. On an ongoing basis, we can use help in updating our WILPF HT resources, including a fact sheet and other materials from the tool kit we last issued in 2012.

And, for AHR issues generally, branches are invited to have reps participate in AHR’s communications so you know what’s going on with HT and our other activities (at-large members are always welcome, too!) – we’re doing CEDAW work, 1325 work, and are setting up a subcommittee to work on the joint Human Right to Water campaign that has grown out of issues raised at the Detroit Congress (contact Rose Daitsman).

If you are interested in any of these issues or Advancing Human Rights in general, you are invited to join us. Contact Jan, or the AHR Co-Chairs: Barbara Nielsen or Lucinda Tate.

Post date: Tue, 01/06/2015 - 06:40

Contact Carol Urner at carol.disarm@gmail.com with comments and additions

Please correct items on this calendar and add important new ones. We want to publish a more complete and useful calendar in February.

January 2015
All month: Follow-up on Vienna conference. Share Marshall Islands suit and petition with your friends. Learn about the proposed Ban Treaty from WILPF Reaching Critical Will. And investigate Don’t Bank on the Bomb co-written by former WILPF Secretary General Susi Snyder.)
January 6: 114th  Session of Congress convenes. Join us in keeping our Eye on Congress re nuclear weapons abolition and ending wars.
January 9: Last day to book February Cuba trip with Code Pink!
January 19: Martin Luther King Day. Participate in local events and speak out his words on ending war.
January 20: State of the Union address delivered to Congress by President Obama
January 24-25: Shut down Diablo, one of only two nuclear power plants remaining in west coast states. Two days of strategy planning meeting in San Luis Obispo. Home hospitality from Mothers for Peace.

February 2015
February 3: Approximate date for submitting White House 2016 Budget to Congress
February 10: Launch Speaker Program on Nuclear Abolition and Ending Wars
February 8-15: Code Pink organized trip to Cuba! http://www.codepink.org/cuba
February 18: Anniversary of Sentencing of Transform Plowshares activists Megan Rice, Michael Walli and Greg Boertje-Obed. All are now WILPF members and need our support and abolition work. (Can we appeal for a pardon for those now imprisoned for seeking to abolish nuclear bombs? Who are the criminals and who is defying our own Constitution and breaking international laws?)
February 28-March1: Symposium: The Dynamics of Possible Human Extinction. Sponsored by Helen Caldecott Foundation at the New York Academy of Medicine, New York, NY. Will also be online.

March 2015
March 1: 60th anniversary of US hydrogen nuclear bomb test on Bikini Atoll, Marshall Islands.  Support Marshall Islands suit
March 4-6: WILPF co-sponsors shut down of Creech AFB Nevada drone attacks
March 8: International Women's Day. Resources and speakers on ending wars
March 11: Fourth anniversary of the continuing Fukushima Disaster

April 2015
April 14: Global Day of Action on Military Spending. Day coincides with release of military expenditure statistics by SIPRI.
April 15: US Income Tax Day traditionally marked by creative WILPF demonstrations against wasting tax dollars on militarism. 
April 22: Earth Day. Draw attention to US military environmental destruction and the need to stop war and heal the earth.
April 22-25: Peace Palace in The Hague: WILPF Centennial Congress
April 27-28: WILPF Conference at the World Forum in The Hague where we invite others from around the world to join us in stopping war. The time is now.
April 25-26: March, festival and one day conference on nuclear weapons abolition in New York City.
April 27-May 29: Nuclear Weapons Review Conference in New York City

May 2015
April 27-May 29: Register through Reaching Critical Will. 2015 Nuclear Weapons Review Conference  in New York City
May 17-20: ANA D.C. Days
May 21- 22: ANA spring retreat in D.C. Check info on ANA members (WILPF is last with a video on You Get What You Pay For.)
           

 

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