NEWS

Post date: Thu, 09/10/2015 - 06:30


by Nancy Price


On behalf of Earth Democracy’s Global Warming/Sustainable Energy committee, Hattie Nestel and I call on WILPF members and branches in NY, MA and NH to join local and state campaigns to stop the hazardous and unnecessary Kinder Morgan Tennessee Gas Pipeline, also known as the Northeast Energy Direct project, before it is too late! 

The 429-mile pipeline $5 billion pipeline, estimated to be operational by Nov. 2018, will bring fracked gas from Pennsylvania’s Marcellus Shale through NY, MA and NH to distribution companies in New England.  The original route through southern Massachusetts was changed after political and public outcry  to now go from northern Massachusetts into southern New Hampshire before coming back to a gas hub at Dracut, 30 miles north of Boston. .

This past January, the StopNED Coalition was created joining broad-based state and the many local community and watershed groups together. As StopNED states:

A gas pipeline is being forced upon us that will take our property by eminent domain, tax us to pay for its construction, destroy our protected and treasured open spaces, increase the risk to our personal safety, and jeopardize our state’s ability to meet its carbon emission commitments. We envision stopping the unnecessary pipeline, and meeting our needs by reducing our reliance on fossil fuels, increasing efficiency, expanding renewable technologies, and mandating repairs of existing infrastructure.

The People Are Leading!

Like many WILPFers, this is not Hattie’s first campaign on an issue she cared deeply about. On Monday, September 28, 2009, as reported in the Rutland (VT) Herald, she was one of  “four elderly women,” members of the Vermont Yankee Shut It Down Affinity Group,  living downwind of the Vermont Yankee nuclear reactor,” who walked through the open security gates and were arrested.

Like many of us might, Hattie writes of learning about the pipeline, how she took action, and why “I am willing to give it my all” to stop it. Here’s a wonderful interview about her experience on the Pipeline Pilgrimage walk through six New Hampshire towns, even after knee replacement surgery.  

Now, Hattie and local opponents in the Northfield, Mass., area after participation in marches, weekly vigils, the Pipeline Pilgrimage, writing letters to the editor and elected officials, and travelling to D.C. to protest at a FERC (the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has authority over interstate pipelines) meeting, are considering non-violent civil disobedience training for eventual blockades and sit-ins when needed.  

This may be what it will take stop Kinder Morgan from building a 80,000 horsepower compressor station, the largest in the country, 1500 feet from Holly Lovelace’s home in Northfield.  Watch Hattie’s video interview as Holly explains the devastating impact the station, set on 200 acres, will have on her home and rural property. At other compressor locations, water sources are polluted from benzene; there are cancer clusters, and residents with skin rashes, migraines and other health issues.  

Videos of personal stories are an excellent way to educate and mobilize the public. As Hattie writes: In July, 2014, I went on a “NO PIPELINE” walk across the state and heard peoples’ anguished stories. In August, I decided their stories had to be heard and began doing videos of individual homeowners and politicians about the environmental and financial disaster this pipeline would be to us in Massachusetts. In September 2014, I began to learn how to use a video camera to record these stories and by June 2015, I had recorded 36 interviews airing on 30 TV Community Cable Access stations across the state.

Most recently, Monday, August 31, opponents were dealt a blow when the Massachusetts Department of Public Utilities approved 20-year contracts for three large local gas distribution corporations to buy natural gas from the pipeline. This approval makes it easier for Kinder Morgan to demonstrate “need” for the project and, perhaps, approval by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.  

But, the Leaders Will Follow!

First, on August 28, the Health Board of the Franklin County, Mass., town of Conway ordered Kinder Morgan to stop all pipeline-related activities within its borders, joining more than 50 other area communities that have passed similar cease and desist orders or resolutions opposing the pipeline.

Second, Hattie reports: lots of our local officials are with us in Massachusetts, including state representatives and senators, as well as Congressman McGovern. This is not just because of increasingly well organized resistance. It is also because Kinder Morgan’s well-documented  poor pipeline safety record is fueling” opposition

Still Hattie says, “Not much noise yet from Senators Markey or Warren, though we are working on them.”

Third, at the July 29 FECR public scoping meeting this collective resistance paid off with a victory!  After 100 members of the public, six western MA state representatives, and MA Congressman McGovern demanded a slow-down of the Environmental Impact Report process, FERC agreed to extend the public comment period to Sept. 29 for the public meeting and Oct. 16 for written comments.

Conclusion:  Clearly, after several years, grassroots organizing against this pipeline, though  not reported in the major newspapers, nor even much in the Boston Globe, the pace is quickening. The broader public and elected officials are much more engaged and joining the opposition. Because the threat to the environment and beauty of the rural New England landscape is so great, there is a new-found commitment to collectively solving New England’s energy needs with sustainable and renewable technology for the sake of people and nature.

Now you can sign a petition to MA Governor Charlie Baker that reads: We call on you to pursue clean renewable energy policies and prevent new natural-gas pipelines and new fossil-fuel infrastructure from being built in the Commonwealth.

For specific questions on grassroots organizing, please contact Hattie at hattieshalom@verizon.net or 978-790-3074. If you have a story you’d like Earth Democracy to cover in the October eNews, please email Nancy at nancytprice39@gmail.com

 

PHOTO: Signs against the compressor. August 20, 2015 Vigil, Northfield, Mass. Hattie Nestel third from left.  Photo by Renee Theberge

 

Post date: Thu, 09/10/2015 - 06:10


Some 20 WILPF members, from Philadelphia, Boston, Vermont and a few from farther afield gathered to hear reports on a range of political issues, all in the bucolic setting of Robin Lloyd’s family farm in Rochester, Vermont.

Participants posed for a solidarity photo to send with Paki Wieland to El Salvador to share with women incarcerated because of miscarriages. They harvested vegetables for salads; the weather obliged with a few light rains, leading to rainbows almost every day.

Reports included six who attended the Centennial events in The Hague, Ellen Thomas and Carol Urner on nuclear weapons abolition, Hattie Nestel on stopping the gas pipelines, and others on radical politics, racism, ISIS, the environment, women and imprisonment, and more.  For details see the blogspothttp://wilpfgatheringvt.blogspot.com/

Post date: Thu, 09/10/2015 - 06:06

All members are invited to join the board meeting on September 15, held by conference call.  To receive the call in number, agenda, and reports, please contact the managing director no later than September 13, at Lamia Sadek  lsadek@wilpfus.org.

Active members for two years or more are encouraged to run for one of the six board positions open in 2016. Watch for nomination updates. Full three-year terms: president, nominating committee chair, development committee chair and at-large member.  Partial terms: treasurer (one year) and program chair (two years)

Post date: Tue, 08/04/2015 - 11:31


Statement of the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom, United States Section, on the Iran Nuclear Deal, on August 4, 2015

The US Section of the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF) wholeheartedly supports the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) aka the “Iran Nuclear Deal,” and strongly urges Congress to vote in favor of the resolution supporting it.

This historic agreement, coming after 20 months of arduous negotiations, paves the way for an improved relationship with Iran – one based on diplomacy and mutual respect.  WILPF US joins the United Nations, NATO, the European Union, the Arab League, the National Iranian American Council, and dozens of former ambassadors and analysts who are all heralding this agreement.  The New York Times  editorial board wrote that the agreement "is potentially one of the most consequential accords in recent diplomatic history, with the ability not just to keep Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon but also to reshape Middle East politics."

It is noteworthy that Iran has always denied pursuit of the development of nuclear weapons and has long been a signatory to the Nuclear Proliferation Treaty (NPT), while the only nation to oppose the JCPOA, Israel, is not.  Furthermore, although they deny it, it is widely known that Israel is in possession of nuclear weapons (estimates ranging from 75 to 400).

WILPF has long called for the elimination of nuclear weapons by all nations.  We believe that the use of nuclear weapons is a crime against humanity, and so we reiterate our call for all nations to become parties to, and abide by the provisions of the NPT, and to dismantle any nuclear weapons that they may already possess.

Furthermore, WILPF US calls for the immediate lifting of all economic sanctions, which is considered an illegal collective punishment against the people of Iran.  The sanctions have been the cause of immeasurable hardship for the innocent citizens of Iran and are not justified.

For 100 years, the women and men of WILPF have worked internationally to end wars and bring peace to all citizens of the world.  WILPF US is gratified that by signing the JCPOA, the United States is taking the path of diplomacy and peace, rather than provocation and conflict.  We most strongly urge Congress to vote in favor of the resolution supporting the JCPOA.  To vote against it would be a vote for war, would undermine the Executive authority to negotiate treaties on behalf of the United States, and would destroy months of delicate and difficult negotiations.  It would also defy the overwhelming wishes and support of the international community.

 

Post date: Tue, 08/04/2015 - 11:27

By Helen Jaccard

The 30-foot sail boat that tried to sail to the Marshall Islands in 1958 to interfere with testing of nuclear bombs has been lovingly restored and has completed her first voyage since restoration.  WILPF member Helen Jaccard was part of the crew from Humboldt Bay to San Diego, arriving on August 1, 2015.

The Golden Rule and her crew were instrumental in stopping atmospheric testing of nuclear weapons. Her mission is to educate a new generation about the dangers of nuclear weapons and nuclear power.  Jane Addams Peace Association helped the project come to fruition with a generous grant that was used to purchase safety equipment.  Humboldt Bay WILPF also contributed to the project, which allowed us to purchase emergency strobe lights for our life vests.

Veterans For Peace, with the help of dozens of volunteers and hundreds of supporters including Jane Addams Peace Association and Humboldt Bay WILPF, has completed the restoration of the Golden Rule sail boat.  We had a grand entrance to San Diego on August 2 with at least three local television channels covering the event on the evening news!  Crew member and WILPFer Helen Jaccard appeared on Channel 10.

History

The original crew of Golden Rule was from a group of Quakers and antinuclear activists who brought “Hiroshima Maidens” to New York for reconstructive surgery.  They learned of the experiences of these Hiroshima survivors amidst the growing public concern over radioactivity in mother’s milk.  They concluded that they must do everything in their power to stop nuclear weapons from ever being used again.  They wrote to the President and Congress to try to persuade them to stop the atomic bomb tests.  When it was clear that their efforts were being ignored, they decided they had no choice but to go to the Marshall Islands and non-violently interfere with the atmospheric testing.   Their journey was very public.  They wrote articles for many newspapers and had a huge amount of public support.

Golden Rule set sail from San Pedro, California, on February 10, 1958, stopping in Honolulu for supplies.  There, her crew was jailed for disobeying a new regulation, not a law, that had been written while they were in transit – to prevent people from entering the Marshall Islands nuclear test zone.  The public was outraged, and there were many protests and demonstrations trying to free the crew and get the charges dropped.

Another boat, Phoenix of Hiroshima, was also docked in Honolulu at the time and got to know the crew of Golden Rule.  The Reynolds family had just come from Hiroshima where Dr. Earle Reynolds was studying the health effects of radiation.  Earle and his wife Barbara were so inspired by the example of civil disobedience set by the crew that they took up the torch and successfully sailed to the Marshall Islands.  The U.S. ended atmospheric nuclear testing soon thereafter, and in 1963 the U.S., UK, and Soviet Union signed the limited Nuclear Test Ban Treaty. 

Jessica Reynolds was 14 years old at the time and is now a huge supporter of Golden Rule.  Her cousin Naomi owns Phoenix of Hiroshima; they hope to someday restore that boat as well.

Both boats were discovered in California in 2010, just 200 miles from each other.  They were in watery graves.  Over the past five years, Golden Rule has been brought to a new life by Veterans For Peace and many supporters. 

Inspiration for other peace boats

Many other peace boats have been used for non-violent direct action since then, including Vega, Pacific Peacemaker, Sea Shepherds, and Rainbow Warriors.

In 1971, Golden Rule supporter Marie Bohlen of Vancouver, BC, suggested a voyage to the U.S. nuclear test site in the Aleutian Islands like the Golden Rule and Phoenix voyage of 1958.  Soon they had the first Greenpeace boat headed toward Alaska!

Restoration

After many years of various owners (we are in touch with several people who have sailed on her), Golden Rule fell into disrepair and was found adrift in Humboldt Bay.  She sank in a gale in 2010 and was raised into the boat yard of Leroy and Dalene Zerlang.  Zerlang was preparing to dispose of the wreck and researched the history of the boat, learning that it had played an important role in the Cold War.  Instead of using her for fire wood, he posted the information over the internet.

Veterans For Peace members Fredy and Sherry Champaign drove down to check out the situation.  Fredy said that when he walked over to the wreck and put his hand on her keel, the Golden Rule spoke to him and asked for another chance at life.

The Zerlangs provided boat yard space and shop facilities and much expert advice and contacts.  Chuck Dewitt, a member of VFP, was restoration coordinator, working almost daily for the five years.  Many shipwrights, riggers, historic boat lovers, and peace activists have spent thousands of hours in the restoration project.

The Launch

On June 20, 2015, the reborn Golden Rule returned to the water!  Hundreds of supporters cheered as she was gently floated into Humboldt Bay.  Original crewman Orion Sherwood, Jessica Reynolds Renshaw of the Phoenix, Hiroshima Maiden Shigeko Sasamori, Fredy and Sherry Champagne and many others were there.  Long-time peace activists David McReynolds and Bradford Lyttle, who knew the original crew, were also there.  Children and grandchildren of the original crew attended, including Sally Willowbee, who came early to help with reconstruction before the launch.

Mary Sweeters of Greenpeace, Robert Gould of Physicians for Social Responsibility, and Barry Ladendorf, president of Veterans For Peace spoke at the reception.

Golden Rule Sails Again!

On Thursday July 23, 2015, Golden Rule began her journey to San Diego and her new mission to educate the public about the dangers of nuclear war and nuclear power.  On board were Captain David Robson,  First Mate Jan Passion, and crewmen Michael Gonzalez and Helen Jaccard (of WILPF and VFP).  Jan Passion left the boat at Half Moon Bay and Professor Arnold J. “Skip” Oliver joined us for the rest of the journey to San Diego.

On August 2 Golden Rule officially sailed into her berth on Shelter Island with about 30 people including at least three television stations, a radio station, and newspaper reporters interviewing the spectators and crew.  Pictures by Ellen Davidson can be found at https://plus.google.com/photos/106906066409718302863/albums/6178614339156497393?banner=pwa

The 2016 season and beyond

Golden Rule and her crew will play a big part in the 30th annual Veterans For Peace National Convention in San Diego and the commemoration of the 70th anniversary of the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

Toward the end of August we will stop in Long Beach close to where she originally launched for her journey toward the Marshall Islands.

Other ports of call on the way back to Humboldt Bay are Santa Barbara, Monterey Bay, San Francisco Bay and Fort Bragg.  There may be other ports of call as well and organizing is ongoing.  Our goal is to reach Eureka by October 15 before the weather becomes difficult going north.

The likely plan for 2017 is a spring voyage to Bellingham, Washington, with a researcher who will educate the crew in sampling water, mud, and sea life for radioactivity from Fukushima, then port-hop back south to northern California.

At each port-of-call we intend to educate thousands of people about the effects of radioactivity, nuclear weapons and nuclear power and the whole nuclear path.  We will also give presentations about peace and environmental issues.  By connecting the public with local activist groups, we hope to ignite a new generation of activists, give people hope, and bring about changes in the U.S. energy, war, and environmental policies.

You can help

We need volunteers, crew members, and money.  Please see www.vfpgoldenruleproject.org to learn how you can help or contact Helen Jaccard at Helen.jaccard@gmail.com or 206-992-6364.

Checks of any amount are most welcome!  They can be made out to VFP Golden Rule Project and sent to  VFP Golden Rule Project, P.O. Box 87, Samoa CA 95564.

 

PHOTO: Helen Jaccard and shore support member Gerry Condon display a banner from the Golden Rule while the boat is docked at Half Moon Bay on its way to San Diego, CA. 
Photo by Charlotte Casey

Inset photos of Helen and the boat are by Ellen Davidson

 

Post date: Tue, 08/04/2015 - 11:11


By Paula LeRoy

Santa Cruz WILPF put up an ambitious, multi-media exhibit inspired by Jane Addams in the Downtown Library, and held seven events there during the three-month run. The opening focused on WILPF’s past, present and future; it was followed by a public arts night, a Raging Grannies hat decorating and song event, an afternoon of Stories from the Frontlines of Activism, a report back from The Hague,   the branch’s annual meeting led by Marcia Heath, and a closing ceremony when each of the featured endurance activists ceremonially received their portraits as an award.

The exhibit could be experienced more or less in this way: A few dozen large replicas of spectacular JACPA book covers line the staircase to the second floor, landing you in front of a gorgeous display of the various interests and accomplishments of our WILPF co-founder Jane Addams by Gaby Litsky as well as banners made by peace campers. Next to it, a world map pinpoints the various world WILPF Sections, with photos of activities from the Democratic Republic of Congo to Japan, to France to Nepal. Beneath, a glass case houses books by and about both Jane Addams and Santa Cruz Branch members.

Exhibit viewers begin a journey meeting over 30 Endurance Activists in expressive portraits by Charles Berger, a world renowned photographer, and are usually amazed by the profile bios of each activist. Displayed in categories announced with protest style signs, such as “We Are Already Against the Next War” the portraits are interspersed with timelines of social histories such as labor, environmental issues, and anti-nuclear movement, compiled by the exhibit co-curator Paula LeRoy.  The WILPF manifesto is next to those.

Each category also features a provocative SoulCollage and poem created by co-curator Jeri Bodemar. Her glass case display of SoulCollage is an exhibit in itself, filled with art and personal artifacts and glowing with love. Lastly, several stunning political art pieces capture one’s attention, deepening the understanding of the goals of 100 year-old WILPF. Sadly, six display boards of SC WILPF members who have passed on, news articles, and irreplaceable clippings, lovingly and beautifully arranged by Marilyn Lucier, mysteriously disappeared before the opening without a trace, or even photographs of their content.

The exhibit generated some publicity and new members for WILPF as well as a renewed sense of purpose and pride. Paula LeRoy is in the process of compiling the exhibit contents into an artistic book, which will be publicly available. WILPF-US generously awarded the exhibit a mini-grant for materials and publicity, a bit of which will be the beginning of the book publishing fund. Further contributions are greatly appreciated and can be sent to the branch; contact Marcia Heath.

Videos from the events:


PHOTO: Marcia Heath, Santa Cruz WILPF Branch leader, and Jane Addams.

 

 

Post date: Tue, 08/04/2015 - 10:30
Jan Burns reads the inscription on the Japanese bell


70 Years of Nuclear Weapons – At What Cost? is the theme of a gathering at Lawrence Livermore Lab in California, while WILPF members lay flowers at a Japanese bell in Des Moines, Iowa, and a Disarm leader speaks in Portland, Oregon.

Carol Urner is a keynote speaker for the Hiroshima memorial in Portland, which WILPF has cosponsored for 50 years after young mothers from Women for Peace initiated the event in 1962. Oregon Physicians for Social Responsibility has taken primary responsibility for the past 33 years.

This year’s event, 70 Years After Hiroshima and Nagasaki: The Ever-Present Nuclear Threat , also features a speech by atomic bomb survivor Michiko Kornhauser, and performances by Portland Taiko, Tomodachi Chorus, Sahomi Tachibana’s dance group.  Read more about it and download the poster. 

The theme for the August 6 memorial in Des Moines, Iowa, is, Hiroshima/Nagasaki: 70 Years Later: The Fate of the Earth. WILPFers and community members each year bring flowers to the Japanese bell on the state capitol grounds.

WILPF member Jackie Cabasso’s interview on “70 Years Later – Whatever Happened to Nuclear Disarmament? for the Peninsula Peace and Justice Center August 4 will be viewable online.  The event is cosponsored by Palo Alto WILPF.

Jackie is executive director of the Western States Legal Foundation, which is a cosponsor along with Tri-Valley CAREs and dozens of Bay Area peace and justice groups of the August 6 event at Lawrence Livermore Lab. The theme is 70 Years of Nuclear Weapons – At What Cost? Nonviolent direct action will follow a program featuring Daniel Ellsberg, Country Joe McDonald and Taiko drummers.

 

PHOTO: Des Moines WILPFer Jan Burns reads the inscription on the Japanese bell at the state capitol grounds. Members bring flowers and ring the bell to close the ceremony.
Photo by Jan Corderman

 

Post date: Tue, 08/04/2015 - 10:23


By John Wagner, WILPF Triangle Branch

North Carolina’s Triangle Branch Water Committee is working on fracking, coal ash dumping, indigenous rights, voting rights, and specific legal actions in which WILPF was active in planning meetings that resulted in three state lawsuits challenging the constitutionality of procedures. All these issues are related to the critical challenge of the day – protecting Mother Earth.  

Fracking

NC had a large statewide anti-fracking planning meeting in July.  The Earth Democracy Water Committee members spoke and helped lead sessions about citizen water and air monitoring, and on non-violent direct action.

  • Following a public hearing the Chatham County Board of Commissioners voted unanimously to draft a 2-year moratorium on fracking. This will be the second county in NC with a moratorium on fracking. 
  • We spent three days meeting with community members in West Union, West Virginia.  They are fighting the widespread fracking and devastation in their beautiful mountains, coves, and rivers.
  • We have started working with the Blue Ridge Environmental Defense League and are beginning to do community monitoring of stream life, simple water chemistry, and particulate monitoring in Lee and Chatham counties in areas that are threatened by coal ash – and – fracking.

Coal Ash

We continue to attend meetings at many levels in Lee and Chatham counties to stop the dumping of 20 million tons of coal ash by Duke Energy

We took part in the first statewide meeting of communities that are, or will be, affected by coal ash. Representatives from across the state began a unified plan to push for a safe, permanent plan for the toxic ash, and for permanent water supplies and health care for the hundreds of families that have documented well contamination.  We also are demanding very widespread, extensive testing and monitoring of wells surrounding coal ash dumps. 

Indigenous Rights

We attended the Save Oak Flats protest on the Capitol lawn in DC on July 22 about the planned destruction of an area in the Tonto National Forest, Arizona, that is sacred land to the Apache Nation. The land is being swapped to the Australian Resolution Copper Co. to mine for copper, making a huge crater in the earth, and destroying the stream and forests, and destroying the sacred site.   This should be considered for Earth Democracy support and actions.

Voting Rights  

Mass Moral Monday March for Voting Rights
Along with many WILPF members and around 6,000 citizens, we attended the Voting Rights March  in Winston-Salem on the first day of the NAACP’s case in the federal court against Gov. McCrory and the legislature’s massive voter suppression laws.  The case is still in the court system. 

Although maybe not technically an Earth Democracy issue, in North Carolina it is a major racial justice issue and may be the deciding factor in stopping the current dismantling of our environmental, educational, and social protections.  The outcome will affect national voting rights actions in many states.

Legal Actions

Several environmental groups have lawsuits against the State Legislature, the Mining and Energy Commission (MEC), and the Department of Natural Resources.   Although WILPF is not directly involved in the suits, we have been active in planning meetings that resulted in three North Carolina lawsuits challenging:

  • The constitutionality of way the MEC members were selected.
  • The constitutionality of the MEC – a temporary rule-making board, to be allowed to over-rule local governments.
  • The NC Department of Natural Resources issuance of permits for Duke’s coal ash dumping plans for Lee in Chatham in spite of a large document that raised serious specific scientific, procedural, wetland issues, endangered species threats, coal ash liner flaws and concerns, and environmental justice issues.
     

John Wagner and Lib Hutchby are the mainstays of the Triangle Branch Water Committee. Lib, a member of Earth Democracy’s Coordinating Team, attends innumerable events as representative of WILPF and as a Raging Granny to sing at marches and protests. John has attended meetings in Washington, DC, and West Virginia to better inform himself on the scientific back ground of the environmental issues they are dealing with in North Carolina.(Nancy Price)


PHOTO: Waterkeeper Alliance/Rick Dove

 

Post date: Tue, 08/04/2015 - 10:09


By Nancy Price, Earth Democracy Committee

Detroit WILPF Branch member Kim Redigan along with her activist colleagues and sponsoring organizations planned the Detroit to Flint Water Justice Journey – a 70-mile walk July 3-10 calling for affordable, clean water for all statewide.  

At the International Social Movement Gathering on Water and Housing (May 29-31) that Mary Bricker-Jenkins and I attended, Kim mentioned this idea to me. As Kim exclaimed in a recent email to me, “Can’t believe we pulled this together in a month – utterly exhausting, but exhilarating.”

The walk is described as “simply the thread that weaves together a series of important public events to highlight the issues by hearing from people on the front lines -- local residents personally affected by unsafe and unaffordable water, concerned citizens, people committed to water justice including public health workers, attorneys, pastors, elders and youth.” 

The walk started in Detroit where for over 13 years thousands of citizens have had their water shut off and where the 2005 Water Affordability Plan was passed by the Detroit City Council but never implemented.  Walkers continued to nearby Highland Park where the community has endured and is still threatened with mass water shut-offs after years of administrative mismanagement.

The journey concluded on Friday, July 10 in Flint where residents report serious health problems related to unsafe water from the polluted Flint River – hair loss, autoimmune disorders, skin burns, and children with lead poisoning.  Here’s the full schedule of events.

Kim explained: “The walk gave us the opportunity to listen to people along the way who are struggling with high water bills and, in the case of Flint, unclean water. To a person, all agree that water is not a commodity and that privatization is a bad idea.  Once we explained the 2005 Water Affordability Plan that was passed by the Detroit City Council, but never implemented, people were supportive, even enthused, about the idea of a water affordability plan for the entire state. Folks also were deeply attuned to the public health crisis and sheer immorality of the shutoffs.”

The take-away?  Michigan needs clean, affordable water. Water is a sacred trust that should be held as a common rather than a commodity for private control and profit?”  Here’s the announcement from the Peoples Water Board and an excellent news report.

Congratulations Kim and all who made this walk a great success – a great example of  collaboration to accomplish a really impressive event.  

Earth Democracy’s Human Right to Water committee, along with Advancing Human Rights and Corporations v. Democracy, is working with the Michigan Welfare Rights Organization to challenge the practice of the Welfare Department removing children from homes where water has been shut-off claiming that families are not providing a safe environment!
 

PHOTO: Kim Redigan is at the bullhorn as the marchers proceed from Detroit to Flint, Michigan, to demand clean, affordable water for all.    Photo by Valerie Jean 

 

Post date: Sun, 08/02/2015 - 11:42

Marybeth Gardam, Growing WILPF Campaign Committee

Re-envisioning WILPF in the 21st Century is an imperative.  We’ve got critical goals, but we need your support to get there.  This campaign update includes information YOU can use to help us plant new seeds.

Growing WILPF is working to create stronger ties to branches, reach out to recruit new members, provide mentoring and leadership training for new members and branch leaders, and to strategically create new branches around the country. 

  • We’ve had several new branches starting up since January, 2015 already!
  • Our long-awaited Program Retreat is now scheduled for early October and will help us better frame the work of our members and Issue Committees. 
  • And a new full time Managing Director is being recruited to help better amplify and coordinate the work of branches and committees.  
  • Branches are being contacted right now for a survey about the kinds of support they would welcome.   We are rebuilding communications and relationships with branches, because they are our hands and feet and eyes across the US.

But none of that will be able to continue long term without YOUR donation. 

We are asking members to contribute NOW. 

We are asking branches to contribute too.

Go to GrowingWILPF.com to make a donation. It’s fast and easy.

While there, you can check out the campaign budget, goals and progress too. 

You can weigh in on our GOAL SURVEY,

You can access our newest page, WHY DONATE TO WILPF NOW, with its great Talking Points to use with potential donors. 

We need your advice…  Suggest a local DONOR PROSPECT! 

We have to also look outside WILPF to round out our fundraising campaign. 

Take a moment or two to think about people in your community who support Progressive causes and have the capacity for giving to Growing WILPF.   Then CALL US to suggest local potential donors we can approach (individuals, foundations, Progressives who can appreciate the kind of work WILPF does and has done for 100 years).    

We need your eyes and ears. No one knows your community as well as you do.   We can help you make the case directly, or we can simply use your introduction to call on leads you identify for us.  Please do it NOW! 

Contact Robin Lloyd 802-862-4929 - robinlloyd8@gmail.com - or Marybeth Gardam 863-651-4888 -mbgardam@gmail.com

HELP GROW WILPF in your community!

Want to learn more about The Art of the Ask?
We have access to a professional fundraiser who will donate time to provide an excellent foundation for first time donation-seekers. Contact us at the emails above to sign up to get this important training. Our success depends on our preparation.  

Get on our list now, and we’ll be scheduling this training soon.

 

Photo caption: WILPF President Mary Hanson Harrison discusses goals and strategies with Growing WILPF CoChair Robin Lloyd during the March 2015 UN Practicum in NYC.  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Pages