NEWS

Post date: Tue, 09/17/2024 - 13:19

By Nancy Price
Co-Chair, Earth Democracy

September 2024

We’re getting ready for the upcoming COP 29, which will take place November 11-22, 2024 in Baku, Azerbaijan. The event will have delegates from various countries, as well as a wide range of civil society organizations — including human rights, peace and security, health, labor, youth, faith, gender groups and Indigenous peoples —  along with representatives from fossil fuel corporations meeting under the banner, “In solidarity for a Green World.”

The first Conference of the Parties (COP) meeting was held in Berlin, Germany in March 1995. COP is the decision-making body of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and meets annually to discuss and agree on international climate policy: Assessing effects of the measures taken by parties (countries), reviewing the CO2 emission inventories submitted by parties, and assessing parties in achieving the convention's objective.

COP 29 is guided by the three points of the Framework for Action

  • First: Our fixed objective. We all have a moral duty to avoid overshooting the 1.5℃ temperature target above pre-industrial levels. But the window of opportunity is closing, and we must focus on the need to invest today to save tomorrow. Our fixed priority is delivering deep, rapid and sustained emission reductions now to keep temperatures under control and stay below 1.5℃, while leaving no one behind.
  • Second: Enhance ambition and enable action. The COP 29 Presidency’s plan is based on two mutually reinforcing pillars: “enhance ambition” combines key elements to ensure all parties commit to ambitious national plans and transparency. The second pillar, “enable action,” reflects the critical role of finance, a key tool to turn ambition into action and reduce emissions, adapt to climate change and address loss and damage costs from climate impacts. 
  • Third: Have an inclusive process for inclusive outcomes. The COP 29 Presidency is listening to and engaging with a broad range of international stakeholders, working to ensure that everyone’s voices are heard, and perspectives are considered and included so that we deliver inclusive outcomes based on shared solutions. We are optimistic that together we can make real progress. 

The Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty

In 2015, the COP 21 Paris Agreement set a benchmark for global climate action through its temperature goal to stay below a 1.5℃ increase in temperature compared to pre-industrial levels. Despite fossil fuels being clearly identified as the main driver of the climate crisis, they are not mentioned in this landmark climate agreement. 

Also in 2015, the Pacific Island Nations Vanuatu and Tuvalu called for a global treaty to address fossil fuels as the main contributors to global warming and climate change. That same year, the “Suva Declaration on Climate Change” was issued at the Pacific Islands Development Forum Third Annual Summit held in Suva, Fiji, that called for "a new global dialogue on the implementation of an international moratorium on the development and expansion of fossil fuel extracting industries.” 

Later at COP 26 in Glasgow, 2021, the most contested decision was that fossil fuels were finally mentioned in the Glasgow Climate Pact with countries agreeing to “reduced coal use,” a phase-out of “inefficient” fossil fuel subsidies and increasing climate finance for developing countries.

Some real progress may be made under the “Framework for Action” at COP 29. How long can people and the planet wait when fossil fuel executives are “stakeholders” at the negotiating table? Can the developed countries make and honor pledges to climate finance and loss and damage funds? 

After decades of climate negotiations, fossil fuels have finally been dragged to center stage, yet governments still approve new coal, oil and gas projects that threaten our ability to limit warming to 1.5℃. With a focus on reducing emissions, countries and companies claim to be climate leaders, but continue to open, approve and fund new fossil fuel projects.

To protect people from the threat fossil fuels pose to our climate, our health and our future, a growing block of 13 countries seek a negotiating mandate for a Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty and are gathering signatures to letters and endorsements. More information will be posted on the Earth Democracy website page

We need a concrete, binding plan to end the expansion of new coal, oil and gas projects, limit global temperature rise to 1.5℃ above pre-industrial levels, and manage a global Just Transition to safe, renewable, affordable energy for all. in which no worker, community or country is left behind. This Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty also includes a Global Registry of Fossil Fuels to ensure transparency and accountability of production and reserves.
 

Post date: Tue, 09/17/2024 - 13:12
Starhawk

By Jeneve Brooks, PhD
WILPF US Strategic Support and Initiatives Coordinator, Development Committee

September 2024

On Saturday, Sept. 21 – 12 pm ET/11 am CT/10 am MT/9 am PT, WILPF US is thrilled to welcome Starhawk, the award-winning eco-feminist and pagan author, activist, and permaculture teacher, as our main presenter for our unique Fall Equinox/International Peace Day event, “Harvesting Inner Peace and Wisdom”. You can register for the event here.

Traditionally, the Fall Equinox is a time to acknowledge the fruits of our labor and reflect on our lives. While we may not yet be where we aspire to be in our activism or in our own personal lives, we are certainly further along than where we started. The journey together is worth celebrating! 

The Fall Equinox occurs yearly in late September, anywhere between September 21-24. This year, the actual moment of the Equinox will occur on Sept. 22nd at 8:43 AM ET. And International Day of Peace (“Peace Day”), is annually celebrated on September 21st; it was established in 1981 by unanimous United Nations resolution and offers the world a shared date to commit to Peace. WILPF US wanted to mark the significance of both the Equinox and International Day of Peace with this special event. See more information about the UN’s commitment to a Culture of Peace below.

Starhawk will offer perspectives and techniques that can help us appreciate this time of abundance, to help us meaningfully harvest personal growth benefits and inner calm from our peace and justice activist work. Together we’ll acknowledge the energy we’ve expanded this year, lessons learned and blessings we release into the world through our intentions for justice and a world at peace. We’ll renew our commitment to build a lasting culture of peace while we refill our cup during an exhausting election season, and amid a world torn by endless war and violence.   

Our Presenters 

Starhawk is an influential figure in modern earth-based spirituality and ecofeminism, and an author or co-author of 13 books, including ”The Spiral Dance: A Rebirth of the Ancient Religion of the Great Goddess” and the ecotopian novel, ”The Fifth Sacred Thing” and its sequel ”City of Refuge.” Starhawk founded Earth Activist Training, teaching permaculture design grounded in spirituality and with a focus on activism. She travels internationally, lecturing and teaching on earth-based spirituality, the tools of ritual and the skills of activism. 

Starhawk will also be joined by two extraordinary presenters: Della Z Duncan and Ruby Woods.

  • Della Z Duncan is a renegade economist who supports individuals to better align their values with their work. She is also a Senior Atlantic Fellow of Social and Economic Equity at the London School of Economics and hosts the Upstream podcast which challenges traditional economic thinking. She’ll conduct an experiential exercise to help create mindful presence in our activist work during the Great Turning.
  • Ruby Woods is a singer, songwriting, poet/ritualist. She also has decades of experience as a Massage Therapist and a Reiki practitioner. She co-organized Women Walking Woodward for Peace from 2012-2023, won a 2021 Knight Arts Challenge Grant, and is Co-Chair for Great Lakes Bioneers Detroit. She will share personal insights on the theme: How the Head, Heart and Hands Can Be Your Guide.

Click here to attend.

Please note: There is a $20 (suggested) donation fee to attend this event, or whatever your heart tells you to give towards our work for peace. You can contribute a lower amount (or the minimum to register - $5) if you need to. 

Why do we have a suggested donation fee for events like these? 
WILPF US is a national peace and justice nonprofit organization operating on a very modest operational budget. Every dollar helps sustain our important work. Thank you for giving what you can.  

Please contact me if you have any questions about this exciting event at wilpfus.jenevebrooks@gmail.com

Help us spread the word by forwarding this email invitation to friends, allies, family and community members. We are so excited to host the living legend – Starhawk! And I hope to see you there!

2024 Marks the 25th Anniversary of the United Nations General Assembly’s Adoption of the 1999 Declaration & Programme of Action on a Culture of Peace

The declaration states: “Not only is the absence of conflict, but also requires a positive, dynamic participatory process where dialogue is encouraged, and conflicts are solved in a spirit of mutual understanding and cooperation.”  

In that moment, the UN General Assembly worked collaboratively to lay out the values needed for a culture of peace. Based on the UN’s website, those values are: 

“Respect for life, human rights and fundamental freedoms; the promotion of non-violence through education, dialogue and cooperation; commitment to peaceful settlement of conflicts; and adherence to freedom, justice, democracy, tolerance, solidarity, cooperation, pluralism, cultural diversity, dialogue and understanding at all levels of society and among nations.” 

WILPF members truly exhibit those values!

Yours – in gratitude and in peace.

Jeneve Brooks, PhD
Strategic Support & Initiatives Coordinator

 

Post date: Mon, 09/16/2024 - 13:33

 

By Marybeth Gardam
For the Lloyd Family Legacy Planning Team and the Search Committee

September 2024

In June, the Search Committee released a survey to help better define the Executive Director job description, the selection of candidates we interview and, ultimately, who we hire. We asked everyone on our email list to take the survey. The results are in, and we are pleased to share some of the key takeaways and themes from the survey. 

Most Important Competency Areas 

  • A deep understanding of feminist leadership or facilitative leadership techniques that encourage others to share leadership. 
  • Strategic and long range program and project planning experience to help in expanding our work, increasing measurable impact, and creating fundable projects. 
  • Demonstrated commitment to racial and gender equity and dismantling all systems of oppression.
  • Strategic collaboration experience, listening skills and fostering alignment across all stakeholders. 
  • Internal communications that keep membership and stakeholders informed and engaged. 
  • External communication that consistently lifts WILPF's visibility.

On the opposite end, the following areas were rated least critical, but still important.  

Least Important Competency Areas 

  • Rate the importance of experience in leading visual design updates to improve organizational visibility, fundraising and member recruitment. (The official name and dove logo will not/cannot change.)  
  • Understanding and experience with human resources, including personnel contractor policies, job descriptions, developing and reviewing hiring contracts, and contractor supervision/review and communication. 
  • Proven connections with prospective donors to the causes WILPF promotes. 
  • Staff, oversight and management. 

Taking the survey answers into consideration, the Search Committee has now created a job description that the Board has approved. Here is the link to the job posting, which is now live on Idealist.com. The deadline for applications is November 4th. We plan to use the fall and winter to focus on recruitment and hiring, and ideally aim to have an Executive Director onboarded by early 2025. 

LFL Planning Team:
Martha Collins, Laura Dewey, Cindy Domingo, Chris Morin, Betty Burkes, Jane Sloane, Marybeth Gardam.
LFL Search Committee: 
Tina Shelton, Barbara Nielsen, George Friday, Phillip Cole, Marybeth Gardam, CeeCee Anderson
Ex-Officio Members:
Darien De Lu, Nancy Price, Robin Lloyd
 

Post date: Mon, 09/16/2024 - 13:04
Humboldt Branch book sale

Luna from Centro del Pueblo at the Humboldt Branch book sale; Credit: Magaley Cervantes

By Sue Hilton

September 2024

The Humboldt County (CA) branch held our almost-annual July 4 used book sale with our partners from Centro del Pueblo (a local immigrant rights group) again this year. The book sale raises money for our Edilith Eckert/Jene McCovey scholarship, which gives small grants to local groups for projects promoting Peace & Justice, locally to globally.

Humboldt book saleCentro applied for startup funds many years ago, and we helped them pass a sanctuary law in our county. They now have several paid staff and lots of projects but we still work together, and it was great to have younger folks to help us put up tables and move boxes of books.

We also raise money for the scholarship through a quilt raffle — one of our members is part of a group that donates quilts to local nonprofits (you can see the quilt in the background in the photo above). We'd love to have other WILPFers buy raffle tickets — they're $5 each or 5 for $20. Send a check to Humboldt WILPF to P.O. Box 867, Arcata, CA 95518. There's more about the scholarship here

We also helped write and will receive the City of Arcata's Declaration of the International Day of Peace (though we don't have any other IDP activities planned) and are just starting DEI work based on George's training at the Congress in June. 

 

Post date: Mon, 09/16/2024 - 12:51

By Glo McMillan

September 2024

Our new Communications Access (yes!), Culture/the Arts, and Sensitization (CCS) group is starting a few exciting projects that you can join, including talks and fun art activities. 

We invite you to join CCS E-List for The Arts and Activism! Contact: Glo McMillan at scifo200111@gmail.com

With 14 people on the new CCS E-List, we are off to a joyous start. Ideas are flowing in. People have wanted a place to ‘grow’ their creative activism that is inseparable from their artistic personalities. And This is the place.

The CCS Arts Zoom In — To Celebrate Mexican Women (!) on October 1st at 4PM PT

Our theme is Mexican art — women in Mexico and women in government. Brings songs, art, recipes, poems, scripts for street theater. Here in Tucson, Arizona, we are totally bilingual and bi-cultural — we have bilingual schools, bilingual news shows on radio and TV. So, it is fitting that for CCS’s first Arts Zoom, hosted from Tucson, is about a flowering of women in Mexico and our happiness to share in the news. All we can see is color around us this time of year and we hope this will inspire others to share their creativity at this Zoom on October 1st.

Robin Lloyd has graciously consented to share how her Burlington, VT, WILPF Branch makes the arts a part of their racial inclusion work. They are always coming up with surprises in the VT branch of WILPF. We keep hearing good things so find out more and maybe some tips for your own branch arts projects.

How about your branch? Are there artists in your WILPF branch who might be interested in making a national connection via our CCS? What other themes and days should we celebrate with art?

Online Peace Theater: The Planet Zoom Players

Two WILPF members have already shared cyber-space in our Planet Zoom Players productions. These plays were recorded in Zoom, then published on YouTube. This exciting new use of online reading of staged plays can be geared to other plays that feature WILPF history and other scripts done by WILPF members.

Shilpa Pandey (a member of our past WILPF Membership Committee) starred in “Rock the Nuclear Clock!,” a play that showed how humanity in the near future solved its nuclear war problem with a lunar-based QUIZ Show. See our potent satire here!

Margo Schulter (DISARM Committee) played a role in H. G. Wells’s “The Crystal Egg” in which a visionary old man yearns to mean the “others” out there without prejudging and fearing them.

Planet Zoom so far has produced mainly classic science fiction adapted to play form with peace themes. But we have the capability of doing other genres of plays as well in our Peace Theater mode. Please contact me, Gloria McMillan, to join CCA as a reader, designer, or PR role! Scifi200111@gmail.com.

CCS and Recycled Art

In my daily life, I see far too much being wasted. How can we recycle water and make it into art? How about metal cat food lids, rebar from construction or coat hangers? We can make sunflowers and sell these at peace festivals. Many YouTube videos are now out on how to make art from plastic soda bottles, gallon bottles and plastic bags. Mesh bags that harm aquatic life can be saved and made into art, as well. Your branch can launch these projects for sale at public events. Arts + Activism + Ecology!

How about vegetable metal ties? I began seeing them around Romaine lettuce in the supermarket. I knew this could be used in basketry, any cordlike object can, so I came up with these vegetable tie baskets. These will definitely sell at group fundraisers.

I made a few different styles of baskets. Some were tray style baskets to use as a holder for holiday fruit baskets, some are round and can be used to pot plants, for example. Can your WILPF US branch make these? It is easy to do as a branch activity.

Do keep in touch, there will be much more to come.

Photo credit: Glo McMillan
 

 

 

 

 

Post date: Mon, 09/16/2024 - 12:41
Regina Ross

WILPF member Regina Ross strikes the Peace Bell on the grounds of Jimmy Carter’s Presidential Library and Museum. Credit: Peggy Dobbins.

By Peggy Dobbins
Atlanta Chapter

September 2024

On Nagasaki Day, members of the Organizing Committee for the Atlanta chapter of WILPF US sent a WILPF petition to the US President and Vice President calling for support for the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons. They met at the newly installed Peace Bell on the grounds of the Jimmy Carter Presidential Museum and Library where Nuclear Watch South has organized the Observance for the last 30 years. 

Nuclear Watch South released a report in May on the dangers of relying on nuclear power, written by Glenn Carroll, coordinator for Nuclear Watch South, with GA WAND's Executive Director Kimberly Scott and Patty Durand, former president of the Smart Energy Consumer Collaborative. “Vogtle Plant: The True Cost of Nuclear Power in the United States” was based on a study of Georgia’s Vogtle Plant, whose plans to expand its facilities was recently applauded by members of President Biden’s administration.

Carroll, who was at the event, warned that the plant is a danger to the community: "There is no safe level of radiation.The amount of radiation in a running reactor is incomprehensible.

"When Helen Caldicott wrote ‘Nuclear Madness,’ she told us [that] if the contents of one reactor were to escape, it would be a global event — far exceeding the amount of natural background radiation received from the sun and the soil. The Earth has now absorbed the radioactive legacy of four total meltdowns [Chernobyl and Fukushima] and decades of  irresponsible dumping of radioactive waste. The waste from reactors is highly concentrated and highly radioactive with a hazardous life of millions of years. The technical and legal term for this waste is ‘spent fuel.’ We have not dealt with even 1 gram in 80 years of nuclear technology,” she added.

 

 

Post date: Thu, 08/01/2024 - 07:25

WILPF Board Experiments with a Virtual Retreat: Leaders from Program Issue Committees Join for Half-Day

by Darien De Lu
WILPF US President

July/August

Not all the reviews are in yet, yet initial evaluations of the first virtual board retreat pronounce it effective, well planned, and with the sequencing well thought out. The retreat started with 4 hours on Friday, July 26, devoted to helping build stronger personal relationships. It continued for 9 hours on both Saturday and Sunday, with the Board and other ‘pundits’ (WILPF US members who have taken on particular official roles related to WILPF International) taking the time to get to know each other better and to more widely discuss key issues.

On Saturday, a number of issue committees leaders joined in a special Program & Activism session, which explored questions like: ‘What kinds of actions and activities successfully involve branches?’ and ‘In what ways is our WILPF US program forwarding our WILPF agenda, mission and vision?’. The Sunday sessions focused on relationships within WILPF, starting with the question: ‘What are the characteristics of a “welcoming group” that would be applicable to the Board and WILPF committees?’. In these times when political conversations can quickly become difficult, communication is an important topic. Small groups identified characteristics of both respectful and disrespectful communications. Participants shared how a respectful or disrespectful response makes them feel.

In anticipation of upcoming stages in the WILPF Lloyd Family Legacy Campaign, the retreat concluded Sunday by returning to the work begun on Friday, uniting to build a collective vision for the future of WILPF US.

 


News from WILPF International Board: Code of Conduct Drafted

by Tina Deshotels Shelton
At-large Board Member

The WILPF International Board (IB) has been working on a code of conduct (CoC), and once complete, they will begin working on a complaint and conflict resolution mechanism. The final CoC was submitted to the IB for the end of May board meeting and was approved pending minor edits. Once those edits are incorporated in the final draft, the document will be shared with all members.

Like our Mission and Vision statement, the CoC is a set of guiding principles for individuals at all levels of our organization. It was created by WILPF for WILPF. The list of values found on pages 3-4, which were approved at the 2022 International Congress, are helpful as a reference for the rest of the document. The section on approaches to our work on page 4 provides context to the part on commitment that rounds out the rest of the document. Overall, the CoC asks each of us to reach for our best selves in our goals, in our actions and our interactions.

Reviewing the CoC amongst members and discussing these commitments at each level will hopefully yield helpful discussions. Ancient spiritual practices, as well as modern science all point towards peace beginning ‘at home’ and this document is an effort for us to learn how to create that as we join in our efforts to create peace in our world.
 
The Code of Conduct can be found under the MyWILPF section of WILPF.org website, using the search function. (If you are a member of WILPF, you can access member-only material at the MyWILPF tab, which is also where you can sign up for newsletters.)
 
The next step is one of the pieces that will help us operationalize the CoC, namely building a set of feminist complaint and internal conflict resolution policies, practices and processes. Having these in place will help WILPF to address differences and concerns, and to honor diverse perspectives in a peaceful, constructive and transformative way. This work is overseen by the Ad-hoc Accountability Framework Committee, convened by International Vice-President Melissa Torres, and supported by a team.

Questions? Please contact membership@wilpf.org.

 


Support Casa Maria Soup Kitchen

by Gloria McMillan
Tucson, AZ Branch

Casa MariaOn Wednesday, August 7th at 6:30 pm EDT, WILPF’s Housing Justice Working Group is hosting a meeting with Brian Flagg, who has been working at the Casa Maria Soup Kitchen for almost 40 years. Casa Maria  is a Catholic worker house committed to nonviolence, voluntary poverty, prayer, and hospitality for the homeless, exiled, hungry, and forsaken. 

Born and raised in Whittier, California, with a degree in sociology from Biola College, Brian has lived and worked at the Casa Maria soup kitchen since March of 1983. 

For more information contact Gloria at scifi200111@gmail.com.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Post date: Thu, 08/01/2024 - 07:13
Global Women United for Peace Against NATO

Members of Global Women United for Peace Against NATO meet in DC restaurant ahead of the No NATO rally in front of the White House, 7th July 2024. Clockwise from left: Tina Shelton (Greater Philly WILPF branch), Ellen Mass (Boston WILPF branch), Peter Schutz (World Beyond War), Tamara Lorincz (WILPF Canada), Sevin Dagdelen (German Parliamentarian), Martha Hennessy (Catholic Worker), Ann Wright (World Beyond War & CODEPINK), Dianne Blais (DISARM co-chair), Paki Weiland (MAPA), Crystal Zevon (WILPF Vermont), Cherrill Spencer (DISARM co-chair). Credit: Cherrill Spencer, used with her permission.

 

by Cherrill Spencer and Dianne Blais
Co-Chairs of DISARM/End Wars Issue Committee

July/August 2024
 

NO NATO - YES PEACE 

WILPF US was one of the organizers of North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Counter-Summit and Rally held in Washington DC the weekend before NATO’s July 9-11 75th anniversary summit.  

The all-day counter-summit was held on Saturday, July 6th, followed by a rally on Sunday. World Beyond War’s website has links to the videos and text versions of speeches from those 2 days. WILPF was represented by members from several branches and DISARM co-chairs Dianne Blais and Cherrill Spencer. 

Speakers at the July 6 counter-summit detailed why the world does not need NATO anymore, and that it is doing more harm than good. Ms Sevim Dagdelen, a member of the German Bundestag and speakers from Africa, Asia (Korea and Japan), Europe (Belgium, France, Germany), Middle East (Gaza) and North America (Canada, USA) detailed the spreading of NATO to countries nowhere near the north Atlantic and the unnecessary wars it has been involved in. This video has all their speeches, as well as the songs by musician Ben Grosscup who entertained the attendees ahead of each panel. 

Immediately after the counter-summit, many attendees dashed across DC to attend the Resist NATO summit where we heard from some youth and local DC organizations regarding the imperialistic behaviors of NATO.

Ahead of the rally outside the White House on Sunday 7th July, Global Women United for Peace Against NATO organization met for brunch (see photo above). Everyone then went to Lafayette Square for the rally where15 speakers gave short speeches describing why their organization wanted to get rid of NATO. In the recording of the rally, you can fast forward 1 hour and 52 minutes into the video to see Dianne and Cherrill give WILPF’s point of view of war and its horrible effects on women and girls in a blistering 96⁰ F.

DC-Maryland-Virginia WILPF Branch
Enjoying the hospitality of the DC-Maryland-Virginia WILPF Branch; Credit: Cherrill Spencer, used with permission

Lobbying Congressional Members for the Warheads to Windmills Coalition and the DC-Maryland-Virginia (DMV) WILPF Branch Meeting

On July 8th, Dianne and Cherrill took part with about 15 other members of the Warheads to Windmills (W2W) coalition in visiting about 30 members of the House of Representatives to inform them about the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW) and the new Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty and associated legislation in the US Congress. WILPF US is a member of the Warheads to Windmills coalition. Those chosen to lobby Congress were required to have a constituent in their district who could attend the lobbying in person or by zoom. 

The group then taxied to northern DC for DMV WILPF Branch’s “Convergence of Peace-Growers” reception with moving presentations and delicious Ethiopian and Japanese food. 

On July 9th, Cherrill returned to Capitol Hill for another day of lobbying for W2W and hoped to demonstrate outside the DC Convention Center where NATO was meeting on July 10.

Our DISARM/End Wars Issue committee welcomes new members; we have many ongoing campaigns that need people to work on them.  Write to disarmchair@wilpfus.org to request information and to join the DISARM/End Wars Committee, which meets on Zoom on the second and last Sundays of the month.

 

Post date: Thu, 08/01/2024 - 06:59
Earth Democracy Banner

 

by Jean Hays and Nancy Price
Co-Chairs, Earth Democracy Committee

July/August 2024

We would like to thank the speakers at our 35th Triennial Congress who presented  such a wide range of topics on the theme “Water on the Frontlines for Peace.”  If you were able to attend only a few of the presentations or none at all, here’s the list of recordings

Movement on Ban of PFAS in Vermont

Military PoisonsFor a number of years, Earth Democracy focused on our Military Poisons Project (link militarypoisons.org) with Pat Elder and the Vermont PFAS and Military Poisons Coalition grassroots education and legislative work. We congratulate the Coalition members and Coalition Coordinator Marguerite Adelman that on May 7, the Vermont Legislature passed a nation-leading bill to protect Vermont residents from PFAS.

This bill (S.25) will ban per- and polyfluorinated substances (PFAS) and other toxic chemicals from personal care products, and from apparel, cookware, artificial turf, and children’s products. The bill includes a first-in-the-nation ban on phthalates, formaldehyde, mercury and lead, among other harmful chemicals in menstrual products, and the first ban on PFAS in incontinence products. Each vote on this bill in the Vermont Senate and House was unanimous, and it now heads to the governor’s desk for consideration.

Earth Democracy will continue with our work on the Human Right to Health and Water,  and pick up on our earlier 2015 work on Climate Justice, Women + Peace.

Join a Special Project

We welcome you to join one of these Special Projects briefly described here. 

If you love researching, writing, and media work, if you are an artist, poet or thrive on strategic planning, please email Nancy Price at EarthDemocracy@wilpfus.org.

Briefly, after Labor Day, our three new Special Projects are:

  • The Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty is spearheaded by a block of nation-states concerned that the world needs a treaty to manage a global ‘Just Transition’ away from coal, oil and gas. It’s no longer possible to ignore the countries that claim to be climate leaders while continuing to open, approve and fund new fossil fuel projects. Obviously, it’s impossible to reduce emissions without lowering demand.
    • Though fossil fuels are recognized as the main drivers of the climate crisis, they are not mentioned in the 2015 Paris Climate Agreement, when participating countries agreed that an increase in global warming should stay “well below 2℃”, and they should try to limit temperature increases to 1.5℃ above pre-industrial levels — a limit we are in danger of reaching with no turning back.
       
  •  A focus on COP 29, the Conference of Parties at the 2024 United Nations Climate Change Conference, November 11-22, 2024 in Baku, Azerbaijan. The fact that Mukhtar Bahayev will preside at this COP has raised serious concerns about how discussions will proceed at COP 29, given that he has worked in the state-owned oil company SOCAR for 26 years and that, in 2023, Azerbaijan relied on oil and gas for more than 92% of its export revenue.
    • Indeed, there is a much-needed COP 29 discussion on the new “Roadmap to Mission 1.5℃”. At this COP, it is crucial that there is better international cooperation and progress by each country clearly stating what their Nationally Determined Contribution will be to reduce greenhouse gas emissions to keep warming at 1.5℃ or at least below 2℃.
       
  • Collaborate with the Disarm/End Wars committee to develop educational materials and factsheets on how global military spending, including by the NATO countries, accelerates climate breakdown.
    • For example, in “Climate Crossfire”, published in October 2023, it was calculated that if all members of NATO meet the commitment of spending at least 2% of GDP on the military, by 2028 this would lead to a total estimated collective military carbon footprint of 2 billion tons of CO2, greater than the annual GHG emissions of Russia. NATO would also spend an estimated additional $2.57 trillion, enough to pay for what the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP) estimates as the climate adaptation costs for low- and middle-income countries for 7 years.

There’s no doubt that it is time for the US peace organizations to come together to build a vigorous, robust and diverse peace movement in this country grounded in racial, social, economic and environmental justice and human rights. It’s time to make the case for moving from a war economy to a peace economy, to move from ‘Warheads to Windmills’ and a ‘Just Transition’ to sustainable, renewable green energy. Remember, nuclear power is not green.

 

Post date: Thu, 08/01/2024 - 06:43

 

by Darien De Lu
WILPF US President

July/August 2024

The Board is undertaking changes and improvements in WILPF functioning with a new procedure for resolving member complaints and disputes and a 3-day retreat to focus on fundamental topics of programs and organizational relationships. For the new Peace Seekers group, we want your thoughtful nominations of WILPF members skilled in sorting out conflicts.  

Peace Seekers

WILPF US has not had a well-developed process for responding to disputes between members. A number of qualifications for the five members of the Peace Seekers group will contribute to their success:

  • Awareness/knowledge of WILPF and WILPF principles
  • Membership in WILPF for over two years and currently active at the national WILPF and/or branch level 
  • Level-headedness, perspective, wisdom and judiciousness
  • Awareness of topics of current concern in WILPF
  • Some study of or experience with ways of nonviolently addressing conflicts 

Watch for an upcoming eAlert, which will provide further details and a link to the nomination form for the Peace Seekers.

Virtual Board Retreat

One way a board retreat differs from a board meeting is that a retreat allows time, so taking 60-90 minutes for a more personal exchange is doable. Also, the retreat will have time for challenging topics, like the work-life and the economic factors that affect our WILPF involvement and activism, or how we can work successfully in the face of a possible rightward shift in national politics.

Two new members have been appointed at the last two board meetings: in March, Ellen Schwartz, as Nominating Committee Chair and, in May, Eileen Kurkoski, as Membership Development Committee Chair. Now, with 12 members, the Board is missing only one of its positions – one of the two Program Chairs. So it’s a good time for the Friday-through-Sunday retreat to establish connections among the members, and after the success of the WILP US Congress and the coming 2025 WILPF International Congress, it’s an important time to reflect. 

The late July retreat was the first retreat in 2 years. The previous retreat was partially in-person and partially virtual. A major factor in the success of a virtual gathering is having most participants present for the entire retreat, as they would likely be at an in-person event. This board experiment is a new approach in these times of increasing cost of travel and awareness of the carbon footprint of flights.

Current plans call for hiring additional national WILPF staff, through the generous funding of the Lloyd Family Legacy. In what ways and in what direction will WILPF evolve? 

In order to help the Board develop a vision for WILPF, the retreat planners are looking at different technologies to move toward a shared vision. The tool of a ‘Jamboard’ offers ways to collaborate. (A demonstration is presented in this video). Another approach uses breakout rooms to shift the participants around into different small groups. With a virtual retreat, we can discuss in dyads if we wish, without running out of space!

The Board will also discuss items that branches might want to explore, such as: What are the characteristics of a ‘welcoming branch or group’? What techniques help strong-willed WILPF members to collaborate usefully?  

Along with you, our members, the Board is looking for ways to increase WILPF's visibility and membership. What are ways to work together better and enhance the sisterhood of our national WILPF culture? 

Since the topic of regional meetings and gatherings was raised at our May-June Congress, more and more people have expressed interest. Possibly some national committee will grow out of the retreat discussions. If you’re interested in being involved with that committee or finding out more about national WILPF volunteer opportunities, please contact me: President@wilpfus.org.
 

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