NEWS

Post date: Fri, 02/05/2016 - 07:49

By Marybeth Gardam, Corporations v Democracy Issue Committee Chair

The interconnectedness of water with resource conflicts and war is becoming better understood among activists, but we need to keep raising this in our communities. Water has also become a hot-button issue that spotlights economic injustice, as in Flint, Michigan, and states where fracking, coal slag, and nuclear plant leaks endanger water in the poorest neighborhoods. 

With World Water Day on March 22, and Earth Day on April 22, WILPF Branches have an opportunity to lift up these timely issues in their own local communities. They are issues that dramatically connect the global and the local. Our responses should also make that connection.

Branches and at-large members are encouraged to plan events that can raise the intersections of water, climate, environmental threats, resource shortages of food and water -- all of which connect to the Roots of War -- and for which the poorest and least powerful bear the most burden. Women are particularly affected by this intersection, this “perfect storm” of situations.  So are Native Americans, Tribal Nations and people of color. Invite them to be part of your organizing. Or consider joining with local allies among these groups to strengthen and support their planned events for World Water Day and Earth Day.  

WILPF’s new CLIMATE JUSTICE+WOMEN+PEACE Project Infographic Cards make good arguments for the interconnectedness of these issues and can be effective for educating and organizing locally. Use them at lobbying visits during Feb. 14-21 when members of Congress will be in recess and at home in their districts.  Leave the cards behind as you point out the connections between these issues and their impact on endless war, extreme weather events, food and water shortages, immigration, refugee crises, human trafficking, and environmental degradation.  Bring along others who are most affected in your state, and make your case strongly. Be sure to ask them to vote NO on the TPP in February/March. This trade agreement threatens to exacerbate each one of these problems.

The FREE Infographic Cards are the first part of a four-part project that will also provide study guides, candidate talking points, fact sheets and a presentation kit. The cards are available now and 21 branches are already using them to raise WILPF’s visibility in climate, TPP, and food security work.  

The study guides and other materials will be completed and posted on our website by March 31.  Order the Infographic cards at mbgardam@gmail.com. They are going fast, but we hope to reorder soon. The CLIMATE JUSTICE+WOMEN+PEACE Project is a collaboration of our Earth Democracy, DISARM, Advancing Human Rights and Corporations v Democracy Issue Committees and was funded by a WILPF-US minigrant. Branches pay only for mailing costs

See more coverage of World Water Day.

Post date: Fri, 02/05/2016 - 07:27

By Carol Urner and Ellen Thomas, co-chairs of WILPF National Disarm/End Wars Issue Committee

We are now in the midst of our West Coast tour campaigning for abolition of nuclear weapons and an end to war. We are actively promoting HR 1976, the only bill in Congress calling for abolition of nuclear weapons. 

It calls for President Obama and this present Administration to live up to those Prague promises and to provide leadership toward a nuclear weapons free world. Instead of the positive leadership we expected; however, our nation is now leading a new nuclear arms race toward doomsday and the probable extinction of humanity and all we love about our planet home.

You can read the bill, HR 1976, and its background on the website of Ellen Thomas. You can also take a few minutes to send a letter to your own Congressperson from that site, asking him/her to co-sponsor the bill. But don't stop there. One form letter -- and especially if you take the time to edit and personalize it -- can be an important first step, but actual visits with even our friendliest legislators will usually be needed to gain their co-sponsorship for HR 1976.

We are also reporting on the exciting new developments within the United Nations as the non-nuclear nations take matters in their own hands. They have participated in three special sessions on the humanitarian consequences of nuclear war, inspired in part by the Red Cross/Red Crescent call for abolition of nuclear weapons. They have since initiated unprecedented new actions within the General Assembly. One of these is an open-ended working group, proposed by Mexico, to meet during 2016 to seek ways to close the legal gaps and make possession and production of nuclear weapons -- even for alleged purposes of deterrence -- totally illegal. All nations are invited to participate, including the nine nuclear powers, but no nation can veto the decisions of the majority as an overwhelming number of governments seek ways to completely eliminate these arsenals from our planet.

Although we officially launched our tour on January 21, a Disarm/End Wars committee member from Los Angeles Branch, Sheila Goldner, and Carol Urner started a few days earlier on January 15 and 16 at the Rotary World Peace Conference in Ontario. California. The Disarm/ End Wars committee had decided at its December monthly meeting to spend $250 for a WILPF display booth at the conference. We could not afford the conference sessions themselves, but two days spent with exhibitors -- many of them Rotary clubs from around the world (including Russia) -- was a rich and positive experience. How can we fail to end war when so many of us, from very different backgrounds, are working so diligently to create a world without war?

When with Rotary we also met a Peruvian American volunteer with World Beyond War who had seen notice of the bill HR 1976 and had already decided that is the positive project for which we must all work. He joined us on January 21 for our teach-in at the Whittier Peace and Justice Center. He has taken on organization of the search for co-sponsors in his own county.

Another plus from those two days with Rotary was the enthusiastic response of a former WILPF staff member from Ojai valley, Nuri Ronaghy. We ended up staying with her on our way to Santa Barbara, and she is now determined to start a WILPF branch in her own village, which is bursting with hosts of young mothers and their families. We have promised to give her every support we can.

On January 23 we met at the Culver City Peace Center in Los Angeles, a city with many progressive representatives who we believe should become co-sponsors of the bill. Carol will help with the process when she returns to Whittier, near Los Angeles, in late February.

In San Diego on January 25 we visited offices of both representatives with WILPF constituents from the struggling branch there, and left them to continue the work in that beautiful city now overwhelmed with military bases.

By January 27 we were able to meet for an hour with Rick Wayman and David Krieger at the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation in Santa Barbara.  NAPF was among the 18 endorsing organizations for our Nuclear Free Future tour, and David and Rick have always been very good friends, advisers and partners in our WILPF work to abolish nuclear weapons and end war. While at NAPF we also recorded a radio interview with Jean Hays of Fresno Branch which we will post on our websites when it becomes available.

January 27 was also a wonderful evening with the Mothers for Peace in San Luis Obispo. These fantastic women are concentrating on shutting down Diablo, the last nuclear power plant in California. They are doing a great deal of legal work and fighting the Department of Energy and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission in the courts. Carol especially enjoyed staying the night with longtime WILPF member Liz Apfelberg. The last time we had met was at the  WILPF Triennial Congress in Chapel Hill, NC, hosted by the Triangle Branch.

By January 28 we were in Fresno and we presented our program to a room packed with Fresno WILPFers.  Fresno is a huge industrial city created by developers out in the middle of nowhere, and still run by them. The city politics are not progressive, but the WILPF Branch -- one of our strongest -- is always a challenge to them and helps make the city a more livable place.

On January 29 we reached Santa Cruz in time for a wonderful dinner for 10 hosted by Patricia Schroeder, who attended the Hague Centennial Congress as an alternate delegate. On the 30th we participated in an hour-long community TV interview with Mathilde Rand.

On January 31, we presented our program at the Santa Cruz library to another roomful of engaged WILPFers. We sought to give them new hope and incentive to add work for nuclear weapons abolition and an end to war to all the other wonderful work they already do through WILPF to create a better and more just society for us all.

We are having a busy week, visiting Nancy Pelosi’s office on the 3rd, the offices of four South Bay representatives on the 4th and 5th, a program in Los Altos (San Jose and Peninsula WILPF) with Jackie Cabasso on the 4th, another on the 6th in Oakland (San Francisco and East Bay) with Jackie and with Marylia Kelley from Tri-Valley Cares and Alliance for Nuclear Accountability, then on to Sacramento, Arcata and Eureka  CA, and Ashland, Corvallis and Portland, OR, then Seattle, WA, and Ground Zero Trident Submarine base near Seattle, all before we have to turn in the car on the  22nd of February and Ellen flies home.

People have been marvelous all along the way, and we’re hopeful that this trip will lead to some strong allies in this beautiful part of the world which is threatened by Fukushima and Diablo Nuclear Power Station and the government’s shift to the Pacific Pivot, which makes the West Coast vulnerable.
 
How tragic if we cannot step up and use our purported power to stop war now.
The opportunities for progress are so great in these days. The three gatherings on the humanitarian consequences of nuclear war have resulted in so much good fruit and so many men and women in the non-nuclear nations who are now determined to proceed with nuclear weapons abolition and an end to war. Surely we can join and support them, and also support our many members in WILPF who are working their hearts out to achieve these goals for us all.

in peace, Carol Urner    cell: 503 320 9108
Ellen Thomas    cell 202-210-3886  etprop1@me.com (on tour)

Post date: Fri, 02/05/2016 - 07:15

By Darien De Lu, Elections Subcommittee of the Nominating Committee

The final list of WILPF US candidates includes a choice for the office of president/co-president and a single candidate for each of the other board openings. You can join a call to hear them respond to some key questions.

We have experienced candidates, and on Saturday, February. 20, you can hear the candidates respond to these questions.  Do you have a question you'd like us to ask the candidates?  Please send it to us at nominations@wilpfus.org.

So please, save the date to listen in to the meet-the-candidates call:

Saturday, Feb. 20, 2016,
at 7 pm EST, 6 pm CST, 5 pm MST, and 4 pm PST (about one hour long)
Call-in number -- (641)715-3670 (standard toll charges)
Participant access code -- 107284. 

The candidates and offices are as follows:

1. President or Co-Presidents
(running as a team) Barbara L Nielsen, San Francisco, CA Branch, and
Theresa Coté, Auburn-Foothills, CA Branch-in-formation

OR

Mary Hanson Harrison, Des Moines, IA Branch

2. Treasurer (completing last year of  3-year term)
Jeanmarie (Simpson) Bishop, AZ (at large member)

3. Development Committee Chair
Marybeth Gardam, Winter Haven, FL (at large member)  

4. Program Chair
Maureen Ngozi Eke, Mt. Pleasant, MI (at large member) 

5. Nominations Committee Chair
Laura A. Dewey, Detroit, MI Branch

6. At Large Board member
Dixie Hairston, Houston, TX Branch

 

Ballot packets will be in the mail shortly to members of WILPF.  Your return vote  must be postmarked no later than March 5.

Post date: Fri, 02/05/2016 - 06:38

By Cindy Domingo, Cuba and Bolivarian Alliance Issues Committee

The Cuba and Bolivarian Alliance Issues Committee is proud to cosponsor the national tour of Luisa Campos Gallardo, director of the National Literacy Museum in Havana since 1996.  The Museum is associated with Havana’s University of Pedagogical Sciences.  Ms Campos will be visiting the US in April/May 2016 and possibly June, depending on interest. We invite branches to bring Ms. Campos to visit their city or to sponsor events in the cities already included in the tour.

In 1960, Fidel Castro announced in a United Nations speech that Cuba would eradicate illiteracy in one year’s time.  In 1961 the National Cuban Literacy Campaign was launched and in that year, that promise was fulfilled.  The campaign called on the Cuban people to volunteer to participate in this campaign, many of them young girls and women.  In that one year, literacy rose to 96%.  Today, Cuba’s literacy rate is 99.8% The National Literacy Museum documents the history of the campaign as well as ongoing international efforts to eradicate illiteracy through the Yo Si Puedo Program. 

Please contact Cindy Domingo at cindydomingo@gmail. If you are interested.  For more information on Cuba’s National Literacy Campaign in 1961, please see www.maestrathefilm.org

This film could be used in conjunction with Ms. Campos’ tour.

Ms Campos holds a masters in educación and has 48 years of experience as a university professor, largely teaching at the José Enrique Varona Pedagogical University. She has taught at an undergraduate, graduate and postgraduate level, as well as teaching special courses in the areas of Cuban history, ethics, José Martí, adult education, literacy (in various issues within literacy studies), and with The Yo Si Puedo program.  She taught Yo Si Puedo methodological seminars in Cuba and abroad, training teachers who will run and advise, the program in different countries. 

She was an on-site Yo Si Puedo adviser for two years in the states of Nayarit and Guerrero, Mexico, where she received awards and was included in a book published in that country.

In April 2013, she lectured at four US universities in Ohio, Wisconsin and Tennessee, and has received numerous awards and decorations from national institutions in Cuba.  Ms. Campos is coming to the US, in part, at the invitation of Pennsylvania State in University Park to present at an Adult Literacy Conference organized by Goodling Institute for Research in Family Literacy.

Pending the granting of her US visa, she may come a bit early and stay longer. If you are interested in hosting her to your city and/or university, and can commit to coordinate logistics and finances, please let us know.

Each city would have to purchase Luisa’s airfare from the previous city, and guarantee her food, lodging, local transportation, a respectable per diem and/or honorarium.

Current itinerary for Luisa Campos
April 19 (approximate) Fly HAV-MIA (Tentative depending on invitations)
April 21 - 23 University of New Mexico - Albuquerque, NM
April 24 - 26 Penn State Behrend - Erie, PA
April 27 - 29 (or 30) Event at Penn State at Goodling Institute for Research in Family Literacy - University Park, PA

Possible itinerary after PA
May 2 - 5 University of Memphis
5 - 10 Minneapolis-St. Paul
10 - 13 Bloomington, IN
13 - 20 Baltimore/DC
20 - 26 OPEN
May 26 - June 2 New York City (Hosts: various - LASA underway - parallel events with the US Women and Cuba Collaboration & other Cuba organizations)

JUNE IS WIDE OPEN and can stay as long her visa allows 

Return to Havana, depending on additional invitations, pending valid length of US visa


PHOTO: Luisa Campos shows equipment used in the Literacy Campaign. Credit: Bob Fitrakis

 

Post date: Fri, 02/05/2016 - 06:29

By Marybeth Gardam, Corporations v Democracy Issue Committee Chair

With the public and retailers focused on planting season, now’s the perfect time to begin using the Human Right To Health & Safe Food Campaign’s excellent resources and organizing tools.

On the Human Right To Health & Safe Food (HRTH&SF) website link there are sample letters and advice for organizing letter writing campaigns, a leave-behind Infographic Card to explain the toxicity of glyphosate (recently called a “probable human carcinogen” by the World Health Organization), a community survey with “how-to instructions” for organizing, a sample media release, and directions for ordering a kit to test the level of glyphosate in community water supplies and in the breastmilk of local nursing mothers, articles, videos, and much more. 

The INFOGRAPHIC CARDS, printed with WILPF US mini grant support, are available to order at a very nominal cost on the HRTH website link and are excellent to hand to legislators, hardware store managers, Department of Public Works managers, farmers, local lawn care companies, and even neighbors who spray glyphosate in their yards.    These cards have been ordered by over 21 branches so far, some branches ordering as many as 500, and the demand continues.  Use these cards to distribute at these upcoming events:

February 14-21 is Congressional RecessVisit your local senator and representative to ask for a “NO Vote” on the Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP).  Hand them the HRTH&SF Infographic and explain how the TPP will force cooperating nations to purchase GMO seeds, increasing the spread of glyphosate and other toxic herbicides and create more “superweeds” and “superbugs.”

Emphasize that glyphosate is now deemed a “possible human carcinogen” and must be banned from the market to protect public health and our ecosystems. 

(If you also order and hand them the CLIMATE JUSTICE+WOMEN+PEACE Project Infographic Card, you will also tie together the TPP’s impact on climate change, human rights, refugees, resource, conflict, militarism and human trafficking. Order at mbgardam@gmail.com)

March 22 is World Water DayBuild the argument for keeping glyphosate out of our water supplies and water streams.  Don’t forget to raise the issue of old, neglected and decaying water infrastructure as a health threat, and the impact of water privatization as the Flint and Detroit Michigan demonstrates.  This is the direct result of decades of tax cuts for the wealthy that provide less support for basic human services… and it’s often an effort to move towns and municipalities towards water privatization projects. 

April 22, Earth Day, will be celebrated around the world with expos, fairs and festivals.  Use our HRTH&SF Infographic Cards to table and get the message out to people to press for a worldwide ban on Roundup and glyphosate, and to campaign against the TPP, which promotes GMO crops dependent on glyphosate and other dangerous ag chemicals.

LOCAL PARTNERSHIPS EXPAND THE MESSAGE – If you’ve already ordered and used our Infographic Cards in your community, consider ordering more and visiting your local allies to offer them the chance to know about and utilize the cards and tools provided on the HRTH&SF website and the CLIMATE JUSTICE+WOMEN+PEACE pages of the Earth Democracy Committee at the WILPUS website.

Glyphosate has been linked to a variety of serious and life-threatening birth defects and diseases.  It is sprayed ubiquitously on “Roundup Ready” genetically modified food crops and appears in high levels in much of the country’s processed foods, too!   Many nations have banned GMO seeds, crops and herbicides that contain glyphosate.  Monsanto, the maker of Roundup and “Roundup Ready” GMO seeds, has spent millions to promote Roundup, even while aware for decades of the serious health risks it poses.  And Monsanto’s lobbyists have successfully linked Roundup and GMO seeds to foreign trade deals, including the Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP), foreign aid packages and World Bank loans. The Human Right To Health & Safe Food Campaign of WILPF US is tied directly to issues with the TPP, climate change impact, resource conflicts, and food and water shortages that fuel violence and war. his campaign is an excellent example of how local action is tied to global issues. 

 

PHOTO: Gardeners need to be aware of the dangers of glyphosate weed killers.

           

Post date: Thu, 01/14/2016 - 09:48

This members-only webpage was an initiative by the national Nominating Committee for the 2019 board elections. In 2022 we’re updating this webpage, while keeping only the names of the candidates, from the prior information, for historic purposes. (If you would be interested in more information on the Nominating Committee, please contact President@wilpfus.org.)

The goal of this webpage is to provide information to members about WILPF board candidates and Bylaws amendment proposals — all on the same ballot. 

To learn more about the candidates and the Bylaws proposal, you can join in a special webinar on Thursday, November 10, 2022. You’ll hear more about the candidates and the Bylaws amendment proposal — and have the chance to ask questions. That WILPF election information event is November 10 at 5:30 pm PT / 6:30 pm MT / 7:30 pm CT / 8:30 pm ET.

Please click here to register for this one-hour webinar. For further information, see the November 4 members-only eAlert, “Nov. 10. Meet Board Candidates”  Also, you can email Secretary@wilpfUS.org for additional details.

To give you access to more election information, see the following documents to this webpage:

Candidates' Documents

Candidate for Treasurer: Barbara Nielsen
Application

Candidate's Statement
Letters of Recommendation
Resume and/or Activist Bio

Candidate for Program Committee Chair: George Friday
Application

Candidate's Statement
Letters of Recommendation
Resume and/or Activist Bio

If you have questions about election matters, please contact the WILPF US Secretary by emailing Secretary@wilpfUS.org.

Bylaws Amendment Information

  1. Staggered Elections Amendment, Nov. 2022
  2. Staggered Terms and Elections System Chart
  3. Bylaws Amendment Proposal Explanation
  4. 2021 WILPF US Bylaws

 


2019 Board Election Candidates

Candidate for Treasurer: Jan Corderman
Candidate for Program Committee Chair: Joan Goddard
Candidate for Membership Development Committee Chair: Shilpa Pandy

 

 

 

Post date: Tue, 01/05/2016 - 12:17


By Leah Bolger, Drones Quilt Project coordinator

WILPF members have been working hard to raise public awareness about the immorality and illegality of US combat drones.  The Drones Quilt Project is a collective art project which humanizes and memorializes the victims while educating the public.

The exhibit consists of quilts made up of blocks with the names of the drone victims, accompanied by posters with information about drones. There is also a two-sided hand-out for viewers to take with them. 

We need more quilt blocks!  Please consider hosting the exhibit and/or a quilt block-making event.

Several WILPF branches as well as Veterans For Peace chapters have hosted the exhibit, so I would encourage WILPFers to contact other local allied groups to maybe go together to sponsor the exhibit. San Jose Peace & Justice Center has joined with the Peninsula Peace and Justice Center, De Anza College, Los Altos Library, Multifaith Voices for Peace and Justice and several churches to display the quilts. 

I have attached the application for the potential host which outlines their responsibilities, as well as a promotion for those considering sponsoring. Contact Leah Bolger.  leahbolger@comcast.net.

Top Photo: Quilt on display in Corvallis OR is one of 11 quilts created by individuals in the US to build opposition to the drone attacks killing thousands of people in Pakistan, Afghanistan, Yemen and other countries.

Bottom Photo: Quilt block memorializes the mother of a 3-year-old girl and includes the name of the designer.

 

Post date: Tue, 01/05/2016 - 12:06


By Ellen Thomas and Carol Urner, co-chairs of the Disarm/End Wars Issue Committee

We launch the first of three tours January 20 with a focus on abolishing nuclear weapons and learning about WILPF branch projects and concerns. We start on the West Coast and are gathering invitations from Southeast and Midwest branches for spring tours.

We will be promoting the Nuclear Weapons Abolition and Economic and Energy Conversion Act (H.R. 1976). We are hoping and offering to visit the local Congressional office of progressive representatives with WILPFers and friends.

See the alert which Roots Action and World Beyond War helped WILPF send to thousands of activists.  Send a letter to your own Representative NOW, regardless of his/her political persuasion. We need to initiate constructive and civil dialogue with everyone.

In California, branches and members are now working on solidifying dates and venues for our itinerary. We will be in Southern California from January 20 to 24 with a Los Angeles public community meeting on January 23 and additional meetings with the new branch in San Diego and with members in Whittier and Los Angeles Metro.

We are scheduled for a community meeting organized by Santa Cruz Branch on January 31. Before and after that date we are invited to visit Fresno Branch in central California and then Monterey, San Jose, Palo Alto, San Francisco and East Bay Branches. They are cooperating in working out the best schedule for all of us.

We will pass through Sacramento around February 4 and will hope to stay a couple of days if convenient for them. Nothing has been solidified yet with our our new WILPF contact there but that is one of our strongest branches.

We look forward to meeting Humboldt County WILPFers in Eureka, and will spend time with Helen Jaccard, our committee member. She is now there with the Golden Rule that sought to stop nuclear weapons testing in the Marshall Islands.

We also are expected at Corvallis OR Branch (around February 10-11) and Portland, Oregon (12-13). Our Ashland contact has moved but we still hope to meet with some members there. They do wonderful work with Mayors for Peace and put great creative effort into Hiroshima – Nagasaki week.

By that point we may be in a state of collapse, but hope to summon energies to spend a few days in Washington state. We have contacts in Seattle and would like to explore possibilities of rebuilding a branch there. We would also like to visit Bangor and the naval base there with reportedly the largest collection of deployed nuclear weapons in the world. Those weapons are on Trident submarines, some of which are constantly patrolling the Pacific, including very close to the long Chinese and Russian coasts. Those weapons are always ready for doomsday, whether it comes by accident or design.

We are peace builders determined to abolish these weapons from our planet.

We will also share resources from WILPF Reaching Critical Will on exciting new forces at work among the vast majority of nations seeking an end to nuclear weapons and wars. Present and former WILPF staffers --Ray Acheson, Beatrice Fihn, Mia Gandenberger and Susi Snyder – are at the heart of this amazing effort by NGOs and the UN General Assembly to ban nuclear weapons. They believe this process can press the nine nuclear powers to abandon their expanding nuclear programs and finally join in negotiating the comprehensive abolition treaty we all demand. This is a creative process in which we can actively participate.

Of course we want to do more than share from our perspective. We want to listen to WILPFers everywhere share their own concerns, projects and visions. All of us are engaged in facets of projects together. We will report our impressions back to the Program Committee to augment the very useful branch survey prepared by Marybeth Gardam for all of us to use. We will be bringing resources from the other Issue Committees as well.  All of them want to support and stimulate branch work.

We plan to blog along the way. 

You can contact us on the road by email or phone.  See you soon, we hope!

Carol Urner carol.disarm@gmail.com   cell: 503-320-9108

Ellen Thomas et@prop1.org   cell:  202-210-3886

 

Photo: Ellen Thomas and Carol Urner (seated) send greetings from Des Moines Peace Garden. credit Jan Hill

 

Post date: Tue, 01/05/2016 - 12:02


By Nancy Price

Reporters praised the Paris climate agreement as a “global turn from fossil fuels” and “major leap for mankind.”  Oscar Reyes, Institute for Policy Studies, writes that “the main text of the agreement is long on rhetoric and short on action.” 

Thanks to Jeri Bodemar of the Santa Cruz Branch who called to my attention to Oscar Reyes’ extremely important and concise critique “Seven Wrinkles in the Paris Climate Deal.”  Based this critique, all I can say is…

It is shocking
how far the United States was willing to go

to ensure adoption of a weak, ineffective agreement
in order to protect the global fossil fuel and nuclear energy industry.  

It was the huge number and diversity of the global grassroots climate justice and democracy movements mobilized in Paris that made a great difference in at least getting the 1.5 degree C benchmark recognized, holding  “The People vs. Exxon Fossil Fuel Cover-Up”  and Rights of Nature” Tribunals,  creating artful actions and protests even when these were banned and risking arrest. By converging in Paris, all these groups could solidify their global coordination and mutual commitments for on-going action. You can review Democracy Now’s excellent coverage of the inside and outside events in Paris here.

Below, I briefly summarize Reyes’ points, but first I urge each of you to read his short article  and then order our newCLIMATE JUSTICE+WOMEN+PEACE”  Infographic Card that is both  downloadable/printable and available in bulk printed quantities for branches and members to order for free, while only paying for shipping. Click here for information on ordering.

Use this Card at every opportunity for education and mobilization, especially during the coming weeks when the national movement to defeat the TransPacific Partnership (TPP)  moves into high gear with President Obama’s January 12 State of the Union Address, when he’ll promote the TPP and his expected February 4 New Zealand trip to sign the TPP with other heads of state.

The TPP will be a major driver of global warming and climate chaos.

Carbon pollution from international shipping and flights that will accelerate under the TPP doesn’t count and neither does carbon pollution from the military!

Here, briefly, are Oscar Reyes’ critical points about the Paris Climate Deal.

1. Its targets are ambitious, but they’re unlikely to be met.  The agreement promises to “pursue efforts to limit to 1.5 degrees C“ or 2.7 degrees F, which is even more aggressive than the 2-degree C baseline promoted by scientists to prevent the ‘fossil fuels by 2030.

But, this new agreement doesn’t even take effect until 2020, when the chance to achieve the 1.5-degree C goal will have already gone, unless the world’s largest economies drastically change course.

Going into Paris, 176 or the world’s 195 countries stated what they intended to do to address climate change. Even if these promises were met, the world would still be heading for 3 degrees C or more of global warming taking us into dangerous territory, chain reactions and unforeseen “tipping” points from which we and the planet could not - might not recover from.

2. There are no legally binding targets to cut climate pollution. Countries are free to make promises, there’s no penalty if they break them. All they have to do is come back in 2023 and every 5 years to say they’ll do more. This is all promise – no action.

3. No new money is promised to address climate changes in developing countries. By some calculations, already $64 billion is provided and promises in Paris could take it to $94 billion. The estimated need, according to the Climate Fairshares tool is upwards of $400 billion annually!

4. Climate reparations are off limits. The U.S. categorically refused to consider any proposal for reparations for the damage rich countries’ emissions have already caused. The U.S. argued that the Paris agreement should insure wealthy countries against any future claims for “liability or compensation” for the loss or damage caused by climate change (the wealthy countries being historically the largest emitters and drivers of climate change that impacts the poorer countries). This was finally struck from the main agreement, but remains in the accompanying guidance as to how it will be implemented. 

5. It doesn’t tell oil, gas, or coal producers to leave fossil fuels in the ground. Avoiding runaway climate change means leaving over 80% of the world’s remaining fossil fuel reserves in the ground.  “False solutions” such a bioenergy and carbon  capture and storage are promoted, which includes  “reforestation,” replacing forests with tree plantations for bioenergy, which actually means kicking indigenous peoples and forest communities off their land for corporations to profit.

6. Opens up same carbon trading loopholes that undermined the Kyoto Protocol. It allowed rich countries to buy “carbon credits,” for example buying tracts of forest, from poorer countries instead of reducing their own emissions.

7. Carbon pollution from international shipping and flights doesn’t count. Emissions from international flights are on course to triple by 2050 and shipping emissions to quadruple, but that pollution doesn’t count as greenhouse gas emissions, according to the Paris Agreement.


Photo: Barbara Clancy at November 16 No TPP March, Washington, DC. Credit: Nancy Price

 

Post date: Tue, 01/05/2016 - 11:51


by Darien De Lu, Elections Subcommittee

Time is running out!  Nominations you make of other people for the WILPF US Board are due by Jan. 10 and complete application materials from candidates must be received by Jan. 24. 

Listen to the recording of the December informational conference call and get full details at.the WILPF US elections webpage.  This year's election offers a wider range of choices for potential candidates -- both a large number of board openings and a variety of board terms.  You can nominate a WILPFer for any of these positions or you can apply yourself, if you qualify. See below for the positions and terms coming up for election.

If you missed the Dec. 17 conference call on the topic of the workings of the board, you can find out more about what board roles entail by listening to the one-hour recording of that national conference call featuring current and past board members.  To listen, simply call (641) 715-3669 (standard toll charges, depending on your phone service, may apply) and putting in the access code: 107284 to hear a play-back of the call.

MAKE SURE MEMBERSHIP STATUS IS CURRENT – candidates for the board must be paid members for at least the previous 24 months. Confirm your membership status by contacting the national office.

So far, the Elections Subcommittee has been in touch with eight potential candidates, but we have received no application materials.

Perhaps you're part of a branch that is interested in helping by counting ballots?  If so, or if you have still more questions not answered by the website above and its linked document, please email nominations@wilpfus.org.

Be sure to mark your calendar for the meet-the-candidates call, Saturday, Feb. 20, 2016, at 7 pm EST, 6 pm CST, 5 pm MST, and 4 pm PST.  The call-in number will be (641)715-3670 (standard toll charges), and the participant access code is 107284.  Do you have a question you'd like to ask?  Please send it to us at the email address above.

Service on the national board requires adherence to various terms and conditions of board service; please refer to the application form.  Specific board job descriptions are available, in a document linked on the site, for all of the following openings:

Complete three-year term positions

        1. At-large Board Member (does not chair any board standing committee)

        2. Development Committee Chair

        3. Nominating Committee Chair

        4. President

Positions filling in the remaining two years of a term

        5. At-large Board Member (does not chair any board standing committee)

        6. Program Committee Chair

Position filling in the remaining one year of a term

        7. Treasurer/Finance Committee Chair, elected to complete the final year of the current three-year term

 

For both nominations and applications, please refer to the Board Application Packet & Standards.
 
 Do you have questions about the duties of particular board positions?  Please see the Board Job Descriptions.

 

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