NEWS

Post date: Sat, 03/05/2016 - 09:15

Alexandra Hoffman and Judy Bonnell-Wenzel of Ann Arbor WILPF demonstrate on behalf of Flint residents. Credit: Odile Hugonot Haber

By Nancy Price, Earth Democracy Committee

World Water Day was created in 1993, one year after the Rio de Janeiro Earth Summit. Plan an action or event now and post to the UN World Water Day global map. This year’s theme is the Power of Water and Jobs  – transforming people’s lives.  Read more about World Water Day , ideas for actions and news events. 

The UN website explains that on World Water Day people everywhere show that they care and have the power to make a difference. This year many will focus on the power that water and jobs have to transform people’s lives. Nearly all jobs are related to water and those that ensure its safe delivery. But today, millions of people who work in water are often not recognized or even protected by basic labor rights.”

Of course building large and small water projects and wells in urban and rural areas across the world can make a difference in people’s lives and lead to the realization of the human right to water deemed by the UN a prerequisite to realization of all other rights.

Yet, water privatization, unchecked water pollution from sources of all kinds,  regulatory failure, corporate and political corruption, budget cuts and racial injustice can drastically impact delivery of water safe for personal and household use in both first, developing and third world countries. This is not just a matter of labor rights, but of government policy, budget priorities and political will.   

On World Water Day plan to initiate or join a solidarity action in support of the human right to water in your or a nearby community where needed.

Here’s an example from the Ann Arbor Branch. As Odile Hugonot Haber reports, on several occasions from January to February she and some members went door-to-door in Flint to alert mothers that even water that was filtered should not be used by pregnant or nursing mothers and children or by anyone with cancer. Everyone should only drink bottled water.

They also demonstrated a few times in front of Michigan Governor  Rick Snyder’s $2 million condo in Ann Arbor calling for his resignation and a criminal investigation.

They were joined by women activists from Flint who told them, “If you think this is not coming to your town, you are mistaken.” 

Now we know from recent reports that Flint is not the only case of lead poisoning of water. Reports show lead poisoning in water is more extensive nationwide, across the country, many types of pollution have compromised or now threaten our drinking water sources. In fact, as Odile reports that Ann Arbor’s drinking water has been threatened since the 1980s by a slow-moving underground plume of the industrial solvent 1,4-dioxane used at a nearby plant and very little remediation has been accomplished.
 

World Water Day events in Fresno

By Jean Hays

Fresno’s Earth Democracy Group is planning a two-part celebration – with a film showing on Friday, March 18, and a Workshop on Saturday, March 19.  Please join us!  Mother Earth and each of her fragile inhabitants need all of us right now!!  

On March 18, WILPF co-sponsors with the CineCulture film series class at California State University, Fresno, a showing of the “don’t miss” environmental thriller Racing Extinction, from the people who gave us The Cove. Racing Extinction addresses the fact that species are disappearing rapidly due to many man-made conditions. One example, as the film's narrator states: "The wildlife trade is second only to the drug market in the world; it's that lucrative."  

The next day,  WILPF hosts the Enlightened Apocalypse: Paying It Forward to Save Mother Earth free workshop.

“Don't it always seem to go -That you don't know what you've got -‘Til it's gone"

These words from Joni Mitchell’s song, Big Yellow Taxi,” help provide the theme of our March 19 Earth Democracy workshop that will start with the concept of what the Earth would look like with no living thing left on it. We will then step back to take a look at what actions caused this total destruction of life, and then examine what we can do now to change conditions so such extinction will not happen.

Presenters will include a representative of Valley First Nations people and local experts Steve Haze, Lloyd Carter and Walt Shubin.  The local examples of Tulare Lake, the San Joaquin River and the dams that have and will destroy our delicate balance of nature will be topics of discussion as well as others brought to the table by workshop participants.

We will begin the workshop with an outdoor opening ceremony by members of a local tribe who will then open the discussion on Indigenous philosophy of our relationship to Mother Earth. Next we will hear stories from the other presenters, including parts of a short film and commentary on Tulare: The Phantom Lake and then break into discussion groups with the hope of coming up with next steps to stop further destruction of our environment and restore what has been damaged. Sound like a tall order? As the Friday film narrator says: "Better to light one candle than to curse the darkness.  Maybe someone else with a candle will find you and, together, you will find others."  

Come to see the Friday Racing Extinction film, then attend our workshop the next day and light your candle, along with other workshop participants.  Imagine the Earth coming back from the brink, a reverse apocalypse, a vibrant, lush, green home to all our precious species of plants and animals, and humans included.   In the days before the film and workshop, keep your eyes open for night projections of photos of endangered species on buildings near you! 

If you have questions call Jean Hays at 559-313-7674.

Post date: Sat, 03/05/2016 - 09:01

Photo: UN Women/Ryan Brown

The 2016 theme for International Women’s Day is “Planet 50-50 by 2030: Step It Up for Gender Equality.”.March 8 is the official date, and WILPF US branches will be celebrating the day throughout the month.

The United Nations observance will reflect on how to accelerate the 2030 Agenda, building momentum for the effective implementation of the new Sustainable Development Goals. It will equally focus on new commitments under UN Women’s Step It Up initiative,  and other existing commitments on gender equality, women’s empowerment and women’s human rights.

See more at http://www.unwomen.org/en/news/in-focus/international-womens-day
 

Flowers and suffrage book in Maine

By Christine DeTroy, Maine WILPF

Maine WILPF members will hand out flowers to women in the center of Brunswick on March 8, each stem with WILPF and International women’s Day information attached. On March 13, the author of Voting Down the Rose will recount the inspiring story of suffrage activism.

Maine author Anne B. Gass will speak at 4:30 pm in the Curtis Memorial Library and participate in a discussion of the role of women in today’s world. The complete title is Voting Down the Rose: Florence Brooks Whitehouse and Maine’s Fight for Woman Suffrage.

The event is sponsored by PeaceWorks and the League of Women Voters, along with the Maine WILPF Branch.  For details, contact Christine DeTroy  frieden@gwi.net

Los Angeles to hear publisher

Attorney Sharon Kyle, publisher of the LA Progressive. laprogressive.com will address the International Women’s Day luncheon of WILPF Los Angeles on March 12. She serves on the board of the Black Commentator and on the board of the ACLU of Southern California.

The luncheon at the Taix Restaurant will be provided at half price for guests 25 and under. See the bulletin for details. Reservations at 213-891-4517 or wilpfla@gmail.com.

 

 

 

Post date: Sat, 03/05/2016 - 08:41


Text by Carol Urner,  Photos by Ellen Thomas, Disarm/End Wars Issue Committee

Nine WILPF Branches in California and three in Oregon participated in the Nuclear-Free Future learning and action program presented by Carol Urner and Ellen Thomas on behalf of the WILPF US Disarm/End Wars Issue Committee between January 21 and February 22.  Seven delegations have already visited local offices of their representatives in support of HR 1976 -- the only Congressional bill on abolishing nuclear weapons.  All branches began preparing for future face-to-face visits with their representatives. 

The tour was co-sponsored by Proposition One Campaign which had received a grant in memory of Jay Marx, who helped us so much in the past.   You can ask questions or invite Carol and Ellen to meet with your branch on any future tour by contacting Ellen Thomas et@prop1.org  Call or text 202-210-3886.

Carol Urner reports:

We were welcomed with enthusiasm and hospitality way beyond our expectations. We were invited to hold meetings and give presentations to members and friends from Los Angeles, Fresno, Santa Cruz, East Bay, San Francisco, San Jose, Palo Alto/Peninsula, Sacramento and Humboldt County WILPF branches.   Jackie Cabasso of Western States Legal Foundation (and WILPF) and Marylia Kelley of Tri-Valley CAREs (and Alliance for Nuclear Accountability) joined us in Oakland, where the room was packed with hard-core activists from around the Bay Area.

After Sacramento came Arcata and Eureka, for more meetings and a visit to The Golden Rule boat crew.

Carol visits with member of Golden
Rule crew

In Oregon we had a productive meeting in Ashland, two meetings sponsored by the Corvallis Branch and almost an hour slot in the Portland Branch regular business meeting plus a purely social gathering.  We thought most of these meetings went well except two where we presented immediately after a long journey and were not in top form.  We also visited Washington State and gained one new branch in California.

We met individually with two members from the struggling San Diego Branch which sorely needs our care and support.  They arranged two Congressional visits with local staff for the four of us. Betty Traynor of San Francisco Branch and Joan Goddard of San Jose Branch arranged five such visits with WILPF constituents, including to Zoe Lofgren (in person), and local district office staff of Nancy Pelosi, Mike Honda, Anna Eshoo and Jackie Speier.

Constituents took the lead, and Ellen Thomas and I added background information on the bill and on the powerful new initiatives for abolition from 158 of the 193 UN members.  All who participated were great and we now watch for the needed follow-up.

In San Luis Obispo, we also met with one non-WILPF group in which a sole WILPFer, Liz Apfelberg, actively participates.  Mothers for Peace are doggedly pursuing the Department of Energy in the Federal courts in their effort to shut down Diablo Canyon, the last remaining nuclear power plant in California.  They all certainly deserve whatever support we can give. Their cause is our cause as well and we can learn much from their work.

And a visit to Ojai near Santa Barbara netted a whole new branch for WILPF!  Eleven new members are already registered, and I will be present for their launching and first formal meeting in early March. We hope to introduce them to all of you next month.

We also traveled to Washington State where we hoped to investigate possibilities for resurrecting the Seattle Branch or for starting a new one elsewhere. We made no real progress in that, but met some wonderful people with whom we can cooperate in promoting nuclear abolition and HR 1976. We learned much from Leonard Eiger, who arranged two visits for constituents and ourselves to visit Congressional aides of Representatives Suzan DelBene (Bothell) and Denny Heck (Tacoma). Leonard heads communications for Ground Zero, the watch dog outpost next to the Bangor submarine base just 20 miles west of Seattle. There the largest collection of nuclear warheads in the United States awaits doomsday in the nuclear submarines stationed there. We stayed two nights at Ground Zero and in the daytime explored the area with a local nonviolent activist who had many stories of courage and persistence to share.

Helen Jaccard upper left, with Veterans for Peace in Seattle

The last visit of our trip was with our committee member Helen Jaccard. She is now working for Veterans for Peace, arranging ports of call for the storied Golden Rule sailing ship which was built in the 1950s by Quakers determined to stop US nuclear testing in the Marshall Islands by sailing into the testing zone. It was sunk, however, in a Hawaii harbor before the journey could begin. Now, rebuilt by Veterans for Peace, it is sailing for nuclear weapons abolition. We attended a VFP meeting with Helen and presented HR 1976. We asked that it also be promoted as part of the journey. It is the only nuclear weapons abolition bill now in Congress, and outlines a program similar to what President Obama proposed in Prague.  It does not ask for unilateral disarmament but simply that the US Administration lead the global effort for nuclear weapons abolition rather than lead a new devastating nuclear arms race, as at present.

Now we rest, catch up, evaluate and learn from successes and failures on our first tour promoting HR 1976 as we prepare for similar travel on the East Coast in April. On the East Coast we intend to participate in Alliance for Nuclear Accountability DC Days http://www.ananuclear.org April 17-20, and we invite others of you to join us there. Please contact us about this and other details via Ellen Thomas et@prop1.org

in peace, Carol Urner  
cell: 503 320 9108

A World Without Nuclear Weapons – Community TV interview with Carol and Ellen in Santa Cruz – January 30, 2016

 

PHOTO (top of page): Carol Urner at Portland Branch meeting 2/13/16

Post date: Sat, 03/05/2016 - 08:26

By Odile Hugonot Haber, Middle East Committee

The No Way to Treat a Child campaign aims to expose the practice and impacts of Israeli military detention on Palestinian children to the US public and elected officials in order to hold Israel accountable to international laws and to build support for ending the military occupation. 

Israel is the only country in the world that automatically prosecutes children in military courts that lack basic fundamental fair trial guaranties. Each year 500 to 700 Palestinian children living in the occupied West Bank under prolonged military occupation are arrested by the Israeli forces and prosecuted in a Israeli military detention system that is notorious the systematic and wide spread ill treatment of the Palestinian children. 

We urge branches to protest the treatment of Palestinian children and get more information on this campaign.

Hamas Guide ​

The Middle East Committee has sent the Hamas guide for study to all branches of WILPF. You can find the guide online: or you can order it from the Boston office from Ariane Blondin. ablondin@wilpfus.org or 617-266-0999

On page 19 of the online guide you can see a WILPF Action Plan.  We urge you to report where you are with this study and whether you have already reached your elected officials and other organizations.

We are working on enlarging this campaign. Please let us know of your results.

Reach out to the Middle East Issue Committee representatives for this campaign:

Barbara Taft: Beejayssite@yahoo.com
Libby Frank: LMFrank2@comcast.net
West Coast: Ellen Rosser:ellen.rosser@gmail.com

 

PHOTO: Israeli soldiers and Palestinian child. Photo: ISM, palsolidarity.org,Creative Commons license

 

Post date: Sat, 03/05/2016 - 08:22


By Helen Jaccard, Disarm / End Wars Issues Committee

Join us March 27-April 2, 2016 at Creech Air Force Base, Indian Springs, Nevada for a 2nd national mobilization of nonviolent resistance to shut down killer drone operations in Afghanistan, Syria, Iraq, Pakistan, Yemen, Somalia and everywhere.

Special Events: 

  • Wednesday March 30, 6-9 pm Inside Drone Warfare: Perspectives of Whistleblowers, Families of Drone Victims and Their Lawyers, sponsored by Veterans for Peace
    Moot Court Room, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Law School
  • Thursday March 31, David Rovics concert

Last year nearly 150 activists joined us from 20 different states across the country, including over 50 veterans. In a very successful resistance action, we were able to interrupt business as usual for nearly an hour, with 34 activists ultimately arrested. Let's make SHUT DOWN CREECH 2016 an even more powerful stance against illegal drone killing. Please join us, and help spread the word. Together we are PEACE!

We will hold vigils daily, Monday-Friday, March 28 to April 1, during rush hour commute: 6-8 am and 3-5 pm.

Participants who can only join part of the week are urged to participate Wednesday.-Friday, March 30 - April 1, when we hope to have the largest resistance....mass mobilization.

More Information at shutdowncreech.blogspot.com

Sponsored By:
CODEPINK: Women For Peace, Veterans For Peace. Nevada Desert Experience. Voices for Creative Nonviolence

Why we protest at Creech:
In 2005, Creech Air Force Base secretly became the first base in the United States to carry out illegal, remotely controlled assassinations using the MQ-1 Predator drones, and in 2006, the more advanced Reaper drones were added to its arsenal. Creech drone personnel sit behind computers in the desert north of Las Vegas and kill "suspects" thousands of miles away. Recent independent research indicates that the identity of only one out of 28 victims of US drone strikes is known beforehand. Though officials deny it, the majority killed by drones are civilians.

In 2014, it was leaked that the CIA's criminal drone assassination program, officially a separate operation from the Air Force's, has been piloted all along by Creech's super-secret Squadron 17. In November 2015, four Air Force drone veterans who were based at Creech wrote to President Obama, “We came to the realization that the innocent civilians we were killing only fueled the feelings of hatred that ignited terrorism and groups like ISIS, while also serving as a fundamental recruitment tool similar to Guantanamo Bay. This administration and its predecessors have built a drone program that is one of the most devastating driving forces for terrorism and destabilization around the world.”

Since 2009 dozens of activists have been arrested for allegedly trespassing at Creech, in attempts to stop the indiscriminate killing and burning of innocent people by drones.

The US drone program is rapidly proliferating as air bases are being converted to drone bases across the US and abroad, but Creech remains the primary air base in US state-sponsored global terrorism. Creech is where the killer drone program started--it is where we shall end it.

  • We must put an end to this desecration of our Mother Earth and all creatures who inhabit it.
  • We must put an end to the dehumanization of lives from Ferguson to Palestine to Syria and Yemen.
  • We must close all foreign US military bases. Money for human needs.
  • We must put an end to drone murder, drone surveillance and global militarization.

See updates at http://shutdowncreech.blogspot.com


PHOTO: Protestors at Creech Air Force Base near Las Vegas. Photo taken March 2015, courtesy CodePink Women for Peace

 

Post date: Sat, 03/05/2016 - 08:13


By Barbara Taft, Greater Phoenix Branch treasurer

Greater Phoenix Branch has just put out its first newsletter, in which we told about our production of Most Dangerous Women, as well as our recent tabling at the Mesa Martin Luther King Day event.

Since then, we tabled at Arizona State University during the Forum and Festival (previously known as the teach-in) sponsored by the campus Local to Global Justice. This year's theme was racial justice. We passed out literature, sold buttons and peace beads, and chatted with the people in attendance. We also got sign-ups for our mailing list and volunteers for our next event.

That event is something that we will be doing jointly with our local peace group, Arizona Alliance for Peace and Justice (AAPJ) on the weekend of March 11, 12, and 13. AAPJ's Peace Kids subgroup has been staffing a booth at the Scottsdale Arts Festival for several years.

We will be becoming the lead group in this ongoing project, which is held in the kids' area of the festival, known as Imagine Nation.  We will be working with the children there to help them fold peace cranes, while telling them about Sadako and the Thousand Paper Cranes. This year's theme for the kids' area is "Art is Everywhere," and since folding papers cranes is like an engineering task, we will represent "engineering for peace."

We're also still thinking about how and where to present some excerpts from the play. One of the professors we know at ASU thinks she may be able to get us into some classrooms in a variety of departments to do this. We could do some of the shorter dialogues along with a couple of songs, thus enabling people to learn about some of the great women represented in the play and about WILPF's ongoing work. And we’re thinking of starting a Raging Grannies group to bring in more members.

We recently showed Pray the Devil Back to Hell, the Abigail Disney production about Liberia that is part of the Women, War and Peace series.  We hope to show some of the other films from the series in the future. We're looking forward to growing our branch and we're trying to explore ways to get more young people and women of color to join, as we think one of the greatest assets we have is the diversity of this community.

For info on the branch, contact Barbara Taft at 480-380-6325.
 

PHOTO: Member Josephine Sbrocca (standing) and branch chair Floris Freshman chat with a visitor to the WILPF table at the Martin Luther King Jr. Day Festival in Mesa.  Credit: Mike Taft

 

Post date: Sat, 03/05/2016 - 08:10


By Deborah Livingston, WILPF Tucson Branch Co-chair

Members of the Tucson Branch demonstrated against the Trans Pacific Partnership at a Congressional office in February and tabled at the 34th Annual Peace Fair, whose theme was Compassion for Refugees & Migrants, All One World.

The Raging Grannies sang at the February 27th fair, and the branch shared a tent set up by the Jobs With Justice group. Many of the songs were written or adapted by Lee Stanfeld.

Many people in our branch have been working hard to stop TPP and also many have been involved with the very active End Citizens United group, Corporations v Democracy. They took part in the February 19 anti-TPP demonstration in front of Representative Martha McSally's office.  About 50 people came out to join us. A few WILPFers had a meeting with McSally's staff after the demonstration.

Coming up March 20th we are having our Eighth Annual Gaza and Palestine event called "Challah for Gaza." We prepare a delicious French Toast Brunch and invite the community to join us in helping to bring clean water systems to Palestinians via the MAYA Project of the Middle East Children's Alliance. Check out the MECA website http://www.mecaforpeace.org

We are now awaiting the Earth Democracy banner that we ordered to use at our World Water Day and Earth Day Events.
 

PHOTO: At Congressional office of Martha McSally. Catherine Mullaugh holding a sign and Mary DeCamp in the background wears Flush TPP costume made by Margo Newhouse.

Post date: Sat, 03/05/2016 - 08:06

WILPF US  remembers former board members, Ethel M. Jensen and Georgia Pinkel..

Ethel M. Jensen, 1921-2015

Longtime WILPF peace activist Ethel M. Jensen died on November 5, 2015. Ethel's life included an undergraduate education at Ohio State University, wartime marriage to Joe in 1944, birthing and raising four children, and redefining herself in mid-life starting with an MA in Education from Villanova University in 1973. But the predominant themes in her life were her commitment to peace, civil liberties, and to the rights and dignity of women. In fact, she would argue that the ideals of peace and civil liberties are inextricably bound to those of feminism.

Ethel first became active in WILPF in Dayton, Ohio, in the mid-1950s. When the family moved to Pennsylvania in 1962, she was eager to locate the local WILPF branch, certain that it would be through WILPF that she would find her new closest friends. She was right. At her first meeting in Norristown, she met (among others) long-time WILPF president Kay Camp. For the next forty years Kay and Ethel would be bound at the hip. Ethel and Kay traveled to the Soviet Union in 1968, in an effort to promote  peace by building international bridges of friendship among women.

Ethel served on the WILPF board of directors, and in 1989 was the program planning chair of the national WILPF conference in Madison, Wisconsin. It was during these years that Ethel attended Earlham College as both visiting professor and student, earning a certificate in Peace Studies. The Earlham experience expanded Ethel's understanding of the relationship between feminism and peace.

After husband Joe's retirement from the ministry, Ethel and Joe embarked on a new life chapter, living and working on campus at five different colleges around the country. At Linfield College, Ethel organized a four-day international conference, “Now is the Time: Finding Peace in the Nuclear Age,” assembling multiple recipients of the Nobel Peace Prize.

Ethel and Joe eventually ended up at Dickinson College in Carlisle, PA. It was there that they felt the most at home and decided to finally “retire”. In 2005, in the face of advanced age and Joe's failing health, they moved to a retirement community in Hanover, PA. Joe died five years later.

Ethel was an exceptional listener and had a bottomless capacity for empathy. Many people over many decades have considered her to be their best friend. But none were more important to Ethel than her friends in WILPF. In her own words, WILPF was “my life-line.”

A memorial service is to be held at 11:00 AM on June 11, 2016, at the Second Presbyterian Church at 528 Garland Drive, Carlisle, PA. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions can be made to WILPF, 11 Arlington Street, Boston, MA 02116.
 

Georgia Lee (Jackson) Pinkel, 1942-2016

Georgia Pinkel served on the board of WILPF US as program chair and wrote the Branches column for Peace & Freedom magazine for many years. She attended the 1995 Beijing International Women’s Conference.  She sang with the Raging Grannies and enjoyed participating in the Grannies’ Unconventions.

She was president of the congregation and a member of the choir at the Unitarian Universalist Church of Vancouver, WA, where a memorial service took place on February 27. She is survived by two sons, a grandson and a great-granddaughter.

Georgia was born in Chicago IL and graduated from Knox College in Galesburg with a degree in education. She later studied at the University of Louisville KY (computer science) and Clark College (women’s studies).

 

Post date: Fri, 02/05/2016 - 08:08

By Brandy Robinson, Advancing Human Rights Issue Committee

The NGO Committee on the Status of Women and others officially started Cities for CEDAW campaign in 2013. The US is one of few countries not to ratify CEDAW – the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women. 

This ambitious campaign’s goal was to seek 100 cities to adopt CEDAW as a local ordinance by December 2015.  Many NGOs and civil societies took on this challenge. With these efforts, cities such as Louisville and other cities adopted CEDAW as local law. Many other cities are in the process of implementing CEDAW as local law. For a complete list of CEDAW cities and those in support of CEDAW, please see the list.

The WILPF US Advancing Human Rights Committee and WILPF US branches also participated in these efforts. Pittsburgh, PA, and Portland, OR, branches have been championing these efforts in their local areas. The Portland Branch helped in co-founding the Oregon CEDAW Coalition with the goal of bringing together local and statewide organizations to advocate and educate Oregon’s public and local and state governmental entities on how CEDAW would be beneficial for Oregon’s economy and overall quality of life for everyone. The Coalition’s efforts resulted in proclamations from Oregon Governor Kate Brown and the cities of Eugene and Portland mayors.

Currently, NGO-CSW will host a CSW60 Cities for CEDAW forum in March 2016 and there will be several other panel events on Cities for CEDAW at CSW60. Due to the overwhelming interest in the Cities for CEDAW campaign, it is encouraged that NGOs and CSOs join into the NGO-CSW’s CSW60 panel events on Cities for CEDAW. Please contact citiesforcedaw@winaction.org, if your NGO or CSO are interested in joining into these panel events.

US Senate Bill 224 Women, Peace and Security Act of 2015

With the recent 15th anniversary of UNSCR 1325 and the recent 1325 Peace Forum in October 2015 and WILPF US significance in helping to bring a voice to the NGO consultation component and the “human security” framework in the US National Action Plan process, WILPF US, its branches and supporters have a great opportunity to get the United States Senate Bill 224 Women, Peace and Security Act of 2015 passed.

Senator Barbara Boxer of California has been a champion for the Women, Peace and Security Act, sponsoring the Women, Peace and Security Act since her 2012 introduction. She has helped in gaining bipartisan support on a hotly debated topic and now has reintroduced this bill. With this year being an election year, it is possible to get this bill the attention it deserves.

What can you do?

There are several things you can do. Pick one, a few or all; whatever the case, you can make this happen!

  • Contact or write your representative, senator or relevant stakeholders and tell them you want Senate Bill 224 Women, Peace and Security Act of 2015 passed. Please click here to contact your senator or representative or tell them here.
  • Spread the word in your branches and community and explain how the law will create inclusion of women in security and governmental leadership and emphasize that it is needed today more than ever. Here is a Women, Peace and Security Act of 2015 fact sheet from a fellow NGO working on this issue.
  • Join WILPF US Advancing Human Rights (AHR) Committee and work on this effort and more, Contact AHR. bln.sf.ca@gmail
  • Start a WILPF US delegation to Washington, D.C., give testimony, advocate behalf of on WILPF US  and for the women around the world to make known that women do matter, do your part to make the Women, Peace and Security Act a reality in the U.S.! Interested? Contact the AHR Committee. bln.sf.ca@gmail.


GRAPHIC: Infographic by Brandy Robinson, WILPF US Advancing Human Rights Issue Committee. Status of Women Data 2015 National Report: Political Participation, available at http://statusofwomendata.org/explore-the-data/political-participation/po... for figures by states in the US.

 

Post date: Fri, 02/05/2016 - 07:56

By Hattie Nestel

The idea for the MLK, Jr Walk, over the January 16-18 weekend, to oppose the Kinder Morgan pipeline was a sudden inspiration, when a lightbulb went off in my head  on a short walk in mid-December opposing the same pipeline.

I reported on this 429-mile $5 billion pipeline project in the September eNews. It is estimated to be operational by Nov. 2018, to 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, changed after political and public outcry, is now routed from Northern Massachusetts into southern New Hampshire before coming back to a gas hub at Dracut, 30 miles north of Boston.

I first learned about the pipeline in May 2014, and since then I organized walks, lawn-signs and bumper stickers, produced 36 interviews shown on community TV stations of people whose property will be impacted by the pipeline and gigantic compressor stations, and produced “Stop the Pipeline” newscasts.  Still, clearly more was needed to call attention to this uncalled-for environment destroying project to build the political momentum to stop the pipeline. 

The key ingredients for making this walk a great success were getting the Buddhists to agree to lead the three day walk with their drums and chants; the second, was getting the Buddhist nun Sister Clare to write a mission statement to make the connection between Martin Luther King, Jr. and the fight to stop the pipeline, and the third was, before the walk, to get the local newspaper to highlight this action with a long article, Leverett Peace Pagoda Monks to Walk Path of Proposed Pipeline, and then an editorial. 

In our area of Western Massachusetts, almost every town is affected by the pipeline which is mainly for export and corporate greed. All our towns have taken strong positions opposing it, so getting the word out was easy and registrations kept increasing to join in this 34-mile three-day walk in what turned out to be one of the coldest weekends of snow and freezing winds. People came from numerous organizations and from as far away as North Carolina. What’s amazing was how quickly people wanted to help, and help they did! 

Churches hosted us for breakfasts and dinners which were akin to the best gourmet buffet imaginable--huge pots of hot nourishing soup, lasagna casseroles, roasted veggies and desserts to die for. Hot pots of soup also appeared along the route, with gourmet pizzas, hot casseroles and yummy desserts set up on tables in peoples’ yards.

Many non-walkers made themselves available as support drivers who were needed to shuttle cars and drivers to end places and two much needed shuttles in order to shorten the length of the walk down to 11.5 miles a day.

Families came with children, people who could only walk a mile or two managed and spirits were high.  A serious blizzard the first day caused us to delay the walk by two hours and start from a different location, but this did not dampen our spirits. Slippery road surfaces, steep long hills and freezing temperatures with 45 mph gusts of wind on the last day in the hill town of Plainfield was challenging, but we persevered and as I looked back on the line of walkers I saw only beautiful red-cheeked smiling faces. The local paper’s headline put it this way, “Peaceful protesters, undeterred by weather, set off on walk against pipeline.”

We walked a total of 34 miles between a proposed compressor station site in Northfield and a proposed construction pipe yard in Plainfield, MA. All in all, we estimate we had at least 300 walkers spread out over three days. 

Conversations along the way were about how deeply moved the walkers felt walking the beautiful rural landscapes dotted with red barns, cattle and farmlands that would be impacted by construction and right-of-ways.

Many people spoke about how alone and isolated they had felt trying to fight the pipeline  and how much the walk reinvigorated and fortified them to continue the struggle to stop the Kinder Morgan Pipeline from coming through Massachusetts.

The entire budget for the walk was $40 to have two signs made. A side benefit of stopping this pipeline may be helping to shut down fracking in Pennsylvania.

Still more is needed to build the grassroots power, political will, and continued press to stop this.  Our Stop the Pipeline affinity group will have a walk on February 15, President’s Day, in Greenfield, MA, where Berkshire Gas is located, to call for them to stop the “bogus” moratorium against new customers on the grounds that there isn’t enough gas to distribute and thereby justifying the pipeline and to stop contracting with Kinder Morgan for the pipeline. Participants can choose a 5.3 mile walk through Greenfield or a picket at Berkshire Gas’ headquarters. President’s Day in Greenfield should be busy, and our walk should get a lot of attention.

These actions in MA are just part of the growing opposition to fracking and fracking infrastructure projects across the country that some of our WILPF Earth Democracy members are involved with, for example, Lib Hutchby and John Wagner of the North Caroline Triangle Branch.

For information on the pipeline, in interviews and radio programs and organizing this walk, please contact me at hattieshalom [at] verizon.net or call me at 978-790-3074
 


PHOTO: Spirits remained high on the three-day march against the Kinder Morgan pipeline despite freezing temperatures, slippery roads and wind gusts. Credit: Boston Climate Action Network website 

 

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