NEWS

Post date: Wed, 04/05/2017 - 12:54
Great Phoenix Branch

Some of the peace posters produced by young visitors to the Greater Phoenix Branch’s Peace Kids booth at the Scottsdale Arts Festival were hung in the branch’s “art gallery.” Credit: Mike Taft.

By Barbara Taft, Greater Phoenix Branch treasurer

The Greater Phoenix Branch has been busy with tabling and other activities for public exposure, and it’s working. In January, we tabled at the Mesa Martin Luther King Day event, which followed the Mesa MLK parade. Then, on February 25, we tabled at the Forum and Festival (formerly the Teach-in) at Arizona State University, where we distributed our information and talked with students and others about WILPF.

Kevin Greathouse and Barb TaftAt the last minute, we scheduled a meeting featuring Robin Lloyd, who was visiting from Vermont. Several members were interested in hearing her talk about her grandmother, Lola Maverick Lloyd, who was active at the start of WILPF nearly 102 years ago, because Lola was friends with Rosika Schwimmer, a prominent character in “Most Dangerous Women,” which we performed last year. Robin did not disappoint, although we couldn’t provide her with a large audience.

March found us running our Peace Kids booth at the Scottsdale Arts Festival, where we taught kids to make peace cranes and told them (and their parents) the Sadako story. Smaller children colored peace posters, which we posted in an outdoor art gallery. We got a dozen sign-ups from interested women who we hope will want to join our branch, and we had many discussions with others who stopped by, either to learn more or to tell us about their own experiences with WILPF.

We are preparing for the WILPF national solidarity event on April 22. Our member Floris Freshman is an accomplished artist, and she has made us a banner, using the example posted online. But ours is unique. Since we are in the desert, we decided that saguaro cactus was more relevant to our branch than the flowers that appear on the original, and we decided to “insist” (rather than “demand”) “peace and planet before profits.” We’ll be taking our branch photo with members and supporters on Saturday, April 8, in front of saguaros at the entrance to Steele Indian School Park in Phoenix, and then going to lunch at MacAlpine’s Diner and Soda Fountain, a few blocks away, which has been an institution in Phoenix since 1929 (not quite as long as WILPF has been an institution). This, we hope, will be a good opportunity to get to know some of our new members and friends as we chat about future plans. We also hope that many of our “Most Dangerous Women” cast members will get active again.

Also, thanks to Jeanmarie Bishop for setting up a branch website, which we hope will be up and running, with items posted on it, later this month.
 

Inset photo: Greater Phoenix Branch member Kevin Greathouse and treasurer Barb Taft wait to welcome visitors to their table at the Mesa MLK Day celebration. Credit: Mike Taft.

 

 

Post date: Wed, 04/05/2017 - 08:53
The Golden Rule

Sailing in Bellingham, Washington Harbor, on The Golden Rule, August 20, 2016. Credit: Gerry Condon.

By Helen Jaccard, WILPF US at-large member, Veterans For Peace associate member, VFP Golden Rule project manager

Golden Rule crewWILPF will again play a big role in the voyage of the Golden Rule Anti-Nuclear Protest Boat as she sails to most California ports this summer, from Eureka to San Diego and up the Sacramento River.

She will stay in San Diego this winter in preparation for the tour of the rest of the US. The California branches of WILPF are excited about her visit and our anti-nuclear work, which provides an important educational element to the “End the Whole Nuclear Era” campaign.

2017 Voyage

Here’s the preliminary schedule for the 2017 voyage of the Golden Rule:

  • Leave Eureka: Sat 6/10
  • Noyo / Caspar /Fort Bragg: Sun 6/11 - Wed 6/14
  • Bodega Bay: Thu 6/15 - Sun 6/18

San Francisco Bay and Sacramento River

  • Peace Pirate Camp: Wed 6/21 - Wed /28
  • Tiburon - Corinthian YC: Boat Show! on 6/26
  • Sausalito: Thu 6/29 - Sat 7/01
  • San Rafael: Sat 7/01 - Sun 7/02
  • Vallejo: Sun 7/02 - Mon 7/03
  • Antioch: Mon 7/03 - Wed 7/05
  • Reunion! Phoenix of Hiroshima: Wed 7/05 - Thu 7/06
  • Antioch: Thu 7/06 - Fri 7/07
  • Walnut Grove: Fri 7/07 - Sat 7/08
  • Sacramento: Sat 7/08 - Wed 7/12
  • Walnut Grove: Wed 7/12 - Fri 7/14
  • Antioch: Fri 7/14 - Sat 7/15
  • Vallejo: Sat 7/15 - Mon 7/17
  • San Rafael: Mon 7/17 - Wed 7/19
  • Half Moon Bay: Wed 7/19 - Sat 7/22
  • Santa Cruz: Sun 7/23 - Wed 7/26
  • Monterey: Wed 7/26 - Sat 7/29
  • Morro Bay: Sun 7/30 - Wed 8/02
  • Santa Barbara, mini-Peace Pirate Camp: Thu 8/03 - Sun 8/06
  • Ventura/Oxnard: Mon 8/07 - Thu 8/10
  • Marina del Rey: Thu 8/10 - Sun 8/13
  • Long Beach: Mon 8/14 - Thu 8/17
  • Newport: Thu 8/17 - Sat 8/19
  • Dana Point: Sat 8/19 - Mon 8/21
  • San Diego: Tue 8/22
  • Pirate Peace Camps: To be announced

Peace Pirate Camps

A new program, Peace Pirate Camps, provides an opportunity for veterans, youth, women, and others to join together to learn to sail, learn the principles of nonviolent direct action, participate in an action planned during the camp, and learn about nuclear issues today. It will be a lot of fun, and you might be chosen for future crew!

There will be one camp June 21–28 in San Francisco Bay, and two or three in San Diego. A two-day version is being planned in Santa Barbara, August 4-5. Contact Jim Summers, poozles@hotmail.com, for more information, or fill out an application and return it by email to vfpgoldenruleproject@gmail.com.

The Golden Rule to visit the Phoenix of Hiroshima!

This reunion will be the first we know of since 1958, when the Golden Rule crew handed the baton to the Phoenix crew in Honolulu to complete the historic attempt to stop atmospheric nuclear bomb testing.

The same year that the Golden Rule sank and was brought up from the bottom of Humboldt Bay, the Phoenix of Hiroshima sank only a short distance away! The Phoenix has been located and efforts to raise and restore her are underway. If the Phoenix is still in the area of the Sacramento River in early July, we will have a wonderful reunion celebration. If all goes well this spring, the Phoenix will be on the water instead of under it!

The Golden Rule only sails with help from our supporters and helpers!

We need funds and volunteers for repairs, maintenance and upgrades, including:

  • Main sail rigging repairs
  • New power charger/inverter
  • Electrical and galley improvements
  • Heating and ventilation
  • Propeller shaft seal repair

Please call restoration coordinator Chuck DeWitt at 707-445-4790, or email him at chuckdwtt@gmail.com to help!

Event Volunteers Needed

The 2017 sailing season will be very exciting! We will sail from Humboldt Bay to San Diego. With many educational stops, we need a lot of help, all hands on deck, and there are many roles to play! Organizers, authors, public speakers, a web master, photographers, and videographers will all be needed and appreciated.

If you live on the coast of California, we also need help in organizing events and seed money for each stop. To volunteer, please contact Helen Jaccard at 206-992-6364, send an email to vfpgoldenruleproject@gmail.com, or make a donation.

Crew and Captains Needed

Are you a sailor and interested in stopping nuclear weapons and promoting nuclear-free, carbon-free energy? Use our crew application form to apply. This year, a modest stipend will be available for licensed captains. For more information, call Helen Jaccard at 206-992-6364.

You can Help Keep the Golden Rule Afloat

The Veterans for Peace Golden Rule Project reaches thousands of people each year, and this year promises to be the best yet: we will not only make more stops, but each stop will involve a strong program to reach beyond the choir. By offering public speakers and education to churches, clubs, and many other different kinds of organizations, we are taking our message to where people meet, encouraging them to see this famous sailboat and to go for a ride.

We need your help to make this all happen! Please donate online, or send a generous check to:

VFP Golden Rule Project
PO Box 87
Samoa, CA 95564

 

Post date: Wed, 04/05/2017 - 08:46

Santa Cruz WILPF members Cat Heron Steele and Willow Katz protest torture and the Trump inauguration, January 20, 2017. Credit: John Malkin.


By Willow Katz, Santa Cruz WILPF

Since 2012, over 2,500 prisoners in California have been released from Security Housing Units (SHU)—solitary—to general prison population, due to: historic hunger strikes; California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation regulation reform; and the Ashker v. Governor of California class action lawsuit settlement.

The WILPF Santa Cruz Branch co-sponsors Together to End Solitary, nationwide actions on the 23rd of every month to end solitary confinement torture and mass incarceration. The date, the 23rd, represents the 23-plus hours a day people are locked in solitary cells. These actions started as a statewide effort in California and quickly turned nationwide.

From 2011 to 2013, the California Prisoner Human Rights Movement carried out three hunger strikes against solitary confinement and prison abuses, and for five core demands for their constitutional and human rights. People of color account for 85 to 90 percent of those in CA SHUs, many of them jailhouse lawyers and political activists. After the 2012 Agreement to End Hostilities was implemented across racial/ethnic and geographic lines, over 30,000 CA prisoners and hundreds nationwide joined the 2013 hunger strike.

On September 1, 2015, the prisoner-led class action civil rights lawsuit Ashker v. Governor of California successfully settled. It effectively ends indefinite, long-term solitary confinement in all California state prisons. Thousands of people have been released from solitary to general prison population, where they are promoting the Agreement to End Hostilities, which has greatly decreased violence among people incarcerated in California.

The UN Mandela Rules prohibit over 15 days in solitary and any isolation of children, adolescents, persons with mental disability, and pregnant or breast-feeding women. Yet thousands of people remain in prolonged solitary confinement in California adult prisons, and up to 100,000 people are in solitary in US prisons, with thousands in youth facilities and untold numbers in jails and immigration and military detention centers. Help us promote the Agreement to End Hostilities.

For almost three years in California, thousands of people locked up in solitary have been awakened with loud noise and flashlights in their eyes every 30 minutes, night and day. Write a letter to end this sleep deprivation torture. Read prisoner quotes and expert reports, find a wealth of information, and take action on the Prisoner Hunger Strike Solidarity website.

WILPF Santa Cruz continues the work to end solitary confinement, mass incarceration, and human rights abuses of currently and formerly incarcerated people.

On settlement of Ashker v. Governor of California, CA prisoner plaintiffs stated on August 31, 2015: “Our movement rests on a foundation of unity: our Agreement to End Hostilities. It is our hope that this groundbreaking agreement to end the violence between the various ethnic groups in California prisons will inspire not only state prisoners, but also jail detainees, county prisoners and our communities on the street, to oppose ethnic and racial violence. . . . As the recent statements of President Obama and of Justice Kennedy illustrate, the nation is turning against solitary confinement. We celebrate this victory while, at the same time, we recognize that achieving our goal of fundamentally transforming the criminal justice system and stopping the practice of warehousing people in prison will be a protracted struggle. We are fully committed to that effort, and invite you to join us.”

For more information, contact phssreachingout@gmail.com.

 

Post date: Tue, 03/14/2017 - 10:30

Congress Banner

A Great Congress!
 Women’s International League for Peace & Freedom - U.S.
33rd Triennial Congress
Thursday July 27th – Sunday July 30th

University of Illinois at Chicago
Student Center West, 2nd Floor Conference Rooms
828 South Wolcott Ave ● Chicago IL 60612

Congress is over, but the experience lives on!
Go to News from Congress for videos, reports and photos highlighting events and experiences.

Join other strong & feisty women from across the U.S. who are rising up and organizing for action to create an effective, sustainable global grassroots movement. Designed to be a working Congress, each conference segment is inspired by a theme: Rise Up, Revolt, Remember, Reimagine and Reclaim. Attendees will sharpen their activist skills and enhance their knowledge of key issues worked on by WILPF members back home. Collaborative workshops with next-step action items make this Congress a go-to-event for building strong alliances and forming a more peaceful and just world.

Congress Headquarters:
The conference will be held at the Student Center West Conference Facility on the University of Illinois-Chicago Campus, within walking distance of Jane Addams’s Hull House, the first settlement house for immigrants in the U.S.

Lodging will be offered in dorms close to the conference facility. Most meals will be included in your registration, with a variety of on-your-own meal options available from the conference facility cafeteria and nearby culinary scenes in Little Italy and Greek Town. Take advantage of your trip and come early or stay late to experience Chicago! 

See Registration and Chicago, for more details.

Program:
Peace Activist Panel
Chicago Activist Panel
Issue Workshops
Skill-Building Workshops
Walk to Hull House & Tour
Member Showcase
Entertainment & More!

See Program, Speakers and Schedule for more details.

Speakers:
Thursday, July 27 – Evening Plenary:  Peace Activist Panel

  • Phyllis Bennis – Director, New Internationalism Project, Institute for Policy Studies
  • Leah Bolger – Coordinating Committee Chair, World Beyond War
  • Kathy Kelly – Co-Coordinator, Voices for Creative Nonviolence
  • Ellen Thomas – Co-Chair, WILPF US Disarm/End Wars Committee

Friday, July 28 - Morning Plenary

  • Larry Spivack – President, Illinois Labor History Society

Friday, July 28 – Evening Plenary:  Chicago Activist Panel

  • Olga Bautista – Community Organizer, Southeast Environmental Taskforce
  • Mary Dean – Organizer for World Beyond War, WILPF US Member
  • Jeanette Hernandez – Longtime Active Member of AFSCME Local 1989
  • Pam Smith – Co-Founder & Executive Director, Addie Wyatt Center, Chicago and Kingian Nonviolence Trainer

Saturday, July 29 – Afternoon Plenary

  • Stefanee Parks-Asche – Director, Illinois Labor History Society
  • Mary Hanson Harrison – President, WILPF US

See Program, Speakers and Schedule for more details.

Workshops:
Workshop topics were selected based on feedback from a recent WILPF member survey. Sessions focus on issue and skill-building topics presented in a participatory discussion format.

See Program, Speakers and Schedule for more details.

Member Showcase: 
A WILPF Tribute Video will be produced to showcase all the members who make WILPF great! Submit your photos and videos by July 1st (deadline extended). WILPF Branches (and committees) will be given the opportunity to setup Branch Table Exhibits. Reserve your table by July 1st (deadline extended). The Des Moines WILPF Branch will be hosting a Jane Addams Children's Book Awards (JACBA) Corner on Friday and Saturday. See Member Showcase, for more details.

Leadership Institute:
WILPF members are invited to attend the WILPF-US Leadership Institute, which will explore how skillful leadership can help branches build their vision, their direction, and more effective local work. During sessions held before the Congress and interspersed throughout it, participants will learn the skills and art of leadership especially needed for our times. To find out more, click here.

Entertainment: 

Voices - Thursday night
For 35 years, 8 recordings (including the 2015 release of Sailing Free), and evolving generations of musicians, Voices has been a mainstay in the Chicago political-folk scene.  Primarily a choral group singing a capella or with minimal accompaniment, Voices dedicates their music to seeking social justice through a multicultural message of peace.  Selections include an embrace of immigrants, sisters and brothers of all walks of life, the planet, and a world without war.  All Sailing Free sales continue to support Sarab Shada, a Voices' member for three years, and her family who now live as refugees in Turkey. 
 

Harmony, Hope, & HealingHarmony, Hope & Healing - Friday night
Let your spirits rise with inspirational gospel-style songs and heartfelt stories performed by a small ensemble cast of this sought-after hometown Chicago group. 

Harmony, Hope & Healing’s (HHH) mission is to create a safe environment where vulnerable individuals and families heal and rebuild through the restorative power of music. Founded in 2000 and incorporated as a nonprofit in 2003, HHH provides music programs at various shelters, residential facilities, community centers and the Cook County Jail, all located in some of Chicago’s most poverty-stricken and violent neighborhoods.  Supporting women, men and children as they heal from traumas associated with homelessness, addictions, violence, incarceration and isolation, HHH strives to improve the quality of participants’ lives. Through the transformative power of music, HHH programs foster the development of key life skills, including stress management, communication and parenting; building a sense of community and nurturing hope for a better future. Participants also have the opportunity to perform with the HHH choir at public events which helps them gain self-confidence and exposes them to a variety of new experiences and people. HHH helps individuals become independent and emotionally and socially healthy members of society.

Scholarships:
Scholarships to help pay for Congress costs will be distributed as funds become available. If you would like to apply for a scholarship, please download and email your completed application to Jan Corderman, jancorderman@msn.com,  Teresa Castillo, taca_03@ymail.com and Karen Pope kosbornepope@gmail.com by June 23rd.  If you have any questions, please contact Jan Corderman at 515-205-4504.  If you would like to make an online donation to fund a Congress Scholarship, go here.

Supporters:
Our sincere gratitude for the generous supporters who helped underwrite Congress to make it enjoyable and affordable for all. See Supporters, for more details..

For more information:
Contact Chris Wilbeck, Congress Coordinator, chris.wilpf@gmail.com or 515-229-6988.

 

Post date: Fri, 03/03/2017 - 07:22
Benefit Concert for Syria

By Judy Karas, co-chair, WILPF Monterey County Branch

The WILPF US Monterey County Branch joined the Monterey Peace and Justice Center and the Monterey Peninsula Friends Meeting (Quakers) on February 3, 2017, to sponsor “A Musical and Cultural Benefit for Syria,” a benefit concert for Syrian refugees and victims of war. The Syrian American Medical Society Foundation (SAMS) received the evening’s proceeds. SAMS is a nonprofit, nonpolitical, professional medical relief organization representing thousands of Syrian American medical professionals in the United States. The foundation organizes medical missions, provides professional and educational trainings to Syrian physicians, and delivers medicine and medical supplies to hospitals and vulnerable families in Syria. Monterey County Branch members Catherine Crockett, Celeste Akkad, and Judy Karas organized the event.

The benefit was a great success, measured not just by the $7,000 plus raised for SAMS, but also by the goodwill generated, the appreciation shown to the performers, and the support given by local performers, merchants, volunteers, sound technician, and the Unitarian Universalist Church of the Monterey Peninsula (where the gathering was held). Local physician Dr. Kerala Serio gave a short talk, highlighting the work of SAMS in helping those who have been injured in the ongoing Syrian fighting. Thus, the evening was both entertaining and informative.

Performers included singers and musicians: harpist Amy Krupski, flutist/mandolin player Laura Shaw with guitar accompaniment, jazz flutist Kenny Stahl, Jackson Stock and Friends, storyteller Dina Stansbury, the Ukulele Songbirds, and others. A representative from SAMS was on hand to talk about the humanitarian crisis in Syria. A photo exhibit of the work of Sumaya Agha, who has been documenting the Syrian refugee crisis for Mercy Corps, was on display. And, the UNA-Monterey Bay Chapter had a table in the lobby with information about their Adopt a Future Program. All in all, attendees and performers alike enjoyed and appreciated the event.

Post date: Fri, 03/03/2017 - 07:10

Submitted by the Development Committee of WILPF US

The ONE WILPF CALL is for all members! Join the March 9 call to learn about a second Solidarity Event being planned for June 18. WILPF International is asking WILPF US members to take action together.

You don’t have to be a branch leader or contact to engage in lively discussions with WILPF US members from across the country and to work closely on projects or plans to strengthen and improve WILPF.

Every month, the ONE WILPF CALL offers the opportunity to reach out and connect and to participate in guiding WILPF forward in activism and strategy. An average of 30 members, representing some 16 branches—and several at-large members, too—join these calls.

Add to your calendar:
ONE WILPF CALL
Thursday, March 9
4 pm pacific / 7 pm eastern

You can call in with only your phone, or using both your phone and your computer for a fuller communication experience. It’s easy! Preregistration for the calls is necessary, and you can register here.

On March 9, featured speaker Ray Acheson, from the WILPF International UNO program Reaching Critical Will, will discuss her plan to ask WILPF US branches to participate in planning Solidarity Marches to coincide with the Women’s March to Ban the Bomb activities, which Reaching Critical Will is planning for Sunday, June 18, in New York City. The March 9 call will help us gain awareness about the historic negotiations for a Nuclear Weapons Ban Treaty coming up at the United Nations in March and June. Read more about the June 18 march in the DISARM/End Wars update.

So far, the monthly ONE WILPF CALL has featured speakers like CODEPINK’s Medea Benjamin, Popular Resistance organizer Margaret Flowers, International WILPF President Kozue Akibayashi, Middle East expert Phyllis Bennis of the Institute for Policy Studies, and our own two WILPF US Issue Committee Chairs Nancy Price of Earth Democracy Committee and Cindy Domingo of the Cuba and Bolivarian Alliance Committee. These calls are inspirational and are helping to shape member engagement in WILPF. Consider joining the call on March 9.

 

Post date: Fri, 03/03/2017 - 06:49
2017 Nuclear Free Future Tour route

2017 Nuclear Free Future Tour route.

Join in the Women’s March to Ban the Bomb; follow the next segment of the Nuclear Free Future Tour; petition against shipments of extremely hazardous liquid weapons-grade radioactive materials.

Women’s March to Ban the Bomb, June 18—NYC and everywhere!

WILPF branches are asked to participate in planning Solidarity Marches to coincide with the Women’s March to Ban the Bomb in New York City on Sunday, June 18, 2017. To gain awareness about the historic negotiations for a Nuclear Weapons Ban Treaty coming up at the United Nations in March and June 2017, you can go to ICANW.org and Reaching Critical Will.

What’s being planned for June?

As the world becomes environmentally and politically less stable, the threat of nuclear war looms and the Doomsday Clock has advanced a minute. So nothing could be more timely or more urgent than these Women’s Marches to Ban the Bomb. We will be marching with women (and men) from throughout this country in celebration of the opening of a second session of negotiations on a new treaty banning nuclear weapons, just as biological and chemical weapons are already banned.

Odile Hugonot Haber and Laura Dewey
Odile Hugonot Haber and Laura Dewey at the Women’s March in Washington. Credit: Laila Hamdan

Organizing sister marches in cities across the US is a task WILPF can do, and it is well within our mission to do so.

“We can take the solidarity skills we are learning for our April 22 Earth Day event and fine-tune them to be ready to organize marches in June,” advises WILPF US President Mary Hanson Harrison. “There can be no more important or urgent cause for WILPF women than this Women’s March to Ban the Bomb. It speaks to the very roots of our organization and our primary mission of peace.”

This is not just the task of DISARM Committee members. WILPF has been pointing out the interconnectedness of climate justice, human rights, women, and peace. Each of these issues, and many more, will be engaged if we organize marches against nuclear weapons and use those marches to raise awareness about the imminent threat of nuclear weapons to the planet and all life forms.

DISARM Committee Chairs Robin Lloyd, Barbara Nielsen, and Ellen Thomas are encouraging WILPF members to start now to organize these June marches.

“Let’s use the collaborations we are forming and renewing for our Earth Day actions to gain allies and cosponsors for the June march,” suggests Ellen Thomas.

Nuclear Free Future Tour: Earth Day (April 22) to June 18

Ellen Thomas will be continuing the WILPF Nuclear Free Future speaking tour that began last year, when she and Carol Urner traveled the east and west coasts visiting WILPF.

Beginning April 22 (Earth Day) in St. Louis, Missouri, Ellen plans to travel west to Columbia, Missouri, and Kansas City, Kansas; then north to Iowa, South Dakota, North Dakota, and Minnesota; east through Wisconsin, Illinois, Michigan, Ohio, Pittsburgh, PA, and on to Washington, DC, for Alliance for Nuclear Accountability DC Days, May 21-24; north to Philadelphia; and finally to New York City for Left Forum 2017 the first weekend in June and the Women’s March to Ban the Bomb on June 18. See the map of the tour route.

Ellen hopes that Odile Hugonot Haber (Ann Arbor), Ann Suellentrop (Kansas City), and others who have good information to share at the next stop(s) on the tour about any part of the nuclear chain—from uranium mining to power plants to weapons to waste transportation and disposal—will be able to join her for a while on her two-month journey. If you or your branch would like to host Ellen, and if you could help set up meetings with your legislators to promote the Nuclear Weapons Abolition and Economic and Energy Conversion Act, please contact Ellen as soon as possible at et@prop1.org or 202-210-3886 (cell and text).

Trucks Carrying Highly Radioactive Liquids May Be Passing through Your Town

Three possible routes for the nuclear waste transfer
Three possible routes for the nuclear waste transfer. Credit: Google Maps / http://radioactive-roads.weebly.com/

A very few news agencies are informing their readers that 100 to 150 trucks are going to be carrying extremely hazardous liquid weapons-grade radioactive materials from Chalk River, Canada, to Savannah River Nuclear Facility in Aiken, South Carolina, during the next few months. For example, on February 15, Mother Jones published the article Toxic Liquid Nuclear Waste Headed for US Roadways, which warns, “Less than two ounces, says one analysis, could destroy a city’s water supply.”

A map of three possible routes has been published in Ohio, where residents are concerned that the waste will be going down Route 77.

There have been efforts to halt the shipments in both Canada and the United States, including a lawsuit, which unfortunately was dismissed in early February. In North Carolina, residents are petitioning their new governor to refuse to allow shipments to be transported through the state.

At-large WILPF member Ruth Thomas, who has been challenging efforts to dump radioactive waste in South Carolina since 1970, says: “I cross-examined witnesses in an NRC hearing in 1975. In my questioning, I wanted to show examples of the gaps in the system—for example, that they didn’t train the drivers how to discover a leak. They didn’t give them a dosimeter. They accepted the information from the Department of Transportation and rail companies and other agencies on the safety of bridges without checking. They accepted assumptions without basis. There are accidents, lots of them, and who has to take care of it? Not the NRC. The states do. If anyone were to read the cross-examination of what goes on when a regular package of spent nuclear fuel is shipped, they would say, ‘No way, don’t do that.’ But nobody has that information. The NRC won’t provide it. No one knows the gaps, the assumptions, or how ridiculous it is that anything would be sent that way. If they know, they can challenge it.”

Help spread the news, and if you live along the potential routes, ask your governor and state legislators to keep these potentially catastrophic shipments from happening!

 

 

Post date: Fri, 03/03/2017 - 06:32
Tucson Raging Grannies

The Tucson Raging Grannies getting ready to sing at the 2017 Peace Fair. From left: Barbara Taylor, Rosemary Plakas, Deb Livingston, Marita Stith, and Stephanie Keenan. Courtesy Deborah Livingston.

By Deborah Livingston, Co-Chair, Tucson WILPF

The Tucson Raging Grannies performed at Tucson’s 35th annual Peace Fair and Music Festival, which was held on February 25, 2017. This year’s theme was “Demilitarization—Solidarity Not Hate; Let’s Stand Together.” The WILPF Tucson Branch had a table at what is one of Arizona’s largest gatherings for peace, justice, and environmental advocates. WILPF members have participated every year of the fair’s 35-year history.

The event, which the Tucson Peace Center organizes each year, offered a day of live music and other entertainment, children’s activities, tabling, and food. Just some of the many other groups represented were Jobs with Justice, the Sierra Club, Southern Arizona Gender Alliance (SAGA), the American Friends Service Committee, the Nuclear Resister, Global Art Project for Peace, Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America, CODEPINK, Black Lives Matter, and Death Penalty Alternatives for Arizona (DPAA).

A photo of the Raging Grannies is featured in The Daily Wildcat coverage of the fair. More photos of the 2017 Peace Fair can be seen on the Tucson Peace Center Facebook page.

This year, Vermont WILPF member Robin Lloyd was in Tucson. She gave a presentation about her grandmother, Lola Maverick Lloyd, who was one of the many women who went to the Hague with Jane Addams before WWI and who helped to start WILPF in 1915.

 

 

Post date: Thu, 03/02/2017 - 19:13

From left: Marlena Santoya, Stelle Sheller, Tina Shelton, and Judy Elson at the Free Library of Philadelphia, January 20, 2017. Courtesy Tina Shelton.

By Tina Shelton, Greater Philadelphia Branch

Four members of the Greater Philadelphia Branch Coordinating Committee were able to attend the Civic Engagement Fair, at the invitation of the Free Library of Philadelphia. Along with groups like Fair Districts PA, SERVE Philadelphia, and the ACLU, we tabled and chatted from 11 AM to 2 PM with both nonprofits and library patrons. It was a fun way to spend Inauguration Day 2017! Thanks for the invite, Free Library!

Post date: Thu, 03/02/2017 - 19:11
WILPF US Facebook Page

Submitted by the Development Committee of WILPF US

Are you missing out? WILPF US is offering members a free training in how to use Facebook. Sign up today.

Without many options for affordable or responsive media, one of the few ways to get your message out to the public today is through social media. Movements are organizing around Facebook and Twitter, and important communications are increasingly being relegated to these communication platforms. Understanding these platforms involves using techniques that, as an activist and organizer, you need to know. And now, WILPF US is making accessible some valuable instructions.

Learn to use Facebook, for your activism, your branch, your community! Michael Ippolito, a professional educator who is proficient in Facebook, will be sharing some valuable skills. He is known to many of you as our “backdoor engineer” who makes the ONE WILPF CALL possible through the Maestro technology. Michael is a patient and very clear instructor. He will use screen sharing, so you can see how he “likes,” “shares,” and “posts” on Facebook and how he creates and promotes “events” on Facebook.

Put Saturday, March 11, 11 am pacific/2 pm eastern, on your calendar. Preregister for the training call now. This FREE training is a benefit of WILPF US membership!

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