YUUR Voice in Trenton: January 2015

 

Happy New Year from UULMNJ!  Here are a few UULMNJ highlights:

  • Legislation: UULMNJ supported the following legislation and initiatives this past quarter.  Thank you to all who helped make some of this legislation a reality:  Bail Reform Legislation and Constitutional Amendment, Opportunity to Compete, Presumptive Parole, Earned Sick Days, Affordable Housing/COAH and Sandy Relief.
  • Stamp Out Despair Appeal:  Many of our Congregations participated in the First Friends “Stamp Out Despair” Appeal sponsored by our Immigration Task Force.  Although we don’t have exact numbers, we estimate that materials for about 75 writing packets and over $1000 in phone card contributions were provided to NJ immigration detainees.  Thank you all for your generosity.
  • UULMNJ Sumer Internship Program is looking for two college students who would like to work with UULMNJ next summer.  These are sponsored by the UU College for Social Justice.  The work is 25 hrs./wk. and has a $1500 stipend.  For more information contact director@uulmnj.org or apply directly to www.uucsj.org/internships
  • UULMNJ Educational Video Program “YUUR Voice” is available to be shown in your congregations.  Five programs on immigration, mass incarceration, climate change and Affordable housing are available on the UULMNJ YouTube Channel.See the attached flyer for more complete information.  The video program can be viewed on PrincetonTV, Channel 30 on Tuesday mornings at 7 AM and Thursday evenings at 9 PM.

Save the Dates:

  • March 8:  New Jersey MUUsic Festival, Morristown Fellowship.  Come hear UU musicians from around New Jersey come together to benefit UULMNJ.
  • April 18:  UULMNJ Annual Meeting, Montclair UU Congregation.  Keynote Speaker: Junius Williams.  See our task forces in action.

January 9, 2015–Roe at Risk: Fighting for Reproductive Justice

Please join the Reproductive Justice Committee of the Unitarian Society of Ridgewood on Friday, January 9, 2015 from 7:00 to 9:00 for an inspiring and informative night discussing the current state of reproductive rights. We will be viewing the documentary “Roe At Risk: Fighting for Reproductive Justice” followed by a riveting panel discussion with three influential reproductive justice professionals. Light supper will be served. More details on this flyer.

YUUR Voice in Trenton: Dec 2014

HAPPY HOLIDAYS TO OUR UULMNJ FAMILY!  The heart of UULMNJ is found in the hard work of our volunteers and advocates.  As we come to the end of another calendar year, the UULMNJ staff and Board sends deepest thanks to you for all of your efforts.  2014 was a great success for UUs in New Jersey because of you!  May you have a wonderful holiday season and a very happy new year!

SAVE THE DATE! April 18, 2015 is our annual meeting.  This year’s meeting will be held at UU Congregation at Montclair.  You won’t want to miss the keynote address by Junius Williams. Listed among Ebony’s “100 Most Influential Blacks in America,” Junius Williams is a prominent attorney, educator, and advocate.  His memoir “Unfinished Agenda: Urban Politics in the Era of Black Power”, which released in January, is an account of activism that combines “ivy-league sophistication and street smarts”.  Former Mayor of Detroit and National Bar Association president, Dennis Archer, calls it a book that “should be required reading for people who care about their communities and have either a sense of hopelessness or a burning desire to bring about positive change where they live.”

YUUR Voice Television Series will premiere on Princeton Community Television this Thursday, December 25 at 7:00 p.m.!  Catch this and other episodes every Tuesday at 9:00 a.m. and Thursdays at 7:00 p.m.  You can also view each episode on the UULMNJ YouTube Channel.  Find links to classroom study guides in the description of each YouTube video.

“Black Lives Matter” has found a voice with Standing on the Side of Love.  Many New Jersey congregations have taken to the streets in solidarity following the decisions in the Michael Brown and Eric Garner deaths. UULMNJ encourages everyone to stand in support of justice.  However, it is very difficult for UULMNJ to ascertain all of the activities of the state-wide events.  Please reach out to your congregation to find ways to get involved.

Congratulations to UULMNJ! We recently received a grant from the UU Funding Program.  The $12,000 grant comes with an additional $4600 matching grant and will be utilized to support UULMNJ programs and administration.   Any new contributions will be matched with this grant, essentially doubling your donation!  Please consider giving to UULMNJ this holiday season to help us reach our match goal.

HAPPY HOLIDAYS

Action Alert December 5, 2014: Contact Your Legislators About Drug Policy and Fracking

As we begin December, there are two action items that are still on the table:

•    Call or write Senate President Sweeney (856-251-9801) and Judiciary Chairman Scutari (908-587-0404) in strong opposition to S211/A783. See details below.
•    Call or write your legislators to override the Governors Fracking Waste Ban Veto

S211/A783  Background

The assembly passed A783 a few weeks ago.  However, the Senate has not voted yet. S211/A783 represents a doubling down on the failed drug policies of the past.  This horrible legislation will do nothing to decrease opioid abuse in our state, would fill New Jersey’s prisons with nonviolent drug offenders serving disproportionately long sentences and will cost taxpayers millions of dollars (almost $8 million a year according to the bill’s fiscal estimate) in increased incarceration costs—money that would be better spent on drug treatment and other effective health interventions.This bill is in direct opposition to the bi-partisan bill package recently introduced by Senator Vitale to address opioid abuse in New Jersey from a public health approach.

S211/A783 would also have an enormous disparate racial impact, devastating communities who are already suffering from the effects of mass incarceration and lack of supportive social services.  While African Americans and Latinos make up only 27 percent of the population in New Jersey, they account for more than 80 percent of those incarcerated for drug offenses.

On top of pre-existing sentencing enhancements, S211/A783 would effectively quadruple current sentences.  These penalties would rival the infamous (and now reformed) Rockefeller drug laws in New York.  While the legislation itself doubles the penalties for heroin distribution, it must be considered in conjunction with other sentencing enhancements and mandatory minimums already contained in New Jersey’s criminal code.

Please try to call during normal business hours, but if not, make sure to leave a detailed message.  When calling, please ask to speak with the legislator’s Chief of Staff or Legislative Aide, state your name and if applicable, the congregation you represent.  Finally, follow-up your call with an email to SenSweeney@njleg.org and SenScutari@njleg.org detailing your discussion with their staff, reiterating your strong opposition to S211/A783 and urging them to prevent the bill from moving any further. (Click the email link above to write Senator Sweeny or Scutari.)

Ban Fracking Waste Override Background:

In the Spring we helped pass legislation (S1041) to ensure that NJ wouldn’t become a dumping ground for toxic fracking waste, which contains radioactive elements, heavy metals, and known carcinogens. Unfortunately, the governor vetoed the bill, which was passed with strong, bipartisan support.

Please contact your NJ legislator now. Urge them to continue prioritizing clean water and public health by overriding the veto. Frack waste has already been dumped in New Jersey’s waterways. We’re talking about endocrine-disrupting and cancer-causing chemicals such as benzene, arsenic, radium, and formaldehyde. This is why it’s so important that our legislators support protecting our public health and water supplies from this dangerous pollution.

Gov. Christie says he vetoed the bill because New Jersey doesn’t have fracking. However, the pressure to dump even more in New Jersey will only increase as fracking expands in Pennsylvania, gas deposits are explored in New York and New Jersey, and other states are increasingly restricting disposal options.

Please contact your Legislators today!

On the Ferguson Decision

As I am writing this, I am watching coverage of the unfolding reactions to the Ferguson decision, and my heart aches.  It aches for Michael Brown’s family, struggling to find personal solace for the loss of a son in the midst of national scrutiny. It aches for a grand jury faced with making a difficult decision based on facts that don’t really tell the whole story.  It aches for a community that struggles to protect itself from being consumed by anger and frustration.  It aches for those who have been stung by tear gas because they gathered to protest a failure of justice.  It aches for those standing in vigil desperately trying to find a peaceful solution. It aches for a police force sitting on a powder keg of its own creation, knowing that a match lurks in the night.  It aches for the small business owner whose livelihood has been destroyed by looting and fire. It aches because I am one with humanity in a society that often fails recognize its humanity.

Mostly my heart aches for America.  We are failing as a country.  We are failing as a human race.  This is nothing new, we have been failing for a long time — we have failed by continuing to create greater separation from each other based on race, economic means and belief.  We fail to ask the right questions that will lead to greater understanding and equity. We fail to address the underlying structures that discriminate and separate our communities. We fail to speak out in support of those who are suffering through little fault of their own.  We fail to be accountable for the violent discriminatory world we live in.  As a nation, we fail to take responsibility for the way many among us are forced to live.

But I believe in hope and I believe change is possible.  And I believe that our faith communities are the ones to lead the way.  I pray that we find the moral courage to take on this responsibility, and moral imperative to move our country toward greater compassion and greater justice.

With hope,

Rev. Craig Hirshberg

UULMNJ Exec. Director

Update on 2014 “Stamp Out Despair” Holiday Project

STAMP OUT DESPAIR CAMPAIGN UPDATE
Please help us Stamp Out Despair!

Thanks to you all we have collected a tremendous amount of stationery and do not need anymore. But we are still in need of the following:

  1. Forever Stamps
  2. International Global Stamps
  3. Blank cards
  4. Monetary donations for phone service that would help detainees call their families during the holidays*
  5. 2 ply paper folders
  6. Large and small blank envelopes
  7. Blank Note cards
  8. Handwritten personal notes of encouragement addressed “Dear Friend” (need 900)

*Collect all the phone card donations and send a check made payable to First Friends with “Stamp out Despair” in the memo line.
Phone service: USPS money order for $28.75

OTHER ASKS:

  • A desktop computer to be used at our office
  • Old cell phones that use SIM cards that can be use by those released from detention
  • Men’s shaving disposable razors
  • Create houses of welcome to host a released asylum seeker in your church or in your home

Important Holiday Project for UU Congregations

The holidays can be extremely difficult for those who are spending them in immigration detention centers.  UULMNJ wants to help.  Our Immigration Task Force has found a way, by  participating in First Friend”s “Stamp Out Despair” program.

First Friends  is an organization of volunteers who visit people detained at the Elizabeth Detention Center (EDC), Bergen County Jail, Hudson County Correctional Facility and Delaney Detention Center. Many detainees know no one in the United States, so a First Friends visitor may be their only link to the outside.

“Stamp Out Despair”  provides detainees with gifts of writing materials, stamps, envelopes and cards to help them stay in contact with family and friends and to let them know there are people in the U.S. who care about their plight.  Here’s How it Works:

Collect the following into a packet:

• Blank 2-pocket folder
• 20 First class “Forever Stamps”
• 10 Global “Forever Stamps
• 20 sheets of white writing paper
• 15 sheets of colored writing paper
• 15 sheets of small writing paper
• 5 blank greeting cards
• phone card donation

First Friends also needs notes of encouragement addressed “Dear Friend,” that will be given to 300 detainees at the Elizabeth detention center. It is in the spirit of holidays that we are bringing hope with paper. Any monetary donations would allow First Friends to provide phone cards services to detainees so that they can call their loved ones this holiday season.

First Friends would like to have these items by Dec. 15. Specific instructions for assembly and delivery are on the flyer [tt_vector icon=”fa-file-pdf-o”].

Please consider involving your congregation in this worthwhile project.  It is the least we can do for detainees who are so often forgotten.  If you have any questions, please contact Ted Fetter, Immigration Task Force Chair or our Executive Director.

Thank you for your help and your heart!!

Anti-Poverty Summit Registration Opens

The Anti-Poverty Network’s Annual Poverty Summit:
Changing Attitudes, Changing Laws, Changing Lives
Thursday, December 4, 2014
8:30 AM to 3 PM
Crowne Plaza, Monroe, New Jersey
Breakfast and lunch will be served
Register Today! [tt_vector icon=”fa-external-link”]

 

APN Summit Speaker 2014“The Anti-Poverty Network (APN) represents over 50 organizations fighting poverty in New Jersey.  As a member organization, UULMNJ and our Economic Justice Task Force work closely with APN.  On Dec.4, hundreds of supporters and elected officials will be gathering to organize efforts for combating poverty in New Jersey.

Recognizing the 50th Anniversary of the War on Poverty, this year’s conference will celebrate the victories in this war and focus attention on what steps New Jersey must take to ultimately win.

Conference participants will be equipped to continue this effort through skill-building workshops, networking opportunities and issue-advocacy training.  Workshops include social media advocacy, community advocacy, engaging legislators and more.

Please join in this effort to provide basic needs to all of our New Jersey residents.  Your voice is important. For more information see, download, and share the attached flier [tt_vector icon=”fa-file-pdf-o”] .

We hope to see you on the 4th!

Bail Reform Measure Approved in New Jersey

Yesterday, New Jerseyans showed up at the polls in strong favor of reform to New Jersey’s broken bail system.  Thank you to all of those who worked tirelessly to get this Constitutional amendment passed. A special thanks to task force chair, Al Stawsky, for his passionate dedication to this issue.

The work is not done.  Our Ending the New Jim Crow task force continues to move forward.

Yesterday we proved Margaret Mead right, a small group of committed people affected change. Keep up the great work!

ACLU-NJ Releases Statement on Passage of Ballot Question 1.