Chuck Collins 2019 Plenary Keynote Speaker

Chuck Collins is an author and senior scholar at the Institute for Policy Studies in Washington, DC, where he directs the Program on Inequality and the Common Good. He is also co-founder of Wealth for Common Good. He is an expert on economic inequality in the US, and has pioneered efforts to bring together investors and business leaders to speak out publicly against corporate practices and economic policies that increase economic inequality.

Collins has written a number of books about inequality, tax policy and social change philanthropy. In 2000, he co-authored the book, Robin Hood Was Right: A Guide to Giving Your Money for Social ChangeIn 2000 (revised in 2005), he co-authored with Felice Yeskel Economic Apartheid in America: A Primer on Economic Inequality and Insecurity.  Collins is coauthor, with William H. Gates Sr, of the 2003 book, Wealth and Our Commonwealth: Why America Should Tax Accumulated Fortunes, which argues that the estate tax is both fair and necessary. In 2013, he authored 99 to 1: How Wealth Inequality is Wrecking the World and What We Can Do About ItHis most recent book is Born on Third Base: A One Percenter Makes the Case for Tackling Inequality, Bringing Wealth Home, and Committing to the Common Good.

Between 1983 and 1991, Collins worked at the Institute for Community Economics, based in Greenfield, Massachusetts, providing technical advice to community land trusts and mobile home resident cooperatives. Between 1991 and 1995, he was director of the HOME Coalition in Massachusetts and a field organizer for the Tax Equity Alliance of Massachusetts (now the Mass Budget and Policy Center). In 1995, he co-founded, with Felice Yeskel and S.M. Miller, United for a Fair Economy in Boston, Massachusetts, a left-leaning national organization devoted to education about growing income and wealth inequality.

Collins has worked with a number of prominent wealthy individuals, including William H. Gates, Sr. and George Soros, in an effort to promote tax equity. 

In 2005, he became a senior scholar at the Institute for Policy Studies, where he co-edits the web site, Inequality.org and directs the Program on Inequality and the Common Good. In 2008, he cofounded Wealth for the Common Good, which subsequently merged in 2015 with the Patriotic Millionaires.

At the Institute for Policy Studies, Collins’ research has looked at income and wealth inequality and the racial wealth divide. He has co-authored a number of studies including “Billionaire Bonanza” exploring the share of wealth flowing to the top 1 percent and Forbes 400, and the “Ever Growing Gap”, which examines the future of the racial wealth divide.

 

Trump-Pence’s Title X Gag Rule Will Harm New Jersey Women

PLANNED PARENTHOOD ACTION FUND OF NEW JERSEY

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

February 22, 2019

Contact: Casey Olesko 973-775-2781 / Casey.Olesko@ppgnnj.org

Trump-Pence’s Title X Gag Rule Will Harm New Jersey Women

70 percent of Title X patients in NJ go to Planned Parenthood for care

TRENTON, NJ — Today, the Trump-Pence administration released a gag rule that undermines Title X, the nation’s program for affordable birth control and reproductive health care, and makes it illegal for health care providers in the program to refer patients for an abortion.

“The administration has put health care providers like Planned Parenthood in an impossible position: withhold information from our patients, or get pushed out of a program designed to ensure that people struggling to make ends meet can still access essential reproductive health care,” said Triste Brooks, President and CEO of Planned Parenthood of Northern, Central, and Southern New Jersey. “We won’t withhold critical information from our patients.”

“Health care is a human right and we will not let this stand,” said Roslyn Y. Rogers Collins, President and CEO of Planned Parenthood of Metropolitan New Jersey. “The Trump-Pence administration may not think you deserve care, but we do.”

Title X is the nation’s only program for affordable birth control and preventive reproductive health care. Title X ensures that every person — regardless of who they are, where they live, how much money they make, or whether they’re insured — has access to basic reproductive health services, such as birth control, cancer screenings, and STD testing and treatment.

In New Jersey, more than 70 percent of the patients served by Title X received care at a Planned Parenthood health center. Planned Parenthood was the sole Title X provider in 13 New Jersey counties in 2018. Without Planned Parenthood, all other Title X-funded sites in New Jersey would have to increase their contraceptive client caseloads by 254 percent to serve the women who currently obtain birth control from Planned Parenthood health centers.

The Murphy administration has already publicly denounced the gag rule, and members of New Jersey’s Congressional delegation have also spoken out against the harmful change.

“The ‘gag rule’ targets women who live in underserved communities, already facing obstacles to accessing health care,” said Brooks. “We won’t be deterred; Planned Parenthood is committed to providing the care patients need — no matter what.”

A fact sheet on Title X’s impact in New Jersey is available here.

Amazon Smile and UU FaithAction NJ

Did you know Amazon will give UU FaithAction NJ .05% of every dollar you spend on Amazon…. and who doesn’t spend on Amazon?  It’s easy to set up:  Log onto to smile.amazon.com and under Charitable Organizations search for Unitarian Universalist Legislative Ministry.  Then, whenever you need to purchase something from Amazon, use the amazon smile site and shop as normal!  Amazon will then send us a check every month for 5% of all sales linked to UULMNJ (our former name). Or you can simply click here.

Join us for Plenary 2019!

Chuck Collins, author of Born on Third Base: Growing Up Advantaged in a Time of Extreme Inequality, will be the keynote speaker at this year’s annual Plenary to be held Saturday, April 13th from 10:00 am – 3:30 pm.  Join us at the Unitarian Universalist Congregation at Montclair located at 67 Church Street, Montclair NJ. 07042.  Register HERE!

 

Two Sundays, Two Awesome Conferences

On Sunday, February 3rd, UU FaithAction held the first Justice Policy Update Conference, which featured Professor Meghan Sacks, Criminal Justice Program Chair at Fairleigh Dickinson University.  Professor Sacks talked very knowledgeably and passionately about the legislation that created mass incarceration, the current efforts to amend some of these policies, and the injustice these policies perpetuate.  As one seasoned conference attendee stated, “It was the BEST speaker she had ever heard on this topic.”  Professor Sacks recommends that anyone interested in mass incarceration watch the films 13th and Riker’s Island: An American Jail.

On Sunday, February 10, UU FaithAction held the second Policy Update Conference at the Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Princeton.  Our guest speaker was journalist and WNYC on-air correspondent Matt Katz.  Matt Katz has become, over the past three yeas, a leading investigative reporter on immigration, detainees, protective status and refugees in America.  His talk was informative and riveting.  Prior to his deep dive into Immigration, Matt reported on former Gov. Chris Christie and was part of a team of journalists who earned a Peabody award for their reporting.

UU FaithAction Honors Sally Pillay

On Sunday, February 10th during the Justice Policy Update Conference, UU FaithAction honored First Friends Director, Sally Pillay.  First Friends of New Jersey and New York’s mission is to uphold the inherent dignity of any immigrant who has been detained as well as any asylum seeker.  They coordinate volunteer visitation, aid with resettlement and are active and vocal advocates of the immigrant/asylum seeker community.

Sally Pillay, departing Director of First Friends and Ted Fetter, Chair, UU Immigration Justice Task Force

Sally Pillay is the out-going Program Director and has been with First Friends for over a decade.  Ms. Pillay is from South Africa and is required to return to her country of birth due to the current immigration policies.  First Friends, and Sally, have been strong partners in our efforts to advance immigration justice reform.  She will be missed!

Stand with UU FaithAction at The People’s State of the State

Stand up in support of economic, political, and social justice at The People’s State of the State!

New Jerseyans are still waiting for movement on critical issues like a $15 minimum wage for all workers, drivers licenses for all, marijuana legalization, environmental justice, and a tax code that ensures the wealthiest pay their fair share.

We deserve lawmakers who share our sense of urgency and recognize that now is not the time for politics as usual. Now is the time to create a stronger and more-inclusive state for all residents, not just the wealthy and well-connected.

Together we can create the fairer and more-just New Jersey we all envision. Join us on January 10th outside the State House Annex!

WHEN:  January 10, 2019 at 10am – 12pm
WHERE:  State House Annex
131 W State St
Trenton, NJ 08608
United States

Guidelines for Letter Writing

Guidelines for Letter Writing

Be sure to know who your representatives are.

Know your legislative district, the names of your state senator and two assembly persons, your state board members, and your representatives in Washington, DC, if working at that level. Know the legislators and policy makers who are key to your issue. Try to have people from their districts lobby them. If you need assistance to find your current legislators, visit www.njleg.state.nj.us/members/legsearch.asp

Proper letter etiquette should be followed.

The correct address and salutation on the envelope and letter should be used. All legislators and state board members are addressed as “The Honorable…”

Give your full name and address, and identify yourself as a registered voter in your district.

Legislators and state board members sometimes choose torespond to letters, so it is important for them to know who you are and what district you are in. Also, if it turns out to bea long effort, you may be contacting your legislator or stateboard member several times and you want to build on the familiarity. Mentioning your organization also helps.

Identify the bill of concern or regulatory proposal.

Give both the bill number and name, if it has one, and a short description. A legislator is involved with many bills and may not automatically know which one you are referring to. Similarly, state board members handle several regulatory packages simultaneously.

Give reasons for your position, but be brief.

Besides giving the basic information, be specific as to how this will affect you, the community, or the district. Short, concise letters that discuss one issue are most effective.

Express yourself politely.

Intimidation, threats, or insincere flattery will not help you win the issue. Remember that others who may be in opposition to your cause will be making every effort to be polite.

Try to generate a commitment of support from the legislator.

Ask why the legislator or state board member feels a certain way about the issue. Engage the legislator or state board member in a meaningful and thoughtful discussion of the issues.

Be Original.

Don’t use form letters or copy another person’s letter. It is better to make a short, original, and unique statement than to mimic someone else.

Time your letter to arrive at the key moment.

There are critical times in the legislative and regulatory process. Being too early in your contact will not help. Contact the NJPSA Government Relations staff for guidance. In fact, consider utilizing email to contact your legislator and state board member.

Thank your legislators when their actions meet with your approval.

They appreciate the support of the voting public and, like everyone else, like to hear good news instead of always the bad.

Oppose New Jersey Redistricting

NJ legislative leaders–primarily Democrats–are supporting a horrible amendment to the NJ constitution, a purely political proposal to increase the ability of politicians to choose their voters.  The usual term for it is “gerrymandering.” It would also embed the two-party system into the state’s constitution, a blatant attempt to weaken third parties like the Green and Libertarian parties. Every group that testified on the proposed amendment this past week opposed it. UUs and our allies should oppose this most recent attempt to codify gerrymandering too. 

Despite the fact that this doesn’t easily fall under one of UU FaithAction’s six issue areas, it flies directly in the face of our 5th Principle: “The right of conscience and the use of the democratic process within our congregations and in society at large.

For example, the amendment not only gives the sitting Senate president, House speaker, and minority leaders the power to appoint eight members to the redistricting commission.  It also requires that four of those appointees must be sitting legislators. This would clearly empower elected officials to have an oversized influence on who votes in their own or their own party’s races.

Furthermore, an analysis by the Princeton Gerrymandering Project demonstrates that in creating districts that the amendment calls “competitive” could actually lead to an overrepresentation of the majority party in the legislature. 

While the proposed amendment would mandate respecting “communities of interest”, there are no protections for racial equity and too few public hearings to establish truly representative communities of interest.

Additionally, the explanatory paragraphs that describe the amendment on the required statewide ballot are also misleading: they give no hint of the radical change to representative democracy this amendment entails. What seem like “motherhood and apple pie” goals are more like poisoned apples presented to an innocent public.

Finally, New Jersey would be much better served by a non-partisan redistricting process like California’s, rather than a partisan (even if bipartisan) process designed to protect incumbents, party loyalists, and further entrench the Democratic and Republican parties themselves.  Our partners at the League of Women Voters proposes such a non-partisan process in their Fair Districts New Jersey Project. 

Please make it a priority!  Call or write your senator and assembly members to oppose SCR152 and ACR205 (and earlier SCR43 and ACR60).

 

What You Can Do:

1. Send an email to your legislators letting them know New Jersey deserves a fair redistricting process and fair maps!

2. Call your legislator’s district office to voice your opposition to SCR152/ACR205. Review our sample script and talking points here

3. Visit the League’s “Partisan Gerrymandering” resource webpage and learn more about the undemocratic proposals being fast-tracked through the Legislature

Thank you for your attention to this very important issue!

Lay Preaching Workshops

 

Come Grow Your Voice! Come Grow the Voice & Visibility of FaithAction!

UU FaithAction NJ is sponsoring a workshop to help lay folks learn the art of sermon writing and how to lead worship.  Our goal:

  • Grow FaithAction’s visibility in more of the 21 member congregations
  • Provide a valuable service to congregations looking to fill their pulpits in the summer, as well as throughout the year

Workshop in Two Parts

Part I focuses on generating written texts and will take place immediately prior to this year’s Fall Issues Conference at Beacon in Summit, NJ, Saturday, October 20 from 9:00 am to 10:30 am.   This session will be led by Rev. Karen G. Johnston.  Registration is required so please email admin@uufaithaction.org to secure your spot!

Part II folks come together from all NJ on Saturday, November 10, 10 -4 at The Unitarian Society in East Brunswick.  The second builds on the first, so attendance at the first is required in order to take part in the second.