Reparations Discussion @ UU Princeton Oct. 29 7 p.m.

Racial Justice Program: The Case for Reparations to Descendants of Enslaved People

 Have you been wondering what Reparations are all about? The ACLU believes the issue of reparations should be seriously considered by all Americans and some institutions have already taken action. Last year, the Princeton Theological Seminary announced it had pledged to spend $27 million reparation on scholarships and other initiatives to address its historical ties to slavery, in what appears to be the biggest effort of its kind.

The UU Congregation of Princeton Racial Justice Task Force has invited local attorney and activist, Caroline Clarke, Esq., to give her presentation with time for Q&A:

Date and Time: Thursday, October 29, 2020 at 7 pm on zoom:

Please register in advance for this meeting:

https://zoom.us/meeting/register/tJItcO2gpjssHNz23c1dpPKH43ByguyYI8re 

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.  The program is free and open to the public.

Annual Fall Issues Conference held on October 19, 2019

The UU FaithAction NJ annual Fall Issues Conference was held on Saturday, October 19 at Central Unitarian Church in Paramus.  This well-attended event featured a panel of criminal justice experts.  If you were unable to attend, you can still read the reports by clicking on the link below.

Get Conference Packet Information Here: https://www.uufaithaction.org/?page_id=8284&preview=true

Plenary 2019 – Economic Justice Task Force Report

 

 

 

 

Economic Justice Task Force (EJTF) Plenary Report – April 13, 2019

EJTF has reached a point of stability after a couple of years of floundering. Our monthly videoconference meetings have a consistent group of attendees and we started the year with a workshop/educational event at which about 20 UUs explored income inequality under the guidance of an experienced facilitator. Those of us who participated feel like we gained valuable context for virtually all of social justice aspirations, grounding them in a multi-generational struggle to secure liberties which have been strategically undermined by wealthy and powerful interests which joined to reverse the people-powered wave built in the aftermath of World War II.

Legal Advocacy Signature Legislation

EJTF’s “signature legislation” to minimize or eliminate the stigma of those receiving free and reduced price lunches stalled because of broader legislation making its way through the NJ legislature. After meeting with Assemblywoman Sumter about her own school-lunch bill and speaking with Assemblyman Caputo’s office about his own more-comprehensive education bill which includes anti-stigma protections, we advocated for stronger language to assign responsibility firmly on individual schools to make sure free and reduced lunches got to those entitled fairly and effectively. The process was a bit of advocacy mixed with general coalition-building to expand UUFA’s influence in the legislature and position as faith advocates.

Changes to the Legal Advocacy Project itself call for a new examination of our efforts and better strategic thinking about how to identify potential advocates among our representatives, supporting their efforts while pushing them towards an even more-expansive view of government stewardship of individual opportunity and liberty. 

Initiatives and Issues

  1. 2018 Poor People’s Campaign (through its NJ branch – the NJ Prophetic Agenda) and the Time To Care Coalition – EJTF follows the movement of these groups and UUFA is still on the organizing team. In general, we feel that the overall PPC effort is inconsistently organized nationally, with NJ’s chapter an example of a lightly-staffed effort with a few victories but needing far more engagement by congregations and religious leaders. The two main organizers are Rev. Robin Tanner (Beacon UU) and Rev. Charles Boyer (Bethel AME Woodbury). The primary focus of these groups has been on the “Fight for $15” wage campaign, which was passed by the legislature and signed by Governor Murphy. Focus has shifted to IMPROVING this legislation by expanding its reach to tipped and younger workers excluded from the original bill.
  1. NJ Marijuana Legalization ONLY IF “Restoration” and “Reparations” are included. The Murphy administration had a very public failure to pass their legalization, cementing the public perception that the legislature’s key leaders (particularly Senate President Steve Sweeney) are not on the same page as the Governor, particularly as regards the social justice concerns which were a key element in his campaign for office. The legislation WAS indeed crafted in accordance with “the California model”, which we consider a good sign and confirmation of our advocacy efforts, but failure to corral the votes represents a tension likely to continue. Clearly UUFA can play an important role since the primary clergy group associated with legalization is a group of African American ministers in North Jersey who have joined with Assemblyman Ron Rice to oppose legalization because of the disproportionate burden from substance abuse falling historically in their own communities. Effective advocacy may take the form of joining other faith leaders like Rev. Boyer as they advocate for similar justice-seeking solutions.
  1. NJ State Bank – (Our January event covered this issue as well as income inequality in general) – The national UUs For a Just Economic Future (UUJEC) and our NJ member Sally Gellert continue to work on this issue, complex as it is. Our statewide partner, Banking On New Jersey, has been “laying low” over the past year and the Murphy administration has clearly put the issue on the back burner while it focuses on more popular or publicized political issues. My understanding is that an extensive report conducted by outside experts will be an important element in moving towards actual legislation. Creating such a bank will be very complex and with only the 100+ year-old Bank of North Dakota as a model, it will be important to get legislators the type of comprehensive analysis that such a report can provide. We should find ways to advocate for funding so that a report can lay the foundation for future efforts (not an overly-exciting or inspiring mission but one that can truly help)!

Jerry Fried, Economic Justice Task Force Chair, UU Faith Action NJ 

jerryfriedhome@gmail.com

 

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.