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Mid-South Peace & Justice Center

November 1, 2012 by Mid-South Peace & Justice Center

Get Out the Vote

logoVOTE! We at the Mid-South Peace and Justice Center want to remind you to make sure that you exercise your right to vote. Tomorrow, November 6th is election day and while most eyes will be focused on the Presidential election there are two very important ballot initiatives that need your support.

We are urging you to VOTE YES on the GAS TAX and SALES TAX. It makes sense for us to ensure that vital services in our community are funded and supported. We are there year round to make sure that our tax dollars are used to benefit those that need it most. This is the time to make sure our communities have the resources to build community. Please review the info below and make an informed choice.


VOTE YES! ON THE CITY OF MEMPHIS GAS TAX.  ONE CENT MAKES SENSE!

gastaxThe Memphis City Council voted to place on the ballot a referendum for a 1¢ cent tax per gallon of gas purchased within the city of Memphis. If it’s approved, the tax could provide as much as $3 million to MATA as a guaranteed source of revenue for local public transit. This small tax would amount to a mere $10.00 per year for a person who drives 20,000 miles a year at 20 miles to the gallon.

These funds will be used by MATA to improve service along the eight most used routes: the 52, 10, 8, 50, 56, 32, 43 and 39 buses. This will also result in cutting down on waiting times along the eight major routes and improved services during peak hours.The funds also would be used to improve bus shelters and hire additional drivers for MATA plus, a service for riders with disabilities that prevent them from using the fixed routes.

4mata1_t607The 1¢ Gas tax referendum is supported by the Mid-South Peace and Justice Center, the Memphis Bus Riders Union,The Sierra Club, Memphis Center for Independent Living, ADAPT of Tennessee, Latino Memphis, the League of Women Voters  and the National Federation of the Blind of Tennessee.

So get out the vote. To see if you are a registered voter and to find your voting precinct, please visit the links below.


VOTE YES FOR EDUCATION, VOTE YES FOR THE COUNTY SALES TAX.

salestaxEarly Voting has has ended, but you can still cast your vote FOR 30 million dollars to improve public education in Memphis and Shelby County on Nov. 6th by voting FOR the Shelby County Sales Tax Referendum.

Stand for Children is coordinating Election Day turnout for the campaign. They need volunteers to work with on election day to talk to voters and pass literature at the polls. This is a great opportunity to take a direct action for our schools and students. A few simple words from you to a voter could make the difference in this election. “Vote for OUR schools! Vote for the Sales Tax Referendum” that’s all it takes.

Not everyone realizes that half of the sales tax is guaranteed by state law to go to public education. This will equal 30 million more annually for our schools, about $200 more per student in Shelby County.

Here’s how you can help!

Just  have a hour or two, or a lunch break?

  • Volunteer for at your voting precinct or any polling site. Just let us know and we will get you literature and a sign. Or, we can assign you to a priority location.

 Can you work all day? (6:30am-7:00pm)

  • You will be assigned a polling location for ALL DAY
  • You will receive a volunteer and lunch stipend
  • You are asked to attend a training session on Monday November 5 at 6PM at the Stand for Children Office, 915 McLemore, Suite 201
  • On Election Day we ask you to be at your polling station from at 6:30AM

You all will be the difference in this election; and, these dollars will make a real difference in our schools.

Vote FOR the County Sales Tax, Vote FOR our Schools!

Email memphis@stand.org if you can help in any way!


Am I registered?

http://www.voteshelby.com/index.aspx?nid=87

Precinct Locator
http://www.voteshelby.com/index.aspx?NID=122

Filed Under: News

November 1, 2012 by Mid-South Peace & Justice Center

Community-Police Relations

memphis-united-thumbCommunity-Police Relations (Reconciliation) – CPR  

In many communities in our city, relationships between community members and members of law enforcement have deteriorated to the point of breakdown.

Some issues that are contributing to the mistrust between the two groups are:

*incidents of police harassment, making threats, racial profiling

*police officers being arrested for crimes and intense media coverage of these arrests

*some areas experiencing high degrees of violence, including gang violence

*negative feelings towards police conveyed within families inter-generationally

We have empathy for the people involved on all sides, from the officers that wake up each day to go out to provide a helping hand to those in need and to deal with real criminals, to those who have been victims of crime, those whose loved ones have been victimized, and to the family members that have lost loved ones in these conflicts..

To address these issues in a holistic fashion, the Mid-South Peace and Justice Center is facilitating a new and innovative project, Community-Police Relations (CPR), working first with a pilot group of community members and a pilot group of law enforcement officers to discuss and work to change the barriers to having good relationships between both groups.

We are working to improve community-police relations by:

*creating a safe space for dialogue about the real issues involved in relationships between the community and law enforcement

*building security for our communities that is based upon tactics that are determined by the communities themselves

*putting forth the solutions that will enable positive relations between the community and law enforcement

This project is not only about dialogue and healing; it is also about moving beyond healing process so that our community can re-engage in setting the agenda for how we deal with the problems we face.  It is about reconciliation that leads to empowerment.  We are here to make a change!

With the police department and community organizations in full support, the CPR effort has thus far brought together concerned community members and concerned police officers for an initial series of meetings. These meetings have involved the two groups meeting separately, discussing their experiences and sharing their feelings about the difficulties in the relationship between the two groups, and also offering initial suggestions as to how the difficulties can be addressed and how we can begin to rebuild trust between the two groups. Next month, the two groups will be brought together for the first joint meeting, where a real, direct dialogue will start that addresses some of the different perspectives and experiences, and that sheds some light on the barriers that have prevented parties from hearing each other and from working together in the past.

It will take more than law enforcement representatives and community liaisons to address our city’s need for reconciliation between community members and law enforcement.  We need your voice – we are listening!

Following this series of joint meetings between representatives of the community and of law enforcement, we will begin to take the dialogue and healing process out into other communities in the city.  CPR will be looking for host sites for community meetings in 2013.  The host sites will invite interested participants to learn more about community-police relations and this project and to be a part of proposing solutions to the problems that have contributed to the strained relations which currently exist.

CPR BridgeThe forums between community and law enforcement, and subsequent community meetings, will lead ultimately to a series of suggestions for change – in other words, an action plan that can be implemented city-wide to ensure positive relationships between communities and police.  This action plan will evolve organically from the input and dialogue between people on various sides of the issue and may involve political, institutional, psychological, social, and economic dimensions.

How can you help?

Learn more about the Community-Police Relations and the reconciliation effort.  Sign up to host a forum in 2013!

For more information, please contact CPR organizer Melissa Miller-Monie atmelissa@midsouthpeace.org or (901) 725-5490

Filed Under: News

October 30, 2012 by Mid-South Peace & Justice Center

Building Movements in Memphis

movement building photo-2 On September 28-30th, ten grassroots community groups from across the city came together for the Movement Building Training, hosted by MSPJC. This exciting training was facilitated by two national organizations, Center for Community Change and Green for All.

The MSPJC training team worked hard collaborating with them in designing the curriculum to fit the needs of the groups present, and what transpired was a dynamic weekend in which new, powerful connections were made and lots of important internal work was done within each attending organization as well.

movement building photo-1Groups had the chance to develop powerful narratives to tell others who they are and why they’re doing the work. They also had an opportunity to do campaign planning and develop an action plan of tactics to reach a specific goal they’re working towards. We also did lots of important big group learning and connecting. Many people present said they had never been in a training before where they felt so much support, like we were a family. Groups present included: Memphis Center for Independent Living/ADAPT, Tennessee Equality Project, Memphis Bus Riders Union, H.O.P.E., Comunidades Unidas, Women’s Action Coalition, Grow Memphis, M3, Change Memphis, Vance Avenue Collaborative, and S.O.L.I.D.S. This was a huge power building opportunity, and we are thrilled that we’re already seeing new collaborations and engagement from many of the groups which were present.

Filed Under: News

October 29, 2012 by Mid-South Peace & Justice Center

H.O.P.E. for today and H.O.P.E. for tomorrow

hopelogo2H.O.P.E. is the name of a Mid-South Peace and Justice Center sponsored organization whose members are exclusively people who are currently or have formerly experienced homelessness. For over a year now, H.O.P.E. has been organizing and agitating around the issues that are a priority to the homeless community.


DIGNITY:
H.O.P.E. members hit the pavement running this month, volunteering  with the Community Alliance for the Homeless for the 100k Homes campaign: Memphis 100, which will get 100 of the most vulnerable individuals of the street and into permanent supportive housing before Christmas.


39287_4252914973839_1025240397_nH.O.P.E. was instrumental in securing the funding for this campaign back in May, and to seal the deal, H.O.P.E. members spent three days getting up at four o’clock in the morning to do outreach and conduct surveys to connect 100 of our brothers and sisters with the housing and supportive services that they so desperately need.

“Of the 259 interviewed, more than half will be near death within the next two years.
Almost all of them sleep outside year round and over half of them have serious medical conditions.”

H.O.P.E. will continue to fight for funding that makes campaigns like this possible!


Mutual Emotional Support:

e22commission_t607H.O.P.E. wants to thanks the Krav Maga Center of Memphis for joining forces with H.O.P.E. to produce a series of monthly self defense classes for women experiencing homelessness!

92% of women on the street have experienced the victimization of physical or sexual assault. This will provide our members who are women with a way to develop their survival skills and strengthen the interpersonal bonds they have with one another in a safe andsupportive environment.  This, along with the added component of mutual emotional support and group counseling  will lead us to the creation of a H.O.P.E. Women’s Caucus, to specifically address the issues of women on our streets. We already know that the women in our group are some of our strongest leaders. We are looking forward to the next steps of strengthening these skills and building the internal capacity of H.O.P.E. to continue to win real tangible victories for our members.


Solidarity:

425816_4301793697209_1479921259_nThis month, H.O.P.E. men and women stood together with our LGBT brothers and sisters to support the the Non- Discrimination Ordinance, which the Memphis City Council passed with a 9-4 vote on October 16, 2012.  This ordinance now provides city employees with equal protection from discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity as well as disability, age, sex, national origin, and ethnicity.

H.O.P.E. knows that homelessness is a rainbow issue; there is no issue that we can’t find common ground with in the struggle for civil rights and equality. During a past H.O.P.E. meeting, members voted to support the work of TEP and will continue to support our LGBT members.


Self Determination:

390479_154352818037083_1941398029_nH.O.P.E. members have met every Monday at the Memphis Center for Independent Living, over the past several months to develop a business plan for a worker owned and operated tee-shirt printing co-op. This month, H.O.P.E. members finalized and voted to approve the business plan and bylaws for Street Wise ink CO-OP!

H.O.P.E. would like to thank Dan Levin, our business advisor for his tireless commitment and involvement in this project.  Here is an excerpt from our business plan:

“Street Wise Ink is a collaborative group of homeless and formerly homeless men and women joined together sharing knowledge to create a silk-screening business.  Based on the principle of “Teach a man to fish,” Street Wise Ink members are empowering themselves to break the chains of homelessness.
This will not only provide a sustainable income to Street Wise Ink members, it will also raise awareness of issues surrounding homelessness and provide additional revenues back to the community.
Additionally, extraordinary member creative talents and reinvestment from wholesale sales, will allow for the development of a retail revenue stream from member-designed items.”


Feeding the Movement:
H.O.P.E would like to thank Just for Lunch and Trolley Stop Market for making a commitment to donate meals each month for our weekly H.O.P.E. meetings at The Manna House! There are lots of ways to feed the movement, and we would like to thank all of our allies for their  continued support.


If you are interested in how you can support the work of H.O.P.E. members, please contact Paul Garner @ 901.725.4990 or paul@midsouthpeace.org and don’t forget to like us on Facebook for more H.O.P.E. updates!

Filed Under: News

October 20, 2012 by Mid-South Peace & Justice Center

2012 Annual Member Meeting

mspjc2012webJoin us for the Annual Member Meeting of the Mid-South Peace and Justice Center. This annual gathering is an important opportunity for all members to participate in setting the direction of our work. We have much to celebrate!

Already this year we have:

  • H.O.P.E. has won over $750,000 in funding for vital services for those experiencing homelessness. This seed funding has enabled our city to receive $5 million in additional funding to help those suffering most from the violence of poverty. They have also worked to hold service providers accountable to the people they serve through direct action, making sure that funds allocated to help those experiencing homelessness are used responsibly and effectively.
  • Launched a comprehensive Police-Community Relations project that is working to develop a community led vision of how we deal with the crime and violence in our neighborhoods.
  • Pushed back against SB2508, an anti-homeless law that makes sleeping on state property a Class A offense carrying more penalties than simple assault or domestic violence.
  • G.O.T. Power has trained and supported over a hundred grassroots community organizers. This included Core Organizer Trainings in English and Spanish and a recent Movement Building Training for almost 75 grassroots leaders.
  • Supported the development of a culture of organizing through the coordination of a series of movement circles built around local populations and for the first time a statewide movement circle as well.
  • Developed GrowMemphis into an independent 501(c)(3) organization that is leading the food justice movement in the mid-south.
  • Moved our offices and created a Social Justice Resource Center that we share with GrowMemphis and the TN Immigrant and Refugee Rights Coalition. We also have space available for other social justice groups to share.

Come join us as we celebrate our successes and plan for future victories. We will share a meal; get updated about our current work and accomplishments over the past year; and elect new Board members and officers.

MSPJC Annual Member Meeting
Saturday October 20
BRIDGES, 477 N. Fifth St.
5pm-7pm

This is your organization. Come help us shape it!

All current members are welcome. Not a member? You can join online at www.midsouthpeace.org/membership Any amount makes you a member. Please join now.

weblogo(2)The Annual Member gathering is immediately following the Gandhi-King Community Conference. Please join us all day on Oct. 20th as we work to build a movement around the critical issues in our community. TheGandhi-King Conference registration fee is on a sliding scale starting at free. But all paying attendees receive a complimentary membership in the Mid-South Peace and Justice Center. BUILD A MOVEMENT :: JOIN THE MOVEMENT

Filed Under: News

October 19, 2012 by Mid-South Peace & Justice Center

2012 Gandhi-King Youth Conference :: Gabriela Marquez-Benitez

Filed Under: Videos

October 7, 2012 by Mid-South Peace & Justice Center

Gandhi-King Community Conference :: Oct. 20, 2012

weblogo(2)

We are pleased to announce the 2012 GKC Community Conference, to be held on October 20th at BRIDGES. This year’s conference has a unique local focus on the key issues that are most important to our communities in securing lasting peace for all.

Register now! Registration is based on a sliding scale starting at free. Please sign up and attend to change our community.

This is an annual movement building space for activists, organizers, grassroots leaders and people that just want to improve their community and the world to gather in a unique environment that will leave them better equipped and connected to better our community.

The day long conference will be broken into three sessions that will build on one another so that you will leave inspired, connected and ready for action.

  • IgniteAction: A series of short, dynamic and engaging presentations on the issues that are most pressing in our community. Each short presentation will be led by an inspiring grassroots leader from the community focusing on the key issues of equality, poverty and homelessness, community led development, immigration reform, healthcare, education reform, and community-police relations.
  • Peoples Assembly Forums: Going deeper into the topics that were just presented to develop our own analysis of the issues and collaborate on ways that we can create change. Each session will be led by a panel of organizers working on these critical issues and will feature an open space discussion.
  • G.O.T. Power? (Grassroots Organizer Training): Apply the knowledge and analysis around community issues using new skills. Deepen your skills in participatory workshops designed to build upon your knowledge and experience so that you can take effective action. Workshops will include yoga and meditation, creating and working with media, greening your community, nonviolent direct action, embodied activism with Playback Memphis, nonviolent communication, and more.

Take a moment to register for this amazing opportunity. You will leave connected, inspired and already engaged in action.

The Community Conference will be held at the BRIDGES facility (477 N. Fifth St.) and will feature a sliding scale registration fee with no-one turned away for lack of ability to pay. This is a community conference and we are working to make it as accessible as possible to all people in our community.

We look forward to connecting, learning, and working with you to create the peace and justice vision of Dr. King and Gandhi. You can find updated info including the full schedule on our website, www.gandhikingconference.org

Filed Under: News

September 28, 2012 by Mid-South Peace & Justice Center

Latino Community: Got Power?

DSCF2638-JPGAlmost a month ago, 23 Latino Community Members and strategic allies from Memphis,  Jackson, and Nashville, TN came to the Mid-South Peace and Justice Center to attend the grassroots organizing training named, “GOT PODER.”

It was not the first time that Mid-South Peace and Justice Center has conducted this training with the Latino Community, but was actually a third event for M.S.P.J.C.  More trainings focused on local communities in need, have also been planned.

Presently, the Latino community of Memphis and surrounding areas are working very hard to stop disenfranchisement laws.  They have been learning that the most effective way to stop these laws is to be organized.  History has been teaching us this, not only with the Civil Rights movement of the 1960‘s but also the Chicano Movement, the Grape Strike lead by Cesar Chavez, and a most recent movement that struggles with laws dehumanizing immigrants.

In 2012, Memphis is no exception to this struggle.  While most people could say that Memphis is not like Arizona or Alabama in regard to discriminatory laws such as SB1070, 287G or HB 56, etc.;  it is accurate to say that every year TN legislators are tempted to implement a copycat proposal of those bills.  The common ground of such bills is to prohibit undocumented families from having access to housing, education, work and critical public services*.

In response, members of the Latino community, whether documented or not, and their allies are educating themselves in how to be organized, promote equality, and practice solidarity in the stand against discrimination.

*For more information about TN immigrant issues please visit the Tennessee Immigrant and Refugee Rights Coalition website www.tnimmigrant.org)

Following the GOT PODER Training, several attendees participated in the organization of a multi-cultural immigrant celebration named “Memphis Unafraid“ welcoming the Undocubus* to Memphis.  This was a bus with approximately 30 undocumented immigrants traveling from Arizona to North Carolina giving a simple but very important message: “We are the undocumented- without papers and without fear”.

  • *For more information about The Undocubus visit www.nopapersnofear.org

The Undocubus riders were encouraging undocumented immigrants to come out of the shadows of fear and take action for their own human rights, as well as vicariously the rights of others being represented culturally.

After a cultural celebration full of dance, poetry, theater, music and storytellers, three Memphis-Latino community members joined the Undocubus on their journey.  Two of those were Raul Venegas and Jose Salazar; both of whom also had been part of Got PODER and Core Organizing Training.  The third was Daniel Marquez- father of  West TN organizer Gabriela Benitez for T.I.R.R.C. (TN Immigrant and Refugee Rights Coalition).

One of the several stops for the Undocubus riders was Knoxville, TN.  This is a city that has been threatened by anti-immigrant laws and whose Sheriff had once refused discussion with the immigrant community.  The Undocubus riders, allies and community members let their voices be heard with a Nonviolent Direct Action blocking an intersection close to the Sheriff office.

Maricela UndocubusFour people were arrested, with one of those being Marcela Lou- another participant of GOT PODER training.  This was the first time in history that Latino community members, consisting both of documented, undocumented and immigrant allies were arrested in a Nonviolent Direct Action (N.V.D.A.) in this state.

Following further discussion with these courageous participants of the Undocubus and the N.V.D.A. in Knoxville, TN and hearing of the impact GOT PODER has had on them for taking action has encouraged M.S.P.J.C. to continue the work of training people and training communities for social justice for all.

The M.S.P.J.C. training staff would love to serve your group or organization. Please contact allison@midsouthpeace.org to talk about how we can create a training that meets your groups’ needs.

We also have trainings in Spanish.

Ofrecemos Entrenamientos en Español, por favor contacte  a gio@midsouthpeace.org

Filed Under: News

September 28, 2012 by Mid-South Peace & Justice Center

H.O.P.E. for one, H.O.P.E. for all

hopelogo2(H.O.P.E.) is the name of a Mid-South Peace and Justice Center sponsored organization whose members are exclusively people who are currently or have formerly experienced homelessness. Fresh off the heels of victory in our ROAD HOME campaign, where H.O.P.E. won more than $500,000 of County funding for homeless and veterans issues this organization is eager to continue the fight for our people.


Dignity & Self-Determination: A “Street Wise” Co-op

One of H.O.P.E.’s long-term projects is the formation of Street-Wise Ink, a worker-owned tee shirt printing co-op to facilitate part time income sources for its members. H.O.P.E. members have been attending workshops where they are being trained in silkscreen printing to create t-shirts for organizations, church youth organizations, political campaigns and grassroots organizing groups. This service will be fully owned and operated by the members themselves.

Img0001_09-11-2012

H.O.P.E. members involved in the co-op have also been attending regular weekly meetings to discuss the business aspect of running a co-op; drafting by-laws, a feasibility study, and business plan, as well as discussing membership dues, pay structure, and branding. Most recently, the co-op has been designing and printing shirts for the Mid-South Peace and Justice center to sell at the Cooper-Young festival on Saturday, September 15.

If you are interested in contributing your support to this project, please contact Paul Garner @901.725.4990


Solidarity: “H.O.P.E. for 100”

In July, H.O.P.E. joined as a member of the Memphis/Shelby Homelessness Consortium. The Consortium is made up of more than 40 member agencies, led by the Community Alliance for the Homeless, a nonprofit that provides planning, technical assistance and service coordination to public and private agencies working to end homelessness in Shelby County.

H.O.P.E. member Robbie Howard is the group’s official representative on this body and has been attending the committee meetings for Outreach & Chronic Homelessness.  Back in May, H.O.P.E. secured $510,000 in the county budget for homeless services. $250,000 of these funds is set aside to provide early outreach and In-home case management and wrap around services for 100 of the most vulnerable individuals experiencing homelessness in our city. These are individuals who are projected under current conditions to die within the next two years without housing and services. These funds will bridge the gap for these individuals moving into permanent supportive housing until their Medicare benefits are processed. Now, H.O.P.E. and the Community Alliance for the Homeless need your help. We are seeking volunteers to assist in street outreach to identify 100 unsheltered individuals who qualify for these services and get them off the street by Christmas of 2012. If you are interested in assisting in this process, please register here.


Mutual Emotional Support: H.O.P.E. For Steve :: Update!

H.O.P.E is pleased to announce that we have raised enough funds to help our member, Steve pay his rent for the month of September! We would like to thank everyone who has made a contribution to help Steve in his time of need. Thanks to you and the generosity of other H.O.P.E. supporters, we were able to raise enough funds to keep Steve in his place and off the streets for another month while he awaits the start of his disability benefits. H.O.P.E. is committed to ending homelessness here in Memphis and across the US, however we realize that if we can keep one individual from falling through the cracks of society, it is just as important as addressing the systemic issues of inequity that cause homelessness.  We appreciate your continued support in this struggle and want you to know that by answering the call, you have made a huge difference for Steve by not only giving him the security of a roof over his head, but also the piece of mind that he is not alone in his personal struggle for a brighter future. Steve will continue to work with H.O.P.E. to advocate for himself and others who are caught in similar situations. Please spread the good news to your friends and family!

Filed Under: News

August 8, 2012 by Mid-South Peace & Justice Center

Building a Movement :: free training for grassroots groups :: Sept. 28-30

Big logo(1)The Mid-South Peace and Justice Center is facilitating a three-day workshop to foster the development of skills and capacity for groups and organizations involved in grassroots organizing work across our region. We hope this training is an opportunity for us to support one-another and come together into the Memphis Movement! 

What is it?

This is a training for new and established groups that are working to better their community. It is not a training for service providers; this is for groups engaged in grassroots community organizing. This is not your ordinary training. Your group will learn how to use the power of  story to move people to action, you will work together to identify tactics and plan strategy that can be immediately implemented in your work together, and you will support one another in becoming individual leaders leading a collective movement.

Who should come?

Are you involved in a group or campaign that is working for social, economic, environmental or racial justice? Does your group want to build their individual skills and develop a group plan to win on their issues? Are there 5-10 people in your group that will commit to the entire training? If the answer is yes to all three then you should definitely come. If you are unsure about some of the questions please contact us and lets figure it out. This is more than a training; it is a space for movement building. It’s not a movement without you and your communities issues. Sign up now!

How does my group sign up?

To sign up and get more detailed information  contact Giovanna Lopez at gio@midsouthpeace.org or 901.725.4990. There is no cost to participate in this training opportunity. We are asking that each group identify 1-2 lead contacts that will commit to bringing 5-10 members of your group to the training. Participants must commit to the entire training which runs Sept. 28-30 (Fri. 6-9pm; Sat. 9am-5pm; Sun 1-5pm.)

Filed Under: News

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