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You are here: Home / News

News

July 17, 2016 by Ashley Caldwell

Mark Your Calendars! Summer Public Workshops

Community organizer training is about unveiling the mainstream power dynamics that exist to keep marginalized people “in their place,” and then realizing that we have the power to bring those dynamics into balance.
We can’t and shouldn’t sit back and wait for those in authority to make changes for us. We know best what our communities need. The most powerful and lasting way for change to occur is by doing it ourselves.
Mid-South Peace and Justice Center’s training program,Grassroots Organizer Training for Power, expands our community’s capacity to create social change through building skills in grassroots organizing, providing support to people doing community work, and offering oppression awareness and liberation education.
What can we offer you?
  • Trainings and workshops can be designed specifically for any kind of group in a variety of formats including comprehensive weekend workshops on specific issues and skill sets.
  • Trainings in Spanish are also available upon request. We work and collaborate with bilingual trainers and facilitators.
  • Click HERE to see the wide variety of workshops and trainings we offer.
  • Training and workshop fees are negotiable, scholarships are available, and donations for scholarships are greatly appreciated.

 

Filed Under: News

June 19, 2016 by Mid-South Peace & Justice Center

Memphis United contacts CLERB complainants

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This week, Memphis United mailed 176 letters to people the City of Memphis referred to the Civilian Law Enforcement Review Board between 2011 and 2013 — when the board did not exist.   

There are more individuals who we will contact in the coming weeks.  These individuals are part of a larger “backlog” of people the city referred to a nonexistent board.  All of these people deserve a fair shot at justice.  That means having a CLERB with the power to hold law enforcement accountable; that means subpoena power.

Last year, Memphis United won our campaign to reinstate the board and strengthen it with a subpoena process.  But now the subpoena process is in danger of being removed through a substitute ordinance by Councilman Worth Morgan.

We’re asking people to contact their City Council representatives — in particularDistrict 5 Councilman Worth Morgan, Worth.Morgan@memphistn.gov, (901) 636-6786) — and tell them that taking the time to understand the language of the ordinance is worth it to ensure that CLERB has the power to hold law enforcement accountable.

Memphis United is MSPJC’s criminal justice reform project.  Our victories include the reinstatement of a civilian law enforcement review board.  But we need your help.  Please click here to sustain our work toward law enforcement accountability.  

Filed Under: News

June 1, 2016 by Ashley Caldwell

Victory! Millions for MATA Buses and Services

City council got a standing ovation for unanimous approval of the fy 2017 operating and capital budget, which includes $7.5 million increase for MATA.
This additional funding will help add new buses to the system and prevent further service cuts! We’ve never seen a budget approved so quickly.
Thank you all for your emails and phone calls and meetings with Mayor Stricland and the City Council. A special thank you to the Amalgamated Transit Union Local 713, The Memphis Advisory Council For People With Disabilities, the Memphis Transportation Advisory Committee, Innovate Memphis, and the Sierra Club and Lifeline to Success for pushing this issue into the spotlight, and thank you Councilmembers Edmund Ford Jr., Berlin Boyd, Martavius Jones, Janis Fullilove and Mayor Jim Strickland for showing critical support for our public transit system.
This is a good temporary fix that will stave off cuts to service. However, we must continue as a city to push for increased funding from all levels of government to ensure that public transit works for all who need it.

Filed Under: News

May 20, 2016 by Ashley Caldwell

Community Organizing Skills Training

Community Organizing Skills Training explores with the participants the foundational skills to be organizers and create systematic change in a group or community, keeping nonviolence as a foundation.

This training is fully interactive and has direct application in each session.  We train using popular education and integrating experiential education, allowing people to explore in a hands-on, direct manner, while also drawing out the expertise that the individual already has within.

Who should attend this Community Organizing Skills Training?
Experienced and less-experienced organizers,  activists, community leaders and any other people who wants to learn what ‘community organizer’ is about.

Topics covered include:
Intro to Organizing, Campaign Planning, Facilitating Meetings, Working with Media and Intro to Nonviolent Direct Action.

Where: 1000 South Cooper St. Memphis Tn 38104 – First Congregational Church Conference Center

When: Friday, May 27:  6-9pm
Saturday, May 28:  9am-5pm
Sunday, May 29:   2-6:30pm

****** No partial attendance allowed ******

Cost: Sliding scale ($30-$375) based on the individual’s income. If your organization is sending you to the training, use the organizational budget to determine the fee.

Please consider that it costs MSPJC $200 per person to do the training.

Fee includes 14+ hours of training, simple snacks, light breakfast and lunch on Saturday, materials and follow up support from a network of the mid-south best organizers and activists.
Some scholarships may be available, please request scholarship application by email.
Donations for workshop scholarships gratefully accepted!

 

Filed Under: News

May 18, 2016 by Mid-South Peace & Justice Center

Global Ministries Foundation’s bonds downgraded again

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Mold at Warren apartments, May 29, 2015

Thanks to our brave tenant organizers, Global Ministries Foundation may finally be held accountable for the unlivable conditions of its subsidized housing properties.

S&P Global ratings reviewed GMF’s 2014 and 2015 financial statements and its housing portfolio.

The findings of this review prompted the agency to downgrade ratings on 23 GMF bonds including those for Goodwill Village, Serenity Towers, and Madison Towers.  

This is the second time this year S&P has lowered ratings on GMF’s bonds.

As WREG reports:

A ratings analyst said based on their review, the events at Warren and Tulane weren’t “isolated.”

The report read, “We believe there’s a heightened risk that HUD could decline the renewal of, or even terminate one or more of GMF’s Section 8 HAP contracts besides Warren and Tulane.”

S&P also said GMF’s financial position will likely get worse considering the need for substantial repairs at so many complexes.

The ratings agency conducted its own site review at several GMF properties and noted poor conditions at a number of locations.

Just last week, the bank that serves as the trustee for bondholders filed a lawsuit against the non-profit in federal court.

Senator Marco Rubio visited GMF’s troubled Eureka Gardens in Jacksonville, Florida and called for a criminal investigation.

“We are glad to finally see some badly needed oversight and accountability.  But we all know that Global Ministries Foundation is the tip of the iceberg of an entire system of corruption within the site-based Section 8 housing network,” said Mid-South Peace and Justice Center Executive Director Brad Watkins.

“We need several things.  From HUD, we need increased oversight and more diligent inspections.  Further, we need a renewed investment in the capacity of local code enforcement and a robust tenants’ rights and organizing movement.  We are in this for the long haul.  But sadly, there are many more Richard Hamlets out there,” Watkins said.

While we applaud recent legal actions against GMF, we know that none of this would have happened without the work of our brave tenant organizers at Warren, Tulane, and Serenity Towers apartments.  Please support our Tenants Rights Project here to ensure that this work continues.

Filed Under: News

May 15, 2016 by Mid-South Peace & Justice Center

What happened at last week’s CLERB meeting

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Our Ashley Caldwell attended the Civilian Law Enforcement Review Boardmeeting at City Hall.

Confusion among the board

A large portion of the meeting focused on how the board members did not understand the ordinance.  There was back and forth dialogue about whether or not the board had subpoena power.  The board also presented a packet of emails from July 2015 between then- City Councilman Alan Crone and City Council attorney Allan Wade, and were confused as to how the ordinance was passed granting them subpoena power even after Wade presented information proving subpoena power not to be possible.  Even after reading the section of the ordinance outlining their powers, they were still confused.

Possible Sunshine Law violation

Following the subpoena power discussion, the board discussed an issue brought forth by the Commercial Appeal last month, that their confidential deliberation may put them in violation of the state’s Sunshine Law.

To briefly sum it up, this law requires that any meeting containing more than one city appointed or elected official to be open to the public and the press.  As the CLERB members are appointed by the city, the newspaper may  be on to something.  There is a clause in the CLERB ordinance that allows the board members to deliberate privately or close the meeting by a unanimous vote from the board members if the situation calls for confidentiality or the case pertains to sensitive information.  The board discussed whether or not this still put them in violation of the Sunshine Law.

From these two conversations is where the big and somewhat frightening news derived.

City Council may want to create its own CLERB ordinance

Apparently, Councilman Worth Morgan told the board last month that due to confusion about whether the board is operating unlawfully under the Sunshine Law and if the ordinance wrongfully allows the board subpoena power, there is talk among some City Council members of amending the CLERB ordinance and creating a new ordinance themselves.

We probably don’t have to tell you how dicey this may become if the Council moves on this, or that it could result in an ordinance not reflecting the will of the public, which we collected in the first stage of our CLERB campaign.

CLERB considers first case

Aside from all the confusion, CLERB wrapped up their first case.  The board voted to sustain the findings of MPD Internal Affairs.  Their reasoning: there was information impossible to discover from all the evidence, and the hospital records state that no injuries (not even bruising or swelling) were observed on the complainant.  They did decide to recommend a policy change to Juvenile Hall to prevent situations like this from happening in the future.

Hints of progress

CLERB investigator Arthur Robinson announced that CLERB’s independent website is in the process of  being built now.

Also, the CLERB members are scheduling ride-alongs and civilian police academy training.

And in another bit of good news, CLERB members attended an executive meeting with all of MPD’s top brass.  At this meeting, Interim Police Director Mike Rallings told the board members that he looks forward to working with them and does not see them as adversarial.  Furthermore, Rallings agreed to provide the board a copy of MPD’s policy and procedures manual.

As you can see, we are going to have some work to do with the board to keep it on the path intended by the grueling process of amending the ordinance, but this will be manageable.

We will never shy away from advocating for the rights of the people.  Please help us continue our criminal justice reform work by supporting the Mid-South Peace and Justice Center today.

Filed Under: News

May 11, 2016 by Mid-South Peace & Justice Center

Our work continues to pay off: NY bank wants receiver for Warren and Tulane apartments

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Mold at Warren apartments, May 29, 2015

Remember when we first raised the issue of Global Ministries Foundation being slumlords and criminals, and “respectable people” chastised us and debated if this was true?  They’re silent now, but the same can’t be said for the attorneys taking GMF to task.

As the Commercial Appeal reports, the Bank of New York Mellon Trust has asked a federal judge in Memphis to strip GMF of control of Warren and Tulane apartments.

Attorneys for the bank accused GMF of allowing the property to fall into a state of disrepair to the point of not meeting basic standards, according to the motion filed in U.S. District Court on Friday.  Attorneys also accused GMF of failing to alert bondholders of the notice of default the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development issued over nine months ago.  The bank indicated in court records it found out about HUD stopping federal subsidies for the property from the federal housing agency, not from GMF.  The bank’s motion also suggests GMF may have committed fraud.

The article also quotes our brave tenant organizer Cynthia Crawford who faced retaliation by GMF after she spoke out.

We have huge plumbing issues here.  The toilets overflow, tubs overflow after we shower,” said Cynthia Crawford, who lives at Warren and is also part of the tenant organization.  “That’s a health hazard.  We are going to move out but that’s going to take time.”

Crawford said she welcomed the idea of having someone new in charge of making repairs and ensuring tenants aren’t living in squalor.

While we are pleased to see action finally taken against GMF, we know that none of this would have happened without the work of our brave tenant organizers.  Please support our Tenants Rights Project here to ensure that this work continues.

Filed Under: News

May 10, 2016 by Ashley Caldwell

$5 Million for New Buses in Strickland Budget

Thanks to everyone who came out in support of our #BudgetForBuses rally! With the ATU Local 713, we’ve been fighting for the city to prioritize replacing older buses over trolleys, and Mayor Strickland’s 2016-2017 budget is a good start: MATA will receive $5 million in capital funding to purchase new buses. However, MATA will also receive only $2.5 million in operations, which falls short of what we need. In February, MATA CEO Ron Garrison asked the city for $8 million in operations, and said that MATA is “on the verge of collapse.”
MBRU Co-chairs Cynthia Bailey and Sammie Hunter spoke to WREG and WMC Action News 5 about the new budget:
“I think it’s a start. We’re OK with it, but we’re not really satisfied. We need another $8 to 9 million.” -Cynthia
“We’ll fight to get the money for the system.” -Sammie
Garrison spoke with MBRU members and promised that there will be no service cuts. But our work isn’t done: MBRU will work with the city and MATA to find new ways to increase MATA’s operating dollars. Our victory on the 19th is just the beginning!
There will be a public budget hearing for MATA tomorrow, 5PM on the 5th floor of City Hall. Come out and show your city leaders that increased MATA funding is still a top priority! We’ll keep you posted as budget deliberations continue.

Filed Under: News

May 9, 2016 by Mid-South Peace & Justice Center

ICYMI: Our Executive Director discusses looming public housing crisis on Talk, Memphis

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Brad Watkins records Talk, Memphis.  Photo credit: Commercial Appeal

More than 750 subsidized housing families – as many as 2,000 people – are expected to be displaced in Memphis by Sept. 1.

Those are families now living in Foote Homes, the city’s last public housing project, scheduled to be razed, and the Warren and Tulane apartments, whose owner lost HUD funding.

Where will they go?  Is there enough livable and affordable housing for all of them?

“If this is not handled properly, we could have a serious housing crisis,” said Brad Watkins, executive director of the Mid-South Peace and Justice Center.

“A dry Katrina.”

Watkins has become the community’s leading advocate for subsidized housing residents.  He was instrumental in efforts to get the city, state, and federal officials to examine Global Ministries Foundation, which owns Warren and Tulane.

Listen to the full podcast here.

Support our Tenants Rights Project here.

Filed Under: News

May 9, 2016 by Mid-South Peace & Justice Center

How to clean neighborhoods and involve youth

The Clean Neighborhoods Act was passed by the Tennessee legislature in 2010 and signed into law by former Governor Phil Bredesen.

This law would allow community organizations, schools groups, church groups, and other groups of people to contract with the city and county for the mowing of grass and removal of trash from vacant properties.

Imagine what a boon this could be to grassroots and neighborhood-level groups operating in our community?

Further, by allowing people in their own communities to earn income from eliminating blight, this law could take tax dollars out of the hands of dubious contractors and put that funding directly into the communities that need them.

When combined with our Juvenile Justice Project, the Clean Neighborhoods Act could pave the way for a neighborhood-driven jobs program for our youth.

While the Clean Neighborhoods Act is state law, neither the Memphis City Council nor the Shelby County Commission has passed the simple resolution needed for local activation of the law.

It’s time we made this happen.

Filed Under: News

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