Civil Rights Press Clippings
Sleeping is a Crime
by Sam Miller, Clamor Magazine Voting Poor Columbia Journalism Homeless Votes Count, Too Columbia Journalism RNC: Where are they now? Radio.Indymedia.org, Aug 31, 2005 National Conference Brings Energy, Strategies, Information to Portland Portland Cop Watch, Feb. 10, 2005 Empty Dreams, Homeless 'canners' crushed by the system Vilage Voice, Dec. 17, 2004 Sleep-Out to protest Harrasment & Selective Enforcement of Homeless people in NYC Radio Indymedia, Nov. 26, 2004 2004 National Conference on Police Accountability Playback Times Flying Focus Video Collective, Oct. 2004 The New York the Bush Partisans Wouldn't See Tenant Inquilino, Sep. 2004 Interviews from Still We Rise March Radio Inymedia, Aug 31, 2004 Protestors Greet Start of GOP Convention with Poor People’s Marches The New Standard, Aug. 31, 2004 Life Could Get Tougher RNC Displaces NYC's Homeless Catholics for Democracy, Aug. 4, 2004 Real Change News, Jul. 8, 2004 Picture The Homeless and Judson Memorial Church Mark National Homeless Memorial Day Global Black NewsJan. 4, 2004 The live-ins -- Homeless fight for a place in the park nyc24.org City's sued in homeless busts Daily News, Nov. 26, 2002 Gavin Newsom's Scared of the People..!! Poor Magazine Online, Mar. 12, 2002 Stop Police Brutality stoppolicebrutality.org, May 1, 2000 Civil Rights Reports & PublicationsCivil Rights Campaign MeetingThe Civil Rights Committee meets every Tuesday at 2pm.
All homeless persons interested in civil rights issues are welcome, and strongly encouraged, to attend! Google Analytics |
Homeless Civic Participation Project
We launched a Homeless Civic Participation Project to ensure that homeless New Yorkers’ right to vote is honored, that people know their voting rights, including those in jail on Rikers Island– many of whom are incarcerated because they are homeless. Our civic participation team are homeless New Yorkers trained in voting rights and government accountability so that homeless New Yorkers build our capacity to engage with public and elected officials to adopt our agenda for real solutions to homelessness.
Our innovative teach-ins stimulate dialogue around critical issues and how to identify and engage decisionmakers that have power over our issues: including elected and appointed public officials. We provide opportunities for homeless New Yorkers, through grass roots organizing and political education, to utilize their own power, individually and collectively as members of the community to identify and implement real solutions to homelessness as informed voters. While voter participation is a critical part of the foundation of our democratic system, ongoing engagement with elected officials and appointed public officials from the federal level to our community boards is critical to develop real solutions to homelessness, to end the criminalization of homelessness as public policy and to hold local government accountable for the provision of emergency services and shelter to homeless people. We are working towards building upon relationships with other homeless led organizations nationwide as we identify issues of national impact, such as criminalization and policies governing affordable housing to develop a national homeless peoples platform. "I believe that it was Harriet Tubman, the legendary conductor on the underground Railroad who said, “I could’ve freed a whole lot more slaves if only they knew they were slaves.” One important part of getting empowering homeless people is getting them to recognize the rights they have and that they need not be excluded from civic participation because of homelessness. Being homeless doesn’t mean that you can’t:
( categories: Civil Rights )
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