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Week of Action: Tell Congress and the Senate to Pass Juvenile Justice Reform Now! |
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Monday, 01 March 2010 14:39 |
 W. Haywood Burns Institute
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| WEEK OF ACTION TO PROTECT YOUTH |
March 1-5, 2010 |
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Tell Congress to Reauthorize the Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act (JJDPA)
Every day across the nation, youth are detained in juvenile facilities for shoplifting, running away, getting in a brawl at school, or other minor offenses. Two-thirds of youth in juvenile detention are youth of color, even though they make-up only one-third of the nation's population. That is because youth of color continue to receive more severe sentences than White youths, even when they have comparable offense charges and histories.
Tell Congress to protect juveniles and address disparities.
Thirty-six years ago, the federal government signed into law an act that provides federal standards to protect juveniles coming into contact with the juvenile justice system. Today, the Juvenile Justice Delinquency and Prevention Act (JJDPA) is overdue for reauthorization.
JJDPA includes four core protections for youth in the juvenile justice system:
· Keep runaways, truants and other "status offenders" out of secure facilities;
· Prevent youth from being placed in adult jails (with limited exceptions);
· Ensure that youth in adult jails are separated by sight and sound from adult offenders;
· Require states to address the disproportionate contact of youth of color with the system.
We must urge Congress to act.
Now is the time for Americans to take on the responsibility of getting troubled and vulnerable youths back on track. It is time to push our government to encourage a fairer, safer and more effective juvenile justice system. Tell Congress to renew their commitment by preserving and advancing juvenile justice system reforms and effective delinquency prevention efforts by reauthorizing the JJDPA. The Senate Judiciary Committee has passed S. 678. But there has been no bill introduced in the House.
You can make a difference.
1) If you have only 30 seconds...
Sign a petition calling for action on the JJDPA: In the House and In the Senate
2) If you can spare a few minutes...
Email, send or fax a letter urging the House of Representatives and the Senate to reauthorize the JJDPA.
3) If you can give even more of your time...
Phone your Senator to express your support for S. 678 and to ask for their co-sponsorship. Call your Representative to urge action around reauthorization of JJDPA. Click to Find Your Senator and to Find Your Representative
Thank you for helping to protect youth across our nation.
Sincerely,
The Burns Institute in partnership with the Act4JJ Campaign (www.act4jj.org)
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WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 6TH PROTEST THE SENTENCING OF Steven Menendez and Jose Garcia |
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Written by Shadi Rahimi
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Tuesday, 05 January 2010 09:45 |
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Downtown L.A. Criminal Court Building (Clara Shortridge Foltz Criminal Justice Center) 210 West Temple Street, Los Angeles, CA 90012 Court in Session at 8:30am / Judge Norm Shapiro, 11th Floor, Division 116 Press Conference - 1:30 pm, Downstairs on Temple

Steven was 14 and José was 16 when a 26-year-old told them to drive with him to "talk to some girls." Instead, the 26-year-old sat in the back seat and fired a gun out of the car, killing a teenager on the street. He was never arrested and has since been killed. But, the two teenagers were convicted of murder late last year after going back and forth between juvenile hall and court for nearly three years.
On Wednesday, January 6th, they will be sentenced. They face 50-to-Life (Steven) and Life Without the Possibility of Parole (Jose). They are being sentenced to die in prison. Thousands of California youth are serving similar sentences. Our goal is to pack the courtroom and follow it up with a media action outside. This will be the first of many actions in 2010 to push for the END OF LIFE WITHOUT PAROLE AND OTHER EXTREME SENTENCES FOR YOUTH IN CALIFORNIA, starting by working to PASS SENATE BILL 399 which made it through the State Senate last year, and must make it through the Assembly this year.
From the: Youth Justice Coalition Visit us @ Chuco's: 1137 E. Redondo Blvd., Inglewood, CA 90302 Mail us @: PO Box 73688, Los Angeles, CA 90003 Call us @: 323-235-4243 fax us @: 323-846-9472 E-mail us @:
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SF Board of Supes Passes Sanctuary Law; Mayor Won't Honor It |
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Tuesday, 13 October 2009 13:47 |
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Immigrant rights advocates and youth cheered when the San Francisco Board of Supervisors voted 8-2 to pass the immigrant youth policy on Tuesday – requiring that undocumented youth NOT be turned over to federal immigration officials upon their arrest (they would still be turned over if convicted of a felony). But Mayor Gavin Newsom, who is now running for governor, "will give no credence" to the legislation, according mayor's spokesman. Instead, the mayor will continue to direct law enforcement officials to turn youth over to federal officials as soon as they're arrested on felony charges. CALIFORNIA RESIDENTS: Call the Mayor's office to voice your opinion on this! Be sure to leave a message if you do not get a live person as your message will still count.
"My name is ___________, and I’m calling on behalf of ___________ (organization name). (If concerned resident, mention where you are calling from in California and that you know he's running for governor). I’m calling to ask for your support of the policy the Board of Supervisors passed to restore due process to undocumented youth in San Francisco. Passage of the policy will prevent innocent youth from being separated from their families and from being unnecessarily reported to ICE for deportation. Thank you." Mayor Gavin Newsom City Hall, Room 200 1 Dr. Carlton B. Goodlett Place San Francisco, CA 94102 Telephone: (415) 554-6141 Fax: (415) 554-6160 Email:
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Community event Sept. 25 @ Barrios Unidos for Alex Sanchez! |
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Written by Shadi Rahimi
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Thursday, 17 September 2009 08:45 |
Santa Cruz Barrios Unidos will host a movie and music fundraising event in support of Alex Sanchez. In addition, guest speakers from Homies Unidos and Barrios Unidos will address issues on current gang suppression activities and how the war on gangs is a war on marginalized youth of color. Hip-hop artists BRWN BFLO, Para La Gente, Machetero, Poetic S., Reporte Ilegal will also perform and Barrios will screen their featured documentary movie, "Hijos de la Guerra." The event will be broadcast live on KPFA "La Onda Bajita." If you can't make it, please make your donation today to help Alex win his release. Alex sits today in a federal prison due to weak evidence and the stigmatization of El Salvadorian youth. It is critical for everyone in the activist community to take a stand against this great injustice. Please go to Homies Unidos page on Groundspring and make your donation today. Or, donate to the Brown Berets who are raising proceeds to go to Alex's family who are facing economic hardships due to Alex's incarceration. About HIJOS DE LA GUERRA (movie synopsis) Hijos de la Guerra tells the story of the Mara Salvatrucha (MS-13), an international Hispanic street gang founded by Salvadoran civil war refugees, which the U.S government singles out as the fastest-growing and most violent gang in the country. The film explores the individual motivations behind gang membership and the ensuing explosion of fratricidal violence, as well as the complex role of social and government policy in attempting to contain and yet unintentionally encouraging the spread of the gang. At its inception, the newly formed gang channeled the widespread trauma that a genocidal civil war had wrought on an entire generation of orphaned and militarized kids into fanatical violence. This formed the basis for MS-13's explosive growth. Artist Website's http://www.myspace.com/brwnbflohttp://www.myspace.com/paralagentehttp://www.myspace.com/mentespeligrosashttp://www.myspace.com/poeticstimulatorhttp://www.myspace.com/reporteilegalmusica |
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Help Reflect and Strengthen Out of Financial Crisis! |
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Tuesday, 08 September 2009 13:04 |
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Reflect and Strengthen (R&S) is in a financial crisis. Though we have continued to run the organization at full capacity throughout the summer, R&S staff has not been paid since June and there is no money to start the fall session. To respond to this emergency situation, we have been forced to shut down programming until we figure out a plan for a sustainable future. R&S staff, members, and board members will be focusing solely on fundraising and financial planning during this time. Fundraising has always been a challenge for a small, social justice grassroots group like us. This year is different. We have been denied critical funding from foundations that have supported us for years. We have been denied money from new foundations due to the recession. We have received less money from foundations whose endowments were hit hard. While we have exceeded our grassroots fundraising goal for the fiscal year and coordinated many in-kind donations, it’s not enough. 
The community has identified R&S as a vital resource for young people and an organization with the power to transform Boston and beyond. For many of us, joining R&S was the first time in our lives we experienced feeling safe and uplifted by other women, the first time that we were empowered to take leadership, and the first time the trauma we went through as working class people was addressed with healing, analysis, and organizing tools. Our members aren’t getting our unique needs met in school or in other groups we may be a part of. If R&S were to close, there would be no place in our city for young women like us to go. Now, we need our people to step up in solidarity with our membership so that R&S can survive. We are asking for your support in raising $52,421. Without this amount, we cannot re-launch programming. R&S needs you to: donate, throw a house party, reach out to your networks, hold an event, and do whatever is in your heart to raise money. No amount is too small. We have grants pending in September and are hopeful such funding will help us reach our goal. R&S is grateful for your ongoing support and loving action. We are walking in faith we will emerge from this crisis a stronger and more permanent force for personal and social transformation. We are only as strong as the community that lifts us up. To donate now click on Network for Good. Visit R&S website for more: www.reflectandstrengthen.org Mission Reflect and Strengthen (R&S) is a grassroots collective of young working class women from the urban neighborhoods of Boston who take a holistic approach to organizing in order to create personal and social transformation. Our programming focuses are political education, healing from trauma, creative expression, community building, and campaign work to end racial disparities in the juvenile justice system. Vision Reflect & Strengthen's vision for social justice is to create a world where all people are afforded equitable opportunity, support and resources to nurture the development of their minds, spirits, health, and well-being; where women, people of color, queer people, differently-abled people, elders and youth are respected interpersonally and institutionally; where people are free to practice and share their beliefs and traditions; where societies are run collectively and resources are shared equally; where international laws prevent the taking of land, natural resources or labor by force and violence. |
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