Metro Justice News!

New high-tech takeover at MJ!

Our outdated organizational and communications technology is now going to be a thing of the past! We just converted to a new system that makes our website easier for members to donate, sign up for volunteer roles, and become even more involved with Metro Justice.

Also, with this system, our database will be easier to update, which will allow us to bring more volunteers into the office to help us with day-to-day tasks.

The NationBuilder software not only makes us more efficient but makes it easier for you to share our articles, petitions, and membership sign-up with your friends and family over Facebook.

The most important new feature, our membership pages, are now easier to fill out, making online donations to join Metro Justice a snap! Plus, once you donate, you can even share with your Facebook friends that you contributed!

We already identified a need to have more original content by our members available online. With an easier-to-update website, we can easily add more of this content to our website.

If you are interested in helping with this change by either providing feedback or suggesting content, email [email protected]


Colin O'Malley urges NY to "Raise the Age!"

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“The impact might not be just spending time in jail, it might not be just spending more time in jail, it could be loss of section 8 housing possibilities, it could be loss of college aid, it could be decreased job potential once you’re out.” MJ Organizing Director explained at the "Raise the Age" Press Conference at the Center for Youth yesterday morning.

Teenagers in New York who are 16-year-olds and get in trouble with the law can be tried as an adult. But some want to see that age go up. The “Raise the Age Movement” wants teens 18-year-olds and older to be tried as adults.

80 percent of teens who end up in adult jails will re-offend. When they get out of these jails, those children will have less of a chance of getting education, a good job and even affordable housing. 

New York State and North Carolina are the only states in the country that treat children 16-year-olds and older as adults in the legal system.

Other Media Sources:

City Magazine Article

WHEC

WXXI


Education is liberation: Metro Justice Speakers Bureau

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Later this month, Metro Justice will be announcing to dozens of community organizations, block clubs, unions, churches, and schools the creation of our Speakers Bureau.

We know that building movements for social justice requires a shift in consciousness among many of the people in our city. While many of our core values are incredibly popular, the specifics of some arguments are lost, and often members of the public are easily manipulated because they lack awareness of many important details of policy decisions being made or proposed. [More after the Jump]

Read more

Voting Rights Attacked, but also Defended

By Rosemary Rivera, Metro Justice Member

VRA.jpgThe March on Washington, the Civil Rights Act, and the Voting Rights Act changed the American landscape 50 years ago allowing more access to the ballot. Yet in June of this year, the Supreme Court gutted the Voting Rights Act of 1965 by eliminating section five.

Sections 4 and 5 (Section 4 is still in effect, but without Section 5 it is useless) constitute what Rep. John Lewis calls the heart and soul of the act. They require nine states (most of them in the Old South, plus a few others outside this region, and also smaller jurisdictions like Manhattan, Brooklyn, and the Bronx) with a history of racial discrimination to get federal approval before changing their election procedures. This requirement, dubbed “pre-clearance,” came under attack by Supreme Court Justices Roberts and Scalia, et al., who claim that our country has changed and that pre-clearance has become an undue burden for these states and localities and that the formula for determining how the law applies is outdated and unconstitutional. Eliminating Section 5 lifts the restrictions on states, so now they can determine their own voting regulations without federal approval. Justice Roberts has been on the warpath with a long term strategy about lifting restrictions for these states for quite some time. [More after the jump]

 

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Racist violence, White privilege – and real solutions

Racist violence, White privilege – and real solutions

By Pat Mannix

All over the country stories of police misconduct in the performance of their duties are reported online Facebook and YouTube. In Rochester, we have recently followed the story of Benny Warr, a physically disabled man who, while waiting for a bus, was maced, dumped out of his wheelchair, and viciously kicked by the RPD. The attack was not only caught on video but was personally witnessed by the Commissioner on the Board of Education. Justice was not served for Benny and he, suffering from PTSD from the attack, finally took an ACD (Adjournment in Contemplation of Dismissal) just to put the whole thing to rest.

This incident was closely followed by another when a family dispute was interrupted by the police which resulted in a 16 year old boy and his pregnant sister being viciously beaten by officers, then arrested. [More after the jump] 

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Sign the Petition to save the Woods Family Home!

woods.jpgLast week our Housing is a Human Right Campaign had an important victory - the eviction of the Woods Family was postponed by MidFirst Bank after an eviction protest with Metro Justice, Take Back the Land, and the Band of Rebels. 

As important as a step that this victory is, it isn't a permanent victory yet. We still need to call on MidFirst Bank to totally withdraw the eviction and negotiate fairly with the Woods Family. We also need to tell the City of Rochester not to use our resources acting as the private police force of major banks, and to refuse to enforce the eviction!

Take action here and make sure these vital decision makers hear your voice! 

It's these fights that are the key to showing the obvious abuses of major banks in the nationwide foreclosure crisis. And, pre-foreclosure numbers in the Rochester-area show us that the foreclosure crisis here is only about to get worse. We need to make sure that banks know that Rochester residents resist their evictions with community support and we need to make sure the City government is acting as an ally of our residents, not the banks!

Sign the petition here!

In local fights like this, your voice can make all the difference! Let's make it clear to MidFirst Bank that in Rochester we believe Housing is a Human Right and that we'll stand up together to make it a fact. 

24th Annual Rochester Labor Film Series 2013

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A joint effort of the Dryden Theatre and the Rochester Labor Council, the Rochester Labor Film Series presents motion pictures celebrating workers around the world. The first film program of this kind in the nation, we show dramas, comedies and current documentaries on important issues relating to work and workers, especially aspects of work often marginalized or absent in dominant commercial media. Our films from around the world are selected to inform, provoke and inspire.

This year's program is diverse in tone and subject and depicts a variety of workplaces. Several concern physically dangerous jobs (La Camioneta, Burn, Taxi!, Black Diamonds, The Miners' Hymn). Others depict demanding service jobs (Women of the Sixth Floor, The Waiting Room) or artistic work (La Camioneta). Others present the interplay of social class and race (Nothing But a Man) or reflect market shifts in manufacture (Kinky Boots). But common to all is the story of workers' determined and unflinching response to the physical, social and economc challenges they face.

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D & C Guest essay: Reject substandard facilities

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By: Ken Traub and Janet Gelein, Metro Justice Members and Co-chairs for the Elder Justice Subcommittee of Dignified Retirement

The Elder Justice subcommittee of Metro Justice compliments the Democrat and Chronicle and staff writer Patti Singer for the excellent series of investigative reports on the Blossom South nursing home.

It is positively shameful that this 1-star Medicare rated nursing home is among the worst in the nation and had been a “Special Focus Facility” for 27 months before the state Department of Health recommended to the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) that Medicare and Medicaid funds paid to the home be terminated. We believe that as a result of the public exposure generated by this newspaper, CMS acted within one week after receiving the 

state recommendation and informed Blossom South’s administrator that funding would soon end. If it loses its court appeal, Blossom South would have to include as part of a closure plan how it would find appropriate and safe placements for current residents in other facilities.

Read more

Make Metro Justice Rochester "Best Local Activist Group!"

There are only 48 hours left until the City "Best of Rochester" primary ballot closes! 

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Help us get the word out!! Fill out the City Newspaper Best of Rochester Primary Ballot and choose Metro Justice as "Best Local Activist Group" (question 64). http://svy.mk/14FRm8K


Happy Labor Day!

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We can't wait to have more pictures up soon!



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