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Noyes Foundation in 2010
The
worldwide economic crisis has hit the Noyes Foundation hard. Over the
past year, the value of our assets have dropped, from $60 to $44
million. Nevertheless, the Foundation remains committed to continuing
its grantmaking into the future, supporting social change movements
around toxics and environmental justice, reproductive rights, a
sustainable agricultural and food system, and an environmentally sound
New York City.
The
decision to sustain our work required making difficult choices. For
2010 the grants budget will be reduced by 18% or $500,000, from $2.7 to
$2.2 million. As a result, we will not replace ten grantees that are
cycling off Noyes support. Additionally, we will discontinue funding
for some grantees earlier than we or they had planned.
For
2010, the Noyes Foundation will be unable to consider requests from
organizations not already in our funding stream. This policy only
affects the 2010 grantmaking cycle. A decision about the 2011 grants
budget will be made in mid-2010.
Even
with these reductions, the Noyes Foundation still will be making more
than 70 grants to organizations working to restore an ecological
balance on our planet, and to protect the rights of women, low-income
communities and people of color. By making necessary adjustments now,
we hope to reach our goal of providing grants for years to come.
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Congratulations
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Shirley
Sherrod Named USDA's Georgia State Director for Rural
Development
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Shirley
Sherrod, former Georgia Field
Office director of
the Federation
of
Southern Cooperatives and
cofounder of the Southwest
Georgia Project, was appointed
the U.S. Department of Ariculture's Rural
Development Director for Georgia. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack
called the directors "important advocates on behalf of rural
communities
in states throughout the country … [who] help administer the
valuable programs and services provided by the USDA that can enhance
their economic success." Shirley is now responsible for the
administration of loan and grant programs in support of rural housing,
business development, cooperative development, community facilities and
utilities, including broadband and renewable energy.
Shirley
also served as Georgia State Lead for the Southern Rural Black Women's
Initiative for Economic and Social Justice. She has been an active
leader in the sustainable agriculture and food systems movement,
serving on the board of the Farmers’
Legal
Action Group,
and is the recipient of many awards, including a Kellogg National
Fellowship.
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José
Bravo and Gail Small Receive Fellowship Awards for Working
to Build a Fair and Just Society
The
Center for Social Inclusion launched the Alston Bannerman
Leadership Initiative to support leaders of color working to build a
fair and just society.
José
Bravo of the Just Transition Alliance
was
one of five selected from a field of 375
applicants. Each fellow received a $25,000 award to take a
three-month sabbatical for reflection and renewal.
A new
Senior Fellowship program aims to tap the enormous, but largely
unrecognized, reservoir of intellectual capital among leaders of color
working at the grassroots level. With this $25,000 award, fellows bring
their experience and creativity to bear on critical issues of
organizing, policymaking, and movement building. Gail Small of Native
Action
was one of three 2009 fellows. Her
project is to craft policies to address the climate crisis through
collective models of ownership that protect Native sovereignty, leave
fossil fuels in the ground and develop alternative energy sources.
The
Alston Bannerman Leadership Initiative is building an active
network of grassroots leaders. Using on-line collaboration tools and
convenings, the network will foster new ideas and alliances, and
mobilize support for transformative policies.
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Marylee
Orr,
executive
director of the Louisiana Environmental
Action Network,
received the Environmental Leadership Program's
Environmental
Leader
Award from the Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality for her
advocacy work in the state and throughout the nation. Marylee has
served as LEAN's executive director for 22
years, leading its effort to
work with more than 100 grassroots community organizations to make
Louisiana's communities safer and healthier places to live.
In
2008, Marylee received the U.S. Office of Management and Budget
Watch Public Interest Hall Of Fame Award, and was a runner up for the
Conde' Nast Traveler Environmental Award.
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Thomas Fritzsche Receives
Pro Bono Publico and Skadden Fellowship Awards
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Just
Harvest USA cofounder,
Thomas Fritzsche, received the Pro Bono Publico Award from
the Public Service Law
Network,
which recognizes
outstanding pro bono work by law students. Thomas cofounded Just
Harvest, which
brings together the causes of farmworkers' rights, and support for
organic and locally-grown foods.
Thomas,
a Bickel & Brewer Latino Institute for Human Rights scholar,
also was one of four winners of the coveted 2009 Skadden Fellowship
award. This prestigious two-year fellowship supports graduating law
students pursuing public interest work by providing a salary, fringe
benefits and tuition-debt assistance to pursue personally conceived
projects. Thomas has chosen to work with the Southern Poverty Law
Center's Immigrant Justice Project, developing and litigating cases on
behalf of low-wage immigrant workers exploited by their employers. He
previously interned for the SPLC and the Natonal Day Laborer Organizing
Network, and led a Law Students for Human Rights team supporting
Florida farmworkers' legal rights. "I am excited to support workers
enforcing the minimum wage and other laws," said Fritzsche, "because
their courage to take personal risks in order to change society
inspires me as well."
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Diana
Lopez Wins 2009 Earth Island Institute Brower Youth Award
Diana
Lopez of Southwest
Workers' Union is
one of six 2009 Earth Island Institute Brower Youth Award winners.
Diana, 20, is an environmental justice organizer for SWU. In 2007, she
helped create the Roots of Change community garden, the first urban
garden
in San Antonio. The garden provides healthy food at no
cost, serves as an educational
center and creates a positive space for community involvement. It also
hosts training sessions, student work days and Texas-style
barbeques where community members can come together to enjoy a meal
and take home locally-grown produce. The Brower Youth Award, in its
tenth year, recognizes teenage and 20-something activists for
exceptional environmental leadership.
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Geran
Tarr Receives 2009 John Rader Award for Advocacy

Geran Tarr, executive director of the Alliance
for Reproductive Justice, received
the Planned Parenthood of the Great
Northwest’s 2009 John Rader Award for Advocacy in recognition
of her significant contributions over the last year. She was
joined in celebration by her father.
The
Alliance is Alaska’s primary
reproductive justice organization. Two years ago it instituted the
Women’s Summit program to train women on policy issues, and
to give them an opportunity to
network and meet other activists from around the state. The 2008 Summit
keynote featured Loretta Ross, national
coordinator of the SisterSong: Women of Color Reproductive Health
Collective; and the 2009 keynote was delivered by tribal leader Cecilia
Fire Thunder.
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Three
Noyes
Board Members Honored:
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LaDonna
Redmond - A
Responsibility Pioneer
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LaDonna
Redmond was selected by Time Magazine
as one of 25
Responsibility Pioneers for her work on food justice issues in Chicago.
LaDonna
Redmond
considers opening an organic-food market on Chicago’s South
Side the act of a freedom fighter…she recently opened
Graffiti and Grub, a for-profit market staffed by inner-city youth who
also work on urban farms in an employment program through the store.
LaDonna
also was interviewed about the store on the Chicago TV show, Community,
Media & You. And her
article, Food
is Freedom, was published in The
Nation.
To
change our
food system, we need to change the way we talk about
it…access not just to food outcomes but to the production
and distribution methods…access to the land that grows food
so I can grow my own.
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Carol
Kuhre Inducted Into the
Ohio Women's Hall of Fame
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Carol
Kuhre was selected for induction into the Ohio
Women's Hall of Fame. This prestigious honor recognizes her
significant accomplishments, leadership and commitment to serving
others. The Ohio Women's Hall of Fame was founded in 1978 to
recognize Ohio women who have made - or are making - history.
Hall
of Fame members come from all walks of life,
but each has demonstrated an extraordinary commitment to excellence,
achievement and service to others. The Ohio Women’s Hall of
Fame serves as a daily tribute to these women who are an ongoing source
of pride and inspiration for all Ohioans – especially the
state’s next generation of leaders.
These
are women,
who emerge as leaders in their fields, often against great odds, with
courage, determination and compassion. By celebrating their
accomplishments, their struggles and triumphs, we prepare our children
for the choices they must make and the challenges yet to come.
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Belvie
Rooks Honored for Social Justice Work
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On
November 1st, Belvie Rooks will be honored by Savory
Thymes and Growing a Global Heart. Belvie was selected because she has
“consistently and generously shared herself, her resources
and wisdom to support countless organizations, actions and campaigns
and to mentor community leaders.” Environmentalist Julia
Butterfly Hill, who will speak at the ceremony, said she is
“honored to support Belvie in this powerful vision of hope,
possibility and healing for us as a human community and for this
wonderful planet we call home.” Savory Thymes convenes
artists, grassroots organizers and activists to cross-pollinate ideas
and build support for a wide range of social justice initiatives.
Growing a Global Heart makes the connection between healing the earth
and healing the heart. It is engaged in a project in West Africa to
plant one million trees along the Trans-Atlantic slave route to honor
the spirit and memory of the millions who lost their
lives
in the slave trade.
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Grantee Updates
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The
Link Between Workers' Rights and Public Health

When
we think of food safety, we usually think of E. Coli and Salmonella in
foods like spinach and hamburger. Much of the attention has been
focused on food contamination from farms, ranches and packing plants. A
report by the Restaurant Opportunities Center United and
the Restaurant
Opportunities
Center of New York,
done in collaboration with Queens College and
Mt. Sinai’s Seilkoff Center for Occupational Safety and
Health, shows that serious food safety threats are as close as your
favorite diner. The report, Burned: High Risks and
Low Benefits for
Workers in the New York City Restaurant Industry,
documents how
exploitative labor practices pose a little recognized, but significant
threat to public health. It is based on surveys of over 500 workers and
ten focus groups who reveal the restaurant industry has cooked up
a sickening mix of stressful conditions putting workers with
insufficient or nonexistent benefits at
risk for
injury and illness, resulting
in sick workers too often preparing and serving food. With the
H1N1 virus expected to return this season, the Centers for Disease
Control has urged sick workers to stay home. However, many restaurant
workers do not have paid sick days and cannot afford to lose a
day’s wages. ROC United and ROC-NY say that restaurants can
be more responsible in protecting public health by offering workers
safer workplaces and conventional job benefits, like paid sick days and
workers' compensation insurance. Their campaign has educated New York
City policymakers about this issue and the City Council responded by
introducing a bill to ensure basic benefits, such as
“earned paid sick days.”
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Omar
Freilla, founder of Greenworker Cooperatives,
and 11 others who have done great things for the environment, were
highlighted in the children’s book, Heroes of the
Environment. Through
photographs and illustrations, Harriet
Rohmer,
the award-winning publisher of bilingual
and multicultural picture books brings these stories of environmental
justice and
stewardship to life. The chapter,
Turning
Waste into Good
Business and Good
Jobs, covers Omar's work to
bring good, green jobs into the South Bronx,
and the launch of ReBuilders Source – the world's first
worker-owned reuse cooperative. Other heroes include a teenage girl who
figured out how to remove an industrial pollutant from the Ohio River,
a Mexican superstar wrestler working to protect turtles and
whales,
and a teenage boy from Rhode Island who helped his community and his
state develop effective e-waste recycling programs. Heroes of the
Environment can be purchased
through Greenworker Cooperatives, with
a portion of the proceeds going directly to support its programs.
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Power
To The People – All of Them

Building
the power to make change starts young at Power U
Center for Social
Change.
A new midwife program, the organization’s first inclusive
organizing/service program, graduated its first childbirth class with
six new mothers. All are in housing struggles and learning the impacts
of not only safe housing but also necessary food and care for a
liberating, successful birth experience. These graduates will bring
their new babies, experiences and strength into Power U’s
organizing programs. It’s a safe bet that, before they walk,
they will be part of marches and rallies, such as the March on
the
Mayors, hosted by Power U for the Right
to the City Alliance
during the 2008
U.S. Conference of Mayors meeting in Miami. The alliance
unites urban struggles for racial and economic justice from across the
country under the demand for a democratic human Right to the City, for
current residents, their children and grandchildren.
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The
Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility
published Liquid
Assets
– Responsible Investment in Water Supplies.
The principal
author of the report is Leslie Lowe, a former Noyes Board Chair.
Leslie, an attorney who specializes in environmental law and policy,
directs ICCR’s Energy & Environment Program. The
report states:
Water
is the world’s third largest industry after oil and electric
power. It is the most capital intensive of all utilities and the most
essential. The challenges of preserving water resources from overuse
and pollution, and of providing water for all can only be met if all
stakeholders – that is to say, all members of society
– are engaged in water governance.
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Ohio
Valley Environmental
Coalition organizer
and 2009 Goldman Environmental Prize winner, Maria Gunnoe,
was asked to testify before the Water and Wildlife subcommittee of the
Senate Environment and Public Works Committee for a congressional
hearing titled, The Impacts of
Mountaintop Removal Mining on Water Quality in Appalachia.
In
announcing the hearing, Sen. Ben Cardin (D-MD), chairman of the
subcommittee, said:
Mountaintop coal
mining is a long-term assault on Appalachia’s environment,
economy, culture and the health of its citizens. We must put an end to
this mining method that has buried more than a thousand miles of
streams and created untold threats to some of the most beautiful and
ecologically significant regions of our country.
Cardin
and Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-TN) have introduced legislation, the
Appalachia Restoration Act, which, along with the Clean Water
Protection Act in the House, would prohibit the dumping of mine debris
into streams.
Gunnoe
told the senators about the repeated flooding, the water contamination,
and the noise and air pollution horrors associated with living near a
mountaintop removal operation. She added:
Mountaintop
removal is absolutely not about jobs. Mountaintop removal
is a human rights issue. My children and I have a right as U.S.
citizens to clean water, and that right is being taken away from us.
Congressional
representatives aren’t the only ones listening when Maria
talks. Third grade students in California, hearing this
year’s Goldman Prize winner say everyone has a job in ending
the destruction, decided their job was to send letters and artwork to
those who have the power to stop MTR. One thing they really wanted was
to help children their own age in West Virginia. Sample messages:
To
Congresswomen Pelosi:
Why
are you giving them permission to blow up the beautiful mountains? When
people go there they want to see the mountains, not see them all
destroyed. -- Irene
Mountaintop
removal mining is destroying the Appalachias!!! If you could stop it, I
would be much more happier and calmer. --
Kelly
To
EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson:
Allowing
this is horrible. Look inside yourself because you are killing yourself
by making non-oxygen, and killing mother nature. Please shut it down,
and if you do, great job!
-- Anela
To
WV Governor Manchin:
I
am writing this letter because I want you to help Marsh Fork Elementary
School to build a school in a safer place. I feel bad for them to be in
a non-safe place and for me to be in a safe school.
-- Natalie
To
Massey Energy Company:
The
valley fills are illegal under the Clean Water Act. This is so wrong.
Please obey the law! Do not blow up our mountains.
-- Kyle
Above
drawings
by Irene and Juliana, respectively
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It’s
true, a picture is worth a thousand words!
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ACCESS/Women’s
Health Rights Coalition launched
an on-line health care reform campaign, Women
Inform the Reform, make your voice heard for national Health
and Justice Now! Women and Communities Demanding Health Care for All.
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Dan
Apfel is the new executive director of the Responsible
Endowments
Coalition.
He replaces Morgan Simon, who will continue to work with REC as a
strategic advisor. Dan has been an advocate for social and
environmental issues for nearly ten years. Most recently he was a
program officer at the National Federation of Community Development
Credit Unions. REC works to build and unify the college- and
university-based responsible investment movement, both by educating and
empowering a diverse network of individuals to act on their campuses,
and by fostering a national network for collective action. Its goals
are to foster social and environmental change by making responsible
investment a common practice amongst colleges and universities, and to
support the next generation of activists.
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The
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit upheld the right of a
woman to proceed with her lawsuit against a corrections officer who
kept her shackled throughout her labor. The ACLU’s
Reproductive Freedom and National Prison projects and
other groups, including The Rebecca Project for
Human Rights and
National Advocates for
Pregnant Women, played
a critical role in this case, which began in Arkansas, but has had a
ripple effect nationally. Rebecca Project's Malika Saada Saar's blog
includes her article, In Labor and In Chains,
and a video of Shawanna Nelson,
the plaintiff in this shackling decision.
Originally,
the client filed a federal civil
rights lawsuit against the Arkansas Department of Corrections and
several
of its officials. A federal district court judge ruled that a jury
should decide whether her treatment violated the Constitution. Then a
three-judge panel of the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals dismissed the
case, ruling that her shackling was not unconstitutional. Subsequently,
ACLU
represented the client in a hearing before the entire Eighth
Circuit Court, which ruled
that legal precedent clearly established the Constitutional protections
against shackling pregnant women in labor,
paving the way for this lawsuit to go to trail. This decision is
important for the client, for other women in the
criminal justice system, and for the development of the law and prison
policy.
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The
Right to Free Speech Rules
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U.S.
District Court Judge Judith Herrera delivered a resounding victory to
the Southwest Organizing
Project
and the greater nonprofit sector in New Mexico.
In
a summary judgment, Herrera ruled that New Mexico cannot apply its
campaign reporting law to SWOP and New Mexico Youth Organized, saying
the state's threat to prosecute them for not registering as political
committees violated their First and Fourteenth Amendment rights.
The
judge's decision came in a dispute that began after two state senators
accused the groups of skirting campaign finance law in mailers during
the 2008 election campaign. The mailers targeted four Democratic
lawmakers who were seeking re-election, criticizing their stands on
measures in the 2008 session, highlighting their campaign funding, and
urging constituents to contact them and ask that they "represent their
interests rather than corporate interests." The N.M. Secretary of State
weighed in with letters to SWOP and NMYO, saying they must register as
political action committees and file campaign reports. Her letter did
not explain why, but she later said her decision was made on the basis
of the mailings. The groups then sued the Secretary of State for
violation of their First Amendment rights.
"This
is a solid victory for the First Amendment," said attorney John Boyd,
who represented SWOP and NMYO.
“We
are pleased with Judge Herrera’s
ruling,” said SWOP Executive Director Robby Rodriguez.
“Now we can get back to the business of educating the public
about how our legislators vote – a critical service to keep
citizens educated and activated.”
Due
to the Secretary of State’s position, the groups noted, for
the past year nonprofits throughout the state have been unsure about
what they can and can’t say about elected officials. In
short, state officials created an environment where nonprofit advocacy
has been fraught with uncertainty when it comes to the ability to speak
publicly, which is exactly what the first amendment to the
United States Constitution is supposed to prevent.
In
her opinion, Judge Herrera acknowledged this environment:
…
because the Secretary of State has unequivocally indicated that
Plaintiffs are subject to penalties if they fail to register as
political committees, Plaintiffs have ‘suffered the
constitutionally sufficient injury of self-censorship through the
chilling of protected First Amendment activity.
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Choice
Advocates Battle Anti-Choice Ballot Initiatives for Fourth Consecutive
Year
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NARAL
Pro-Choice Montana countered
Montana
Pro-Life Coalition’s campaign to eliminate the right of women
and families within the state to make private medical decisions
regarding reproductive health care. This dangerous measure threatened
to ban legal abortion, stem-cell research and in-vitro
fertilization and birth control in Montana by establishing legal rights
starting at fertilization. In 2008, anti-choice groups
fell nearly 20,000 short of the signatures necessary to put this
measure on the ballot. The amendment also failed in the 2007 and 2009
Legislative Sessions.
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Heard,
Seen & Read
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John
Burnett of NPR’s Morning
Addition
aired Small
Farmers See
Promise in Obamas Plan,
highlighting the work of the Organization for
Competitive Markets,
which he described as:
Small
but influential, the nonprofit, nonpartisan group is made up of
farmers, academics and others concerned about the gigantification of
American agriculture.
The
story stated that the Antitrust Division of the Department of Justice
has
promised to scrutinize monopolies in agriculture. As part of this
scrutiny, and to better understand the impact of anti-competitive
practices on farmers and ranchers, the DOJ and USDA announced they will
hold public “workshops” throughout rural America
beginning in 2010.
For
OCM, this announcement could not have been better timed, coming the day
before its Confronting the
Threats
to Market Competition
conference.
More than 150 attendees heard Phil Weiser, Deputy Assistant General for
Antitrust, DOJ’s
"top
cop" overseeing big agriculture, report that the antitrust division
plans to take a hard look at three areas of agriculture: seed
companies, where according to the American Antitrust Institute,
Monsanto controls 90% of the technology behind genetically
modified seeds for cotton, corn and soybeans; beef packing; and dairy,
where consolidation has accompanied the loss of more than 4,500 dairy
farms every year.
Despite
the positive signs from the Justice Department, OCM knew it had to
strongly rebut a report issued by the U.S. General Accounting Office
concluding that market concentration in agriculture has not adversely
affected producer or consumer prices. It released a 77-page report
entitled, The Debilitating Effects
of Concentration in Markets
Affecting Agriculture. According
to OCM, market concentration for major raw food products hurts
producers and consumers and debunks GAO methodologies and findings.
More than 20 academicians, antitrust lawyers and informed producers
reviewed the report before it was released.
The
report’s authors, lawyer David Domina and economist Robert
Taylor, concluded that, like banks considered too big to fail,
Major
firms in each of our top food sectors are so large that a failure by
any one of them would have major ripple effect across the entire
sector, and all of agriculture. These risks make agricultural market
structure, in concentrated hands, a risk to everyone.
In
the long run, the concentration and integration risk will continue to
drive food prices up, bring an end to the nation’s affordable
food policy and contribute to a rapidly deteriorating agricultural and
rural economy. GAO’s conclusion that market concentration
does not adversely impact prices is unfounded. To the contrary, market
concentration in too few corporate hands poses price, biosecurity, and
lack of redundancy risks to all American consumers. Corrective action
is an urgent national need.
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EPA
Must Regulate Factory Farms!
The
Dairy Education Alliance and
several environmental organizations petitioned the Environmental
Protection Agency to regulate air pollution from factory farms (massive
industrial facilities confining thousands or even millions of animals
in warehouse-like conditions). The 69-page petition detailed
significant emissions of methane and nitrous oxide—two
greenhouse gases—as well as hydrogen sulfide and ammonia. It
also described how these pollutants negatively effect human health, the
climate and the environment. The petitioners assert that regulating air
pollution from factory farms will create a strong incentive for new
facilities to employ production methods that reduce emissions.
The
United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization deems
the
livestock sector “one of the top two or three most
significant contributors to the most serious environmental problems, at
every scale from local to global.” An FAO report entitled, Livestock’s
Long Shadow,
found animal agriculture was
responsible for 18% of all greenhouse gas
emissions — even more than transportation.
According
to DEA, the nation’s confined farm animals produce 500
million tons of waste every year, more than 3.3 times the amount of
waste created by humans. Nevertheless, the EPA does not require animal
factories to meet any testing, performance or emission
standards under the Clean Air Act. According to Charlie
Tebbutt of the Western Environmental Law Center and co-chair of
the DEA:
The
people who live in the communities devastated by unregulated air
pollution from animal factories deserve
protection. Implementing this petition
will get animal factories into the Clean Air Act process and give
communities better opportunities to protect themselves.
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Action
Alert: Senate Committee Approves Sexual Health Education
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Illinois
Caucus for
Adolescent Health announced
that the Senate Finance Committee approved two amendments to the health
care reform bill to provide millions of dollars to fund comprehensive
sexual health education and abstinence-only-until-marriage programs.
Chairman Max Baucus (D-MT) introduced an amendment allocating $75
million to states for the Personal Responsibility Education for
Adulthood Training, a comprehensive sexual health education funding
stream. Fifty million of that money would be used for evidence-based,
medically-accurate, age-appropriate programs that provide information
about abstinence, contraception, HIV/AIDS and healthy relationships.
The other $25 million would fund new adolescent wellness programs,
research and evaluation. The Baucus Amendment passed 14-9, with all the
Democratic members and Senator Olympia Snowe (R-ME) voting in favor.
Much
to everyone’s surprise, the committee also voted in favor of
an amendment, proposed by Senator Orrin Hatch (R-UT), to reinstate $50
million per year to the failed Title V program, a funding stream for
rigid and ineffective abstinence-only programs. The Hatch Amendment
passed 12-11, with support from all the Republican members and Senators
Blanche Lincoln (D-AR) and Kent Conrad (D-ND).
President
Obama eliminated all funding for abstinence-only-until-marriage
programs, including Title V, from his 2010 budget. ICAH and other
sexual health education advocates will continue to fight to ensure that
Congress keeps abstinence-only money out of the final health care bill
and budget. The Senate Finance Committee’s bill will
be debated in the full Senate, and then in conference with
the
House of Representatives.
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Western
States Center, in
partnership
with Expanding the Movement for Empowerment and Reproductive Justice,
introduced a new reproductive justice project, Groundwork: Addressing
Disparities. Working with
nine social justice organizations over 18
months, Groundwork will form a strategic cohort and collective project.
Groundwork
grew out of a 2006 Western States Center summit at which 17
organizations across the region discussed gender justice. Building
a Movement from the Ground Up
summarizes the research and captures the summit
discussions. These
organizations include:
Washington: Chaya; National
Asian Pacific American Women’s Forum, Seattle
Chapter; and Parents
Organizing for Welfare and Economic Rights
Oregon: African
Women’s Coalition; International
Center for Traditional Childbearing; and Urban
League
Idaho
Idaho: Mujeres
Unidas de Idaho; Women
of Color Alliance; and Idaho
Women’s Network
The
support these groups receive through Groundwork will help them win
progressive policies, improve the reproductive health and wellness of
their communities, and begin to close the gap of disparities.
The
first Groundwork meeting was packed with energy and exuberance! It
included “Forward Stance,” an approach to bringing
the minds, bodies, and spirits that are often disconnected because of
systemic oppression and control of women’s gender, bodies and
sexuality. Participants went deeper into their understanding of
reproductive justice and started planning their work for the next 18
months.
Too
often it feels like we're on the outside looking in when it comes to
being included at the table on reproductive issues, the chance to feel
included and have our work recognized and valued by The Center and
EMERJ is invaluable!" – Dina Flores-Brewer, Women of Color
Alliance, Idaho
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The
Real Dirt On Another “Clean Energy” Solution -
Natural Gas
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As
residents of New York, Pennsylvania and other Eastern states listen to
the growing debate over drilling for natural gas in the Marcellus
Shale, many have been looking West to see how the industry has affected
communities and property where thousands of wells already dot what once
were rural landscapes and quiet neighborhoods. What they see shows
that, once again, an energy source touted as
“clean” can leave a big dirty mess where it is
extracted.
The
Oil and Gas Accountability Project
has for years
helped landowners and residents all over the West deal with the impacts
on ranches and communities. Newer, noisier and more invasive
technologies make more and more buried gas “economically
viable” to extract when pollution and loss of water, health
and peace are not factored into the economic equation. Most recently,
OGAP has been working with residents of Texas where, in 2008, the
Barnett Shale produced more than $12 billion worth of oil and gas. A
new Texas OGAP publication, Drill
Right In Texas, lays out best
oil and
gas development practices to advise landowners who decide to lease
their mineral rights, and those who have no choice because they own
only surface rights to their land.
The
Barnett Shale is booming across 19 counties in North Texas. Landowners
in East Texas, the Pecos Region, and the Rio Grande Valley are seeing
production increase just as rapidly. In Fort Worth, amid the lush
prairie hills and the Trinity River corridor, more than 1,100 oil and
gas wells have been drilled within the city limits. One hundred new
wells are being permitted every month. And more than 9,000 wells have
been drilled in surrounding counties that make up the Barnett Shale
play - with 5,000 more already approved. Drilling for gas brings toxic
emissions, water contamination, water disposal issues, safety concerns
and noise issues.
- In
Fort Worth, pipelines and wells are being located and drilled just feet
from residences. Open spaces and native prairie lands are turning into
industrialized landscapes, and drilling is encroaching upon drinking
water supplies such as Lake Worth.
- In
Parker County and across the Barnett Shale drilling region, massive
amounts of precious water are being used to drill the wells, and
residents worry about the quantity and future of their water
resources.
- In
Wise County, toxic and unfenced oil and gas waste pits dot the
landscape, engines from drill rigs, trucks and compressors
spoil air quality, and massive pipeline projects create
industrial
noise in
once quiet communities.
- Near
an Aledo elementary school, a local rancher measured low-level
radiation at the site of a tanker truck accident. The operator was
hauling water produced from gas drilling when the truck overturned. The
Barnett Shale formation, like most shale, contains naturally occurring
radioactive material.
The
impacts to people's health from living downwind or downstream from
drilling and processing are significant, and homeowners are already
wrestling with declining property values as neighborhoods and rural
communities are turned into industrial drilling
zones. Landowners in these areas and across Texas are
struggling to produce their minerals and protect landowner rights,
agriculture, environmental integrity, and recreational opportunities. -
Gwen Lachelt of OGAP
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Noyes
In Action
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What
the Staff’s Been Saying and Doing
Kolu
Zigbi, Program Officer for
Sustainable Agriculture and Food Systems,
spoke to the board of the Lawson Valentine Foundation on Funding Systemic Change
in the Food System. She also
co-authored, Setting the Table
for a
Sustainable and Just Food System,
published in The Foundation Review,
a peer-reviewed journal of philanthropy. Kolu and the co-authors, Kien
Lee and Marjorie Nemes of Community Science, wrote about “a
new theoretical model for building advocacy capacity in people of
color-led organizations.”
Kolu
and
Vic
De Luca, Noyes
President, were involved in the review and edit of
Philanthropy New York’s Diversity
In
Philanthropy: Surveys of New York Foundations and Nonprofit
Organizations. Vic was also
asked to write a pre-publication and the comment on the report for
Philanthropy
New York’s blog.
Millie
Buchanan, Program Officer for
Toxics and Environmental Justice, was re-elected to the Executive
Committee of the Funders Network on Trade & Globalization.
Chitra Staley, Noyes
Board Chair, was busy at the Environmental Grantmakers
Association’s September retreat in Anchorage, Alaska. Chitra
was a presenter at the Inclusive Practices session and a co-facilitator
at the final keynote session: Changing
the Face of
Conservation: Audobon’s Strategy for Engaging Diverse
Communities.
The
Noyes Foundation is included in the new book, How to Say It:
Grantwriting – Write Proposals That Grantmakers Want to Fund.
The Foundation was included in the section on funding activism and
grassroots organizations.
Also,
the Noyes Foundation received kudos from Richard Woo, CEO of the
Russell Family Foundation. In the fall edition of The Mission-Based
Investor,
Richard said:
If imitation is
the sincerest form of
flattery, then we pay great tribute to the Jessie Smith Noyes
Foundation, whose Mission Related Investment statement inspired us in
both language and spirit. Their foundation website is a treasure trove
of MRI philosophy, policy and practice – which they freely
offer for the common good.
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Related
News
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Grassroots
Organizing in the 21st Century
There’s
a lot more to building powerful community organizing
capacity than just involving youth and new technologies. Building
Movement Project released Alliances for Change:
Organizing for the 21st Century,
based on the work of three partner nonprofits committed to
inter-organizational learning: Pineros
y Campesinos Unidos del Noroeste,
Miami Workers Center and Tenants & Workers United. The report
also draws on interviews with eight other organizations, including the Farmworkers Association of
Florida
and Make the Road New York.
These 11 organizations are described as “changing the face of
traditional community organizing” by engaging in direct
services, community development, and civic participation in addition to
campaign-style organizing.”
The
report shows that organizing groups are building grassroots power in
multiple ways and establishing a variety of organizational structures
to support the work. For example, when PCUN hosted the Building
Movement partners in Woodburn, Oregon, it led a tour of model
affordable housing, developed through the Farmworker Housing
Development Corporation it co-founded; discussed its legal status as a
labor association with an affiliated nonprofit and separate political
action committee; explained its use of a novel data management system
during a visit to its immigration and legal assistance center; and
brought the partners to a regional immigrant rights coalition it helps
lead. The report found that organizing groups engaged in multiple
functions, including service provision, can retain an
“organizing culture” by ensuring all staff share
values and critical analysis. Tirso Moreno, director of the Farmworker
Association of Florida considers all of his staff organizers, even when
their role may be primarily administrative. Although the report
acknowledges that strategies for building the constituent power vary,
some groups, like PCUN, have developed formal partnerships to build
regional clout and a base of shared resources. Others, like Make the
Road New York, have built a citywide base by merging two organizations,
the Latin American Integration Center and Make the Road By Walking.
Some of its services, such as its food pantry, are open to anyone in
need, while others, like its employment and legal assistance programs,
serve only dues-paying members. The report does not conclude with a
prescription, but with a set of questions about going to scale,
engaging in non-campaign activities, membership, and building alliances
intended to help groups determine how to organize more powerfully
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A
Penny More Per Pound
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Just Harvest USA,
along with other organizations, helped build consumer pressure for the
Coalition’s wins that protect agriculture workers against
exploitation in the fields of Florida. CIW’s Campaign for
Fair Food, known best for its demand of major food retailers to
increase pay by "a penny more per pound" for the tomatoes they
purchase, would result in a 75% wage increase, improved living
and working conditions, and farmworkers being less vulnerable to
exploitation. CIW has won penny-more-per-pound deals from McDonalds,
Burger King, and Yum! Brands (whose subsidiaries include Taco Bell,
Pizza Hut, KFC, Long John Silver's and A&W).
CIW
announced its latest victory along side Labor Secretary Hilda Solis at
a press conference on Capital Hill. Also in attendance were
representatives from the world's largest food service company, the
Compass Group, which promised to pay an extra 1.5 cents per pound of
tomatoes that it purchases, with one cent per pound going directly to
the farmworkers. Compass Group purchases over 10 million pounds of
tomatoes every year.
In
her blog, Katrina vanden Huevel, publisher and editor of The Nation
magazine, describes the important wins by the Coalition of Immokalee
Workers.
The
key difference between this agreement and previous ones is that Compass
Group will only purchase tomatoes from Florida if there are growers
willing to implement the pay raise and a "code of conduct" which
includes: a system of clocking in and out to accurately record working
hours; the ability of workers to voice labor and safety concerns
without fear of retribution; freedom for CIW to educate workers on
their rights on company time and at the worksite; and third party
auditing for full transparency. If no Florida grower were to step up to
these Fair Food standards, Compass Group would remove tomatoes from its
menus and use the absence to educate customers about the working
conditions that led the company to make this decision.
In the previous agreements brokered by CIW, the food retailers didn't
take this extra step of mandating that they would only purchase from
socially responsible growers. That's significant because the Florida
Tomato Growers Exchange (FTGE) - a trade association representing over
90% of the state's growers - has threatened to fine any grower
$100,000 for every worker that receives a penny per pound raise. The
result? Growers refused to pass along the monies owed to the
farmworkers so approximately $1.5 million is now held in escrow by the
food retailers.
This time, however, Florida's third largest grower – East
Coast Growers and Packers – broke ranks, dropping out of the
FTGE in order to participate in the new agreement between Compass Group
and CIW. This was a courageous decision. The Madonia family which
founded the farm 53 years ago (to the day of the press conference) will
be ostracized by a rather tight-knit group of growers and lose the
services of the trade association that represents them. But it will
also gain the business of Compass Group and the corporations that
signed onto the previous agreements - because all of the
CIW-brokered
contracts require the companies to preferentially purchase from any
grower who is willing to meet the specified Fair Food standards. CIW
now has the four largest restaurant companies in the world, the largest
foodservice company in the world, and the largest organic grocer signed
on to its Fair Food contracts, with more undoubtedly to come.
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