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Sunday, March 22, 2020

5 Principles for Just COVID-19 Relief and Stimulus

If you represent an organization consider going to the link and signing this letter to Congress by Sunrise Movement.


5 Principles for Just COVID-19 Relief and Stimulus
The COVID-19 pandemic demands swift and unprecedented action from the federal government. The depth of the crisis and the scope of the response mean that choices being made right now will shape our society for years, if not decades to come. As policymakers take steps to ensure immediate relief and long-term recovery, it is imperative that they consider the interrelated crises of wealth inequality, racism, and ecological decline, which were in place long before COVID-19, and now risk being intensified. This is a time to be decisive in saving lives, and bold in charting a path to a genuinely healthier and more equitable future through a just recovery.

We, the undersigned organizations, call for COVID-19 relief and stimulus packages to contribute to a just recovery by upholding these five principles:

(1) HEALTH IS THE TOP PRIORITY, FOR ALL PEOPLE, WITH NO EXCEPTIONS

We support the calls of community leaders, public health organizations, unions, and others for free and accessible testing, treatment, and protective equipment; expanded hospital capacity, including in rural areas, territories, and tribal lands; paid sick leave and paid family medical leave for all workers without exception; expanded federal funding for Medicaid; and full funding for Indian Health Service and urban Indian health centers. Critically, the government must ensure such health protections cover all people, including low-wage workers, health workers, independent contractors, family farmers, Black and Latinx communities, undocumented immigrants, Indigenous peoples, people who are incarcerated, people who are homeless or housing insecure, and others likely to be hit first and worst by COVID-19 and the economic downturn.

(2) PROVIDE ECONOMIC RELIEF DIRECTLY TO THE PEOPLE

We support the urgent calls to expand the social safety net by broadening unemployment insurance, vastly increasing food aid programs, extending housing assistance, expanding childcare for working families, relieving student debt, and halting evictions, foreclosures, and shut offs of water and electricity. As with expanded public health measures, these economic measures must be implemented to ensure coverage of workers and communities likely to be hit first and worst by COVID-19 and the economic downturn. In addition, to counteract the economic downturn, the federal government should immediately direct sizable cash payments to every person. Larger payments should be made to lower-income workers and the poor, who are disproportionately exposed to both COVID-19 health risks and heightened job insecurity. These payments should be made swiftly and regularly throughout the duration of the economic recession.

(3) RESCUE WORKERS AND COMMUNITIES, NOT CORPORATE EXECUTIVES

Any financial assistance directed at specific industries must be channeled to workers, not shareholders or corporate executives. Specifically, any federal loans must be used to maintain payroll and benefits, not executive bonuses or stock buybacks. In addition, such funds should come with pro-worker conditions, such as requiring worker representation on the company’s board of directors, company-wide enactment of a $15/hour or higher minimum wage, and compliance with high-road labor standards such as payment of prevailing wages, use of project-labor agreements, adoption of a neutrality policy with regard to union collective bargaining, and adoption of a “ban the box” hiring policy to ensure fair employment opportunities for all.

(4) MAKE A DOWN PAYMENT ON A REGENERATIVE ECONOMY, WHILE PREVENTING FUTURE CRISES

While we urgently need a large, short-term stimulus to protect the health and economic security of those on the front lines of the COVID-19 crisis, it is imperative that policymakers also plan for a large, medium-term stimulus to counteract the economic downturn and ensure a just recovery. This stimulus should create millions of good, family-sustaining jobs with high-road labor standards; counter systemic inequities by directing investments to the working families, communities of color, and Indigenous communities who face the most economic insecurity; and tackle the climate crisis that is compounding threats to our economy and health. All three goals can be achieved simultaneously with public investments to rebuild our infrastructure, replace lead pipes, expand wind and solar power, build clean and affordable public transit, weatherize our buildings, build and repair public housing, manufacture more clean energy goods, restore our wetlands and forests, expand public services that support climate resilience, and support regenerative agriculture led by family farmers. Critically, stimulus packages should include conditions for industries to implement high-road labor standards, workforce development, and reductions in climate emissions and toxic pollution. The response to one existential crisis must not fuel another.

(5) PROTECT OUR DEMOCRATIC PROCESS WHILE PROTECTING EACH OTHER

People must not be forced to choose between exercising their rights as citizens and protecting public health. The federal government must support states, by providing funding and technical support wherever needed, to ensure that every American can vote safely in primary and general elections. Specific life-saving and democracy-defending measures include expanding vote by mail, online or automatic voter registration, among others. The 2020 Census must be fully supported and resourced to achieve an accurate and safe count under the new and evolving conditions. US Congress, state capitals and city halls should not shut down until they have amended rules to ensure continuity of governance in the case that in-person sessions are suspended.

test audio and video links

An audio file
https://drive.google.com/open?id=1BelgEZELnM3hZxeZJsCGPdFOcXPNsiOx


A YouTube link for video which this will not be
https://youtu.be/GUpiU7P3fgM


An embedded YouTube  of video on blog or website

Inside Extinction Rebellion -- a KEO film

This is a 45 minute documentary history of the XR movement in UK up through the train stoppage action.  The video takes a strong editorial view on that last action thinking it a mistake.  I disagree with that judgement and have previously shown that even that action had the potential for building support and understanding of the movement.


Saturday, January 18, 2020

Stop Airport Expansion

The Airport expansion is a gift to the wine and tourism industries -- two low wage extraction industries increasingly owned by outside investors. This and all fossil fuel new infrastructure is a climate issue. This is the wrong direction and must be stopped.  Sign the petition here



We are in a Climate Crisis.
  • Locally we are already experiencing impacts of the climate crisis including record high winds, wildfires, floods, and the loss of health, homes and lives.  
  • In recognition of this, the Sonoma County Board of Supervisors has passed a Climate Emergency Resolution.
Air travel emits significant CO2 which worsens the Climate Crisis.
  • A round-trip flight from New York to London generates an average of 986 kg of CO2 per passenger. There are 56 countries where the average person's carbon footprint is less than that for an entire year.
  • Increasing CO2 would prevent future generations from having the opportunities prior generations have had to live and thrive.
There is a proposal to increase air travel at the Sonoma County Airport with plans to begin construction this summer on expansion of the airport terminal.  
  • It is expected to cost $25 Million to expand the terminal (half of the funds have been obtained).  Instead, our community needs to utilize our resources to address the Climate Crisis, increase fire safety, reduce power outages, and develop economic justice by creating green jobs that are not dependent upon fossil fuels.
  • Increasing the number of flights will increase noise pollution, air pollution and health challenges, especially for those with asthma.
We need public support to STOP expansion of the Sonoma County Airport.  
PLEASE SIGN OUR PETITION TO THE BOARD OF SUPERVISORS:
Dear Supervisors,
We urge you to please stop any plans to increase flights at the Sonoma County Airport and to not put any resources into expansion of the airport terminal.
Signed,

Friday, December 27, 2019

Why We Can’t Just #PlantATree

"Plant a Tree and Save the Planet" can now join recycle plastic and change your light bulbs in the dust bin of destructive memes foisted on us for 30 years.  We must overcome the industrial and financial system and stop exploiting mother earth.
Not Every Forest Is a Forest
The most recent publication of the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization’s Forest Terms and Definitions paper defines a forest as any land above 0.5 hectares (roughly 1.2 acres) with a canopy cover of 10 percent or more. This includes land that has been clear cut but that is expected to regenerate within five years. It also includes certain types of tree plantations, including Christmas Tree plantations.
Ultimately, the UN definition of forests misses a lot of points. Be it the damage done by so-called sustainable forestry practices, biodiversity or real climate change mitigation, this definition side-steps reality and misguides the well-meaning plant-a-tree movement.
This is a short read and basic but we should understand that current popular remedies and international initiatives as well are out of step with science and are just covering for the convenience and profit of self interested industrial extraction industry.

Tuesday, November 5, 2019

Climate Resolution: North Bay Governments Grapple with Climate Change

Thanks to Will Carruthers at the Pacific Sun for this great reporting on climate activism and specifically the Emergency Climate Declarations.  It is clearly time to escalate our demand.

But activists ask: Will the declarations change anything? Not fast enough, according to Dr. José Hernández Ayala. 
Hernández Ayala, a climate scientist at Sonoma State University, compared the county’s recent emergency declaration to a New Years Resolution and noted the goals set are not sufficiently urgent. 
“We’re saying we’re not going to eat as much and we’re going to do a lot of exercise,” he says. “We make all of these promises that we really want to be reality but, at the end of the day, there’s nothing really forcing us to actually achieve those things.”
The Sunrise Movement, a national organization with regional chapters which organized strikes nationwide, advances the idea of shaming politicians into taking immediate action on climate change. Politicians, they argue, are negligent in sitting idly by while the earth continues to heat, setting off a chain of negative consequences. 
Christine Byrne, organizer of the Sunrise Movement’s Sonoma County Hub, says the current crop of climate activists is more prone to anger than previous generations of activists. 
Byrne says they should keep the focus on systemic change, with a focus on those profiting from carbon emissions. 
In 2017, a report by the nonprofit CDP concluded that just 100 companies are accountable for 71 percent of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions since 1988. 
“It’s good for us in our individual lives to take some ownership [for our lifestyles.] … but more and more, especially young people, are recognizing that they as individuals did not create this problem,” Byrne says. Instead, a select group of businesses and the politicians who enable them are to blame. 
That causes anger among young people who realize they will live with the cascading damage of climate change for the rest of their lives.

https://pacificsun.com/climate-resolution/