Thursday, June 21, 2018

Parents with their babies occupy ICE Field Director's office calling for swift reunification of children with their families and an immediate end to Trump’s heartless “Zero Tolerance” policy

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New York, NY – Dozens of parents and babies took over the offices of Thomas R. Decker, New York field office director for ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations at the ninth floor of 26 Federal Plaza on June 21, 2018, in protest of the Trump administration’s heartless separation of children from their families. Local children sang together and drew on paper hearts to leave behind in support of the more than 2,000 boys and girls torn from their families as a result of the Trump administration’s horrific “zero tolerance” policy. Hundreds gathered also outside ICE offices in support of immigrant families and asylum seekers.

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These parents dismissed President Trump’s executive order as a ploy for whole families to be unjustly and unnecessarily – and potentially indefinitely – detained, noting that thousands of children had still not been reunited with their families, and that just last night dozens of children ripped from their parents’ arms at the border arrived in NYC airports and were headed to detention centers thousands of miles away from their loved ones.

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“Our families are not fooled by yesterday’s executive order: it will only lead to more detention and further mistreatment of families.” said Jodeen Olguín-Talyer, mother of 11 month old Alejandro who was with her at the protest. “This crisis of family separation is one of Trump’s own making. The Trump administration criminalizes and inflicts terror on immigrant families in order to advance their agenda of mass deportations.” Clutching tightly to her baby, she said “These are families aren’t criminals, they are mothers, fathers, daughters, babies who are crossing borders to flee violence and poverty.”

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The action, which the parent-organizers planned in just 36 hours, brought together concerned families and children from all over New York City through word of mouth and quick mobilization. Many expressed horror at hearing the Trump administration has no plans to reunite the more than 2,000 children now in detention, and that some children may never see their families again.

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“I had to do something,” said Margot Brandenburg, a mother holding her 14 month old baby. “I can’t stay silent as the so-called leadership of this country dehumanizes and cages human beings. I just hope that as people continue to see the brutality of Trump’s inhumane deportation force enough of us will speak out and take action. My kids are not going to stop fighting. I’ll be taking all three of them – ages 14 months, 3 and 9 years old – to the massive protest in Washington DC next week.”

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“We wanted to take action with our children -- as families -- to show the next generation that we stand against hate and take a stand for what’s right,” said Ilana Berger, one of the organizers of today’s action. “Every day I think about the world we’re leaving for our kids. I want them to inherit not just a better society but also the knowledge that they have the power – and the responsibility – to make a better world for all of us. We are creating tool kits for other parents and children to be able to organize protest in their own communities. We all have a role to play.”

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Others pointed to the damage already done and the lack of a clear plan for reunification. 

Jess Morales-Rocketto, Political Director with the National Domestic Workers’ Alliance was at both today’s protest and the protest at the Texas-US border on Saturday. “The crying, inconsolable children we heard; the toddlers behind wire fences; the rows of young boys on cots under aluminum blankets – these young people may never recover from the trauma of being separated from their parents and relatives.”

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When asked about Trump’s announcement yesterday Morales-Rocketto responded: “The fight to end family separation and detention is not over. We will not rest until every single child is reunited with their parents, and until the zero tolerance policy that created this crisis is overturned. President Trump and Attorney General Sessions are lying to the American people, and we must continue to shine the light of truth. That’s why we are organizing mass protests on June 30: we expect hundreds of thousands to participate in marches and protests across the country.”

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“I’m horrified at the thought of someone taking my child. I’ve heard from the parents and children who’ve been separated, are traumatized and without any indication of how they will be reunited. It breaks my heart as a mother, as a daughter, and as a human being. As parents we are here with our babies because our children see the truth and we think they can help other people see it as well. What’s happening is wrong. No child, no family, should be punished for trying to find a safe place to live” said Olguín-Tayler as she held her 11 month old son.

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“As my 6 year-old niece in Chicago told me, ‘All families love. All families hold hands, no matter where they come from. No more locking people up.’”

Organizers of the action also invited others around the country to join them in taking action with their families, calling on DHS and ICE officials and their members of Congress to stop locking people up, criminalizing immigrants and terrorizing communities.  

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#Activism #CivilDisobedience #CivilUnrest #DefendDACA #DefendTPS #demonstration #DeportICE #DirectAction #Families #FoleySquare #FreeOurFuture #HereToStay #humanrights #ICEfreeNY #ICEmustGo #ICEout #immigration #ImmigrationCourt #KeepFamiliesTogether #NewYork #NoHumanIsIlegal #NoICEinNY #NoWall #NYC #occupation #OurNY #parents #PeacefulProtest #PeacefulResistance #RefugeesWelcome #ResistTrump #SanctuaryCity #SaveTPS #StopDeportations #StopICEraids #TakenFromUs

© Erik McGregor - erikrivas@hotmail.com - 917-225-8963

Wednesday, June 20, 2018

On World Refugee Day, hundreds took to the streets to protest family separation at United Nations

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New York, NY - A massive public protest was organized in New York City on June 20, 2018, in observance of World Refugee Day. Hundreds of New Yorkers from dozens of refugee, immigrant, religious, and community organizations staged a march from Bryant Park and rally in front of the United Nations. 

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Protesters called attention to the delicate issues by representing refugees excluded by Trump administration with life-size orange rafts symbolizing refugee ocean crossings, large-scale photos of refugees, and by reading of the names of refugees who have died in transit.

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In recent days, the Trump Administration policy of separating parents seeking asylum at the southern border from their children and the creation of detention camps for children have sparked widespread outrage. 

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These policies are the latest in a number of Trump administration moves to slash humanitarian immigration programs, including dropping refugee admissions from 100,000 to 15,000 in 2018, elimination of asylum for domestic violence survivors, and the end of Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for hundreds of thousands of immigrants in the U.S.  

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On the occasion of World Refugee Day, a global observance of refugee issues, New York’s City of Refuge Coalition is mobilizing  to support the continuation and expansion of humanitarian immigration policies and reject the political scapegoating of refugees.  

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#Activism #demonstration #DeportICE #DirectAction #FaithLeaders #HereToStay #humanrights #ICEfreeNY #ICEmustGo #ImmigrantNY #immigration #KeepFamiliesTogether #NewYork #Ni1Mas #NoHumanIsIlegal #NoICEinNY #Not1More #NoWall #NYC #OurNY #PeacefulProtest #PeacefulResistance #RefugeesWelcome #ResistTrump #SanctuaryCity #SinDACASinMiedo #Somos11Millones #StopDeportations #StopICEraids #TakenFromUs #WorldRefugeeDay

© Erik McGregor - erikrivas@hotmail.com - 917-225-8963
Advocates Say End the Arrests, Challenge Carve-Outs in Mayor de Blasio's New Marijuana Enforcement Plan

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New York, NY — Advocates, community organizations, and Council Members held a press conference and rally on June 20, 2018 at the steps of City Hall, challenging Mayor de Blasio and the NYPD’s newly-announced marijuana enforcement policy, urging the Mayor to end racially biased marijuana arrests completely. The Mayor and NYPD Commissioner announced the policy shift yesterday in the culmination of their 30-day review period to assess marijuana enforcement in NYC. 

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Due to exclusions in the Mayor’s new policy, advocates raised concerns that racial disparities in marijuana arrests could continue—and perhaps increase. They stood strongly opposed to marijuana continuing to be used as a pretext for unnecessary NYPD interactions with community members. 

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Advocates emphasized that there is no public safety justification for arresting anyone for marijuana, especially given the extreme racial disparities in arrests that the 30-day review period was intended to address. Further, advocates demanded that the City’s policy shift remove any carve-outs (such as allowing NYPD to arrest people on parole or probation for marijuana possession or smoking) and pushed back on policies allowing marijuana to still be used as a pretext for any stop, harassment, or ID check of community members.

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Under the new NYPD policy, marijuana remains a tool for law enforcement to criminalize the most vulnerable New Yorkers: young people, non-citizen immigrants, people who are homeless, criminal justice-involved people, and communities of color, activists say summonses are “Backdoor to Incarceration,” and can result in warrants, arrests, fines, and/or credit liens. 

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“The impact of routine surveillance, stops, and arrests by police on young people is incontrovertibly damaging to their ability to continue living full lives, and maintaining their respect and dignity. Marijuana is often the excuse used to initiate unnecessary and life altering interactions between the police and young people. The Mayor’s new marijuana policy will fall far short of decriminalizing our neighborhoods and keeping young people out of a system that is designed to trap them in cages. Marijuana will still be a pretext for stops in our communities and a criminal summons will still entrap Black and Latinx youth in the criminal legal system,” said Darian Agostini, Make The Road New York. 

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“The carve outs essentially create a situation where officers still have broad discretion—which we know doesn’t work and is a big factor driving the racial disparities now. We need clear-cut policy saying no arrests, no justification for putting people into the criminal system—period,” said Kassandra Frederique, New York State Director, Drug Policy Alliance. “Summonses can be a backdoor into the criminal justice system, because an arrest warrant is issued for people who miss court. This issue should be a civil matter—not a criminal one.” 

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The carve-out allowing officers to still make an arrest if they are unable to verify a person’s ID or address is especially problematic. People who are homeless often don’t have steady access to identification documents and already face increased criminalization—which again calls into question the basis for such a carve-out. Organizations that work with young people spoke out that youth--who are one of the principle targets of current marijuana enforcement--might not possess ID consistently, and could therefore be subject to arrest and saddled with a criminal record. 

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That exclusion could also impact noncitizen immigrants, who sometimes struggle to obtain identification—and face extremely high consequences for a misdemeanor arrest, including deportation. Immigration activists juxtaposed this exclusion and criminalization with the Mayor’s touting of NYC as a sanctuary city and claims that he’s shielding immigrants from ICE within the federal crackdown.

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“NYC is not truly a sanctuary city if we criminalize people because of their immigration status, their lack of access to identification, or their lack of financial resources,” said Chris Alexander, policy coordinator, Drug Policy Alliance.

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Public defenders took issue with the exemption for New Yorkers who have past involvement with the criminal justice system, who would be subject to arrest under the new policy just because of their history--even if they’re trying to move on with their lives.

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“I have PTSD from being in prison for 30 years and the only thing that helps me with anxiety and stress is marijuana, which I’m not allowed to use because I am on parole. It’s not right that I cannot get the medicine I need, but other people can, without any problems. It’s discrimination,” said David Schermerhorn, a Community Leader with VOCAL-NY.  

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People arrested for a low-level marijuana offense can be saddled with a criminal conviction that can make it difficult to get and keep a job, maintain a professional license, obtain educational loans, secure housing, and keep custody of a child—precisely the collateral consequences that the Mayor and other City elected officials have recognized are extremely damaging and should not continue.

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“Mayor Bill de Blasio’s reforms fall short of what is truly needed to undue decades of zealous and racially biased marijuana enforcement. New Yorkers of color will still be marginalized by these proposed ‘carves outs,’ and our non-citizen clients further threatened by the identification requirement. The proposal also does not address the enormous culture shift that must take place at dozen of agencies to eliminate collateral consequences that often include eviction from NYCHA, lost children to foster care, denial of professional licenses and others nightmarish outcomes. Until full legalization comes to New York, decriminalization efforts must not be reform in name only,” said Anthony Posada, Supervising Attorney of the Community Justice Unit at The Legal Aid Society.​ 

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City Council Members who held hearings on marijuana enforcement earlier this year and have steadily pressed the NYPD and City Hall to reform marijuana enforcement also spoke out against the exclusions in the new policy and the need to truly end marijuana arrests for all New Yorkers:

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“The Mayor’s new marijuana enforcement policy is a marginal improvement, but a real missed opportunity to fundamentally change how the City polices marijuana possession and smoking. The legalization train in New York has left the station. The Mayor should get on it," said Council Member Rory I. Lancman.

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“I join the Drug Policy Alliance, my City Council Colleagues, advocacy groups, and community members in calling for the end of racist marijuana enforcement in New York,” said Council Member Antonio Reynoso. “We can no longer ignore the toll that unjust policing practices and enforcement standards are having on our communities of color. The Mayor and the NYPD need to stop tweaking inherently bad policies and fully halt the pursuit of criminal action against misdemeanor marijuana offenses; it is time to pressure our State legislature to legalize marijuana and begin a robust discussion of the details regarding its regulation.” 

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Advocates stressed that the damaging effects of marijuana enforcement extend beyond arrests and pushed the Mayor to also instruct NYC agencies (NYCHA, Administration for Children's Services, professional licensing boards, etc.) to address the harms caused by past arrests and reform their policies around marijuana.

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#Activism #AntonioReynoso #BillDeBlasio #Cannabis #CityHall #demonstration #deschedule #DirectAction #DrugPolicyAlliance #ElectedOfficials #HarmReduction #JumaaneWilliams #legalize #marijuana #MarijuanaRegulation #NewYorkCity #NoMoreDrugWar #NYC #NYCMayor #OurCity #RacialInequality #rally #ResistProhibition #Schedule1 #SMARTNY #StartSMART #StopThrHarm #VocalNY #WarOnDrugs

© Erik McGregor - erikrivas@hotmail.com - 917-225-8963

Monday, June 18, 2018

Climate And Anti-Mass Incarceration Advocates join forces to protest outside Governor Cuomo’s NYC fundraiser as He seeks re-election calling for an end to “Cuomo’s Pipelines: Prisons to Poisons”

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New York, NY – Over 100 New Yorkers came together outside Governor Andrew Cuomo’s fundraiser at the Plaza Hotel on June 18, 2018, calling on the New York governor to act on climate and prison injustice under the umbrella of “Cuomo’s Pipelines: Prisons to Poisons Are Bad For New York.” This is the first time these two movements have come together to demand systemic change from the governor. Activists stressed that their campaign to pressure Cuomo will continue throughout the summer and fall.

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Activists demand Cuomo live up to his own rhetoric on climate change by stopping fossil fuel infrastructure projects and launching a bold plan to get the state to 100% renewable energy and bring an end to mass criminalization and mass incarceration across issues, and overhaul bail, speedy trial and discovery laws, end long-term solitary confinement, and release aging and older people in prison and survivors of domestic and gender based violence.

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Climate activists connected the fight to get off fossil fuels to the unique threats climate change poses to New Yorkers, and how recent climate disasters demand swift action. 

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“We will continue to escalate our demands of Governor Cuomo to halt fracking infrastructure and push for community-led renewable energy in New York,” said Kim Fraczek, the Director of Sane Energy Project. “Earth’s life sustaining climate is reaching a breaking point rapidly, and New York is in a position to set a national standard for climate leadership. However, Cuomo continues to give business to the same destructive corporate powers. It’s time for real change."

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A broad coalition of advocates, formerly incarcerated people, family members, and members of the Release Aging People in Prison (RAPP) Campaign, Survived & Punished NYC, JustLeadershipUSA, and NY CAIC’s #HALTsolitary Campaign also rallied for an end to mass criminalization and mass incarceration across issues, calling on Governor Cuomo to be a real progressive and overhaul bail, speedy trial and discovery laws, end long-term solitary confinement, and release aging and older people in prison and survivors of domestic and gender based violence.

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“The Campaign For Alternatives to Isolated Confinement stands in solidarity with the gathered groups to address and say to Governor Cuomo and other policy makers that ‘We the People’ demand fairer and more just systemic change to reflect the real needs of the people,” said the Campaign’s Organizer, Victor Pate. “NY must pass the HALT Solitary Confinement Act to end the torture of solitary for all people, bring pre-trial and parole justice, protect DV survivors, and transform the entire injustice system that is destroying people, families, and communities.

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As Governor Cuomo runs for a third term, New Yorkers gathered to take a stand against the unjust and racist policies and practices that have become the legacy of prisons and jails throughout New York State. They also called on the Governor to use his executive power to grant more clemencies, commutations and pardons. 

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#Activism #ActOnClimate #ClimateChange #ClimateCrisis #climatejustice #CommunitiesFightBack #CommunityOrganizations #CuomosPipelines #CuomoWalkTheTalk #EndMassIncarcerarion #EnergyDemocracy #energyefficiency #EnergyIndependence #environment #FossilFree #FreeNewYork #GovernorCuomo #HALTsolitary #infrackstructure #KeepItIntheGround #LetThemGo #MakePollutersPay #MakeREVreal #NewYork #NYC #OffFossilFuels #ParoleJustice #politics #PrisionsToPoison #StinkyBoots #StopMassIncarceration #YOUAREHERE 

© Erik McGregor - erikrivas@hotmail.com - 917-225-8963

Wednesday, June 13, 2018

6th Annual Women Stage the World Parade: The Women Count March

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New York, NY - The League of Professional Theatre Women led the 6th Annual Women Stage the World Parade: The Women Count March through Times Square on June 12, 2018, to raise awareness about the underrepresentation of women in theatre and the performing arts. The league wants to see a 50-50 breakdown in professional performance groups by the year 2020. 

The March welcomes all theatre women and allies to join together to shed light on the lack of gender parity in the field and ask theatre decision makers to take a step toward positive change by having #OneMoreConversation with a female job candidate before hiring.
In these efforts, the League is quantifying the current state of gender parity with the Women Count Report series, raising awareness with this March, and offering a solution with #OneMoreConversation.
Women Stage the World continues a long tradition of activism by women of the theatre. The Suffrage Movement would not have achieved success without our theatrical foremothers, who created the first-ever marches and street pageants, including the game-changing first March on Washington in 1913, which inspired many future equality marches. A century after the 19th Amendment, women are still fighting to have their voices heard, and be “counted” as valuable and equal citizens. 
The tradition of donning costumes of noted women artists began in 1985 with the historic Guerilla Girls, and has continued with Women Stage the World and other LPTW Heritage programs. We embody women of the past, speaking out in the present, so our voice will be heard in the future. These programs recall a formidable heritage of activism, and are proof-positive that women do, indeed, COUNT.  
#Activism #ActorsEquity #Art #Broadway #Equality #feminism #GenderEquality #GenderParity #LPTWomen #NewYork #NYC #OneMoreConversation #Parade #‎Solidarity #Theater #WomenCount #womenintheatre #womenstagetheworld

© Erik McGregor - erikrivas@hotmail.com - 917-225-8963