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ACORN People's Platform
ACORN Platform - Net Cache ^
| October 24, 2008
| ACORN
Posted on 10/24/2008 5:09:06 AM PDT by Calpernia
ACORN People's Platform
The People's Platform was conceived at ACORN's 1978 Memphis Convention and ratified at the 1979 St. Louis Convention. In 1990, in celebration of ACORN's twentieth anniversary, ACORN members around the country met in order to revise and update the platform. The resulting document was approved by the Executive Committee of the Association board and ratified by acclamation at the 1990 Chicago Convention.
Preamble
We stand for a People's Platform, as old as our country, and as young as our dreams. We come before our nation, not to petition with hat in hand, but to rise as one people and demand. We have waited and watched. We have hoped and helped. We have sweated and suffered. We have often believed. We have frequently followed.
But we have nothing to show for the work of our hand, the tax of our labor. Our patience has been abused; our experience misused. Our silence has been seen as support. Our struggle has been ignored.
Enough is enough. We will wait no longer for the crumbs at America's door. We will not be meek, but mighty. We will not starve on past promises, but feast on future dreams.
We are an uncommon people. We are the majority, forged from all minorities. We are the masses of many, not the forces of few. We will continue our fight until the American way is just one way, until we have shared the wealth, until we have won our freedom.
This is not a simple vision, but a detailed plan.
Our plan is to build an American reality from the American rhetoric, to deliver a piece of the present and the fruits of the future to every man, to every woman, to every family.
We demand our birthright: the chance to be rich, the right to be free.
Our riches shall be the blooming of our communities, the bounty of a sure livelihood, the beauty of homes for our families with sickness driven from the door, the benefit of our taxes rather than their burden, and the best of our energy, land, and natural resources for all people.
Our freedom is the force of democracy, not the farce of federal fat and personal profit. In our freedom, only the people shall rule. Corporations shall have their role; producing jobs, providing products, paying taxes. No more, no less. They shall obey our wishes, respond to our needs, serve our communities. Our country shall be the citizens' wealth and our wealth shall build our country.
Government shall have its role: public servant to our good, fast follower to our sure steps. No more, no less. Our government shall shout with the public voice and no longer to a private whisper. In our government, the common concerns shall be the collective cause.
We represent a people's platform, not a politician's promise.
We demand the changes outlined in our platform and plan. We will work to win. We will have our birthright. We will live in richness and freedom. We will live in one country as one people.
Energy
- Put the people before profits at the utilities
- Restructure utility rates by:
- Ending all discount rates for large commercial and industrial users.
- Introducing Lifeline utility rates for small users.
- Ban all utility shut-offs during the winter months and require all utilities to offer partial-payment arrangements, in conjunction with arrears forgiveness, in lieu of shut-offs.
- Reform the utility "rate base" concept
- Removing the cost of new plants from the rate base until these plants are fully operational.
- Prohibiting the pass through of political and charitable contributions to the rate base.
- Forcing the utilities and shareholders individually to absorb the cost of accidents rather than passing them on to their customers.
- Ending the manipulation of income tax laws which allow the utilities to pass along the cost of taxes they don't actually pay.
- Prohibiting utilities from automatically passing along increased fuel costs without public review.
- Prohibiting utilities from including the cost of advertising and the cost of presenting their rate cases in rates.
- Prohibiting allocation of costs attributable to business and enhanced services to the rate base.
- Promote the formation of new publicly owned utilities as a "yardstick" and control on investor owned utilities.
- Require that the boards of public power agencies be controlled by a consumer majority rather then by representative of the private utilities.
- Promote conservation & guarantee safety
- Institute a program of direct grants, financed by the utilities, for weatherization, solar installation, and other energy-saving home improvements.
- Give local communities veto power over energy development project over $1 million in investment to file an "investment impact statement," to include, specifically, project impact on low-income communities, describing how it intends to compensate the community for the short and long term impact of development.
- Halt the construction of nuclear power plants until:
- All safety issues have been satisfactorily resolved.
- The current legal limitation on liability claims by victims of nuclear accidents has been removed.
- The nuclear power industry and its shareholders individually have assumed responsibility for the safe disposal of nuclear waste and has agreed to pay for any ill effects caused by these wastes.
- Halt government support of programs and activities in nuclear energy , and substitute programs and research into alternate sources of energy.
- Include shut-down costs in preliminary cost estimates for proposed nuclear power plants.
- Charge the federal government with financing the development of renewable energy sources.
- Increase federal funds for mass transit by converting the "highway trust fund" into a mass transit fund.
- Designate rationing as the only fair way to allocate scarce energy supplies if and when a genuine shortage of energy develops, with such rationing to be managed by local boards as was done during World War II.
- Break the grip of the big energy companies.
- Establish new public energy corporations, among them:
- An energy development corporation to develop and market renewable sources of energy.
- A public oil and gas corporation which has the right and preference to develop oil and gas reserves on federally owned land.
- Prevent any single corporation or conglomerate from owning major interest in more than one of the following resources: oil, natural gas, nuclear energy, solar energy, and coal; or more than one of the following categories: source, refinery, shipping, or outlet.
- Establish and/or maintain price controls for gasoline, heating oil, propane, and natural gas.
- Tax the windfall profits of all a major energy corporations, and return all excess deferred taxes to consumers.
Health Care
Health care must be:
- Affordable.
- Accessible.
- Of equal quality for all.
- Controlled by the people of the community, not by doctors, hospitals and insurance companies.
To achieve this:
- Introduce a set of immediate reforms in the present health care system.
- At hospitals:
- Prohibit hospitals from turning away any patient who needs medical care.
- Give low and moderate income members of the community a proportional share of seats on the governing boards of all hospitals.
- Force hospitals to concentrate on providing basic quality care instead of wasting huge sums on showcase buildings and technological gadgets.
- Enforce federal legislation that requires uniform minimum standards of operation for nursing homes.
- In the medical professions:
- Require doctors - whose education is subsidized by the federal government - to work for three years in an area where there is a shortage of personnel.
- Prosecute local chapters of the American Medical Association if they continue to fix prices for doctors' services.
- Permit doctors and dentists to advertise prices and require price posting.
- Prohibit doctors and dentists from refusing Medicaid and Medicare patients, and from billing more than Medicaid and Medicare recommended prices for the services they provide.
- Place members of the community on all medical licensing boards.
- At the health insurance companies:
- Throw doctors and hospital administrators off the boards of directors, and replace them with a low and moderate income majority.
- Require insurance companies to control hospital costs and medical fees rather than passing them on to their customers.
- Prohibit discrimination by health insurance companies on the basis of race, sex, geography, income, age, or health status.
- Provide all women with the services of midwives without the constraints and restrictions of the medical profession. Require all third party reimbursement to provide direct payment to certified nurse midwives.
- In the government:
- Reform Medicaid and Medicare by:
- Raising income and assets limits for eligibility and removing the spend- down requirement.
- Financing in-home care for the elderly as an alternative to nursing home care.
- Including dental care and other preventative treatment in all Medicaid and Medicare plans.
- Allowing Medicare and Medicaid recipients unlimited nursing home care.
- Providing direct competitive payments to non-physician health care providers.
- Charge state governments with setting maximum prices for basic hospital and medical services.
- Require proportional representation of low and moderate income people on all health planning boards.
- Require generic substitution options and price postings of subscription drugs.
- Require the federal government to provide for the health care needs of recent immigrants.
- Create a national health care system, along the following lines:
- All medical costs are covered, by a combination of insurance, health maintenance organizations, free public health service. and sliding scale payments based on income.
- The system is progressively financed.
- The system is controlled by democratically elected community-based committees.
- There is a 24-hour, 7 day-a-week medical care / emergency room available in every neighborhood, based in neighborhood clinics. The clinics provide all types of basic care, including ob/gyn, pediatrics, and preventative care, as well as the following types of services.
- House calls.
- 24 Hour telephone service.
- Ambulance service.
- A mini-bus to bring neighborhood residents to the clinic.
- Mobile paramedics.
- Doctors are on set salaries.
- Medical education is financed by the government, in exchange for which doctors are required to serve in the public health service for a period of at least ten years.
- Special emphasis is placed on preventive health care with free universal care and more adequate research on the most important facets of preventive medicine, including dental care, chiropractic, nutrition, prenatal care and vaccination.
- Special emphasis is placed on maintaining a healthy environment, with the public health service responsible for strict enforcement of standards on: environmental quality, occupational health and safety, sanitation, foods, and drugs.
Housing
- Create more housing for low and moderate income people.
- Set a goal of a million new units of federally subsidized housing per year, including:
- Subsidized home purchase loans.
- Home rehabilitation loans and grants.
- Rental rehabilitation and rental subsidy.
- Public housing.
- Emergency public housing for displaced people.
- Establish and expand "urban homesteading" programs which would immediately confiscate abandoned properties and turn them over at a nominal cost to low and moderate income persons who wish to live in them.
- "Inclusionary zoning": require housing developments to include low and moderate income housing as a condition for receiving zoning and subdivision approval.
- Cut off Community Development Block Grant funds to communities that don't accept their fair share of low and moderate income housing.
- Terminate sale of publicly owned residential property to speculators and investors: require all publicly owned residential assets to be sold only to resident owners or nonprofits who will use public properties for low income housing.
- Create a "community housing corps" to put unemployed community residents to work providing housing in their own communities.
- Restrict eligibility by income for these and other federal and state housing programs until the needs of low and moderate income people have been met.
- Repeal mortgage interest and property tax deductions: establish mortgage interest tax credits only for low and moderate income households. Use revenue gained from repealed property tax deductions for low income housing development.
- Permanently extend the low income housing tax credit and ensure that tax credits build permanently affordable low income housing.
- Reform the income discriminatory underwriting practices of the secondary market: Require the Federal National Mortgage Corporation, and the Government National Mortgage Association to match underwriting standards to borrower income levels.
- Require builders of upper income housing to contribute to low-income housing construction, so that at least one third of all new housing units are for low and moderate income people.
- Prevent the displacement of low and moderate income people from their homes
- Require that any project which is subsidized or aided in any way by federal, state, or local government obtain replacement value for every person it displaces.
- Establish a special confiscatory tax on income acquired from speculation in real property.
- Ban insurance redlining, and guarantee that comprehensive homeowner's insurance is available at reasonable cost to all homeowners.
- Provide property tax relief for low and moderate income homeowners and renters, in the form of circuit breakers, homestead exemptions, or tax deferrals.
- End foreclosure:
- Initiate an immediate moratorium on all foreclosures, and establish community based committees to mediate between mortgages and mortgagers.
- Establish a federal mortgage forbearance program that would offer financial relief to any household unable to meet mortgage payments for reasons beyond their control.
- Place legal restrictions on the conversion of low and moderate income rental housing into condominiums.
- Require that tenants receive advance notice of the sale of the home or apartment they occupy, and give them first opportunity to purchase it.
- Require that government-sponsored housing rehabilitation projects:
- Offer rents within the budgets of low and moderate income families.
- Give first priority to neighborhood residents.
- Provide protection for tenants
- Outlaw displacement of low and moderate income tenants in privately owned, federally subsidized rental housing; permanently extend the moratorium on prepayment of assisted rental housing projects and provide permanent extensions of all rental assistance certificates.
- Enact a national rental housing standards act which would establish minimum standards for the upkeep and management of rental property.
- Reform landlord-tenant law to:
- Give tenants equal rights under the law.
- Prohibit eviction of tenants for organizing activities.
- Require landlords to negotiate with tenants when a majority have signed on with a tenants union.
- Give tenants the right to withhold rent and apply it to repairs when the landlord fails to meet basic standards of habitability.
- Establish special boards or housing courts to mediate disputes between landlords and tenants.
- Enact rent control statues in communities where a shortage of housing has allowed landlords to charge excessive rents.
- Prohibit direct vendor payments of rent in public assistance programs.
- Clean up public housing
- Require public housing to be "scatter-site" rather than concentrated in low-income areas.
- Give tenants greater say in the management of housing projects, and require projects managers to live in projects.
- Install 24-hour security guard protection at all public housing projects.
Work and Worker's Rights
Every person who wants to work has a right to a job - a job which pays a living wage and offers opportunities for advancement. Those who cannot work - the elderly, the disabled, single parents with small children - should receive enough income to afford them the basic necessities and allow them to live with dignity.
- Charge private industry with job creation and job training
- Require companies which reap a large profit to hire and train the unemployed.
- Require companies which receive contracts from the government to hire and train the unemployed, and -- if they are engaged in projects in low and moderate income communities -- to hire first from the community.
- Require companies which make workers "obsolete" through technological change and automation to retrain these workers in new, employable skills at company expense.
- Require private industry to use the technology which creates the most jobs and uses natural resources most efficiently.
- Charge government and big business with the final responsibility for full employment
- Create a national youth entitlement program which guarantees a part time job and skill training to any youth who remains in school.
- Establish a community job corps in every low income neighborhood.
- Require all government funded job projects based in local communities to give preference in hiring to residents of those communities.
- Mandate that all government funded job training be in trades which currently offer opportunities for employment, and are likely to offer employment opportunities in five years as well.
- Ensure that public employment isn't "make-work" in character; mobilize youth and the unemployed to do the work that needs to be done in America, such as rehabilitating housing, repairing the railroads, providing public transportation for the elderly, cleaning up the environment, dispensing health care as a paramedic, and providing day care for the children of working parents.
- Provide an adequate income to every American
- Guarantee a minimum annual family income at a figure equivalent to the most recent Bureau of Labor Statistics "medium living standard," adjusted for inflation.
- Extend minimum wage coverage to all wage earners and peg increases in it to the cost of living.
- Reform public benefits programs (social security, welfare, disability, etc.) by:
- Allowing more outside earnings as an incentive to work.
- Preventing increased income payments from being erased by automatic increases in public housing , Medicare premiums, and food stamp payments.
- Providing automatic increases pegged to the cost of living.
- Establish minimum standards applicable throughout the nation.
- Make pensions transferable from job to job.
- Establish national standards for disability under workman's compensation.
- Base unemployment payments on the size of the unemployed worker's family.
- Establish the fundamental rights of workers, to include:
- The right to a job which does not endanger health or safety.
- The right to a job which is accessible from home.
- The right to a job which does not require overtime work as a condition of employment.
- The right to company or government financed child care for the worker's children.
- The right to a fair grievance procedure.
- Most fundamentally, the right to organize, which is to be promoted by:
- Extending the National Labor Relations Act coverage to all workers.
- Streamlining the union election and certification process.
- Restricting the use of anti-strike injunction by courts.
- Providing stiff penalties-back wages times five-for employers who fire or demote workers for their organizing activities.
- The right to company or government financed health insurance.
- Reform the National Labor Relations Act
For workers:
- Permit
- sympathy strikes
- secondary boycotts
- picketing to support sympathy strikes and secondary boycotts.
- Permit automatic union certification when a majority of a bargaining unit has signed authorization cards.
- Permit workers to refuse to handle "Struck work".
- Permit striking workers to receive unemployment compensation, welfare, and food stamps.
For management:
- Prohibit the hiring of temporary replacements to fund anti-union campaigns.
- Prohibit all lockouts.
- Regulate management consultation.
- Regulate management consultants:
- Require consultants to file financial disclosure forms with state labor departments.
- Prohibit the use of tax dollars to fund anti-union campaigns.
- Prohibit employers from forcing workers to listen to anti-union campaigns.
- Require management to negotiate over what the National Labor Relations Board now calls "permissive subjects": Sale of the company, work schedules, pricing, choice of suppliers, organization of management, etc.
- Prohibit the use of bankruptcy as a tool to throw out valid collective bargaining agreements.
- Guarantee Women's Rights
- Women should receive equal pay for comparable work.
- Punish sexual harassment with:
- Immediate dismissal for individuals found guilty of sexual harassment.
- Heavy fines and mandatory corrective action for companies found guilty of tolerating a pervasive pattern of sexual harassment.
- Require companies to compensate women workers who must take time off to recover from severe harassment-e.g. assault, or rape.
- Protect Families
- Both men and women should receive paid leave for the birth or adoption of a child.
- Require employers to offer flexible work schedules and full pay to workers who must care for relatives.
- Protect All Workers
- Part-time and temporary workers should receive proportionately the same benefits as full-time workers.
- Workers in unorganized work sites should be able to join unions, and receive the benefits of union membership.
- All workers whether public or private, in small or large numbers, should have the legal right to:
- Organize;
- Bargain Collectively;
- Strike when necessary;
and these rights should be under the full protection of the law.
Rural Issues
- Preserve the family farm
- Restrict agricultural tax breaks to family farmers only
- Redesign the agricultural price support programs to weight them in favor of small and medium-sized farms, and to enable farmers to earn a parity of income with non-farm wage earners in this country's median income bracket.
- Enforce provisions of the 1902 Federal Reclamation Act which limit the amount of federally irrigated land a single person or farm corporation can own.
- Protect family farmers from crippling property tax burdens through mechanisms such as circuit breakers, land trusts, and agricultural tax districts.
- Shelter small family farms from the full brunt of inheritance taxes by granting deferrals or partial exemptions to the heirs as long as they continue to work the farm.
- Set up public land pools through which states can acquire abandoned, foreclosed, or tax delinquent farm property and lease it or sell it at below the market price to families entering or re-entering farming.
- Establish special credit programs offering "Lifeline interest rates" for purchase of land and equipment by families entering or re-entering farming.
- Create a "Family farm extension service" to provide research and technical assistance to small farmers, using retired farmers as extension agents.
- Levy a punitive tax on short-term speculation in agricultural land.
- Ensure that the farm land in the Farmer's Home Administration and Farm Credit Service inventories is made available to foreclosed owners, and families entering or re-entering farming at below market prices.
- Break monopoly control of the food industry
- Prohibit investor-owned, non-farm corporations from owning agricultural land.
- Use anti-trust action to break up the monopoly control of agricultural marketing and commodity storage by the large "middlemen" corporations, and empower federal and state grand juries to investigate monopoly influence in the food and farm industries.
- Use the small farm extension service to set up a network of country/city (farmer/consumer) marketing co-operatives for farm products, and offer publicly-owned land to open-air markets which sell farm products at wholesale prices.
- Allow associations of farmers to bargain collectively with purchasers of agricultural products.
- Guarantee a fair share for rural America
- Upgrade essential public services for rural communities, such as: health care, education, low and moderate income housing.
- Nationalize the railroad beds and call a halt to the abandonment of rural track.
- Give small cities and rural communities their fair share of Community Development Block Grant funds.
- Extend the National Labor Relations Act to farm workers.
- Prevent rural America from being exploited as an energy colony, a dumping ground for hazardous waste, and a playground for speculators, developers, and tax evaders by giving rural communities full control over their own future development.
Community Development
- Clean up the Community Development Block Grant program.
- Allocate 100% of all CDBG funds to projects which directly benefit low and moderate income people.
- Ban the use funds for downtown commercial projects until the basic needs of low and moderate income neighborhoods are met.
- Give democratically elected neighborhoods the power to make decisions on how CDBG funds are spent within the neighborhood, and give elected representatives of these boards the power to determine how CDBG funds are allocated over the city as a whole.
- Support community-based economic development
- "Get it in writing": eliminate business incentives (tax abatements , bond issues, etc.) as they now operate and instead encourage contract arrangements between private industry and the community; the business receives the incentive only if it meets the goals set by the community in the contract.
- Such contracts must be:
- Approved by a Contracts Review Board with a low and moderate income majority.
- Subject to public hearings.
- Offered preferentially to small, community-based enterprises.
- Use the funds saved by the elimination of business incentive to provide credit and management assistance to community-based enterprises, such as:
- Small businesses.
- Non-Profit enterprises.
- Cooperatives.
- Worker-owned businesses.
- Require any enterprise receiving assistance from the government to hire from the community, invest profits in community, and remain in the community.
- Control the effect of private development on the community
- Require every major new private development in the community- residential, commercial, or industrial-to file a community impact statement with the community board describing in detail the potential impact of the development on the community-costs and benefits.
- Force new developments to "pay their own way" by requiring developers to finance any community improvements (streets, sewers, schools) which are needed because of the effect of development.
- Restrict new development in areas which do not have the natural resources to support it.
- Require large companies which desire to leave the community to:
- Submit advance notification to the community board.
- Show cause as to why it is necessary to leave.
- Obtain an exit visa from the community board signifying that the company has adequately compensated all its employees, and the community at large for losses due to relocation.
- Pay Back any incentive previously granted to it by the community.
- Make public services serve the community
- Guarantee every community, whether it be a rural township or an urban neighborhood, close access to certain basic facilities:
- An elementary school.
- A branch library.
- A 24-hour emergency health clinic.
- A community meeting house.
- Recreation facilities.
- Public transportation to city center or county seat.
- Public Transportation
- Charter financial institutions to serve credit needs of the community
- Ban redlining, and require banks to set aside an appropriate portion of their funds to meet the credit needs of low and moderate income people, small business, family farmers, and non-profit, community-based enterprises.
- Grant bank charters for periods of five years only, with renewals based on the bank's performance in meeting its obligations to the community.
- Give local communities the power to grant and revoke operating charters for bank operations within their boundaries.
- Require the presence of low and moderate income people on all financial regulatory oversight boards, in proportion to their presence in the population at large.
- Prohibit banks that make small loans from lending money to consumer loan companies and from owning consumer loan companies.
- Strengthen the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) and The Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA):
- Congress should require that all financial regulatory agencies have enforcement divisions.
- Make the proceedings of the enforcement divisions open to the public.
- Require financial institutions to regularly publish HMDA data in local newspapers, in a form readily understood by the general public.
- Require insurance companies, and other corporations with enormous cash reserves, to reinvest in the low income communities from which they draw money, improve and enlarge the stock of low and moderate income housing, and establish access to health care for low and moderate income people.
- Give low and moderate income people genuine access to credit and other banking services.
- Set maximum interest rates for all forms of credit.
- Establish an affordable "Lifeline rate" for housing credit for low and moderate income people.
- Require State banking commissions to publish a comparative survey of interest rates offered by banks within the state.
- Outlaw discrimination by age, race, or sex in the provision of loans.
- Require banks to make a special effort to advertise the services they make available to low and moderate income people, particularly in the areas of housing and education loans and deposit services.
- Remove existing barriers to the establishment of community development credit unions and other cooperative banking enterprises, and mobilize federal and state banking agencies to provide start-up funds and technical assistance for these enterprises.
- Take control of employee pension funds out of the hands of bank trust departments, and put control in the hands of their true owners: the beneficiaries of the funds.
- Require banks and savings institutions holding property tax and other tax payments to pay interest at savings account rates to depositors.
- Require all banks to cash government welfare, Social Security and Veterans Administration checks.
- Establish inflation indexed savings certificates, so small savers can protect their savings from inflation in absolute safety.
- Use public money for public benefit
- Establish a stricter rating and enforcement system for the community investment record of banks, and require that local, state, and federal funds be deposited only in the banks which maintain the highest ratings.
- Establish new public banks to meet essential needs, such as low-income housing rehabilitation, community economic development, and farm credit, and use public employee pension funds, public university endowments, public deposits, and other untapped sources of public funds to provide operating capital for these public banks.
- Require that the financial institutions receiving taxpayer assistance act as public banks.
Taxes
With tax reform, we can easily afford the People's Platform and provide relief to hard-pressed low and moderate income taxpayers.
- Tax the wealth of America
- Tax intangible property at the same rate as real and personal property.
- Increase and expand state and local severance taxes on the exploitation of natural resources and earmark the revenues for the development of new energy sources and the preservation of the natural environment.
- Establish "split-roll" property tax systems which tax income-producing commercial property, luxury property, and large individual holdings at higher rates than ordinary residential property.
- Tax windfall profits reaped by corporations operating in the four basic areas: housing, health, food, and energy.
- Close the loopholes and simplify the tax system
- Eliminate all income tax shelters, exemptions and allowances which offer wealthy individuals and corporations unfair advantages over low and moderate income working people.
- Tax all luxury items.
- Tax capital gains and other unearned income at the same rate as earned income.
- Eliminate property tax abatements, incentives, and exemptions which allow industries and developers to manipulate local governments to their own profit and the taxpayer's loss.
- Crack down on tax delinquent corporations and wealthy individuals by assessing interest on property tax delinquencies of over $5,000.
- Remove taxation from the basic necessities of life, and from the basic income necessary to live
- Exempt food, medicine, and clothing from sales taxes.
- Exempt utility fuels (i.e. fuel oil and natural gas) used for residential consumption from sales taxes.
- Establish circuit breakers and homestead exemptions to protect low and moderate income homesteaders and renters from paying a disproportionate amount of their income in property tax.
- Index income tax schedules to prevent inflated wages from pushing wage earners into higher tax brackets while their real income remains constant.
- Base taxes solely on the ability to pay
- Replace the regressive payroll tax for social security with a progressive graduated tax.
- Replace the many local and state flat rate taxes with progressive graduated income taxes.
- Provide circuit breakers and other forms of property tax relief for small businesses and family farms.
Environment
The effects of irresponsible environmental policy are felt most directly by low and moderate income people, who often live near government and industrial waste sites. These communities suffer high rates of birth defects, cancer, and other diseases. - Stop the poisoning of our neighborhoods
- Establish procedures to ensure that government and industry clean up the over 30,000 existing hazardous waste sites for which they are responsible in the United States, and that accident sites are monitored by community- based boards.
- Require producers of toxic wastes to sign binding agreements with community groups and local governments to reduce or eliminate the toxic wastes they put in our air, water, food, and soil.
- Establish a system of heavy fines for waste disposal companies that break the law, and bar repeat offenders from doing business.
- Establish community control over setting safety standards, permit approval, and emergency evacuation plans.
- Reform and expand "Right to Know"
- Make "Right to Know," the legislation that establishes the public's right to be informed about hazardous chemicals used and released in local communities, more accessible to the public by:
- Using community-based organizations as clearing houses;
- Requiring that the presence of hazardous wastes in a community be announced with periodic flyers;
- Making public, and widely announced, the routes taken by all hazardous materials transport.
- Include the government and the military under "Right to Know" restrictions and stipulations, in order to allow residents of communities near government and military installations to act on the dangers posed to their health and safety by hazardous waste.
Neighborhood Safety
The major contemporary threats to the safety of low-income neighborhoods are the invasion of rape and the devastation of drugs. Effective law enforcement will incorporate community crime control measures.
Rape
Rape is epidemic in the United States, and victimizes low and moderate income women most severely; it can be fought on many levels.
- Reform and expand criminal justice efforts to prevent sexual assault.
- Increase police patrols of low and moderate income neighborhoods. These patrols should be specially trained to explain safety precautions to women and children.
- Local police departments should establish special crime units.
- Institute criminal justice procedures that encourage speedy trials in rape cases, mandate long jail terms for convicted rapists, and provide counseling for sex offenders.
- Have local law enforcement agencies distribute warning flyers whenever a rape or assault occurs in a neighborhood.
- Promote innovative health care efforts to treat victims of sexual assault.
- Hospital procedures should guarantee that victims are treated with dignity, that their medical needs are met, and that hospital staff reliably collect evidence of crime.
- Incorporate treatment of sex offenders into medical, psychiatric, and psychological training.
- Extend prevention into the classroom
- Require schools to establish in-school and community based rape education programs that dispel myths about rape and foster attitudes and values that will reduce the incidence of rape.
- Situate prevention in the community
- Establish funding for a national network of community based rape crisis centers, to coordinate at the local level:
- Victim Advocacy programs to protect victims' rights and monitor the quality of assistance victims receive from police and medical personnel.
- Self defense classes for women in low income neighborhoods.
- Neighborhood clean-ups to eliminate dangerous places where rapes can occur - like overgrown lots and abandoned houses - and to ensure upkeep of existing services, like streetlights, that contribute to neighborhood safety.
Drugs
Provide treatment on demand to any addict who wants it.
- Provide human services adequate to the problem
- Ensure that no existing human services programs are cut or curtailed in order to pay for drug and alcohol treatment programs. Cut defense spending to pay for drug treatment programs.
- Incorporate drug education into health curricula of all public schools.
- Establish centers where addicted mothers and infants can recover together.
- Increase funding of foster care programs, and establish special training programs for foster parents who must care for children born to addicted mothers.
- Re-open inner city hospitals that have been closed.
- Increase criminal justice efforts
- Use the seized financial assets as well as the income generated from the sale of confiscated property of drug offenders-at the federal, state and municipal levels- to establish drug treatment centers and to rebuild low- income communities by fighting the underlying causes of drug abuse: inadequate housing and job opportunities; no health care. Establish community control over this source of funds.
- Establish a special United States Narcotics Court to deal with the increased load of drug prosecutions.
- Money Laundering:
- Hold bankers accountable for their key role in the drug trade. Impose stiff prison sentences on bankers that knowingly tolerate the laundering of drug money.
- Make it a criminal offense for a financial institution to knowingly conduct business with parties using aliases or assumed names.
- Stop the laundering of drug profits by other means by regulating all check cashing stores on a federal level: require them to register with the Treasury Department, to submit their financial records to federal scrutiny, and to display a federal sticker or seal in the window of their place of business to indicate compliance.
- Ban the manufacture, importation, sale and possession of assault and semi-automatic weapons.
Community Crime Control
- Increase the number of foot patrols; require that 80% of all federal law enforcement grants be spent on neighborhood crime control.
- Establish community dispute resolution councils to adjudicate neighborhood disputes, small claims, and minor criminal offenses.
- Allow persons convicted of minor criminal offenses to do community work as compensation, in place of a fine.
Civil Rights
Civil rights policies and enforcement programs must specifically target the needs and aspirations of low-income people. A comprehensive civil rights program will transform housing, law enforcement, education, health care, jobs and family policy.
- Enforce the law
- Require that the civil rights enforcement agencies devote special attention to the concerns of low and moderate income people.
- Restore the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission to its position as lead enforcer of civil rights law.
- The federal government should increase its investigations of civil rights violations
- The civil rights enforcement agencies should develop management systems that ensure timely resolution of individual civil rights complaints.
- Affirmative goals and timetable should be feature among the mix of remedies used to resolve discrimination cases.
- Impose stiff fines for businesses that fail to comply with civil rights laws, and impose fines and jail sentences on those officials as well.
- The President should be a forceful advocate
- The president should appoint greater numbers of minorities and women with strong civil rights records to Executive departments and the federal judiciary.
- Require all Presidential appointees to submit systematic civil rights enforcement plans for their respective departments within 90 days of assuming office.
- Keep the public informed
- Restore the capacity of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights to collect and publish information adequate to enforce the law.
- Include violence stemming from racial, religious, sexual and ethnic prejudice in the National Uniform Crime Report Index.
Communications
The right to communicate is fundamental. The increasing concentration of ownership in communication industries ensures that, unless positive steps are taken, the concerns of low and moderate income people will continue to be ignored.
- Make it possible for low and moderate income community groups to have their own sources of information
- Initiate government funding to low and moderate income community groups in order to assist them in establishing their own sources of information.
- Exempt government funding to low and moderate income community groups in order to assist them in establishing their own sources of information.
- The Federal Communication Commission should revise its policies so that broadcast applicants with low and moderate income boards of directors are more likely to be awarded stations.
- Make the mainstream media accessible and accountable to low and moderate income people.
- Reinstate the Fairness Doctrine in broadcasting, so that grass roots community groups have equal time to express their views.
- Require cable TV companies to make good on their promises to allow community groups access to air time, or revoke their operating licenses.
Education
Public schools are most effective in educating students when they are run democratically by the community, when they are adequately funded, and when they serve the community's interest.
- Make parents an integral part of local schools
- Individual elementary and high schools should be controlled by local school councils, consisting of members elected separately by parents, community, residents, teachers, staff, and students, with the principal automatically a non-voting member.
- The local school councils should have influence over curricula, and be empowered to approve or disapprove
- renewal of the principals' contract;
- non-personnel budget items.
- Equalize funding
- Funding for all schools should be set so schools in affluent areas do not receive more funding than schools in low and moderate income areas.
- Extra funding should be available for schools with high proportions of students with special needs.
- Funding for schools should be adequate to provide support or services children are unable to receive at home.
- Funding should be for schools, not individuals, and no federal money should be used for vouchers or a voucher system.
- School curricula should meet students' needs
- School curricula should stress basic skills.
- Schools should acknowledge the cultural and language backgrounds of their students by including courses that study those backgrounds in core curricula.
- The school should be part of the community
- School should be available for community needs, like adult education.
- Local business communities should be encouraged to be involved in schools.
- High school students should receive job training that is linked to specific employment upon graduation.
Representation
- More democracy ... in the neighborhood
- Establish democratically elected neighborhood boards with jurisdiction over all public investment, major private development, and zoning matters within the neighborhood.
- Allow appeal from the decision of neighborhood boards by popular vote of the neighborhood (neighborhood referendum).
- More democracy ... in elections
- Institute automatic voter registration
- Take the money out of politics by:
- Establishing public financing of campaigns.
- Setting maximum spending figures for candidates.
- Requiring strict disclosure of all campaign contributions.
- Prohibiting corporations from contributing any type of local, state, or federal election, including general election, primary, initiative, recall, and referendum.
- Eliminate filing fees for elections.
- Require that public officials be elected from the smallest practicable units - that is, from wards rather than at-large, from single-member districts rather than multi-member districts, etc.
- More democracy ... in government
- Require recall, referendum, and initiative provisions at all levels of government.
- Require that low and moderate income people be proportionately represented in all major political institutions, including: the Cabinet, the judiciary, the regulatory boards, and the national party conventions.
- Select the members of government regulatory boards by direct popular election.
- Require government offices to be open on evenings and Saturdays so that working people have access to them.
- Limit the salaries of public officials to no more than the average income of their districts.
- Compensate citizens who serve on public boards and commissions, testify at utility hearings, or represent the public in other ways for their time and expenses-as with jury duty.
- More democracy ... in big business
- Require all corporations of over $10 million in assets to include worker- representative and low and moderate income members of the community on their corporate boards.
- Expand the organizing and collective representation rights of workers, farmers, tenants, consumers, and communities in their confrontation with business corporations.
TOPICS: History; Society
KEYWORDS: acorn; acornplatform
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-20, 21-34 next last
Thank you for finding this Fred Nerks!
Notice Bill Clinton in the center of this photo in presentation of this "People's Platform"
1
posted on
10/24/2008 5:09:09 AM PDT
by
Calpernia
2
posted on
10/24/2008 5:14:06 AM PDT
by
Calpernia
(Hunters Rangers - Raising the Bar of Integrity http://www.barofintegrity.us)
To: Calpernia
3
posted on
10/24/2008 5:14:59 AM PDT
by
GodBlessRonaldReagan
(Wakka-ding-hoy - battle cry of the Plexus Rangers!)
To: Calpernia
4
posted on
10/24/2008 5:15:45 AM PDT
by
Marauder
(Better to elect a man who fought against communism, not a communist.)
To: KylaStarr; Cindy; StillProud2BeFree; nw_arizona_granny; SunkenCiv; Velveeta; Dolphy; ...
Ping for pertinent ACORN info for bookmarking.
5
posted on
10/24/2008 5:16:19 AM PDT
by
Calpernia
(Hunters Rangers - Raising the Bar of Integrity http://www.barofintegrity.us)
To: Calpernia
6
posted on
10/24/2008 5:22:09 AM PDT
by
DocRock
(All they that TAKE the sword shall perish with the sword. Matthew 26:52 Gun grabbers beware.)
From dissfunktional over at Texas Darlin:
http://texasdarlin.wordpress.com/2008/10/23/new-ibdtipp-poll-mccain-and-obama-tied/#comment-19754
what was that that Obama used to do again
before the lawyer thing
Community Organizer?
chieforganizer.org = ACORN (No. Really.)
When on that site ^ and we clcik on Bio at the top, this takes us to a whole new site. Oh what a web we weave!
That site is - waderathke.com
Low and behold all of those sites above are listed on Wade Rathkes site. Wade Rathke is the founder and Chief Organizer of ACORN International and SEIU Local 100.
Golly - Wade is like
Mr. Union! Yet
he wants to close the very companies that provide jobs - a whole LOT of jobs, and products at affordable prices (Walmart). Its like hes trying to take over the country or something. A communist.
waderathke.com/index.php?id=109
Tides.org = Acorn as well; however something seems amiss. Site isnt loading. Went to cache and I see they took the extra step of making images clear.
Founded by Drummond Pike in 1976, Tides is a nonprofit that promotes social justice, broadly shared economic opportunity, robust democracy and sustainable
These are radio stations that belong to ACORN. I noticed they each gave to Obama to support his campaign, and even more dough to oppose McCain:
kabf.org
knon.org
Another Union that is Acorn - seiu880.org
Project Vote (projectvote.org) where have we heard that before? = ACORN
ACORN HOUSING:
http://acornhousing.org/TEXT/homebuying1.php
Mortgage Programs
Through ACORN Housing, homebuyers can gain access to mortgage programs with lower interest rates, lower down payments, flexible underwriting guidelines and lower origination fees. With AHC, you can refinance for better terms through the innovative agreements weve formed with lenders.
With AHC you get:
-Lower down payments and closing costs.
-No Private Mortage Insurance.
-Banks generally require 3 months of mortgage payments in the bank at settlement.
With our program, they dont, which allows you to buy a home sooner.
-Most banks wont count public assistance or voluntarily child support in determining if youll qualify for a mortgage.
With our program, all steady income counts.
(sound familiar? hint - subprime lending
)
1970 Wade Rathke begins organizing in Arkansas to unite welfare recipients and working people for shared needs and rights; forms ACORN (Arkansas Community Organizations for Reform Now)
1971 ACORN leaders organize Save the City campaign in Little Rock, establishing ACORN as a force in Arkansas politics. ACORN establishes six regional offices in the state around issues of concern to rural and small town Arkansans, begins to tackle statewide issues
1972 ACORNs Save the City Rally in Little Rock marks first entrance into electoral politics
1974 In Pulaski County, 250 ACORN members run for office, 195 win seats
1975 ACORN expands to Texas and South Dakota; first associate Executive Board and first president (Steve McDonald) elected to handle issues of larger scope
1978 First national convention, of 1,000 members in Memphis, marks beginning of multi-state campaigns
1978-1980 Participation in 1980 presidential campaign leads entry into national politics
1980 ACORN is in 20 states, having added at least 3 states each year since
1982 ACORN reaches 30,000 member families
1980s Reagan years very trying for low-income communities and organizing. ACORN launches squatting campaign to get low- and moderate-income people into vacant houses and fix them up, with neighborhood approval. Fifteen thousand ACORN members and allies establish Reagan Ranches in over 35 cities, building tent cities to symbolize the homelessness Reagans policies created. ACORN develops and strengthens ACORN Political Action Committees (APACs) and legislative office.
1985 ACORN grows to 27 states, including significant chapters in New York, Washington, D.C., and Chicago
1990 ACORN has more than 70,000 members in 28 states
1994 ACORN participation has helped Project Vote register 147,000 voters in Michigan, Missouri, New Jersey and Pennsylvania
2000 ACORN is 125,000 members strong. ACORN registers 100,000 new voters nationwide.
2004 Now 720 full-time staff working for ACORN and sister organizations, up from 490 just a year before. ACORN organized in 80 cities (up from 60 at the end of 2003) in 31 states. ACORN also expands internationally, with ACORN Canada opening its first offices in Toronto and Vancouver and ACORN Peru opening an office in Lima.
2005 ACORN now includes chapters in over 100 U.S. cities in 37 states and in Canada, Peru and Mexico
2006 More than 350,000 member families organized in over 110 cities in 40 states; added Argentina
2007 ACORN organizes in India
7
posted on
10/24/2008 5:26:01 AM PDT
by
Calpernia
(Hunters Rangers - Raising the Bar of Integrity http://www.barofintegrity.us)
To: Calpernia; sit-rep; Squantos; Eaker; Joe Brower; SLB; wardaddy
Under “Drugs”:
“Ban the manufacture, importation, sale and possession of assault and semi-automatic weapons.”
So, revolvers and single-shot pistols are okay, I presume? Oh, those probably come under “assault” weapons.
These bastards are truly the face of evil.
To: ex-Texan; TigerLikesRooster; Travis McGee; M. Espinola
You all may want to come over here and bookmark this too.
9
posted on
10/24/2008 5:46:12 AM PDT
by
Calpernia
(Hunters Rangers - Raising the Bar of Integrity http://www.barofintegrity.us)
To: Larry Lucido; Calpernia; sit-rep; Squantos; Eaker; SLB; wardaddy
Well, I'm sure I don't have to tell y'all that the self-anointed elites who concoct these rules for others have their own hardware stockpiled; them, and their bodyguards (official and non).
Some animals being "equal-er", and all that.
Like Squantos sez: Doom on 'em. Bloody, merciless Doom.
10
posted on
10/24/2008 5:47:13 AM PDT
by
Joe Brower
(Sheep have three speeds: "graze", "stampede" and "cower".)
Various snipets from the archives:
July 9, 2001
NATIONAL AFFORDABLE HOUSING TRUST FUND PROPOSED - On June 27, Rep. Barbara Lee (D., Calif.) introduced the National Affordable Housing Trust Fund Act of 2001. The bill proposes using a portion of profit surpluses generated from the Federal Housing Administration Mortgage Insurance Program to create a trust fund to provide for the construction of affordable rental units and homes for low- and middle-income Americans. The bill is co-sponsored by Bernie Sanders (I., Vt.) and John McHugh (R., N.Y.). It is supported by ACORN, the National Low Income Housing Coalition, the National Coalition for the Homeless, and the Macauley Institute.
Press Release
Lifestyles of the Rich and Subsidized Tour
Oct. 18, 2001
Minnesota ACORN
Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now
757 Raymond Ave Suite 200, St. Paul, MN 55104
Phone: (651) 642-0003 Fax: (651) 642-0060
_________________________________________________________________________
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: CONTACT: Sasha Baltins
Thursday, October 18, 2001 (651) 642-0003 (612) 296-6195
Who: Busloads of shocked and angry taxpayers and affordable housing advocates
What: Lifestyles of the Rich and Subsidized Tour: Homes they never wanted the poor to see
Where: The parking lot across from ACME Comedy Club (708 N 1st Street)
When: Saturday, October 20th, 1 p.m.
Why: The city neglects affordable housing while subsidizing luxury developments
In recent years members of ACORN and other affordable housing advocates have watched with growing concern as Minneapolis rental prices have skyrocketed and housing prices have put homeownership beyond the reach of many low and moderate income families. This affordable housing crisis has reached such enormous proportions that over half of the people in homeless shelters have jobs and many more are being forced to move out of the city by rising housing costs.
In this context it came as a complete shock when ACORN discovered that our city government was not just ignoring this crisis, the city was making the problem worse! As it turns out 358 million dollars of city taxes are being funnelled into the pockets of luxury developers. These developers are in turn building totally unaffordable housing along the Mississippi river. This housing includes upscale loft condominiums, riverfront mansions and luxury apartment buildings. These units carry up to a one million dollar price tag and an average tax subsidy of $69,000.
ACORN members, taxpayers and those bearing the brunt of rising housing costs are understandably outraged that the city government has used our tax dollars to build housing that we could never afford to live in or own. We feel strongly that tax money should be spent on building housing for low and moderate income people who are the majority of the population and also the ones who need it. Taxes should not be spent on housing for the rich who are a tiny minority of the population that already have a tremendous advantage when it comes to finding good housing.
It is for these reasons that ACORN members and our allies are committed to exposing this injustice and then stopping it. Our first step will be to see for ourselves just where our housing money is going. On Saturday October 20th at 1 p.m. busloads of people from North and South Minneapolis will converge at the parking lot across the street from the ACME comedy club. From there we will begin our visit of the luxury developments entitled, “Lifestyles of the Rich and Subsidized Tour: Homes they never wanted the poor to see.”
*** Good Visuals ***
11
posted on
10/24/2008 5:56:31 AM PDT
by
Calpernia
(Hunters Rangers - Raising the Bar of Integrity http://www.barofintegrity.us)
To: Joe Brower; FreedomPoster; Larry Lucido; Calpernia; sit-rep; Squantos; Eaker; wardaddy; ...
I fear that the freedoms our forefathers fought for and our fathers and many of us fought to defend are hanging by a fragile thread. We will be relegated to the status of a third world nation by these so called “elites.”
“The will of the people is the only legitimate foundation of any government, and to protect its free expression should be our first object.” Thomas Jefferson.
12
posted on
10/24/2008 5:59:29 AM PDT
by
SLB
(Wyoming's Alan Simpson on the Washington press - "all you get is controversy, crap and confusion")
Archive snipet:
Household International Drops Practice of Selling Single-Premium Credit Insurance!
ACORN’s Campaign Against Household Goes On, July 2001
ACORN has won an important victory in our campaign against Household Finance’s predatory lending practices, and we intend to continue the fight until Household has taken additional crucial steps. After almost a year of ACORN efforts focused on this lender, Household Finance announced on July 11 that it will discontinue the sale of single-premium credit insurance with real-estate-secured loans. As Household was the most visible and largest remaining hold out in continuing to sell this insurance, the announcement likely spells the death knell of this product, which has cost borrowers untold millions in stolen equity, and is thus a major step forward.
Household Finance is among the largest subprime lenders in the country, and among the most abusive. Aggressive and deceptive sales of single-premium credit insurance have been one repeated feature of its loans, and a repeated target of our attack; ending such sales is a crucial piece of the proposal for reform, which we have presented to Household both in writing and in discussions. Unfortunately, Household’s sale of single-premium insurance has also been a part of a much broader pattern of abuses, which includes:
- Misrepresenting loan terms, conditions, and payments, to convince borrowers to refinance, when these refinancings leave the borrowers worse off in every way than they were before.
- Charging outrageous rates and fees, even to borrowers with excellent credit.
- Trapping borrowers in high-cost Household loans by making ‘packages’ of two loans, with the second often at interest rates well over 20percent, which together, along with included points, fees, and credit insurance, total more than the value of the home. However good their credit, borrowers are then effectively prevented from refinancing into loans at better terms.
- Including large prepayment penalties, mandatory arbitration clauses, and other abusive terms.
As hundreds of borrowers with abusive Household loans have become part of our organization and joined with other community members and leaders, ACORN’s campaign to push Household to change its lending practices has been far reaching, and this move on credit insurance clearly comes as a result. At the same time, Household would not have made this shift right now had it not been for Citigroup’s recent announcement on ending credit insurance sales, itself the result of major pressure on that giant lender by organizations around the country, including the Coalition for Responsible Lending in North Carolina, the Greenlining Institute, the California Reinvestment Coalition, Inner City Press, and others too numerous to name.
ACORN’s campaign to push Household to change its practices has included a shareholder strategy, which included demonstrating at the company’s shareholder meeting in Tampa Florida. Along with our presence outside the meeting, we supported a shareholder resolution on predatory lending sponsored by Responsible Wealth and United for a Fair Economy, and were able to have an ACORN leader speak to this inside the meeting, thanks to Domini Social Investments’ willingness to let us use their proxy. The resolution, which asked that executive compensation be tied to efforts to combat predatory lending, garnered more than 4 percent of the vote; this is considered a very high level of support for such a resolution the first time out, and guarantees that it will be on the proxy statement again next year.
We have also been working with city councils and other elected bodies to support divestment from Household until and unless the company changes its practices. These efforts were kicked off by the passage of a resolution to this effect in St. Louis, which has now been joined by Los Angeles, and Chelsea (MA), with many more such resolutions underway. In a similar vein, ACORN moved New York City Comptroller Hevesi, as controlling trustee of the City’s giant pension and retirement funds to add his voice to the demands that Household cease predatory practices. At the same time, we have worked with local labor bodies, and with the AFL-CIO to use Labor’s power, both as pension fund managers, and through its business relationship with Household through the Union Privilege credit card program, to put additional pressure on the company. Working with ACORN, local labor bodies from Louisiana to Philadelphia have passed resolutions and written letters urging Household to change.
Still closer to the ground, ACORN’s campaign has included repeated direct actions targeting Household’s offices in more than 25 cities around the country, and at central locations like Household’s government affairs office in Washington, DC; neighborhood outreach to warn people about Household loans; and a media strategy that has resulted in extensive print, radio, and TV coverage of Household as an abusive lender, in cities from Minneapolis, to Boston, to Phoenix, to Sacramento and more. ACORN has also submitted complaints to state bank regulators and attorneys general in more than 10 States. And we have stepped up the pressure by targeting Household business partners like Best Buy - by warning that company’s shoppers that their names and credit information are made available to Household, which then solicits them for its high cost loans.
Our struggle to push Household to change its abusive lending has been a part of our broader fight against predatory lending, both contributing to and taking strength from our work to win legislative and regulatory changes. Household has been among the most active opponents of the antipredatory lending legislation we fought for and won in Philadelphia, and are poised to win in Oakland, and of the legislation we, along with allies including the AARP, are promoting in California and New York. These fights, too, have helped keep up the pressure for change on this company.
Again, we are extremely pleased that our members’ work means that going forward borrowers will no longer face this abuse from Household. At the same time, Household’s abusive practices will continue to rob homeowners of countless millions until the company makes additional changes, and we are extremely troubled by the suggestion made by some advocates that this change in policy alone makes Household a responsible lender.
For more information, contact Lisa Donner at acorncampaign@acorn.org or (718) 246-7900.
13
posted on
10/24/2008 6:00:57 AM PDT
by
Calpernia
(Hunters Rangers - Raising the Bar of Integrity http://www.barofintegrity.us)
To: SLB
“If we lose freedom here, there is no place to escape to. This is the last stand on Earth.”
- President Ronald Reagan
October 27, 1984
14
posted on
10/24/2008 6:02:11 AM PDT
by
Calpernia
(Hunters Rangers - Raising the Bar of Integrity http://www.barofintegrity.us)
To: Calpernia
If we lose freedom here, there is no place to escape to. This is the last stand on Earth.Amen
15
posted on
10/24/2008 6:06:13 AM PDT
by
SLB
(Wyoming's Alan Simpson on the Washington press - "all you get is controversy, crap and confusion")
Archive snipets, Economic stimulous package?? This was ACORN? The school system in Little Rock where this Janet Miles works just hosted a group of Rwandan students. Bill Clinton holds an honorary Rwandan citizenship:
Dec. 4, 2001:
ACORN DEMANDS REFORM OF WELFARE REFORM - On Nov. 26, Little Rock ACORN Member Janet Miles spoke at a national U.S. Health and Human Services listening session in Philadelphia. Miles is a recent welfare recipient, and she described to Assistant Secretary for Children and Families Wade Horn the problems she has seen with the recent “reform” of welfare. ACORN is working with the National Campaign for Jobs and Income Support to insist that significant improvements be made when Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) is reauthorized next year. Miles told HHS that welfare recipients who are trying to find stable employment and are complying with all TANF requirements should be assisted with transportation and childcare and must not have their benefits cut off. Already, nationwide, 120,000 families have had their benefits cut or ended because of time limits. ACORN is asking people to urge their Congress members to eliminate time limits on TANF! To listen to New York ACORN Executive Director Bertha Lewis discuss welfare time limits on WNYC Radio, link to
http://web.archive.org/web/20011216204820/http://www.acorn.org/acorn10/otheracornwork/clips.htm. For more information, contact Chris Saffert at legnatacorn@acorn.org or 202-547-2500.
Dec. 4, 2001:
SACRAMENTO PUSHES ANTI-SPRAWL LEGISLATION - Sacramento ACORN and allies on Nov. 28 announced the formation of a new coalition called Sacramento Valley Residents for Regional Solutions, a group that has collected more than 75 letters of endorsement in only six weeks for a cutting edge state bill that would limit urban sprawl in the Sacramento region. The coalition unites neighborhood groups, environmentalists, housing organizations, small businesses, and labor to push for a regional solution to sprawl. AB 680, sponsored by Assemblyman Darrell Steinberg, would redistribute new sales tax in the six county Sacramento region in a manner that promotes smart growth, increases equity in the region, and fosters cooperation. The two-year bill must pass out of the Assembly by the end of January. For more information, contact Brian Kettenring at caacornsaro@acorn.org or 916-247-8231.
Nov. 20, 2001:
ACORN CONTINUES TO PUSH FOR ECONOMIC STIMULUS PACKAGE - ACORN is urging Congress to pass an economic stimulus package directed at low- and moderate-income Americans, and (in contrast to some of the corporate welfare proposals under consideration) at actually stimulating the economy. ACORN members in several cities staged events to gain attention for this issue on Nov. 13. For more information, link to
http://web.archive.org/web/20011216204820/http://www.acorn.org/acorn10/otheracornwork/releases.htm or contact Chris Saffert at legnatacorn@acorn.org or 202-547-2500.
16
posted on
10/24/2008 6:12:02 AM PDT
by
Calpernia
(Hunters Rangers - Raising the Bar of Integrity http://www.barofintegrity.us)
More Archives:
March 19, 2001:
ACORN MARCHES ON US CAPITOL — Jackson and Wellstone spoke to an enthusiastic crowd of ACORN members. Wellstone said that within the next two weeks he would introduce legislation backed by ACORN to create a federal living wage.
Following these speeches, hundreds of ACORN members carrying banners and chanting marched five blocks to the steps of the US Capitol for a rally against the Bush tax cuts.
Sen. Jon Corzine (D., N.J.) spoke in support of ACORN’s positions, and members made clear what the cuts would mean through use of some outdoor theater: an elephant presented an enormous gift to a fat cat on the Capitol steps. Fox News and CNN sent cameras. NPR’s Morning Edition covered the event; listen to the story at
http://web.archive.org/web/20011223141211/http://npr.org/programs/morning/archives.
The event was also covered by the American Banker newspaper, and the Minneapolis Star Tribune.
See http://web.archive.org/web/20011223141211/http://www.startribune.com/.
ACORN’s positions on the tax cut proposals:
http://web.archive.org/web/20011223141211/http://www.acorn.org/
For more information, contact Chris Saffert, ACORN legislative director, at legnatacorn@acorn.org or (202) 547-2500.
March 19, 2001:
ACORN LOBBIES CONGRESS — Also as part of the annual conference, Representative Mike Ross (D., Ark.) and Representative Danny Davis (D., Ill.) spoke to members of ACORN, and Representative Maxine Waters (D., Calif.) was presented with an ACORN Hero-of-the-People Award. In addition, ACORN members from 27 cities and 18 states visited their Congressional delegations. Many Members of Congress, including the first Republicans, agreed to sign on as cosponsors of the Federal Living Wage Responsibility Act. ACORN members lobbied in support of a federal living wage, for an increased minimum wage, for strong legislation against predatory lending, against the Bush tax cuts, in support of making the child tax credits refundable, in support of building more affordable housing, and in support of providing low-income Americans with assistance paying utility bills.
Living Wage and Minimum Wage: ACORN supports the Federal
Living Wage Responsibility Act, and also increasing the minimum wage to $6.65 without providing unneeded tax breaks for the rich or permission for states to opt out.
Predatory Lending: ACORN supports bills by Rep. John LaFalce (D., NY) and Sen. Paul Sarbanes (D., Md.) that would strengthen consumer protections.
Tax Cuts: ACORN opposes Bush’s proposed cuts as too large and too slanted toward the wealthy. ACORN supports making the child tax credit refundable.
Affordable Housing: ACORN supports legislation similar to S. 2997 introduced last year by Sen. John Kerry (D., Mass.) to devote additional federal resources to building affordable housing.
Utilities: ACORN supports providing more funding for the Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) to prevent widespread shut-offs. S.J. Res. 26, introduced by Sen. Kerry, recommends that the Senate approve $1 billion in immediate funding for LIHEAP. The House Appropriations Committee should pass a supplemental appropriations bill.
To learn more about these issues, and to contact your Congress Members, visit www.Acorn.org, or contact Chris Saffert, ACORN legislative director, at legnatacorn@acorn.org or (202) 547-2500.
17
posted on
10/24/2008 6:20:40 AM PDT
by
Calpernia
(Hunters Rangers - Raising the Bar of Integrity http://www.barofintegrity.us)
To: Coleus; Cagey; Tired of Taxes; LonePalm; frithguild; pandoraou812; Liz
18
posted on
10/24/2008 6:22:20 AM PDT
by
Calpernia
(Hunters Rangers - Raising the Bar of Integrity http://www.barofintegrity.us)
To: Antoninus
19
posted on
10/24/2008 6:23:02 AM PDT
by
Calpernia
(Hunters Rangers - Raising the Bar of Integrity http://www.barofintegrity.us)
More archives:
April 1, 2001:
DEMOCRATS2000 HONORS ACORN — Democrats2000, a group working to elect economically progressive Democrats in 2001 and 2002, on March 28 presented ACORN with its “Voices from the Field” award for ACORN’s exemplary grassroots voter mobilization work during the 2000 elections. Accepting the award were Jean Wallace, Miami ACORN leader on behalf of Florida ACORN; Shada Buyobe-Hammond, board chair of Minnesota ACORN on behalf of Minnesota ACORN; and Albuquerque ACORN leader Yolanda Lugo on behalf of New Mexico ACORN. The award was presented by Representative. Jesse Jackson, Jr., a Democrats2000 board member. (See Democrats2000 at
http://web.archive.org/web/20011223141211/http://www.dems2000.org/home.htm
Chris Saffert, ACORN legislative director at legnatacorn@acorn.org or (202) 547-2500
April 1, 2001:
ACORN ARRIVES IN SAN YSIDRO — San Diego ACORN has opened a chapter in San Ysidro at the Mexican border. Twenty-two new members demonstrated to win a solution for frequent flooding in a neighborhood street. And the target of the demonstration has now become an ally in ACORN’s street-safety campaign. For more information, contact Clare Crawford at caacornsd@acorn.org or (619) 235-9593.
Oct. 22, 2001:
ACORN PROPOSES ECONOMIC STIMULUS PACKAGE - ACORN is promoting an economic stimulus package that would be directed largely at low- and moderate-income Americans.
These are the people worst hurt by a recession, and the people most likely to immediately spend any money made available to them. On Oct. 15, ACORN held events in cities across the country urging Congress and the President to include in an economic-stimulus package the following items:
· expanded unemployment insurance,
· a foreclosure/eviction prevention plan,
· construction of affordable housing,
· energy assistance and a moratorium on shutoffs,
· an expansion of Medicaid to cover unemployed workers,
· an increase in the minimum wage,
· and tax rebates and child tax credits for those who did not receive them.
In several cities, senators and representatives participated in Monday’s events. For more information, link to
http://web.archive.org/web/20011223141211/http://www.acorn.org/acorn10/takeaction.htm
Chris Saffert at legnatacorn@acorn.org or 202-547-2500.
20
posted on
10/24/2008 6:37:00 AM PDT
by
Calpernia
(Hunters Rangers - Raising the Bar of Integrity http://www.barofintegrity.us)
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