March 2015 Cor - The League of Women Voters of the Piedmont Triad
Transcription
March 2015 Cor - The League of Women Voters of the Piedmont Triad
VO T E R I M PA C T Page 1 VOT E R I M PAC T LWV OF THE PIEDMONT TRIAD PO BOX 9721 GREENSBORO, NC 27429 PHONE: 336-274-0202 EMAIL: LWVPTMAIL@GMAIL.COM HTTP://LWVPT.ORG VOLUME XXVII ISSUE 6 MARCH 2015 ACT NOW! CALL or WRITE the members of the NC Senate Redistricting Committee and our own Guilford Delegation to urge them to vote against Senate Bill 36 that would change the way Greensboro elects its City Council. PUBLIC EDUCATION HAS "HAD a GREAT FALL. CAN ALL the KING'S HORSES and ALL the KING'S MEN PUT IT TOGETHER AGAIN?" with Yevonne Brannon, executive director and chair of Public Schools First NC and Here's why the LWVPT opposes this bill: 1) The bill was not created through a transparent process, and it does not appear to reflect the will of the people of Greensboro or their elected leaders. 2) In our democracy, this far-reaching decision should be considered only after the will of the citizens has been expressed by referendum. 3) The bill would allow state legislators who are not accountable to Greensboro's citizens to determine the composition of our local government. 4) The bill reduces the number of elected officials who are accountable to each individual voter from 5 to 2 (a district representative and the Mayor) and permits the Mayor to vote only in case of a tie. 5) The bill's elimination of at-large positions would foster divisiveness and competition among districts and would remove the incentive for Council members to make decisions in the best interests of the community at large." See more information on page 4 and on our web site, lwvpt.org. http://lwvpt.org Mo Green, superintendent of the Guilford County Public Schools Lunch with the League Tuesday, March 17, 2015 at noon (doors open at 11:45) Holy Trinity Church, Haywood Duke Room 607 N. Greene St. Greensboro Lunch (optional) is $11.00. See payment protocol on page 3. Make reservations with Sara White (294-6156 or sarawhite27410@gmail.com) by March 11. Let her know if you want a vegetarian meal. Biographies of the speakers are on page 6. 336-274-0202 LWVPT March 2015 Page 2 MEMBERSHIP AND DUES STAY IN TOUCH If your email address changes, please send a message to lwvptmail@gmail.com with your new address. The LWVPT’s fiscal year runs from July 1, 2014 to June 30, 2015: therefore, members who join now pay half the annual amount, or $29 for individuals (instead of $58)! VOTER IMPACT NEWS For more information, go to the “Join the LWV of the Piedmont Triad” tab on the home screen. Voter Impact (PDF format) is currently emailed to all members and elected officials with email addresses. If you have an email address and you are not receiving the VI via email, please check your spam folder. Be certain to add the lwvptmail@gmail.com to your list of acceptable email addresses. If you would like to comment on format, please send email to the same address. Remember to check the web page once a week or more for new information and for archived copies of Voter Impact. The web page address runs at the bottom of VI pages. Board of Directors, LWVPT 2014-2015 Please refer to this page when you need to contact a board member. Margaret Salinger, Co-President (2014-15) copresident1@lwvpt.org Anna Fesmire, Co-President (2014-16) copresident2@lwvpt.org Cheryl Viglione, Vice-President, Interim Health Care RT Chair hrt@lwvpt.org Eileen Silber, Secretary sec@lwvpt.org Lynn Grigni, Treasurer Treasurer@lwvpt.org Teresa Sue Bratton, Director tsbratton@yahoo.com Walter Salinger, Director - Fair Elections RT cfr@lwvpt.org Alice Patterson, Director AlicePatterson@lwvpt.org Dot Kearns, Director - Public Education RT per@lwvpt.org Tracy Nash, Director - Voter Services VoterEducation@lwvpt.org Director- Voting Rights Protection RT (Open) vrp@lwvpt.org Director— Coordinator Lunch with the League (open) LunchCoordinator@lwvpt.org http://lwvpt.org If you have questions, contact Lynn Grigni, lynn@grigni.com Telephone (336) 285-6717 A big welcome to new members! Kay Brandon, Melissa Hassard, Terry Austin, and Andy Stern. And special thanks to the many members who have worked on projects and committees, both to study issues and to present them to the public by way of “Lunch With The League”, Voter Impact, Voters Guide, Voter Registration, and social gatherings. Judith Hoag, Director JudyHoag@lwvpt.org Janice Siebert, Membership Chair membership@lwvpt.org Whitney Vanderwerff, Director - Comprehensive Immigration Reform RT irt@lwvpt.org Willie Taylor, State Board Liaison wtaylor@triad.rr.com ========== Adjuncts to the Board============== Ellen Weiner - Publicity publicity@lwvpt.org Mary Eubanks - Chair Nominating Committee nominate@lwvpt.org Marlene Pratto - Voter Impact, Web marlene.pratto@gmail.com Emily Herman eeherman@triad.rr.com Sara White - Lunch Reservations Reservations@lwvpt.org Carolyn Allen - Environmental Round Table ert@lwvpt.org News from the board The LWVPT accepts with sadness the resignation of Sally Austin from the board. We appreciate all Sally did to make Lunch with the League a pleasant meeting time. If you have lunch questions, please call the League phone number 336-274-0202. The email address remains the same (see left). 336-274-0202 LWVPT March 2015 VO T E R I M PA C T Page 3 Lunch with the League, March 17 League members and guests will hear talks by Dr. Yevonne Brannon, Executive Director of Public Schools First NC and Superintendent Maurice (Mo) Green. Dr. Brannon will discuss significant issues before the Legislature that impact Pre-K and K-12 public schools and higher education, such as :Funding, Teacher Salaries, Charter Schools, Vouchers, Shortage of Candidates in Teacher Training Programs, and Common Core Curriculum. Mo Green, Superintendent of Guilford County Schools, will discuss how these issues are affecting our local schools, students, teachers and families and how we, as citizens, can best support our schools at this time. We anticipate that Superintendent Green will provide the latest news regarding the SAY YES to Education initiative. There will be time for questions from those attending. (see biographical information on p. 6) Recycling Styrofoam (Not yet) We cannot recycle Styrofoam of any shape or type in our brown recycling cans in Greensboro. Some egg cartons and meat trays are marked with a 6 code and we may think they are recyclable. They are not. Recycling Styrofoam requires a densifier which Greensboro does not have. Please do not put any Styrofoam packing material, peanuts, or egg cartons in the brown recycle bin. Other items that cannot be recycled in the brown bins include Starbucks and other paper coffee cups, hoses, plastic bags, waxed boxes, and electrical cords. (more about recycling on page 9). Greensboro has a 21% contamination rate in recycling so let’s all work to lower that number. LWVPT members and guests are asked to prepay for lunch at our Lunch with the League meetings by mailing a check to LWVPT for $11.00 (see form below) or paying online with a credit card or via Pay Pal. Those not having lunch simply preregister as usual by calling or emailing Sara White at 336-2946156 or sarawhite27410@gmail.com or following the instructions sent with the email message. These procedures expedite the check-in process and make certain payment is made for a reserved lunch. To pay by check, please print out and complete this form and mail to: The League of Women Voters of the Piedmont Triad PO Box 9721 Greensboro, NC 27429 Reservations for: Lunch With the League on March 17, 2015 Name__________________________________________________ Address________________________________________________ City_______________________________ Zip Code____________ Phone (home)___________________________________________ Phone (cell)_____________________________________________ Email address____________________________________________ Number of Reservations @ $11.00 each________________________ Amount enclosed__________________________________________ http://lwvpt.org 336-274-0202 Local Good News The Immigration Reform Roundtable includes, among other partners, Faith Action International. The Faith Action International ID program is now officially accepted by the local police department and several city agencies. Some cities in Alamance County will soon replicate the Faith Action ID program. LWVPT March 2015 Page 4 ACT NOW! On Senate Bill 36 (NC General Assembly) 1— Contact the members of the NC Senate Redistricting Committee where the bill is currently being reviewed! 2 – Tell your Guilford County representatives to stand up for the rights of Greensboro’s citizens by opposing S36! 3 – Write a letter to the editor of the News & Record and advise your friends and neighbors how they can act to oppose S36. SEE THE FOLLOWING FOR MORE INFORMATION ON WHAT S36 WOULD DO TO OUR CURRENT SYSTEM AND TO FIND CONTACT INFORMATION FOR THE SENATE REDISTRICTING COMMITTEE AND YOUR REPRESENTATIVES What S36 would do to Greensboro: 1) Increase the number of districts from 5 to 7 with a representative from each and eliminate the 3 at-large representatives. Each council member must reside in his/her district. Each voter could vote only for the Mayor and a single district Council Member. 2) Increase the length of terms from 2 years to 4. 3) Require an affirmative vote of the majority (5 votes) of the Council to enact any ordinance. 4) Prevent the Mayor from voting except in the case of a tie. Thus the one Council member elected by all citizens would be unable to vote on their behalf! What Greensboro has now under the current system: We have a 9 – member Council elected by the citizens every two years. There are currently 5 geographic districts with a representative elected by the citizens of each district. In addition to voting for a representative for your district, you may vote for 3 at-large council members and the Mayor. In practice, that means that 5 individuals are accountable to all citizens. INFORMATION FOR CONTACTING N.C. SENATORS ON SENATE BILL 36 (Senate Bill 36 is in the Redistricting Committee in the Senate) SPONSORS OF S36: Senator Trudy Wade – trudy.wade@ncleg.net, (919) 733-5856 (Guilford) Senator Joyce Krawiec – joyce.krawiec@ncleg.net (919) 733 -7850 (Forsyth, Yadkin) N.C. SENATE REDISTRICTING COMMITTEE Chairman, Senator Bob Rucho (Mecklenburg) bob.rucho@ncleg.net, (919) 733-5655 Vice Chairman, Senator Andrew C. Brock (Davis, Iredell, Rowan) andrew.brock@ncleg.net, (919) 715-0690 NC Senate. Photo from www.ncleg.net. Vice Chairman, Senator Harry Brown (Jones, Onslow) harry.brown@ncleg.net, (919) 715-3034 Continued on page 5 http://lwvpt.org 336-274-0202 LWVPT March 2015 VO T E R I M PA C T Page 5 Members of the Senate Redistricting Committee: Senator Tom Apodaca (Buncombe, Henderson, Transylvania) tom.apodaca@ncleg.net, (919) 733-5745 Senator Ben Clark (Cumberland, Hoke) ben.clark@ncleg.net, (919) 733-9349 Senator Kathy Harrington (Gaston) kathy.harrington@ncleg.net, (919) 733-5734 Senator Ralph Hise (Madison, Mitchell, McDowell, Polk, Rutherford, Yancey) ralph.hise@ncleg.net, (919) 733-3460 Senator Michael V. Lee (New Hanover) michael.lee@ncleg.net, (919) 715-2525 Senator Floyd B. McKissick, Jr. (Durham, Granville) floyd.mckissick@ncleg.net, (919) 733-4599 Convenient way to access email addresses All of this information is on our web page, http://lwvpt.org under News to Use. We made this easy for you and your friends by putting it right on the home page. Just click and go. Once there, if you click on any email address, your mail system should pop up a message form for you to use for writing to any of the people in these lists. Nice and easy. Please do express your concern over Greensboro’s situation. If you do not live in Greensboro, consider that a change in a city or town’s government can be changed by a bill that passes the General Assembly at any time. Senator Jane W. Smith (Durham, Granville) jane.smith@ncleg.net, (919) 733-5651 Senator Erica Smith-Ingram (Bertie, Chowan, Edgecomb, Hartford, Martin, Nothampton, Tyrell, Washington) erica.smith-ingram@ncleg.net, (919) 715-3040 Senator Dan Soucek (Alleghany, Ashe, Avery, Caldwell, Watauga) dan.soucek@ncleg.net, (919) 733-5742 GUILFORD COUNTY DELEGATION Senator Phil Berger – phil.berger@ncleg.net, (919) 733-5708 Senator Gladys Robinson – gladys.robinson@ncleg.net, (919) 715-3042 Senator Trudy Wade – trudy.wade@ncleg.net, (919) 733-5856 Representative John M. Blust – john.blust@ncleg.net, (919-733-5781 Representative Cecil Brockman – cecil.brockman@ncleg.net, (919) 733- 5825 Representative John Faircloth – john.faircloth@ncleg.net, (919) 733-5877 Representative Jon Hardister – jon.hardister@ncleg.net, (919) 733-5191 Representative Pricey Harrison – pricey.harrison@ncleg.net, (919) 733-5771 Representative Ralph Johnson – ralph.johnson@ncleg.net, (919) 733-5902 http://lwvpt.org 336-274-0202 LWVPT March 2015 Page 6 Speakers for Lunch with the League Dr. Yevonne Brannon received her Ph.D. in sociology from NC State University and was the Director of the Center for Urban Affairs and Community Services at NCSU. She has been recognized with the Outstanding Service Extension Award and the Mary Frances Hester Service to Extension and Outreach Award. Brannon serves as executive director and chair, board of directors, for Public Schools First NC. . Superintendent Mo Green Dr. Yevonne Brannon She has over 35 years of experience in applied social science research, especially in designing research protocols, conducting primary and secondary data collection, and in analyzing and interpreting research findings for public policy issues. Dr. Brannon has been involved in child and public education advocacy work through a variety of organizations including PTAs at her children’s schools where she served as PTA President numerous times. She also served as president of the Wake County PTA Council. Yevonne received numerous awards for her service to state and local PTAs and was recognized with the Governor's Award for Outstanding Service in 1988. Dr. Brannon was inducted into the YWCA Academy of Women and received the NAACP Child Advocacy Award in 2011. Yevonne was named a “Champion of Children” by the NC Foundation for Public School Children last spring. Dr. Yevonne Brannon is one of the founders of several nonprofit organizations that advocate for her two passions: an excellent public education system and a sustainable environment. Some of these organizations are: WakeUP Wake County, The Great Schools in Wake Coalition, and Public Schools First NC. Yevonne has served on the Clean Water Management Trust Fund, and other environmental groups While she served as a Wake County Commissioner for four years and while chair or WakeUP Wake County, she initiated several environment efforts. Dr. Brannon is married to Bill Clifford, a retired NCSU professor. Their three children graduated from Wake County Public Schools and NCSU. Two of her three grandchildren, William and Nolan, are currently attending Wake County public schools and Alex will join them in August. http://lwvpt.org Maurice (Mo) Green is the third superintendent of the Guilford County school system. Green has headed the GC schools since mid 2008. During his tenure the district has raised its graduation rate, and increased student achievement. He raised expectations for students, employees, and parents and restored trust and public support of the school district. Volunteers are increasingly providing many in-kind contributions to the school system. The 2016 strategic plan, Achieving Educational Excellence, Personalizing Learning, Educational Excellence is divided into four areas: Personalized Learning; Character, Service and Safety; Parent, Family and Community; and Educator and Organizational Excellence. Many initiatives, including a focus on the whole child, servicelearning and parent and community involvement, have not changed from the 2012 Strategic plan, but it’s the goal to make them even stronger during this next phase. For more information about Superintendent Green, visit this web site. www.gcsnc.com/pages/gcsnc/District/Superintendent/ Office_Of_Superintendent. Green is an alumnus of Duke University with baccalaureate degrees in political science and economics, and a law degree. He clerked for two prominent judges before practicing law for six years in a private firm. He joined the Charlotte-Mecklenburg school system (CMS) as general counsel in 2001. Green held several positions in CMS before coming to Greensboro. Green has been recognized for his work by several groups and he holds positions in NC, as well as, national education-related organizations. 336-274-0202 LWVPT March 2015 C VO T E R I M PA C T Page 7 Happy Hour The LWVPT held our first Happy Hour on Wednesday, February 25. The turnout was terrific! Thanks to those 20+ brave souls who ignored the imminent threat of snow and the frigid weather to join us at Scuppernong Books. It was a great opportunity to put faces to names, hear from prospective and current members about their interests and activities, and just talk in a relaxed setting. Watch our web site, Wednesday alerts, or Facebook page for the next Happy Hour! Thanks to Janice Siebert for organizing and arranging for this happy hour. Calendar of LWVPT events. Other events listed have italic entries. • • • • • • March 17, Lunch with the League, see p. 1 April 2, Environmental Roundtable, 4 pm Deep Roots conference room April 18, Earth Day April 21, Lunch with the League, Derb Carter, Southern Environmental Law Center May Annual Meeting TBA June 5-7, 2015 State League Convention (see below) The League of Women Voters of North Carolina will meet in convention in Durham at the Marriott at Research Triangle Park 4700 Guardian Drive Durham, NC 27703 on June 5, 6 and 7, 2015. The LWVPT hopes to have a sizable delegation. Only official Board delegates will be able to vote, but all LWVPT members are encouraged to attend and participate in caucuses and workshops. Please let Co-President Anna Fesmire know if you have an interest in attending all or part of the Convention. You may reach her by email at afesmire@bellsouth.net or by phone, 336-2886607. http://lwvpt.org 336-274-0202 LWVPT March 2015 Page 8 Dear League Members, "Interesting and interested people Doing interesting work and Having interesting dialog....... Does this sound like a group that might interest you?" An experience to remember -demanding, rewarding, challenging, satisfying -- serving on the LWVPT Board of Directors....” If you or someone you know would like to pursue this opportunity, please call or email Mary Eubanks, Nominating Committee Chairman, 379379-0090, or any member of the committee. Sue Jezorek 272Judy Hoag 282272-6664 282-7382 Janice Siebert 282Jerry Anthony 282282-9702 282-0099 Short history of the Greensboro City Council by former mayor and League member Carolyn Allen My husband and I arrived in Greensboro in August of l962. Sometime that fall we registered to vote. One of the tasks we had to do in order to register was take a literacy test. This was probably dropped as a requirement with the l965 Voting Rights Act. Over the years since, the number of citizens engaging in the electoral process has grown, but full participation in the franchise often fell short. Greensboro continued to have a city council with all members elected at-large and the mayor elected by the council. The vast majority of council members were white males whose perspectives on city needs hardly covered the views of our citizens. A few African-Americans who did hold seats included Jimmie Barber [Barber Park] and Vance Chavis [Chavis Library]. During the l960's and l970's various efforts took place to try and create a Ward or District system. One such was a referendum organized by a community activist named Sol Jacobs. Sol put together a large coalition of organizations to enable the referendum and persuade voters of the value of a district system. This was a six district, three at-large, and Mayor plan. It did not pass but more than 45% of the electorate approved it. In 1972 a local bill to help quiet some of the discontent with council structure was passed by the General Assembly to require that the mayor be elected by popular vote. Ironically Mayor Jim Melvin first elected in l969 was elected mayor by the council of l971. When he ran in l973, he became the first mayor elected by the voters of Greensboro. The city council election of 1981 produced the first all-white council in 10 years. In the meantime, a committee composed of leaders [including then Mayor Melvin and council member Cameron Cook] and a mix of faiths and races, built a plan that would allow each registered voter to vote for five of the nine proposed members: the mayor, three at-large council members and their district candidates. That was presented to the sitting 1982 council that approved it, thus creating our current system. Thank you for your rapid response to a recent request to contact Congresspersons Walker (District 6) and Adams (District 12) in opposition to HR 5, the Proposed Reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act. If passed, according to the Council of Great City Schools and Nora Carr, GCS Chief of Staff, our local public schools would have lost over a million dollars of badly needed Title 1 Compensatory Funds. For several reasons (many opposing calls may be one of them) the whole issue of ESEA Reauthorization has been pulled from the Congressional Calendar. It was good to partner with AAUW and other groups. We know that MANY calls were made and we will let you know when they will need to be made again. http://lwvpt.org 336-274-0202 LWVPT March 2015 VO T E R I M PA C T Page 9 Visit to Re Community Recycling with the Environmental Roundtable By Marlene Pratto D on’t put the lid on the glass jar before tossing in your recycle bin. Yes, both are recyclable but if you put the lid on the jar, the jar will break with a loud pop when moved at the recycling center. That was one of the noises we experienced first hand on the environmental round table’s (ENV RT) trip to the recycling facility in Greensboro. Ten members and guests of the ENV RT toured the RE Community recycle center on Patton Avenue, March 3, 2015. What is the most valuable item in the recycling bin? Aluminum, but there is not very much of that. What brings in the most money? Paper and, believe it or not, the amount of paper in the brown recycling bins of Greensboro has decreased. People are reading online and not on paper. So be certain to toss in your junk mail, including the envelopes with the see through window. Surprisingly, Greensboro’s method of single stream recycling is more efficient, safer, and higher in compliance than the separate containers for the various items recycled in some cities. When we first arrived we heard a talk by Jess who works for the City of Greensboro. She explained the history of recycling in Greensboro and showed us a color coded map indicating which areas of the city put their bins out the most. Greensboro was the first single stream automatic recycling program in the US, having started in 1993. Mary who works for Re Community divided us into two groups and took us through the area where the single stream is processed. Trucks are weighed on arrival (and exit), dump their collections and leave. A fork lift moves the material to a “ditch” where the material is lifted to the first sorting belt. The people doing the first sort throw out the plastic bags (a real no-no for your recycling bin; take them to the grocery store), pieces of hoses, large metal pieces that won’t go through the magnet and other materials that are not currently recyclable. Materials are then separated with containers falling through and paper and light items moving on. The stream moves on to other workers who stand on both sides of the moving belt. The workers pull remaining non-paper items off the belt and out of the stream. Paper flows along and goes into an area where it is smashed and bailed. A fork lift moves the bales and stacks them for later loading into a truck to be taken to the company that buys the paper. The process is quite interesting and, if enough League members would like to go for a visit, the ENV RT can arrange a trip for groups of 10-14. Send email to ert@lwvpt.org. Immigration Reform Roundtable By Whitney Vanderwerff W ith the extraordinary leadership of Heather Scavone, Director of the Humanitarian Immigration Law Clinic and Assistant Professor of Law at Elon University School of Law, many of our group participated in the February 5 community meeting with the DHS (Department of Homeland Security) Regional Community Relations Officer about executive action on expansion of DACA (Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals) and DAPA (Deferred Action for Parental Accountability). The League's Addy Jeffrey and Kathy Hinshaw were instrumental in implementing the well-attended meeting. The campaign for in-state tuition continues. We learned more about the impact of the DACA Executive Order at the community forum sponsored by the Human Rights Commission Monday March 2. Among those speaking were Addy Jeffrey and Ann Marie Dooley; Dr. Robert Landry, the retired school superintendent of Davie County, BB&T Multicultural Board member and current NC Commissioner to the National Educational Commission of the States; and DACA recipients themselves. The DACA program does not make undocumented students eligible for federal tuition aid like Pell grants. In North Carolina, out-of-state tuition at public universities is three to four times higher than in-state tuition. Out-of-state tuition at UNCG is $21,304 compared to the in-state rate of $6,442. Nineteen states are now allowing undocumented students who attended in-state high schools to pay the same price at public colleges as legal residents of the state. Several more states including Tennessee are considering such legislation. Our current work focuses on the economic benefits: allowing undocumented persons to pay in-state tuition results in positive economic net benefits for a state. Maryland's tuition equality policy for undocumented persons is estimated to have generated $66 million in benefits for the state in 2011. Granting deferred action with work permits increases the amount of payroll taxes collected; work permits create a legal avenue for workers and employers to contribute taxes and to find jobs that best match their skills, as the Center for American Progress research has demonstrated. Tuition equality will be a focus of the immigration reform plenary session at the state League convention June 57, Research Triangle Park Marriott. http://lwvpt.org 336-274-0202 LWVPT March 2015 Page 10 League of Women Voters of the Piedmont Triad PO Box 9721 Greensboro, NC 27429 Phone: 336-274-0202 Email: lwvptmail@gmail.com http://lwvpt.org Time-Sensitive material e eagu L e h ith t 015 w h Lunc rch 17, 2 ervation Ma e a res mak by e s a Ple h 11 Marc Co-Presidents Margaret Salinger Anna Fesmire Vice-president Cheryl Viglione Secretary Eileen Silber Treasurer Lynn Grigni If you have an announcement for Lunch with the League meetings, bring copies of your announcement on paper, preferably colored paper. Your announcement will be placed on the table to your right as you enter the room. The registration table is for registration only. “The League of Women Voters, a nonpartisan political organization, encourages informed and active participation in government, works to increase understanding of major public policy issues, and influences public policy through education and advocacy.” http://lwvpt.org 336-274-0202 LWVPT March 2015