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100th Anniversary of Women’s Suffrage – African American Suffragists

LETTER TO TEACHERS

As we look forward to celebrating the 100th anniversary of women’s suffrage in the United States in 2020, we are writing to suggest an opportunity for you and your students As members of the local League of Women Voters we have been especially interested to learn about the many African American women who were active leaders in the fight for women’s suffrage. Unfortunately, when many people think about this struggle, they mention Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony and Carrie Chapman Catt, but the African American women whose efforts contributed to the eventual success of the effort, have not always been acknowledged as they should be. Although Sojourner Truth is quite well known, we have also learned about Harriet Forten Purvis, Angelina Weld Grimke, Charlotte Rollin, Mary Ann Shadd Cary, Ida B. Wells, Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, Josephine Pierre Ruffin, Sarah Askin of Florence, and others.

These women and others advocated tirelessly for over 100 years until the 19th Amendment was finally ratified in 1920. We know that voting rights were a central focus of the Civil Rights Movement and continue to be a concern today. We anticipate that it will be of special interest to young people to discover the history of these suffragists. We understand that the fight for equal access to voting rights remains an evolving story, and that we all need to continue to work together to ensure the right and equal access of all citizens to participate fully in our democracy through voting.

We can imagine that, during the upcoming 100th anniversary year, this could be an exciting research topic for your students. As a way to showcase their learning, students might write plays, narratives or poems or create art or multi-media projects describing the efforts of these leaders. Such possibilities are a good match for curriculum standards in English Language Arts and Social Studies including the new Massachusetts requirement for civics education. Members of our local League of Women Voters are ready to help in any way we can. For instance we are collecting relevant historical information that we would be pleased to share with you and your students. We are consulting our own historical archives that are held at Smith College, as well as resources at the Daily Hampshire Gazette, the David Ruggles Center in Florence and websites like https://suffragistmemorial.org/african-american-women-leaders-in-the-suffrage-movement/

Thanks for considering this possibility. If you’re interested, please let us know how we can help.

League of Women Voters: Empowering Voters – Defending Democracy

Green New Earth Day Forum with James McGovern & Jo Comerford

Congratulations to the students, who again take the lead in shaping their future!

Let’s join in the planning! It takes a village – here and around the globe.

Green New Earth Day Forum

April 22, Northampton High School, 6 p.m.

Northampton High School students will discuss with McGovern and Comerford how to ensure a Green New Deal.  The Green New Deal is a resolution which creates a vision for transforming our economy, with new jobs, new technology, new education, new industry, all aimed at preventing climate chaos.

This next step will begin to create  goals, and then craft legislation that will provide swift, decisive action to protect our future.

Post Card Workshop: May 11 at Bread Euphoria

Workshop 

Bread Euphoria, Haydenville, May 11, 10 a.m. – noon

Advocates For Change

Contact your legislators.  Speak out for YOUR FUTURE.  

Help us amplify our voices, as together we advocate for legislative change in Boston and in Washington, D.C.

In the workshops we provide all the necessary information on legislation, legislator contact info, stamped post cards and lively discussion.  Come often.  Legislation and policy issues are constantly changing.  Check the Hampshire Gazette and the event list here for dates of workshops.

Bring cell phones and laptops if you prefer to call or send emails.  We provide contact info.

Post Card Workshop at Lilly Library

Workshop 

Lilly Library, Florence, April 27, 10 a.m. – noon

Advocates For Change

Contact your legislators.  Speak out for YOUR FUTURE.  

Help us amplify our voices, as together we advocate for legislative change in Boston and in Washington, D.C.

In the workshops we provide all the necessary information on legislation, legislator contact info, stamped post cards and lively discussion.  Come often.  Legislation and policy issues are constantly changing.  Check the Hampshire Gazette and the event list here for dates of workshops.

Bring cell phones and laptops if you prefer to call or send emails.  We provide contact info.

Action 6: Eduction Promise Act

An Act providing rightful opportunities and meaningful investment for successful and equitable education: S.238/H.586

LWVMA presented the following testimony in support of S.238/H.586, 3.22.19

Testimony submitted to the Joint Committee on Education
In Support of S.238/H.586, An Act providing rightful opportunities and meaningful investment for successful and equitable education
By Mary E. Frantz, LWVMA Education Finance Specialist March 22, 2019 

For nearly 50 years, the League of Women Voters of Massachusetts (LWVMA) has monitored both general municipal aid and education aid. And since the passage of the Education Reform Act of 1993, the League has been a critic of the Chapter 70 formula for distributing education aid and has proposed solutions to provide a more equitable formula. 

Despite our concerns, the League has strongly supported the basic premise of the education reform act that, as the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court ruled, the Commonwealth must provide an adequate education for all of those enrolled in its public schools. The Education Reform Act defined the cost of an adequate education by the Foundation Budget, a calculation which is defined by a second formula in Chapter 70. The two formulas work together so that, each year, the state aid distributed to local schools is based upon each individual school district’s Foundation Budget as calculated for that year. 

The 2015 Foundation Budget Review Commission found that actual costs, particularly those associated with health care and special education, have far surpassed assumptions built into the original Foundation Budget formula. As a result, those increasing costs have forced districts to cut other critical investments, including professional development, counseling, arts, technology and books, early education, social-emotional supports, and extended days and a longer school year. 

The League of Women Voters of Massachusetts supports S.238/H.586, sponsored by Sen. Sonia Chang-Diaz, Rep. Aaron Vega and Rep. Mary Keefe. This bill renews the promise that every  student in Massachusetts will have equal access to an adequate quality 21st century education by significantly revising the Foundation Budget formula. It will adjust the formula to more accurately project districts’ costs, to more equitably distribute resources, and to empower schools to improve outcomes for all students. 

The bill sets a multi-year phasing in of the recommendations contained in the bipartisan Foundation Budget Review Commission’s 2015 report. Until all the recommendations are implemented, the Foundation Budget will continue to fall short of accurately representing the full cost of an adequate education. Passing S.238/H.586 will, however, represent the legislature’s commitment to making these necessary changes. 

The League of Women Voters of Massachusetts urges the members of the Joint Committee on Education to give S.238/H.586 a favorable report and urge its enactment. The League further urges the legislature to make certain that changes in the Foundation Budget formula do not increase the flow of funding to charter schools at the expense of the district schools. All schools should equally see a benefit from these changes. 

Thank you for your consideration.

What should I say?

Hinds, Comerford, Humason, Carey, and Sabadosa are all cosponsors.

Thank you for cosponsoring the Education Promise Act.  This bill provides essential updates to the Foundation Budget that will more equitably distribute resources to all districts. Your support is critical to ensuring that during the multi-year phasing in of reforms, the legislature will continue to appropriate adequate funds.

Senator Adam Hinds                                                Senator Jo Comerford

Room 109-E                                                                 Room 70C

24 Beacon St.                                                              24 Beacon St.

Boston, MA 02133                                                       Boston, MA 02133

Phone: 617-722-1625                                                 Phone:617-722-1532

Adam.hinds@masenate.gov   Jo.Comerford@masenate.gov                                     

Senator Donald Humason, Jr.

24 Beacon St.

Room 313A

Boston, MA 02133

Phone: 617-722-1415

donaldhumason@masenate.gov

Representative Daniel Carey                Representative Lindsay Sabadosa

24 Beacon St.                                                  24 Beacon St.                                      

Room 33                                                         Room 443

Boston, MA 02133                                         Boston, MA 02133

Phone: 617-722-2060                                   Phone:617-722-2460

Daniel.carey@mahouse.gov                          Lindsay.sabadosa@mahouse.gov

Northampton LWV Board meeting. Members welcome.

Board Meeting

April 24

7 – 9 p.m.

Directions: bkglackinmd@gmail.com

Cap and Trade Webinar

                                 

Cap and Trade is Alive an Well: Carbon Markets Around the World  

Cosponsors: Environmental Defense Fund & LWV

Thursday, April 25, 2 – 3 pm

The webinar will be presented by Nat Keohane, Environmental Defense Fund, Senior Vice President, Climate.

Cap and trade is growing fast. And it’s working.

Learn the facts about cap and trade and why it is an effective way to put a price on carbon.

Sign up!

Webinar: Driving Down Emissions: Massachusetts and the Regional Transportation and Climate Initiative

Registration for the webinar is required. After registering you will receive an email with a link to join.  Register here.

Massachusetts LWV State Convention

The 2019 LWVMA Convention, “100 Years:  Looking Back, Moving Forward,” will be held June 7 and 8, 2019 at the Westford Regency Inn and Conference Center in Westford, MA. Convention brings local League delegates together to hear distinguished speakers, approve program for the next biennium, elect a new board of directors, approve the budget, and network with leaders from across the state. We encourage every local League to send their voting delegates, and other members are urged to come as observers.

Noted environmentalist Bill McKibben will be the keynote speaker at the Friday night banquet. McKibben is an author, environmentalist, and activist. He is a co-founder and senior advisor at 350.org, an international climate campaign that works in 188 countries around the world.  He is the Schumann Distinguished Scholar in Environmental Studies at Middlebury College and a former staff writer for the New Yorker who continues to write numerous magazine articles.

Details and Registration:

ACTION 5: Voting Rights Advancement Act of 2019

Voting Rights Advancement Act of 2019

 “Restoring the Voting Rights Advancement Act of 2019, H.R.4, S 561, will strengthen democracy by ensuring that race is not a factor in determining who has access to the ballot box.” It “will restore sections of the Voting Rights Act that the Supreme Court stripped in the Shelby County v. Holderdecision in 2013.”

“More than 50 years ago, we saw the most sweeping advancement to voting rights with the Voting Rights Act of 1965, which made racially discriminatory voting practices illegal.  Since the court’s decision in 2013, voters across the country have faced issues at the ballot box including unlawful purges, shortening of voting hours, and the closing of polling places in communities with large populations of voters of color…

The League of Women Voters implores all members of Congress to support this important legislation.” LWV CEO, Virginia Kase.

What should I say?

Representative Neal – Vote YES for H.R. 4, Restoring the Voting Rights Advancement Act. This is essential to protecting the voting rights of all Americans, especially voters of color.

Representative McGovern – Thank you for cosponsoring H.R. 4, Restoring the Voting Rights Advancement Act.  This is essential to protecting the voting rights of all Americans, especially voters of color.

Senators Markey and Warren – Thank you for cosponsoring S561Restoring the Voting Rights Advancement Act.  This is essential to protecting the voting rights of all Americans, especially voters of color.

James McGovern

Washington office                                                         Northampton office

408 Cannon House Office Building                          94 Pleasant St.

Washington, DC 20515                                               Northampton, MA 01060

Phone: 202-225-6101                                                  phone: 413-341-8700

Fax: 202-225-5759                                                      hours: M-F 9-5:00pm

https://mcgovern.house.gov

hours: M-F 9-5:30

Richard Neal

Washington office                                                        Springfield office

2309 Rayburn House Office Building                     300 State Street

Washington, DC 20515                                               Suite 200

Phone: 202-225-5601                                                 Springfield, MA 01105

Fax: 202-225-8112 fax                                                Phone: 413-785-0325

https://neal.house.gov/contact                                Fax: 413-747-0604

Senator Elizabeth Warren.        www.warren.senate.gov/contact

309 Hart Senate Office B.                   Washington phone: 202-224-4543

Washington, DC 20510                       Springfield phone: 413-788-2690

 

Senator Ed Markey                      www.markey.senate.gov/contact

255 Dirksen Senate Office B.           Washington phone: 202-224-2742

Washington, DC 20510                     Springfield phone: 413-785-4610

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