Almost four years after Hurricane Katrina, our nation’s largest natural disaster, America’s Gulf Coast remains a domestic human rights crisis. As we approach the 2009 Hurricane Season beginning June 1st, levees remains vulnerable, tens of thousands of people have not been able to return home, schools, hospitals and transportation infrastructure remains damaged, and residents continue to struggle for access to affordable housing and living wage jobs.
“Nonprofit and community groups have been the heroic leaders of the citizen-led Gulf Coast recovery. The Gulf Coast Civic Works Act will efficiently allocate funds for job creation and infrastructure development, two significant recovery needs, by avoiding layers of governmental red tape and dispersing funds directly to the entities, regardless of sector, which are ready to do the work,” said Jainey Bavishi, director of Equity & Inclusion Campaign, a coalition of organizations working on recovery across Alabama, Louisiana Mississippi, and Texas.
“Passing HR 2269 would be a bold stand for the fundamental rights of displaced and low-income Gulf Coast residents,” said Monika Kalra Varma, Director, Robert F. Kennedy Center for Human Right. “The right to participate in recovery, to return home with dignity and safety, and to decent work opportunities – these are the basic human rights that we have denied survivors of hurricanes Katrina and Rita for too long.”
Marking the beginning of the 2009 Hurricane Season, on May 30th - June 1st the Gulf Coast Civic Works Campaign will be bringing 400 advocates to Washington D.C. for training and meetings with members of Congress and the new Administration advocating for this critical legislation. For more information on how to participate in these events and support the legislation please visit: http://gccwc.wordpress.com
National Contacts:
Jainey Bavishi, E&I Campaign, Jainey@equityandinclusion.org
Rhonda Jackson, Oxfam America, rjackson@oxfamamerica.org
Jeffrey Buchanan, RFK Center, buchanan@rfkmemorial.or
Gulf Coast Civic Works Campaign partner organizations include:
232-HELP/Louisiana 211
ACORN
ACT All Congregations Together
Alabama Appleseed Center for Law & Justice, Inc.
Alabama Arise
Baptist Peace Fellowship of North America
Bay Area Women Coalition, Inc.
Bayou Grace Community Services
Biloxi NAACP
BISCO Bayou Interfaith Shared Community Organizing
BIT Bayou Interfaith Together
CDC 58:12, inc.
Center for Ethical Living and Social Justice Renewal
Churches Supporting Churches
Clergy Strategic Alliances, LLC
ColorofChange.org
Commission on Stewardship of the Environment, Louisiana Interchurch Conference
Common Ground Health Clinic
Common Ground Relief, Inc.
COPE Congregations Organizing People for Equality
Dando la Mano / Extending a Hand
Desire Street Ministries NOLA
Disciples Justice Action Network (Disciples of Christ)
Episcopal Network for Economic Justice
Equity and Inclusion Campaign
First Pilgrims Baptist JEDC-HDM
First Unitarian Universalist Church of New Orleans, Social Justice Team
Franciscan Action Network
Friends Committee on National Legislation
FUEL Faith United for Empowerment and Leadership
Gert Town Revival Initiative, Inc.
Global Green USA
Gulf Coast Civic Works Project
Gulf Restoration Network
Holy Cross Neighborhood Association
Hope Community Development Agency
Institute for Human Rights and Responsibilities Inc.
Institute of Women & Ethnic Studies
Interfaith Alliance
Jewish Council for Public Affairs
Jewish Reconstructionist Federation
JustFaith Ministries
Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law
Louisiana Conference of The UMC Disaster Reponses, Inc
Lower Ninth Ward Center for Sustainable Engagement and Development
Maria Iñamagua Campaign for Justice
May Day New Orleans
Mennonite Central Committee-New Orleans
MICAH Project
Minnesota Tenants Union
Minnesota-New Orleans Solidarity Committee
Mississippi Center for Justice
Mississippi Coast Interfaith Disaster Task Force
Mississippi Immigrants Rights Alliance
Mississippi Low Income Child Care Initiative
Moore Community House
MPOWER Mississippi Poultry Workers for Equality and Respect
MQVN Community Development Corporation
National Council of Churches
National Council of Jewish Women
National Economic and Social Rights Initiative
National Employment Law Project
National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference
National Lawyers Guild - Minnesota Chapter
National Policy and Advocacy Council on Homelessness (NPACH)
NETWORK, a National Catholic Social Justice Lobby
New Orleans East Cooperative Parish
New Orleans Institute
New Orleans Neighborhood Development Collaborative
New Voices, Academy for Educational Development
Northside Neighbors for Justice
Oak Park Civic Association
Ouachita Riverkeeper
Oxfam America
Pax Christi USA
PICO Louisiana
Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) Washington Office
Providence Community Housing
Puentes New Orleans, Inc.
Renaissance Neighborhood Development Corporation
Retired Senior Volunteer Program
Robert F. Kennedy Center for Justice and Human Rights
Samuel Dewitt Proctor Conference
Sierra Club, Delta Chapter
Soria City Civic Organization
Special Commission on the Just Rebuilding of the Gulf Coast, National Council of Churches
Squandered Heritage
St. Bernard Project
STEPS Coalition
Student Hurricane Network
Survivors Village New Orleans
Terrebonne Readiness & Assistance Coalition – TRAC
Texas Environmental Justice Advocacy Services, (t.e.j.a.s.)
The Episcopal Church
The Episcopal Diocese of Louisiana Office of Disaster Response
The Latino Leadership Circle
The Presbytery of South Louisiana Recovery
The Reconstructionist Rabbinical Association
Turkey Creek Community Initiatives
Union of Black Episcopalians
Unitarian Universalist Association of Congregations
United Hearts Community Action Agency, Inc.
Universalist Unitarian Service Committee
Women In Construction, Moore Community House
Workers Emergency Relief Campaign
Youth Inspirational Connection, Inc.
Youthanasia Foundation