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    FF15 Action Needed Today!

    This is huge: the Raise Up Massachusetts bill supporting the Fight for $15-which would raise wages for fast food and big box retail workers to $15 an hour- is coming up for a vote in the State Senate. This bill would directly raise wages for 185,000 workers in Massachusetts. But Raise Up Massachusetts need your help to make sure it gets passed. Can we count on you to call your State Senator TODAY and ask them to support this bill?

    Here’s how to make the call:

    1. Find your State Senator by typing in your address at http://www.wheredoivotema.com
    2. Call their office TODAY
    3. Ask them to support Senate Bill 1024, which would raise the wage for fast food and big box retail workers to $15 an hour

    This bill would be an incredible boost for thousands of workers across the state, like Mackinley Celestin who works at McDonald’s.

    We have a chance to once again make Massachusetts a leader for workers’ rights. Call your State Senator today and help us make this critical bill a reality. Thank you for standing with us.

    The #WageAction Coalition is fighting against wage inequality and is part of the growing Fight for $15 movement. For more events, please visit our calendar at WageAction.org.

    Difficult Dialogs with Sybrina Fulton, Mother of Trayvon Martin

    We Are All Trayvon
    Thursday, March 24, 2016
    Bunker Hill Community College Building A Room 300
    Program begins at 1 p.m.

    Sybrina Fulton is dedicating her life to transforming family tragedy into social change. Since the death of her 17 year old son, Trayvon Martin, during the violent confrontation in 2012, Fulton has become an inspiring spokesperson for parents and concerned citizens across the country.

    The publicity surrounding Trayvon’s death and the ensuing trial catapulted the country into national debate. Despite the intense struggle of losing a child, Fulton has become a role model to many by turning her grief into advocacy. Remaining strong throughout the trial and ensuing months, she lends her voice to speak against violence towards children and the need to build better, safer communities for all.

    Her message not only appeals to people’s hearts as it relates to children, but is also one of hope and change, exemplified by her personal experiences and endeavors. As a mother, she inspires audiences to continuously educate their children about civil rights and to help them feel accepted as part of an ever changing society. An honest and relatable speaker, Fulton always looks forward sharing her powerful message with everyone from colleges and legal professionals to community and family organizations, and all other proponents of social justice.

    A Miami native, Fulton graduated from Florida Memorial University, where she earned a bachelor’s degree in English. A proud mother, Fulton worked for the Miami-Dade County Housing Development Agency for over 25 years, and is a member of Antioch Missionary Baptist Church of Miami Gardens.

    Free and Open to the Public – Online registration is required.
    http://www.bhcc.mass.edu/dd

    Directions:
    Bunker Hill Community College Building A Room 300
    http://www.bhcc.mass.edu/about/aboutbhcc/charlestowncampus/campusmap/
    Building A is the closest to the Orange Line T Stop

    ROTTEN REPORTAGE on March 9 at Cambridge Forum

    March 9 ROTTEN REPORTAGE: Do We Have the Media We Deserve?

    The bulk of mainstream media in the U.S. is now owned by six corporations that continue to gobble up smaller outlets and independent presses. Some say that we have created a perfect echo chamber, that the plurality of a free press is just a sad joke. Turning on the TV or scrolling through the headlines offers only the illusion of choice.

    So is the media monopoly that we all feared, almost complete? Is there any cause for optimism in the new journalistic market place and in its pre-election coverage, is the national press corps revealing its true colors?

    Cambridge Forum has invited a panel of journalists and experts drawn from the Internet, academia, and NPR to discuss the state of journalism in America today.

    Come join the discussion on March 9 at 7:00pm, 3 Church Street in Cambridge. The event is free and all are welcome!

    For more details contact Mary Stack, director (AT) cambridgeforum.org

    Join the Massachusetts Coalition for the Homeless at the State House Next Thursday, March 3rd!

    Speak Out for Housing, Homelessness Prevention, and Solutions: Join the Massachusetts Coalition for the Homeless at the State House Next Thursday, March 3rd!

    Please join the Massachusetts Coalition for the Homeless for our annual Legislative Action Day on Thursday, March 3rd from 9 a.m. – 3 p.m. in the Great Hall at the Massachusetts State House in Boston.

    The Massachusetts Coalition for the Homeless has been working for over thirty years as a key voice in the public policy and social services arenas for families, youth, and adults in Massachusetts who are at-risk or experiencing homelessness. Each year, the Coalition holds a Legislative Action Day at the State House to engage our members and allies in educating state legislators about the needs of the Commonwealth’s residents who are experiencing homelessness, housing crises, and poverty.

    This year, we are mobilizing our members and supporters to advocate on a number of priorities, including efforts to expand eligibility for the Residential Assistance for Families in Transition (RAFT) homelessness prevention programs to include elders, people with disabilities, unaccompanied youth, and others; fund housing and support services for unaccompanied youth who are experiencing homelessness; ensure that families with children no longer have to first stay in places not meant for human habitation before qualifying for Emergency Assistance shelter; and expand funding for the Massachusetts Rental Voucher Program (MRVP) and the Alternative Housing Voucher Program (AHVP). We also are working to move forward several bills that would improve quality of life for people living in poverty and those experiencing homelessness, including legislation to create a Homeless Bill of Rights and to improve benefits under the state’s Emergency Aid to the Elderly, Disabled, and Children program (EAEDC).

    As part of Legislative Action Day, the Coalition will host a series of speakers who will share their call to action and personal testimonies on the importance of increasing access to housing, shelter, homelessness prevention resources, and support services. Legislative speakers will include Representative James O’Day (West Boylston), the event sponsor and lead sponsor of House Bill 529, An Act Relative to Assisting Elders and People with Disabilities in the Commonwealth; State Senator Harriette Chandler (Worcester), Senate Majority Leader and member of the Special Commission on Unaccompanied Homeless Youth; Senator Linda Dorcena Forry (Boston), Senate Chair of the Joint Committee on Housing; Representative Marjorie Decker (Cambridge), Member, Joint Committees on Ways and Means and Housing; Representative Kevin Honan (Allston), House Chair of the Joint Committee on Housing; Senator Jamie Eldridge (Acton), Senate Chair of the Joint Committee on Financial Services, State Representative William Smitty Pignatelli (Lenox), lead sponsor of House Bill 1129, An Act Providing a Homeless Bill of Rights; and State Representative Denise Provost (Somerville), lead sponsor of House Bill 119, An Act to End Child Homelessness.

    Most importantly, there will be time in the afternoon to meet with State Representatives, Senators, and their staff to advocate for improved access to affordable housing, services, and programs for youth, families, and individual adults who are at-risk or experiencing homelessness in Massachusetts.

    We hope you will be able to raise your voice and join us for this exciting day!

    For more information and to register for this free event, please go to http://www.mahomeless.org/advocacy/item/legislative-action-day-2016.

    NON VIOLENT CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE TRAINING 3/5

    RESIST THE WEST ROXBURY PIPELINEpipeline

    Spring is not too far away and the specter of the West Roxbury fracked gas pipeline resuming construction awaits April 15.

    They’ll be starting. We’ll be stopping.

    An open invitation to all to join us for our first of many Civil Disobedience (CD) trainings to stop the West Roxbury Pipeline.

    The first training of the spring will be on:

    Saturday March 5, 3:00-5:30pm
    Theodore Parker Church, 1859 Centre St, West Roxbury, MA

    The training will cover:

    – A background on the resistance to a 750 pounds per sq inch pipeline coming into W. Roxbury passing by an active blasting quarry. Opposed by community residents, city councilors, mayor Walsh and YOU.

    -Information/experiential practice about CD and supporting others to do CD.

    -Legal and practical information about CD

    – Forming action/affinity groups with CD and support people

    -Input into the spring strategy for actions

    Come help draw the line on fracked gas and neighborhood safety.

    More trainings and sessions to follow.

    To sign up or for more information go to http://www.resistthepipeline.org/

     

    Contact us

    Occupy Boston Media <Media@occupyboston.org> • <Info@occupyboston.org> • @Occupy_Boston