Fresno-Commission-Fo

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Fresno-Commission-Fo “If you are working on a problem you can solve in your lifetime, you’re thinking too small.” Wes Jackson I have been blessed to spend time with some of our nation’s most prominent civil rights leaders— truly extraordinary people. When I listen to them tell their stories about how hard they fought to combat the issues of their day, how long it took them, and the fact that they never stopped fighting, it grounds me. Those extraordinary people worked at what they knew they would never finish in their lifetimes. I have come to understand that the historical arc of this country always bends toward progress. It doesn’t come without a fight, and it doesn’t come in a single lifetime. It is the job of each generation of leaders to run the race with truth, honor, and integrity, then hand the baton to the next generation to continue the fight. That is what our foremothers and forefathers did. It is what we must do, for we are at that moment in history yet again. We have been passed the baton, and our job is to stretch this work as far as we can and run as hard as we can, to then hand it off to the next generation because we can see their outstretched hands. This project has been deeply emotional for me. It brought me back to my youthful days in Los Angeles when I would be constantly harassed, handcuffed, searched at gunpoint - all illegal, but I don’t know that then. I can still feel the terror I felt every time I saw a police cruiser. I remember my dad telling me to never look at the police in the face because it would be deemed a challenge to authority. I was a young black man in this beautiful country, and I was terrified. I will never forget those moments. As present as those memories are for me, I also remember working as a Fresno police officer. I am proud that I was an officer with integrity, honor, respect, with a heart of service, and I was not alone. Those are the same qualities I remember best in my fellow police officers. My former colleagues chose this profession out of a sense of duty and honor to this community. Those women and men I worked with are some of the best people I have ever known, and I was honored to work alongside them. What I found in working on this project is that diametrical feelings can exist in one space and one person. One can feel legitimate terror about simply seeing a police officer and also feel true hopefulness about the help they can bring. I am that person filled with fear and hope – and I am not alone. The meetings, calls, emails, and text messages I have received from this community let me know our residents are also filled with fear and hope. Our community does not want to be at cross purposes with the Department. We are all hopeful that things can change, and we can come together. What is also true is that the vast majority of the women and men in that system are honorable people who want to serve this community, who chose this line of work to be of service. The same way the system has failed this community, it has failed them as well. The police officers in our Department have also been asking for change. I have received the same type of communications from our police officers. I can say from personal conversations with many current and former officers that it pains them deeply that the profession they have dedicated their lives to is seen as a harmful institution, and again they don’t want to be at cross purposes with their community. They also know change must occur. What I have learned is that we all want the same thing. I feel deeply honored to have been given the opportunity to serve on this project. The work has been therapeutic for me. I didn’t know it at the time, but when I got the call from Council President Arias, I was depressed about our country and the state we all found ourselves. The murder of George Floyd had deeply impacted me in ways Fresno Commission for Police Reform that I could not have imagined. Being able to do this work brought me out of that darkness. Being a part of the solution has fortified me, and for that, I am forever grateful to the Fresno City Council and Mayor Lee Brand for giving me this opportunity to serve yet again. I am honored to have served with members of this Commission who were thoughtful and steadfast in their approach. This City and I owe them a debt of gratitude for volunteering hundreds of hours to this project on behalf of all residents. Thanks also to the consultant staff. You all have been extraordinary partners in this project, and there is no way this could have been done without you. A special thanks to Sofia Cutler, who somehow managed to keep us all organized. I’m not sure how you did it but thank you. Personally, I thank Lillian Macias Weiland, who works every day to keep me on track, and did so during this project; I know she wanted to pull her hair out many times. Lillian, I know I can’t do the work of this community without you. Thank you for being my partner. To my fellow Fresno residents, I hope you will read this report and know the truth was told. The history of the institution is steeped in systemic racism and oppression, which unfortunately cause police and community to remain at odds, and at times make it seem impossible that we could come together. Over the 200-year history of American policing, while the people inside the system have changed, the system itself hasn’t. We must call out and acknowledge the truth that certain communities feel legitimate fear at the sight of police, or we will miss the opportunity to heal and reconcile. We must create an environment for our officers that encourages the service they want to provide to this same community that they love as much as the community members that live there. And above all, we must resist the urge to fall into the false choice of either “Pro Police” OR “Anti Police.” The choice is not, nor should it, be binary. We all want the same thing. The recommendations in this report do not represent the end. It is simply the beginning of the next iteration. As Commission members, we knew we would not get to everything, but we were committed to putting the proverbial bones on the frame, with the full understanding that the organs and flesh are still to come. Together we can create a system that provides our community with true safety and allows our officers to serve with honor, dignity, and integrity. Both can and should be true, and this Commission’s work represents the start of that process. This work is not done, but with the help of the community and those entrusted with the honor of leading, we must stretch ourselves further to create the community of safety we all deserve. All this work is in anticipation of the day we pass the baton to our children and grandchildren. Oliver Baines President and CEO Central Valley NMTC Fund, LLC Fresno Commission for Police Reform Residents want and deserve a Fresno where all people can thrive regardless of where they live, who they are, or how they look. Our city will not thrive unless Fresnans are safe. For too long, Fresnans have been calling for the transformation of our city. Fresno’s culture has long been entrenched in an antiquated ethos of punishment as a response to crime that fails to acknowledge that safety, or lack thereof, is rooted in our neighborhoods, our schools, our parks, our economic opportunities, and our social ties. We have spent decades pouring money into a system that relies on policing as a solution to most societal ills and which absorbs the bulk of our resources, with little results for everyday people. For centuries, communities of color across the country and in our beloved City have lived in fear of law enforcement. That fear is based on good reasoning - as described in the following report that shows policing in our society was birthed as a result of and for the oppression of Black people, workers, and immigrants. A system so deeply rooted in racism and oppression must be dismantled and replaced with one that is rooted in community, love, and transformative justice – the recommendations that follow should be used as the foundation for future efforts. Young people in our community have set the vision, and they will lead us into the Fresno of the future, a Fresno that I hope will be unrecognizable as we address the deeply-rooted issues that cause people of color to distrust the police, resent their deadly practices, and question if anything will truly ever change. As the vice-chair of the City of Fresno Commission on Police Reform, I am proud of the conversations we had and the recommendations we have introduced; however, we have only just begun. We must ensure the culture of our police Department is overhauled. We must never forget Isiah Murrietta-Golding, a 16-year-old boy shot in the back of the head by a Fresno police officer while another officer congratulated him.
Recommended publications
  • “From the Cracks in the Sidewalks of NYC”: The
    “From the Cracks in the Sidewalks of N.Y.C.”: The Embodied Production of Urban Decline, Survival, and Renewal in New York’s Fiscal-Crisis-Era Streets, 1977-1983 by Elizabeth Healy Matassa B.A. in Italian and French Studies, May 2003, University of Delaware M.A. in Geography, May 2006, Louisiana State University A Dissertation submitted to The Faculty of The Columbian College of Arts and Sciences of The George Washington University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy January 31, 2014 Dissertation directed by Suleiman Osman Associate Professor of American Studies The Columbian College of Arts and Sciences of the George Washington University certifies that Elizabeth Healy Matassa has passed the Final Examination for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy as of August 21, 2013. This is the final and approved form of the dissertation. “From the Cracks in the Sidewalks of N.Y.C.”: The Embodied Production of Decline, Survival, and Renewal in New York’s Fiscal-Crisis-Era Streets, 1977-1983 Elizabeth Healy Matassa Dissertation Research Committee: Suleiman Osman, Associate Professor of American Studies, Dissertation Director Elaine Peña, Associate Professor of American Studies, Committee Member Elizabeth Chacko, Associate Professor of Geography and International Affairs, Committee Member ii ©Copyright 2013 by Elizabeth Healy Matassa All rights reserved iii Dedication The author wishes to dedicate this dissertation to the five boroughs. From Woodlawn to the Rockaways: this one’s for you. iv Abstract of Dissertation “From the Cracks in the Sidewalks of N.Y.C.”: The Embodied Production of Urban Decline, Survival, and Renewal in New York’s Fiscal-Crisis-Era Streets, 1977-1983 This dissertation argues that New York City’s 1970s fiscal crisis was not only an economic crisis, but was also a spatial and embodied one.
    [Show full text]
  • Chapter 6 Healthy Fresno: an Unfinished Story
    UC Berkeley UC Berkeley Electronic Theses and Dissertations Title Health Equity in a New Urbanist Environment: Land Use Planning and Community Capacity Building in Fresno, CA Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/4pq5p68j Author ZUK, MIRIAM ZOFITH Publication Date 2013 Peer reviewed|Thesis/dissertation eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California Health Equity in a New Urbanist Environment: Land Use Planning and Community Capacity Building in Fresno, CA By Miriam Zofith Zuk A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy In City and Regional Planning in the Graduate Division of the University of California, Berkeley Committee members: Professor Jason Corburn, Chair Professor Karen Chapple Professor Rachel Morello-Frosch Spring 2013 Abstract Health Equity in a New Urbanist Environment: Land Use Planning and Community Capacity Building in Fresno, CA by Miriam Zofith Zuk Doctor of Philosophy in City and Regional Planning University of California, Berkeley Professor Jason Corburn, Chair A tale of two cities. The Mason-Dixon line. The Berlin Wall. Fresnans have evoked a variety of metaphors to describe the spatial divide between the rich, clean and white neighborhoods in the north and the southern areas housing the poor, polluting industries and communities of color that has characterized urban development in the city since its inception. The narrative explaining this spatial inequality has been remarkably consistent over time - sprawl fueled by aggressive developers, corrupt city councilmen and the market pushed the city limits ever farther northeast, abandoning the older neighborhoods to the south where the poor and immigrant communities settled and were too disorganized to counter the government’s neglect.
    [Show full text]
  • View of the Related Literature
    72-4684 WALLDREN, Allan Wade, 1934- THE DEVELOPMENT OF AN INSTRUMENT TO ANALYZE STUDENT QUESTIONS DURING PROBLEM SOLVING. The Ohio State University, Ph.D., 1971 Education, general University Microfilms, A XEROX Company, Ann Arbor, Michigan Copyright by Allan Wade Walldren 1971 THE DEVELOPMENT OF AN INSTRUMENT TO ANALYZE STUDENT QUESTIONS DURING PROBLEM SOLVING DISSERTATION Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of The Ohio State University By Allan Wade Walldren, B.S., M.A.T * * it it it The Ohio State University 1971 Approved by ’~”1 Adviser Faculty■ of Curriculu and Foundations PLEASE NOTE: Some Pages have indistinct p rin t. Filmed as received. UNIVERSITY MICROFILMS ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS As author of this study I wish to publicly acknowledge and thank several people for their assistance, guidance and support in this investigation. First and foremost is Louise, my wife, who shared equally in all of the rigors and frustra­ tions of this investigation. She has been sounding board and colleague, critical editor and typist, and most of all an understanding and sensitive friend. I also wish to acknowledge Dr. Charles M. Galloway, who not only supported the study and assisted in its design, but also encouraged me to bring my past experiences into a new focus and to report them in a style that was comfortable. Dr. Paul R. Klohr not only supported the study but sensitively encouraged the investigator at the most appro­ priate times. Constructive criticism was always blended with a twinkle of humor. Both the study and the investigator were significantly strengthened by Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • The University of Wisconsin Eau Claire Organized Crime
    THE UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN EAU CLAIRE ORGANIZED CRIME IN THE 20TH CENTURY: PROHIBITION’S AFFECT ON THE WESTERN UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY BY BLAKE CLAY-COLTIN FISCHER SUPERVISING PROFESSOR: JOSEPH ORSER COOPERATING PROFESSOR: SELIKA DUCKSWORTH-LAWTON EAU CLAIRE, WISCONSIN DECEMBER 2013 Copyright of this work is owned by the author. This digital version is published by McIntyre Library, University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire, with the consent of the author. 1 CONTENTS Abstract……………..………………………...…………………………………………..………..3 Introduction……..………………………………………………………………………………....4 Jewish, Italian-American Criminal Corporation…...………………………………………………...……………………………...…..7 Chapter 1: Gambling…...……………………………………………..………………………...12 Pre-World War II Gambling…………………………………………………………………………..…..13 “Bugsy” Siegel, and the Flamingo Hotel…...…………………………...……………………………………..………………………15 Chapter 2: Managing Their Public Perception/Image………………………………………………………,,……………………….19 Hollywood and the “Godfather” image....…...………………………………………………………………..……………………...19 Media Mangament…………………………………………………………………………………………...22 Robin Hood, the “Gangster”……………………………………………….……………………..23 Publicity…Flamingo Style!..............................................................................................................25 Chapter 3: Manipulation of Authority…………………………......………………………...…28 “Faces of Face”……………………………………………………….…………………………..29 Conclusion……………………………………………………………..………………………….34 Bibliography……………………………………………………………..………………………..36 2 Abstract The story of organized crime in America
    [Show full text]
  • Police Defunding and Reform : What Changes Are Needed? / by Olivia Ghafoerkhan
    ® About the Authors Olivia Ghafoerkhan is a nonfiction writer who lives in northern Virginia. She is the author of several nonfiction books for teens and young readers. She also teaches college composition. Hal Marcovitz is a former newspaper reporter and columnist who has written more than two hundred books for young readers. He makes his home in Chalfont, Pennsylvania. © 2021 ReferencePoint Press, Inc. Printed in the United States For more information, contact: ReferencePoint Press, Inc. PO Box 27779 San Diego, CA 92198 www.ReferencePointPress.com ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. No part of this work covered by the copyright hereon may be reproduced or used in any form or by any means—graphic, electronic, or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, taping, web distribution, or information storage retrieval systems—without the written permission of the publisher. Picture Credits: Cover: ChameleonsEye/Shutterstock.com 28: katz/Shutterstock.com 6: Justin Berken/Shutterstock.com 33: Vic Hinterlang/Shutterstock.com 10: Leonard Zhukovsky/Shutterstock.com 37: Maury Aaseng 14: Associated Press 41: Associated Press 17: Imagespace/ZUMA Press/Newscom 47: Tippman98x/Shutterstock.com 23: Associated Press 51: Stan Godlewski/ZUMA Press/Newscom LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING- IN- PUBLICATION DATA Names: Ghafoerkhan, Olivia, 1982- author. Title: Police defunding and reform : what changes are needed? / by Olivia Ghafoerkhan. Description: San Diego, CA : ReferencePoint Press, 2021. | Series: Being Black in America | Includes bibliographical references and index. Identifiers: LCCN 2020048103 (print) | LCCN 2020048104 (ebook) | ISBN 9781678200268 (library binding) | ISBN 9781678200275 (ebook) Subjects: LCSH: Police administration--United States--Juvenile literature. | Police brutality--United States--Juvenile literature. | Discrimination in law enforcement--United States--Juvenile literature.
    [Show full text]
  • Racism and Discrimination As Risk Factors for Toxic Stress
    Racism and Discrimination as Risk Factors for Toxic Stress April 28, 2021 ACEs Aware Mission To change and save lives by helping providers understand the importance of screening for Adverse Childhood Experiences and training providers to respond with trauma-informed care to mitigate the health impacts of toxic stress. 2 Agenda 1. Discuss social and environmental factors that lead to health disparities, as well as the impacts of racism and discrimination on public health across communities 2. Broadly discuss the role of racism and discrimination as risk factors for toxic stress and ACE Associated Health Conditions 3. Make the case to providers that implementing Trauma-Informed Care principles and ACE screening can help them promote health equity as part of supporting the health and wellbeing of their patients 3 Presenters Aletha Maybank, MD, MPH Chief Health Equity Officer, SVP, American Medical Association Ray Bignall, MD, FAAP, FASN Director, Kidney Health Advocacy & Community Engagement, Nationwide Children’s Hospital; Assistant Professor, Pediatrics, The Ohio State University College of Medicine Roy Wade, MD, PhD, MPH Assistant Professor of Pediatrics, Department of Pediatrics Perelman School of Medicine University of Pennsylvania, Division of General Pediatrics, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia 4 Operationalizing Racial Justice Aletha Maybank, MD, MPH Chief Health Equity Officer, SVP American Medical Association Land and Labor Acknowledgement We acknowledge that we are all living off the stolen ancestral lands of Indigenous peoples for thousands of years. We acknowledge the extraction of brilliance, energy and life for labor forced upon people of African descent for more than 400 years. We celebrate the resilience and strength that all Indigenous people and descendants of Africa have shown in this country and worldwide.
    [Show full text]
  • LACEA Alive Feb05 7.Qxd
    01-44_Alive_August_v8.qxd 7/28/10 4:25 PM Page 20 20 August 2010 City Employees Club of Los Angeles, Alive! Comes by Hynda Rudd, Alive! City Archivist (Retired), Tales From the City Archives and Club Member ‘Just the Facts’ n L.A. Noir author John Buntin describes the strangely intertwined careers of two of Los Angeles’s most fabled figures, LAPD Chief William Parker and mobster Mickey Cohen. he 20th century in the City of Story by John Buntin. Photos courtesy the TLos Angeles, the 1930s through 1960s, Security Pacific Collection, Los Angeles Public experienced one of the most monumental Library photo archive. crime and corruption eras of any city in this country. The cast of characters read like a herein lies the fascination of the Angel City! criminal report out of New York, Chicago or “WWhy has it become the Mecca of tourists the New Jersey, and in some instances could be a world over? Is it because it is the best-advertised city great fantasy mystery using the same tempera- in the United States? Is it that it offers illimitable ment and eccentricities as the original cast. opportunities for making money and eating fruit? I would like to introduce you to a fantas- Hardly that. After all the pamphlets of the real tic new book, L.A. Noir: The Struggle for estate agents, the boosters’ clubs, the Board of Trade the Soul of America’s Most Seductive and the Chamber of Commerce have been read, City, by John Buntin, a staff writer at something remains unspoken—something that Governing magazine, in Washington, D.C., uncannily grips the stranger.”—Willard where he covers crime and urban affairs.
    [Show full text]
  • Most Requested Songs of 2019
    Top 200 Most Requested Songs Based on millions of requests made through the DJ Intelligence music request system at weddings & parties in 2019 RANK ARTIST SONG 1 Whitney Houston I Wanna Dance With Somebody (Who Loves Me) 2 Mark Ronson Feat. Bruno Mars Uptown Funk 3 Journey Don't Stop Believin' 4 Cupid Cupid Shuffle 5 Neil Diamond Sweet Caroline (Good Times Never Seemed So Good) 6 Walk The Moon Shut Up And Dance 7 Justin Timberlake Can't Stop The Feeling! 8 Earth, Wind & Fire September 9 Usher Feat. Ludacris & Lil' Jon Yeah 10 V.I.C. Wobble 11 DJ Casper Cha Cha Slide 12 Outkast Hey Ya! 13 Black Eyed Peas I Gotta Feeling 14 Bon Jovi Livin' On A Prayer 15 ABBA Dancing Queen 16 Bruno Mars 24k Magic 17 Garth Brooks Friends In Low Places 18 Spice Girls Wannabe 19 AC/DC You Shook Me All Night Long 20 Kenny Loggins Footloose 21 Backstreet Boys Everybody (Backstreet's Back) 22 Isley Brothers Shout 23 B-52's Love Shack 24 Van Morrison Brown Eyed Girl 25 Bruno Mars Marry You 26 Miley Cyrus Party In The U.S.A. 27 Taylor Swift Shake It Off 28 Luis Fonsi & Daddy Yankee Feat. Justin Bieber Despacito 29 Montell Jordan This Is How We Do It 30 Beatles Twist And Shout 31 Ed Sheeran Thinking Out Loud 32 Sir Mix-A-Lot Baby Got Back 33 Maroon 5 Sugar 34 Ed Sheeran Perfect 35 Def Leppard Pour Some Sugar On Me 36 Killers Mr. Brightside 37 Pharrell Williams Happy 38 Toto Africa 39 Chris Stapleton Tennessee Whiskey 40 Flo Rida Feat.
    [Show full text]
  • Black Lives Matter Syllabus
    Black Lives Matter: Race, Resistance, and Populist Protest New York University Fall 2015 Thursdays 6:20-9pm Professor Frank Leon Roberts Fall 2015 Office Hours: (By Appointment Only) 429 1 Wash Place Thursdays 1:00-3:00pm, 9:00pm-10:00pm From the killings of teenagers Michael Brown and Vonderrick Myers in Ferguson, Missouri; to the suspicious death of activist Sandra Bland in Waller Texas; to the choke-hold death of Eric Garner in New York, to the killing of 17 year old Trayvon Martin in Sanford, Florida and 7 year old Aiyana Stanley-Jones in Detroit, Michigan--. #blacklivesmatter has emerged in recent years as a movement committed to resisting, unveiling, and undoing histories of state sanctioned violence against black and brown bodies. This interdisciplinary seminar links the #blacklivesmatter” movement to four broader phenomena: 1) the rise of the U.S. prison industrial complex and its relationship to the increasing militarization of inner city communities 2) the role of the media industry (including social media) in influencing national conversations about race and racism and 3) the state of racial justice activism in the context of a purportedly “post-racial” Obama Presidency and 4) the increasingly populist nature of decentralized protest movements in the contemporary United States (including the tea party movement, the occupy wall street movement, etc.) Among the topics of discussion that we will debate and engage this semester will include: the distinction between #blacklivesmatter (as both a network and decentralized movement) vs. a broader twenty first century movement for black lives; the moral ethics of “looting” and riotous forms of protest; violent vs.
    [Show full text]
  • Mid-Century Modernism Historic Context
    mid-century Modernism Historic Context September 2008 Prepared for the City of Fresno Planning & Development Department 2600 Fresno Street Fresno, CA 93721 Prepared by Planning Resource Associates, Inc. 1416 N. Broadway Fresno, CA 93721 City of Fresno mid-century Modernism Historic Context mid-century Modernism, Fresno Historical Context Prepared For City of Fresno, Planning and Development Department Prepared By Planning Resource Associates, Inc. 1416 N. Broadway Fresno CA, 93721 Project Team Planning Resource Associates, Inc. 1416 Broadway Street Fresno, CA 93721 Lauren MacDonald, Architectural Historian Lauren MacDonald meets the Secretary of the Interior’s Professional Qualifications in Architectural History and History Acknowledgements Research efforts were aided by contributions of the following individuals and organizations: City of Fresno Planning and Development Department Karana Hattersley-Drayton, Historic Preservation Project Manager Fresno County Public Library, California History and Genealogy Room William Secrest, Librarian Fresno Historical Society Maria Ortiz, Archivist / Librarian Jill Moffat, Executive Director John Edward Powell Eldon Daitweiler, Fresno Modern American Institute of Architects, San Joaquin Chapter William Stevens, AIA Les Traeger, AIA Bob Dyer, AIA Robin Gay McCline, AIA Jim Oakes, AIA Martin Temple, AIA Edwin S. Darden, FAIA William Patnaude, AIA Hal Tokmakian Steve Weil 1 City of Fresno mid-century Modernism Historic Context TABLE OF CONTENTS I. PROJECT DESCRIPTION Introduction………………………………………………………………………………………………….3
    [Show full text]
  • Draft Fresno County Regional Long‐Range Transit Plan
    January 2019 Draft Draft Fresno County Regional Long‐Range Transit Plan January 28, 2019 Prepared For: 2035 Tulare Street, Suite 201 Fresno, CA 93721 Ph: (559) 233‐4148 Fax: (559) 233‐9654 Prepared By: 4630 W. Jennifer, Suite 105 Fresno, CA 93722 Ph: (559) 271‐1200 Fax: (559) 271‐1269 Fresno Council of Governments Fresno County Regional Long-Range Transit Plan TABLE OF CONTENTS Chapter I. Introduction: The LRTP Vision and Goals ........................................................................ 2 Background, Purpose, and Need for the LRTP ......................................................................................... 2 Looking Beyond the RTP/SCS Horizon: Key RTP/SCS Plan Elements ........................................................ 2 Vision, Goals, Objectives, and Performance Measures for the Fresno LRTP ........................................... 4 Chapter II. Prior Transit Planning in the Region ............................................................................... 8 Introduction .............................................................................................................................................. 8 Existing Transit Plan Review ..................................................................................................................... 8 General Plan Review ............................................................................................................................... 36 Chapter III. Public Outreach ..........................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Dialogue Session Resources
    Dialogue Session Resources This document is not exhaustive of resources to fight police brutality, organizations to follow on social media, resources for addressing racism and for engaging in anti-racism work and practicing solidarity Resources for Fighting Police Brutality ● https://www.joincampaignzero.org/ ● https://www.obama.org/wp-content/uploads/Toolkit.pdf ● https://www.aclu.org/other/fighting-police-abuse-community-action-manual A summary of research-based solutions to stop police violence from Data Scientist & Policy Analyst Samuel Sinyangwe: https://twitter.com/samswey/status/1180655701271732224 A Physician/Activist, Dr. Quinn Capers IV introduces some of his medical role models that were also activists for African American civil rights and calls all of us to use our careers to create positive change. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5y5nPSjNNZs&app=desktop This link provides resources compiled by Autumn Gupta with Bryanna Wallace’s oversight for the purpose of providing a starting place for individuals trying to become better allies. https://docs.google.com/document/d/1H- Vxs6jEUByXylMS2BjGH1kQ7mEuZnHpPSs1Bpaqmw0/mobilebasic Organizations to follow on social media: ● Antiracism Center: Twitter ● Audre Lorde Project: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook ● Black Women’s Blueprint: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook ● Color Of Change: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook ● Colorlines: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook ● The Conscious Kid: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook ● Equal Justice Initiative (EJI): Twitter | Instagram | Facebook ● Families Belong
    [Show full text]