Skip to main content

January 2022

The racist 1890 law that’s still blocking thousands of Black Americans from voting [theguardian.com]

By Sam Levine, Photo: Imani Khayyam/The Guardian, The Guardian, January 8, 2022 The Mississippi officials met in the heat of summer with a singular goal in mind: stopping Black people from voting. “We came here to exclude the Negro,” said the convention’s president. “Nothing short of this will answer.” This conclave took place in 1890. But remarkably, approximately 130 years later, the laws they came up with are still blocking nearly 16% of Mississippi’s Black voting-age population from...

Governor, Secretary of State announce plan to protect right to vote, expand ballot access [governor.state.nm.us]

From Office of the Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham, Photo: Unsplash, January 6, 2022 Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham and Secretary of State Maggie Toulouse Oliver on Thursday announced a proposal that will protect and expand New Mexico voting rights, including by expanding online voter registration, providing further protections for Native voters, and creating a permanent, voluntary absentee ballot request list. Amid a wave of anti-democratic sentiment nationwide that includes the implementation...

Anti-trans bills hurt mental health for two-thirds of LGBTQ+ youth in 2021 [19thnews.org]

By Orion Rummler, Photo: Nolwen Cifuentes/Getty Images, The 19th*, January 10, 2022 Many LGBTQ+ youth reported high stress, anger, sadness and fear for the future at the end of 2021, and reported struggling to access basic needs during the pandemic, according to a new online poll published Monday by Morning Consult and LGBTQ+ youth crisis organization the Trevor Project. Much of the stress and sadness was caused by the record number of bills introduced last year aiming to restrict...

Pandemic Isolation and the Elderly: A Doctor Reflects on the Impacts [nationalacademies.org]

By Sarah Freuh, The National Academies of Sciences,Engineering, Medicine, January 7, 2022 The omicron variant-driven surge in COVID-19 over the holidays once again landed Americans in calculations about the risks and benefits of gathering with family and friends, weighing the hazard of possible illness versus the distress of loneliness and isolation. The latter can have consequences not just for happiness but for overall health, especially for the elderly, according to a National Academies...

Maya Angelou becomes first Black woman to appear on US quarter as Treasury begins distribution [cnn.com]

By Sarah Fortinsky and Devan Cole, CNN Politics, January 10, 2022 A new US quarter featuring the late Maya Angelou went into circulation Monday, the US Mint announced, making the legendary poet and activist the first Black woman ever to appear on the coin. The Maya Angelou quarter is the first in the American Women Quarters Program, which will include coins featuring prominent women in American history. Other quarters in the series will begin rolling out later this year and through 2025, the...

Shonkoff: New Science+ More Diverse Voices = Greater Impact

The current early childhood ecosystem is fueled by extensive knowledge about child development, mountains of data from program evaluations, and continuing public fascination with the developing brain. Its energy is sustained by the tireless efforts of providers of early care and education, primary health care and social services, policymakers, advocates, and families raising young children under a wide range of conditions. Over the past two decades, the “brain science story” has made a...

SAMHSA’s GAINS Center Seeks Experienced Trainers to Participate in Trauma-Informed Responses Train-the-Trainer Event for Individuals [SAMHSA]

Application deadline: February 18, 2022 SAMHSA's GAINS Center is now soliciting applications from experienced trainers (individuals) who are interested in developing their capacity to provide trauma-informed training in their local agencies/communities via the How Being Trauma Informed Improves Criminal Justice System Responses curriculum. Selected applicants will learn to facilitate the training via a virtual Train-the-Trainer (TTT) event and subsequently deliver the training program in...

Getting education reform right [washingtonpost.com]

By Valerie Strauss, Photo: iStock, The Washington Post, January 6, 2022 The recent announcement by former New York mayor Mike Bloomberg that he was donating $750 million to help expand charter schools in 20 U.S. metropolitan areas sparked another round of discussion in parts of the education world about the best way to improve public schools. In a Wall Street Journal op-ed , Bloomberg declared that “American public education is broken” and that charter schools — which are publicly funded but...

These female vets were ready for civilian life. It was harder than they thought. [thelily.com]

By McKenzie Beard and Vanessa Montalbano, Illustration: iStock/Washington Post Illustration, The Lily, January 3, 2022 When Carol “Cat” Corchado retired from the Air Force after spending 20 years serving in communications and project management roles, she believed she would be a “first-round draft pick for employers.” “It wasn’t even close,” Corchado said. “When I got out, the road was not paved. It was dirt.” It was 2000, and she was armed with her résumé and discharge papers. “If you’ve...

Martin Luther King Jr.,'s History Lessons [newyorker.com]

By Jelani Cobb, Illustration: João Fazenda, The New Yorker, January 9, 2022 On March 25, 1965, at the conclusion of the brutally consequential march from Selma to Montgomery, Martin Luther King, Jr., delivered a speech titled “Our God Is Marching On!” He spoke to a crowd of twenty-five thousand people on the grounds of the Alabama state capitol, in view of the office window of the segregationist governor George Wallace. The address is not among King’s best-known, but it is among the most...

Michelle Obama and coalition vow to register more than a million new voters [politico.com]

By Mave Sheehey, Photo: Charles Rex Arbogast/AP Photo, Politico, January 9, 2022 Former first lady Michelle Obama said in a letter on Sunday that a coalition of voting rights organizations would register more than a million new voters across the country in the run-up to this year’s midterm elections. Obama, who founded When We All Vote, a campaign to register and organize voters, also said in the letter that the coalition would organize at least 100,000 Americans to contact their senators,...

Post
Copyright © 2023, PACEsConnection. All rights reserved.
×
×
×
×