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July 2020

Building Relationships and a Better Foster Care System [positiveexperience.org]

7/2/20, positiveexperience.org/blog Today’s post is based on an interview with Elliott Orrin Hinkle (they/them), an alumnus of the Wyoming Foster Care System. They are an advocate for child welfare, mental health, and the LGBTQ population. Nationally they work as a consultant to the National Capacity Building Center for States at ICF International and at JBS International working on NYTD. Since 2014 they have been a trainer of Youth Thrive and recently were certified to train on Youth Thrive...

Anti-racism: You may be doing it wrong. Here's why. [thelily.com]

By Nicole Ellis and Maya Lin Sugarman, The Lily, July 2, 2020 In the last month since George Floyd’s death, people across the United States have started to look more critically at how we deal with race and incorporate anti-racism into our everyday lives. But one of the biggest challenges we’re running into is white people getting it wrong. We’re diving into why that’s happening and how to do better. It can be exhausting for many black people in this moment to hear from their nonblack...

How A City Known For High Crime Rates And Racial Tensions Kept Its Protests Non-Violent - Pointing The Way For The Rest Of The Nation [witnessla.com]

By April M. Short, Witness LA, June 21, 2020 Protests against systemic racism and police brutality in America continue to call for justice after the police murder of George Floyd on May 25. Floyd’s death catalyzed an uprising of voices that are pushing forward the national narratives around policing and public safety. There is a widespread, growing call to defund and dismantle America’s long-militarized police departments, restructure their use of force policies, and redistribute their...

Santa Cruz becomes first U.S. city to approve ban on predictive policing [santacruzsentinel.com]

By Nicholas Ibarra, Santa Cruz Sentinel, June 23, 2020 After fostering the development of predictive policing technology a decade ago, Santa Cruz on Tuesday became the first city in the U.S. to approve a ban on its use. Both predictive policing and facial recognition technologies are set to be barred from use by Santa Cruz police under a closely watched ordinance unanimously approved by the City Council, which will return to the council Aug. 11 for final adoption. San Francisco, Oakland and...

The Fullest Look Yet at the Racial Inequity of Coronavirus [nytimes.com]

By Richard A. Oppel Jr., Robert Gebeloff, K.K. Rebecca Lai, Will Wright, and Mitch Smith, The New York Times, July 5, 2020 Teresa and Marvin Bradley can’t say for sure how they got the coronavirus. Maybe Ms. Bradley, a Michigan nurse, brought it from her hospital. Maybe it came from a visiting relative. Maybe it was something else entirely. What is certain — according to new federal data that provides the most comprehensive look to date on nearly 1.5 million coronavirus patients in America —...

'A Better Normal' Community Discussion Series: How to Grow a Resilient Community - July 7, 2020

Interested in learning what it takes to Grow a Resilient Community? Do you want to learn how to become a member of ACEs Connection Cooperative of Communities? If so, please join us Tuesday, July 7th, 12-1pm PDT for our next 'A Better Normal' community discussion series. In this discussion we will be talking with Brian Semsem of Fresno's Every Neighborhood Partnership. We will be talking to Brian about what led him to work with ACEs and resilience. In addition, we will be discussing the path...

Pandemic likely to increase number of students in need of social-emotional support (The Herald Bulletin)

By Rebecca R. Bibbs, July 6, 2020, The Herald Bulletin. ANDERSON — In a typical school year, a relatively finite number of students need socioemotional support because of adverse childhood experience, such as parental divorce, death of a loved one or the fallout of an inappropriate relationship with an adult. But as the 2020-21 school year nears, Lori DeSautels, assistant professor in Butler University’s College of Education, said it is a certainty that 100% of students returning to school...

30 Years Ago, Romania Deprived Thousands of Babies of Human Contact [theatlantic.com]

By Melissa Fay Greene, The Atlantic, June 23, 2020 F or his first three years of life, Izidor lived at the hospital. The dark-eyed, black-haired boy, born June 20, 1980, had been abandoned when he was a few weeks old. The reason was obvious to anyone who bothered to look: His right leg was a bit deformed. After a bout of illness (probably polio), he had been tossed into a sea of abandoned infants in the Socialist Republic of Romania. In films of the period documenting orphan care, you see...

As COVID-19 spread in a Texas jail, an activist and a sheriff formed an unlikely alliance [nbcnews.com]

By Maurice Chammah, NBC News, July 1, 2020 With her 4-year-old in the back seat, Dalila Reynoso parked between a gun store and a bail bond agency in downtown Tyler, Texas, peering through the window at the Smith County Jail. When she saw a deputy without a mask on, she snapped a photo. When she saw another fail to wipe down his vehicle, she jotted it down in her notebook. It was mid-April, and Reynoso had begun regularly staking out the facility in this conservative east Texas county of...

9/11 Day of Service Federal Grant Awarded to Global Youth Justice, Inc. [globalyouthjustice.org]

From The Corporation for National and Community Service, July 6, 2020 81,592 Subscribers Federal Grant Announcement Federal Press Release 9/11 Day Federal Grant Awarded to Global Youth Justice, Inc. from The Corporation for National and Community Service Global Youth Justice, Inc. announces it has been awarded a 9/11 Day of Service and Remembrance Grant from the Corporation for National and Community Service, the USA federal agency for Volunteering and Service. This grant will support Global...

Regulation Before Education: Trauma-Informed Schools

Regulation Before Education: The Roots and Fruits of a Trauma-Informed School July 29-31st | 12:00 - 3:00pm EDT These times are unsettling in many ways. But the disruptions have widened opportunities for different ways of being, thinking and doing in education. The trauma-informed schools movement has never been more relevant. Schools committed to cultivating trauma-informed change can successfully buffer the adverse effects of the pandemic, economic collapse, and persistent racial...

'The Wrong Complexion For Protection.' How Race Shaped America's Roadways And Cities [npr.org]

By Ashish Valentine, National Public Radio, July 5, 2020 When the urban planner Robert Moses began building projects in New York during the 1920s, he bulldozed Black and Latino homes to make way for parks, and built highways through the middle of minority neighborhoods. According to one biography , Moses even made sure bridges on the parkways connecting New York City to beaches in Long Island were low enough to keep city buses — which would likely be carrying poor minorities — from passing...

Invitation to July 28 Webinar On The Urgent Need, Methods, and Benefits of Enacting the New ITRC Mental Wellness and Resilience Policy

You are invited to join a free 1 hr. webinar on Tuesday , July 28 from 12:30-1:30 pm Pacific Time (3:30-4:30 pm ET) on the new ITRC Mental Wellness and Resilience Policy Click here to register for the free webinar What is the Need for a New Climate Change Mental Wellness and Resilience Policy? Climate science indicates that global temperatures will, in the not too distant future, rise above the 2.7-degree F. temperature threshold that unleashes civilization-changing impacts. The U.S. is...

In our divided red and blue nation, coronavirus data is a uniting purple [usatoday.com]

By Richard E. Besser, USA Today, June 30, 2020 California and Texas show the folly of viewing this pandemic through a political lens. The two most populous states are seeing record numbers of COVID-19 infections amid other concerning trend lines. The Golden State was hit early on by this pandemic and had taken a cautious, calibrated approach to reopening, while the Lone Star State was one of the first to reopen and until this past week had greeted the virus with Texas swagger. Both are now...

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