Skip to main content

September 2018

Chaplain Chris Haughee Interview

To quote a friend who just gave her testimony at our church about her own struggles with mental health misdiagnosis and recovery, she was told after her first hospitalization, “This won’t be the first time you deal with this.” Our trauma is always with us.

Oprah makes surprise appearance in South Jersey town, praises police department [NJ.com]

A small South Jersey town's annual reunion had it all. A centenarian celebrated her 100th birthday, a historic postmark was unveiled, gospel music choirs performed -- and Oprah Winfrey was there to see it. Winfrey's longtime partner, author and podcaster Stedman Graham, is a native of Whitesboro, an unincorporated community within Middle Township. Graham is also the executive director and a founder of the community organization Concerned Citizens of Whitesboro. According to social media...

Insulin's High Cost Leads To Lethal Rationing [npr.org]

Diabetic ketoacidosis is a terrible way to die. It's what happens when you don't have enough insulin. Your blood sugar gets so high that your blood becomes highly acidic, your cells dehydrate, and your body stops functioning. Diabetic ketoacidosis is how Nicole Smith-Holt lost her son. Three days before his payday. Because he couldn't afford his insulin. "It shouldn't have happened," Smith-Holt says looking at her son's death certificate on her dining room table in Richfield, Minn. "That...

So Much for The Great California Bail Celebration [themarshallproject.org]

To great fanfare, California Gov. Jerry Brown this week signed into law the nation’s most radical overhaul of bail, essentially abolishing cash bail and putting bondsmen out of business. In a statement, Brown declared the new law would assure that “that rich and poor alike are treated fairly” when accused of crimes. But even before the governor signed it, the new law was under sharp attack from some surprising voices — criminal justice advocacy organizations that have long sought to overturn...

To Relieve Ohio's Overcrowded Jails, Rethink Who Goes in Them [nationswell.com]

On a recent afternoon at the city hall in Toledo, Ohio, Holly Matthews is teaching her colleagues some slang. “I forgot to tell everyone my new word of the day,” she says. “It’s ‘pookie.’” A pookie, Matthews explains, is another word for a crack pipe. “I checked with Urban Dictionary,” she says, chuckling. Matthews is executive director of the Criminal Justice Coordinating Council , an agency that provides criminal justice information services to residents of Lucas County in Northwest Ohio.

ACEs and Yoga Therapy

Why Adverse Childhood Experiences Matter This material originally appeared in Yoga Therapy Today, published by the International Association of Yoga Therapists. Used with permission. By Matt Erb and Kristine Weber Emily, a mid-30s White female, came to yoga therapy because she wanted to address her fibromyalgia and weight gain. She reported that her weight gain began when she quit smoking a few years earlier. Lack of energy and widespread pain made it difficult to exercise. She also reported...

Is the Solution Really for More Children to Enter Foster Care? [chronicleofsocialchange.org]

Last week , in a provocative op-ed in the Washington Post , Naomi Schaefer Riley – a fellow at the American Enterprise Institute – argued that the problem in America’s child welfare system is “not that we’re taking too many children away from their parents. We’re not taking enough.” To support her claim, she cited a mishmash of statistics, including an increase in the national child fatality rate, and then some isolated data from two jurisdictions involving re-entry rates for children...

In One Generation, A Farmworker Family Grows College Ambitions [npr.org]

Angel Benavides, a lanky 14-year-old, dribbles down the basketball court of his school gym in Manvel, N.D. It looks like he's going for a layup, but when he realizes he's unguarded, he stops in his tracks and takes a three-pointer. It's a nice arching shot, but the ball bounces tenuously on the rim and doesn't go in. It's late June and Angel is already thinking about playing for his high school basketball team in Texas, 1,700 miles away. But he doesn't know if he'll get there in time for...

If They Die of an Overdose, Drug Users Have a Last Request [yesmagazine.com]

Louise Vincent received a frantic email late one night in July: “Any progress on Adam? They’re trying to get him on a murder charge for his friend’s overdose death.” Adam is a young man in West Virginia who purchased heroin for himself and a friend. They used together. Adam woke up. His friend didn’t. Now authorities hold Adam responsible for his friend’s death. Vincent receives emails like this one with increasing frequency from families and friends of drug users who police claim are drug...

Why Cities Must Take the Lead on Upgrading Service Jobs [citylab.com]

This Labor Day, with President Trump in office, it’s time to realize that the task of creating good jobs for more Americans rests with its cities. Just as cities have led on climate change and minimum wage, they should lead on creating secure, well-paying jobs. The stock market continues its boom and unemployment is at a record low (3.9 percent), but far too many Americans still toil in insecure jobs that do not pay enough to support a family. Almost 70 million American workers—amounting to...

Breaking the Unwritten Rule of Prison [themarshallproject.org]

All of us condemned inmates were hurt when Chaplain Chestnut left the prison to pursue other opportunities and, he said, to save his marriage. “Guys,” he told us one day, “I spend more time on death row than with my wife. She gave me a choice: her, or my work. I love her, so I’ve got to go. I’m sorry.” Chestnut’s departure was devastating because he’d always treated us fairly, even favorably, going out of his way to treat us as equals and as parishioners. Before and after executions, he...

Time Spent on Me Wasn’t Wasted [chronicleofsocialchange.org]

Ricardo Rodriguez is a 26-year-old San Diego resident and former foster youth who balances a job in tech with volunteer work and entrepreneurial pursuits. Thanks to his relentless drive and support from key sources, his life has turned out far different from previous expectations. During his childhood, medical professionals said Rodriguez would never be able to walk, talk or understand words. Despite many obstacles, Rodriguez has made his lifelong dream of working in the tech industry a...

When Slavery Is Erased From Plantations [theatlantic.com]

The story of Sally Hemings—the enslaved woman who bore six of Thomas Jefferson’s children—is told from the basement of Jefferson’s mansion at his Monticello plantation in Charlottesville, Virginia. The third American president’s legacy barely touches the brick floors and plastered walls of Hemings’s windowless room, their two lives more unconnected at Monticello today than they were in 1791. At George Washington’s Mount Vernon estate, slavery is similarly separated from the nation’s founding...

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