Thursday

TWW - Louisville Member Spotlight "Environment" - Meet Sarah Lynn


interviewed by Amy Merrick

As a longtime activist and director of Louisville Climate Action Network (CAN), Sarah Lynn Cunningham was spurred to join Together We Will - LSI after the 2016 presidential election. She is grateful to all the young, inspired and talented volunteers with Louisville CAN and TWW - LSI for giving her hope for the future.  Sarah Lynn will be the featured speaker at the August meeting of TWW - LSI.  The focus will be on environmental issues. what the current state of politics means for those issues, and what we can all do to keep making strides forward. Let's get to know more about Sarah Lynn in this month's TWW - Member Spotlight.


        How are you feeling? 

"As a lifelong activist, retired civil servant and student of history, I'm increasingly dismayed by each day's new lows. It would be bad enough if it were only 45, but it's also the Republican Party and the 1% that owns it." 

How has your life/thoughts changed since November 8, 2016?  

        "The extreme polarization of our society and politics especially worries me. On the other hand, I have a pad of sticky notes that says, "I survived the Reagan administration," and I expect to survive the Trump Tragedy, too. It helps that TWW’s new blood, especially its many younger folks, gives me, a middle-aged activist, hope." 


         How are you managing stress?

"To keep my stress in check I hang out with my partner and friends, exercise my sense of humor and cultivate my gratitude. That gratitude extends to the many inspired and talented volunteers, helping to shoulder the work of running the Louisville Climate Action Network. I work out at a gym three mornings each week, plus live in a walkable neighborhood so I can build regular exercise into my day just by doing errands, going out to eat, etc."  
               
         
        What are your top three concerns post election? 

        "Assuming 45 doesn't start a war with North Korea to distract us from his Russian scandals, my three most important concerns are: 1) the lack of critical thinking within our society, (i.e., the way so many voters eagerly vote for candidates who seek to do them harm).  2) the lack of campaign finance reforms. 3) the strategic way Republicans are both gerrymandering and purging voter rolls to render so many political races non-competitive." 
             
        What do you feel is the importance of diversity in social movements? 
      
        "I think it's vitally important that social movements reflect our full society.  We'll be our most successful only when everyone is welcomed, included and engaged. I try to reach out, to bring others into the fold, especially via mentoring. Still, I recognize that disenfranchised folks often are doing well to meet their and their families' basic, day-to-day needs; they're less likely to have the luxury of investing time and effort into making the world a better place.  So I accept folks for where they are.  I criticize neither the more privileged folks who make up most of most movements nor the disadvantaged folks who can't yet play bigger roles."        
   
       What have you found to be the most effective tool in effecting change so far? 
        
        "I strive to be a force to be reckoned with by picking winnable battles, doing my homework so I know what I'm talking about, and asserting my position professionally. I test my arguments using critical thinking tools to be sure they're coherent, defensible and something I'd not mind going viral. In short, I hold myself to the same standards to which I hold my opponents. I encourage everyone to please join me."

If you wish to make an impact concerning the environment, check out the links to the groups below

Louisville Climate Action Network
Kentucky Conservation Committee
Kentucky Resources Council



TWW Louisville Coffee Break Activism - August

Meet Tony The Democrat

A few months ago I heard about Tony the Democrat. Tony lives in Jon Ossoff’s district in Georgia, and wanted to start a postcard writing campaign in support of Democratic candidates running in the primary. Instead of only asking for local volunteers, he reached out to people all across the country for help getting out the vote. I wrote 100 postcards to Georgia voters and it felt great.
After the primary, Tony decided to help other Democrats around the country and expanded his operation immensely. His group, Postcards to Voters, has now written for candidates in Iowa, Kansas, Oklahoma, Arizona and more.  

It was difficult for me to watch so many Democrats come so close to winning their special elections, but ultimately lose. Then, after writing 40 postcards in support of Karen Gaddis of Oklahoma, I finally experienced the satisfaction of getting a win. It was an amazing feeling when she won her race by 95 votes!
Local Get Out the Vote efforts in Kentucky will be critical next year, but if you are itching to help Democrats right now, sign up to help write postcards to voters here:
And send an email to twwvolunteers@gmail.com with the subject line “postcards” if you would like to join a postcard writing group!

TWW Louisville Volunteer Event - September 9

Cleanup Event – Chickasaw Park





TWW-LSI is asking members to donate time and energy to help clean up a local park.


Saturday, September 9

8 a.m. - 12 p.m.



Chickasaw Park 

1200 Southwestern Pkwy

Louisville, KY 40211 




Even if you can only help for an hour or two, please join us!


What to bring: 
  • comfortable shoes
  • hat
  • sunscreen
  • work gloves
We will provide water. The park will provide trash bags and some work gloves (bring your own if you have them) and will arrange to carry off our filled trash bags.


What we need: 
  • a couple of volunteers to show up early (7:30 a.m.) to hand out supplies and direct our members to specific work areas
  • everyone else, please sign up and and provide your contact info, and let us know what time you will be available 

Environmental Watch



Environmental Watch:
We Need Your Help To Save Our Planet




by Ellen Birkett Morris

With Louisville experiencing high levels of ozone and glaciers melting in Montana, this administration chose to abandon the Paris Climate Accord. One major way to resist is to take your own steps to influence climate change.

A recent article on the Conservation International Blog pointed out that "as big problems go, climate change is in a class of its own: maddeningly complex, almost intangible, and bespeaking a kind of dread that makes you just want to stop thinking about it.”

But before you succumb to fear and frustration, check out these Kentucky groups that are working to help address these issues. You can be a part of their efforts and help leave a legacy for the generations to come.


LCAN offers free, customized programs showing ways to reduce Louisville's carbon footprint, and advocate for smarter public policies to reduce carbon pollution and cut costs. Their efforts range from information on a how to support a local tree ordinance to the creation of an EcoDepot that offers information to renters, homeowners and small businesses on how they can cut their carbon emissions, as well as their utility and fuel costs.


KAIRE is the Louisville Metro Air Pollution Control District’s community outreach and education program. The group’s primary goal is to increase public awareness of the impact individual choices can have on local air quality. The site includes clean air tips and teacher resources.


KWA works to protect, restore and celebrate Kentucky’s waterways. The site includes updates on legislation, action items and volunteer opportunities.


The well-known national organization has a page highlighting the work of its Kentucky chapter and conservation issues important to the state.  


The Kentucky chapter of the Sierra Club highlights national actions and local events. 


A free online list of sustainable businesses, services and organizations in Louisville including an event calendar and business directory.






TWW Louisville August Meeting - Environment

Contributing To The Solution: What You Can Do To Help

by Holley Holland

Together We Will Louisville and Southern Indiana’s (TWW-LSI) August focus is the environment and what each of us can do to solve the looming climate crisis.  
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Some of the main culprits contributing to today's environmental crisis are roughly identified as:

On a national level
  • The U.S. is responsible for 25% of the world's atmospheric carbon pollution
  • U.S. policies continue to be fossil fuel focused, and indebted to the fossil fuels industries
  • The current Republican Administration in DC continues to deny climate change and is actively repealing legislation implemented to protect the environment and Earth's inhabitants
On a local level
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  • Louisvillians contribute much more to the climate crisis than the average American
  • Louisville has many days each year when the air quality is so poor that people with respiratory problems are advised to stay indoors
  • Some areas within Metro Louisville have such extreme pollution that residential cancer rates are twice as high as other areas of the Metro
The good news is this: Together, We Can Solve Our Climate Crisis. TWW-LSI's August town hall will be focused on what we can do to protect our planet and its inhabitants, cut costs, improve comfort, and generate well paying U.S. jobs. The featured speaker is Sarah Lynn Cunningham.  

Sarah Lynn is a licensed environmental engineer and educator currently devoting her energies and passions to the Louisville Climate Action Network (LCAN).  LCAN's mission is to encourage and assist our local community in making day-to-day changes that reduce their impact on both the Metro area and the national and global environment.


Link HERE for simple steps you can take

While there are countless changes that can be made, ranging from light bulbs to public policy changes, how each of us can contribute to the solution can seem confusing and out of reach for the average citizen. Sarah Lynn promises to simplify the process and guide us through the many simple ways we can each reduce our carbon footprint (pollution) and simultaneously save money.

Sarah Lynn will make the discussion interactive and fun while leaving us feeling hopeful that we can make changes and contribute to positive solutions.

Please join us on Saturday, August 12th, from 2-4pm, at St. Matthews-Eline Library for this very informative and practical session on how you can personally contribute to a solution!
Register HERE

Additionally, LCAN offers free presentations for your groups.  Each LCAN presentation is tailored to your learning objectives. Teachers, we help you to show students why what you're teaching matters to them. Because multi-disciplinary teaching can reach more students, we  will incorporate climate-change science, impacts and solutions into any subject area, as needed.  


Request a Presenter HERE


                                                           Learn more and follow LCAN





Monday

TWW Louisville July Fundraiser - Education


The July focus for TWW LSI is education and our monthly charity drive promotes 
education policy and donation of school supplies for refugee students.

Gay Adelmann, this month's speaker, is the co-founder of two organizations (Dear JCPS, Save Our Schools) that could use your money and/or time toward their mission of better educational opportunities for all.  They need donations of printing and postage.  Cash donations are welcome toward basic startup and maintenance costs as well.


http://www.saveourschoolsky.org/donate/
http://dearjcps.com/advocate/donate/ 






Lynn Greene and her daughter have organized a school supply drive for refugee children, many of whom arrive to Louisville with almost nothing. 

There is an online money drive https://www.youcaring.com/kentuckyrefugees-863798
Or, this wishlist.  Items will be mailed directly from wishlist or you may bring them to our July Meeting on Sunday, July 16.  Register HERE






TWW Louisville Coffee Break Activism - July

Have you heard of ResistBot?
by Amanda Clark




A great first step in Activism - who knows where you will go from there!

ResistBot is an easy way to contact your legislators using your smart phone. Simply Text RESIST to 50409 and ResistBot will lead you through a series of prompts, and then fax your message to your Congressman, junior Senator, senior Senator, or any combination. It is designed to text you once a day and ask if you are interested in writing more messages.

As you continue to use it over time, you “level up” and unlock additional options. Launched in March, ResistBot has more than 730,000 users. During the congressional recess scheduled throughout August, users will be invited to organize or participate in protests in districts where members of Congress refuse to attend town halls. According to Resistbot cofounder Jason Putorti, “We send a lot of messages to Congress, probably 30,000 messages a day, but they all go to congressional offices where they sit and get tallied.”




ResistBot is sometimes a little bit buggy, and sometimes legislators just turn off their fax machines so your faxes can’t get through. However, most of the time it works wonderfully, and it is a simple and effective way to get your point across without talking to a person or springing for a stamp. When you use ResistBot, have a little patience with it--after all it’s a free service coded by volunteers, but have some fun with it! You can use it while walking your dog, waiting in line, during a TV commercial, while waiting for water to boil--anytime you have a couple of minutes free and something on your mind. You could even write a thank you note if one of your legislators does something right!

For more information:
check out their website here https://resistbot.io
Facebook

Monthly Focus Education 

Steps you can take to help save education in Kentucky
  •   Educate yourself on the impact of Charter Schools - Link HERE and HERE
  •   Stay up to date on the status of bills related to education by calling numbers at this       LINK
  •  Contact your legislator to oppose cuts to education and the spread of charter      schools. Click on the image to your legislator.    
LINK HERE
  •  Build a network of education advocates by talking to friends and neighbors and organizing letter writing and calling campaigns to keep charter schools at bay and public education fully funded.

Saturday

Education Cuts Never Heal




With a know-nothing billionaire heading the Department of Education and a Governor intent on defunding the educational system that is currently in place, Kentuckians of conscience need to speak out and mobilize to secure the future for our children and grandchildren. From cuts in programs to the establishment of charter schools, public education in Kentucky is under attack.

The case against charter schools is well documented and includes fraud (private individuals profiting from tax payer money), taking money from public schools, lack of accountability and a history of civil rights abuses when it comes to students. For more insight read https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/answer-sheet/wp/2014/05/20/a-dozen-problems-with-charter-schools/?utm_term=.fc9de2791999

Here are just a few steps you can take to help save education in Kentucky
  •   Educate yourself on the impact of Charter Schools - Link HERE
  •   Stay up to date on the status of bills related to education by calling numbers at this       LINK
  •  Contact your legislator to oppose cuts to education and the spread of charter      schools. 
  •  Build a network of education advocates by talking to friends and neighbors and organizing letter writing and calling campaigns to keep charter schools at bay and public education fully funded.

  Speak up, speak out, the next generation will thank you! 

TWW Louisville July Meeting - Education


Gay Adelmann will present an overview of issues currently faced by Kentucky’s educational systems. She is co-founder of both Save Our Schools Kentucky” (SOSKY) and Dear JCPS” (DJCPS).  She will highlight how the two grass roots organizations are working together to realize their goals, and how you can get involved to make a difference.  


Additionally, Gay will discuss the book Dark Money and introduce an online weekly book discussion that will kick of after our monthly meeting. Dark Money outlines the story of the Koch brothers' creation of the funding of an interlocking array of organizations that have been working to influence and ultimately control academic institutions, think tanks, the courts, statehouses and Congress, Gay will discuss the book Dark Money and introduce an online weekly book discussion that will kick off after our monthly meeting. 

________________________


Both SOSKY and DJCPS were started in response to educational concerns and frustrations, as well as the current national movement to privatize the educational system and reduce available funding in support of charter schools.  While they both share very similar and complementary missions, each has a slightly different focus, with 
  • SOSKY focused on state level educational issues and direct interaction with state legislators and administrators
  • DJCPS focused on the Jefferson County School System and bring its stakeholders together in order to create positive solutions for all students
Both organizations have plans to help people in other areas of Kentucky to start their own local chapters similar to Dear JCPS. These chapters work on making change from the ground up, including being involved at the local school board level and exposing corruption, self-dealing and cronyism.

Save Our Schools Kentucky (SOSKY) is a grass roots pro-public education 
stakeholder advocacy group for the state of Kentucky.  

SOSKY is dedicated to raising awareness of impending actions and legislation that could impact KY public schools and is actively building a support system to protect KY public schools from the battle cry of defunding schools, standardized testing and punishment, increasing class sizes, closing schools, blaming teachers, and implementing a privatized education system to the benefit of billionaire capitalists.

SOSKY beliefs include:

  • Every child should have equitable access to a high-quality, publicly funded education
  • Publicly funded schools should be democratically controlled by and accountable to their local communities, and uphold the highest values of those communities
  • Publicly funded education must focus exclusively on our children’s growth and development, not on making profits or punishing communities

    In support of SOSKY’s belief system, the group has identified the following priorities requiring its focus:
    • Encourage legislators to restore public schools funding to pre-recession levels, and fully fund schools and programs so that all students can be successful
    • Prevent charter schools from taking funds away from already struggling public schools
    • Seek authentic assessments that help children achieve their potential, while reducing the the dependence and obsession on high-stakes testing
    • Stop vouchers and scholarship tax credits from taking money from the public school system and shifting resources to private and religious schools
    Learn more and follow Save Our Schools KY

    ___________________________



    Dear JCPS’s (DJCPS) mission is to “Be Part of the Solution” and provide high-quality 
    and equitable public education opportunities for ALL STUDENTS.  

    The group employs methods such as:
    • Securing genuine Stakeholder Input from teachers, parents and students by participating in board meetings, posting open letters on the DJCPS website, conducting anonymous letter campaigns and email blasts, facilitating board members participation in “Shadow a Student” week, holding coffee talks and mixers, and developing safe forums for honest feedback without fear of retribution.
    • Ensuring a Fully Funded Public Education for ALL students within Jefferson County by opposing any actions that could divert resources, attention and support away from JCPS.  This includes actively monitoring public education funding and publicly funded charter schools legislation, pushing for legislation transparency and accountability, engaging and informing constituents about education legislation as well as how representative contact information, and diligently protecting resources budgeted for the most vulnerable populations within JCPS.
    • Reducing Emphasis on “High Stakes” Standardized Testing that has resulted in a resentful, non-collaborative environment that awards those who win the at a game and punishes other students and schools.  Instead, DJCPS strives to return educational emphasis to providing a portfolio of skills that students can successfully leverage into higher education opportunities, a more successful life, and a lifelong love of learning.  DJCPS works to achieve this goal by working with administrators and legislators and providing recommendations such as: eliminating high stakes testing in grades K through 2; limiting the amount of time spent testing within priority schools; and informing parents of the tests their students will take.   This approach is ultimately designed to educate and empower parents and students about the frequency and appropriateness of high stakes tests, as well as their rights, responsibilities and repercussions surrounding refusal of the tests.
    • Recognizing the need for and promoting Early Childhood Education.  DJCPS acknowledges that many issues within our schools today are a result of students not being adequately prepared to enter their age designated grade, and the educational and societal cost required to address this inadequacy.  DJCPS’s solution is to emphasize making sure students enter the school system prepared for kindergarten, and supports the district’s Vision 2020 statement.
    • Ensuring Accountability and Transparency through active communication between DJCPS, board members, and district leaders while attempting to resolve situations where accountability and transparency is less than desired.  DJCPS will additionally speak at board meetings or with media (TV, radio, website and social media) when reasonable expectations have not been met.
                                                   Learn more and follow Dear JCPS