Please distribute widely.
Please register by May 31,
2007
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Green
Party of the United States
2007Annual National Meeting, Reading PA
Green for a
change!
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Dismantling
Racism Workshop
July 11 – July 13, 2007
Registration and Pledge
Form
Return to:
Isabelle Buonocore
National Delegate Coordinator
Pennsylvania Task Force
2007 Green Party Annual National Meeting
- Full name:
- Email address:
- Phone number:
- Of the following categories, write the letter of the one
that best describes how you would identify yourself in terms of
race-color: a. color b.
white
- Are you committed to attending the full workshop,
beginning with dinner at 5 PM, July 11 and ending at 12:00 PM, July 13?
- The Registration Fee is from $10 to $20 based on ability
to pay, and is due the first night of the workshop. Please
specify the amount, from $10 to $20, that you can afford to pay:
$
- Pledges are being accepted to help pay the travel expenses
of the workshop leaders who are donating their time.
Pledges in any amount (starting at $1.00) will be collected the first
night of the workshop if you attend the workshop. If you can pledge an amount,
please specify the amount here: $
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Dismantling Racism
Workshop
This is an intensive workshop for people who
work together for change.
There is value in broadening and deepening candidate, party
leader, staff, and volunteer awareness of racial, ethnic, cultural, and class
diversity. This workshop will provide a safe space to begin
the journey of exploring our differences and ways we can work as individuals to
examine structures, policies, and attitudes that allow racism to exist in our
organizations and in our communities.
Through a special series of activities, role
playing, and discussions, workshop attendees will learn to dismantle racism. The
workshop is designed to allow time to reflect on issues of race and class, and
think about how to overcome the barriers that race, class, and culture have on
our organizing efforts, issues campaigns, and our interaction with a diverse
public.
This workshop can accommodate up to 40 participants. The
entire workshop takes about 18 hours. Participants must make
a commitment to attend the entire
workshop.
Schedule for Dismantling
Racism Workshop
Wednesday, July 11, 2007
5:00 PM Dismantling Racism Workshop begins w Dinner (first
day)
6:00 PM Dismantling Racism Workshop continues w
instructions/goals
7:00 PM Dismantling Racism Workshop continues w film
“Crash”
Thursday, July 12, 2007
8:30 AM – 8:30 PM Dismantling Racism Workshop continues
(second day)
Friday, July 13, 2007
8:30 AM – 12:00 PM Dismantling Racism Workshop (third &
last day)
Registration is open to all persons attending the annual
national meeting.
It is also open to the public. We invite
residents, activists, candidates, elected and non-elected government officials,
and school faculty and staff to attend. This workshop is a
rare opportunity and a gift.
Register without delay to reserve your slot.
The workshop is limited to 40 participants.
Persons who register must self-identify as either a person
of “color” or “white.” The workshop cannot
be held unless 25 to 50 percent of the participants are people of color.
Workshop
Leaders: Bill Price and Rita Harris
Bill Price and Rita Harris are professionals who are
donating their time and service for this workshop.
They are
not sponsored or being paid by any employer or any organization.
In order to assist them with traveling expenses to Reading, pledges are
being taken and donors will be announced in the program booklet.
Please make a pledge, even if you can’t attend the workshop, by
contacting Isabelle Buonocore at
215-467-9065 or by email at
isab...@gpanc.org.
Bill Price was a resident of the southern West
Virginia coal fields for more than 30 years. He has experienced first-hand the
impacts when irresponsible coal mining methods bring economic and environmental
devastation to low-income communities in the coal-producing region of Central
Appalachia.
Bill became active in the environmental movement in 2001
after the community where he lived was heavily damaged by flooding. The failure
of a large sediment pond on a mountaintop removal mining operation directly
above this small community contributed to the severity of the flood, which
destroyed and damaged several hundred homes in the valley
downstream.
In 2003, Bill began working with the Sierra
Club's Environmental Justice Program. As the Central Appalachian EJ Resource
Coordinator, he works in coal-producing areas of six states (WV, KY, VA, OH, PA
and TN) with members of grassroots organizations involved in various
coal-related issues. Bill has co-facilitated Dismantling
Racism workshops throughout the Sierra Club for two years now and also offers
training in Diversity and Leadership Development. He now lives in Charleston WV
and works locally on anti-racism initiatives as well as other social justice
issues.
Rita J. Harris is a long-time social justice
activist/advocate and a lifelong Memphian. The Sierra Club,
the oldest environmental organization in the country, hired her in 1999 as the
first of nine current national environmental justice community
organizers. She has worked on air toxics and a myriad of
environmental justice issues for the past 16 years.
Currently, Ms. Harris heads up the Sierra Club’s Memphis, Tennessee,
Environmental Justice Program office and works specifically with low-income and
people-of-color communities dealing with what they feel are environmental
injustices most impacting their lives. She recently helped
design and launch an e-Learning course on Environmental Justice for the Sierra
Club.
Rita has worked over the past 20 years with a number of
non-profit organizations including the NAACP, Girl Scouts, Mississippi River
Basin Alliance, Mid-South Peace & Justice Center and others.
Wherever she has worked she has attempted to make organizations aware of
the benefits they may be missing out on if they are not fully engaging the total
community. Initially trained by the Peace Development Fund’s
Dismantling Racism trainers in the early 1990s, Rita has been a participant in
many workshops that deal directly with racism, prejudice reduction, and cultural
sensitivity. She firmly believes each of us can work as
change agents to make a better society that is fully inclusive of all
people. Her present work includes the planning and
facilitation of Dismantling Racism and diversity/inclusion training for staff,
volunteer and community leaders. She has led numerous
workshops, facilitated discussions, and led training to connect people to move
beyond invisible barriers.
Rita believes that average citizens, regardless to their
race or class, must be empowered to speak for themselves and be included in
decisions that impact their lives and their communities. As a
part of her daily work Rita has been a driving force and leader in promoting
cultural competency and inclusion. In 2006, she was appointed
to the Sierra Club’s Diversity Council, which is planning the course of action
to work toward a more diverse and multicultural organization.
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