Featured Entries

Es su Esquina

From Reportaje sobre la ordenanza en Carrboro que les prohíbe quedarse en la esquina de jornaleros después de las 11:00 de la mañana. Chris Brook,…

Carrboro to revisit anti-lingering

From The Carrboro Citizen covers the anti-loitering ordinance. A letter sent by SCSJ and several other organizations criticizes the ordinance for its unconstitutionality. The Carrboro…

Meeting focuses on day laborers

From The Chapel Hill News covers a workshop held to find a solution to a dispute over a gathering spot for day laborers on the…

Greensboro moves forward with landfill, CEEJ meets tonight to discuss next steps

The Greensboro City Council is pushing forward with a limited plan to reopen the White Street Landfill to municipal solid waste. According to the Greensboro News and Record, the council voted 4-3 to seek new proposals that would only allow for the use of the presently existing phases. The current injunction against the city bars it from hiring a private firm to expand the landfill. T. Dianne Bellamy-Small, Robbie Perkins and Jim Kee voted against seeking new proposals. Two members were excused from the vote due to conflicts of interest. Citizens for Economic and Environmental Justice will be holding a community meeting tonight to talk about the landfill at Presbyterian Church of the Cross, corner of Phillips Ave. and English Street (1810 Phillips Avenue, Greensboro, NC 27405-5236). SCSJ's Chris Brook will be there to discuss the case thus far.

Buen Pastor Vigil Unites Dreams

They say prayers are the same in every language. This was the hope behind the vigil held at Pullen Memorial Church on Thursday, June 16. Members of Raleigh’s Buen Pastor gathered together with members of the community to unite their voices and speak out against the violation of human rights. Prior to the vigil, SCSJ organized a press conference for Buen Pastor to share their stories with the media and announce the filing of a complaint with the DHS Office of Civil Rights and Civil Liberties over the incident. Coming home from a church conference in April 2010, 44 congregation members, including small children, were detained by Border Patrol agents. They say they were held for over six hours, until dawn, and were mocked, humiliated, and denied the right to a lawyer and interpreter. They told SCSJ that the police forced them to sign documents that they could not understand by saying that they would take custody of their children. “We were intimidated. We are frightened,” said Jeremias Villar, one of the members of Buen Pastor. Border Patrol allegedly claimed that, when they stopped the van, they thought the congregation members were illegally crossing the Mexican-American border. The group was 300 miles from the border at the time of their detention. Six church members were deported immediately. SCSJ’s Elizabeth Simpson is representing the group in immigration court. While members of the congregation shared their reflections of this horrific incident, the atmosphere was one of hope and progress. Even if you did not speak Spanish, it didn’t take an interpreter to understand the strong sense of community inside those walls, a community speaking of unity, peace and action that can fight injustice and restore dignity.

“Progressive” Carrboro Getting Criticism It Is Unaccustomed To

In 2007, Carrboro passed an ordinance forbidding day laborers from seeking work at the corner of Jones Ferry and Davie Roads outside of the hours of 5am and 11am. On Friday, SCSJ attorney Chris Brook sent a letter to the Carrboro town attorney Michael Brough and the Board of Aldermen explaining the unconstitutionality of the ordinance. The city cannot outright bar people from gathering in any one place; ordinances like these can only target "specific criminal intent." Recently, the North Carolina Court of Appeals struck down a more narrowly tailored “anti-loitering ordinance” in the city of Winston-Salem. Judith Blau, Director of the Chapel Hill & Carrboro Human Rights Center works with day laborers to expand their work opportunities. Blau has been outspoken opposing the ordinance. She is particularly bothered by the police practice of herding the men off the corner at 11am. "They would herd them from one spot to another. It's dehumanizing," Blau said. The letter and press release are available at the provided links and the "press release" section of this website: A PDF of the letter sent to the Carrboro Town Attorney is available at: http://bit.ly/maTina This release and any additional associated documents can be found at: https://southerncoalition.org/node/476