Featured Entries

SaveFreemanBeach.Com

SaveFreemanBeach.com is a new website about the history of Freeman Beach in an effort to save this beachfront property from development. Visit http://www.savefreemanbeach.com

Recession Adds To Hurdles Facing U.S. Census

A year from now, the U.S. will conduct its decennial population count. The findings are used to re-apportion congressional districts, disburse federal funding — even decide where new traffic lights go. But the economic crisis threatens to make this daunting task even harder. There is special concern about minority groups, which are traditionally hard to count. Listen to story by clicking link above.

NC Amnesty International Conference

Amnesty International USA presents North Carolina State Conference 2009 Sunday, April 19th North Carolina State University 10am-4pm at Caldwell Lounge 2221 Hillsborough Street, Raleigh Join Local Activists and Amnesty Members for AIUSA’s Annual State Conference Featuring a Keynote Address by: Hannah Gill Center for Global Initiatives, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill ~Network with other activists and representatives from other organizations~ Learn about key issues and skills such as:
  • How to Raise Awareness about Immigrant Rights and the impact of 287G
  • TASER Abuse: How to Organize Delegations to Promote TASER Reform
  • Failed System: The Death Penalty from a Former Death Row Inmate
  • Develop Your Lobbying Skills: End the US Torture Program and Demand Accountability
  • Lessons from the Obama Campaign: How to Recruit and Retain Members
  • The Gaza Crisis: Understanding the Background
HOW TO REGISTER Conference begins at 10am, Registration begins at 9am $10 for non-members, $5 for members/students Registration for non-members includes a complimentary t-shirt and discounted membership No one turned away, please alert Mana Kharrazi if the fee presents an obstacle to your attendance To pre-register, contact Mana Kharrazi: mkharrazi@aiusa.org

New Hill Sewage Treatment Plant

** UPDATE 2/12/10: SCSJ releases its response to the Army Corps of Engineers Final Environmental Impact Study **

New Hill is a small unincorporated community in Wake County, NC. In October 2004, New Hill was selected by Western Wake Partners, a partnership between the governments of Cary, Apex, Holly Springs, and Morrisville, as the site where a new sewage treatment plant would be located. There are clear environmental injustices in this case. The population surrounding the site is upwards of 75% ethnic/racial minorities. Ironically, the community does not currently have access to sewer services, and only the property that is directly adjacent to the plant would be connected to it. The community has also been targeted for negative environmental impacts before - the Shearon Harris nuclear power plant, one of only three in the state, is also located there. The towns represented in Western Wake Partners are all far from the borders of New Hill and their populations include a much lower percentage of ethnic/racial minorities of about 19% on average. The New Hill Community Association has been fighting this plan for several years and is now represented by SCSJ. We will be holding community meetings and pursuing legal strategies as the case goes forward. SIGN THE ONLINE PETITION TO SUPPORT THE NEW HILL COMMUNITY AND END THIS CASE OF ENVIRONMENTAL RACISM
Updates: [view:updates=Node=40]
Resources: [view:resources=Node=40]
Press Coverage Archive: [view:press_coverage=Node=40]
Media: [view:media=Node=40]

Sign Up for SCSJ Updates

Please fill out this form to receive updates from SCSJ.









Please select any subject areas in which you would like to receive specific updates.

Census & Redistricting

Criminal Justice

Environmental Justice

Heirs' Property

Human Rights

Immigrant Rights

Media Justice

Voting Rights

BBC Interview with Binyam Mohammed

From This site links to an interview with Binyam Mohammed from the BBC News. SCSJ helped an investigator from a UK Human Rights organization investigate…

Moncure Worker Solidarity Day

IAM members of Local 369 at Moncure Plywood in Moncure, N.C., have been on strike since July 20 after the company committed numerous Unfair Labor Practices including coercing union members to withdraw from the union or lose their jobs. Moncure management then unilaterally implemented a contract which included mandatory 60-hour work weeks, the elimination of almost all aspects of seniority, and unfair increases in health premiums. Lastly, with the consent of its corporate owner, Atlas Holdings, our members were permanently replaced. Justice for Moncure Striking Workers Day of Solidarity, Monday, March 16th 11 AM – JOIN THE PICKET LINE at the Moncure Plywood Plant on Corinth Road in Moncure, NC. (They want youth and students to make strong showing at this time!) 1PM – HAVE LUNCH provided by the union with the strikers of Local W369, IAM. 3 PM – JOIN A CAR CARAVAN leaving the Moncure plant to go to the Pittsboro courthouse to rally at 5 PM – JOIN THE SOLIDARITY RALLY at the Pittsboro courthouse where the Chatham Board of County Commissioners will meet at 6 p.m. 6 PM - JOIN US AT THE CHATHAM BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS MEETING to sup- port a resolution that urges Moncure Plywood to bargain with the union in good faith for a just contract. SOLIDARITY WITH IAM LOCAL W369 STRIKING WORKERS CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE!

Orange County Heirs' Property Report

From This report gives detailed information about Heirs’ Property holdings in Orange County, NC. This report gives detailed information about Heirs’ Property holdings in Orange…

A blow against exclusion

CHAPEL HILL -- This month a jury in Zanesville, Ohio, awarded $10.9 million to residents of a mostly black neighborhood after finding that the local government discriminated against the community by denying access to public water service, even though it provided water to nearby predominantly white neighborhoods. Low-income and minority neighborhoods across the country face similar discriminatory patterns of municipal exclusion. The verdict in Ohio recognized the disparate treatment that the Cole Run community suffered, and it provided communities nationwide with a potent tool in their struggle against racially discriminatory land-use policies and practices. The case has also highlighted an issue that results not only in inadequate public services, but also in the social and political exclusion of these communities. The Zanesville verdict has a larger potential as well: It presents a unique opportunity for state and local governments to review and revise laws and policies that have created and entrenched similar patterns of discrimination and exclusion, and to aggressively move to remedy the ongoing impacts of such patterns. The verdict also encourages the ongoing efforts of community-based groups to continue to push for inclusion, equal treatment and full participation in their communities. The jury's action should remind those who don't live in excluded neighborhoods that such practices diminish the well-being and quality of their lives and prevent the community from achieving the full realization of its collective potential. Significant work on this issue is being done in North Carolina, where it is believed that more than 31 minority communities are facing some form of municipal exclusion. To document and identify these communities, the UNC Center for Civil Rights has worked with the Mebane-based Cedar Grove Institute for Sustainable Communities, which provided maps and expert testimony in the Zanesville case, and the Legal Aid Clients Council of N.C. In Moore County, the center works with communities that have achieved success through grass-roots organizing to obtain municipal services and increase awareness of their plight. The Jackson Hamlet neighborhood's advocacy led Pinehurst to provide street lights and water and sewer services, and to pursue annexation of the community, which would allow residents to receive additional municipal services and vote in local elections. Through organized community action, both the Midway community, working with the town of Aberdeen, and the Waynor Road community, working with Southern Pines, secured water and sewer services, an annexation commitment and increased political participation in local government. In addition, the center helped each of these organizations conduct community assessments, research funding sources for municipal services, counsel residents on their legal and political rights and become tax-exempt entities, thereby enabling them to qualify for grants to continue their advocacy efforts. Several other organizations in North Carolina, including the Southern Moore Alliance for Excluded Communities, N.C. Rural Communities Assistance Project and the Southern Coalition for Social Justice are already assisting excluded communities to meet the challenges those communities face. These organizations and communities are bringing tangible improvements, sustainability and inclusion through a range of strategies to help remedy the discriminatory effects of current land use practices. There remains much work to be done; many other communities still face the effects of exclusion, which are broad and deeply ingrained. A comprehensive, coordinated effort is necessary to combat the issue. Forward-thinking local and state governments, progressive community groups, lawyers and other nonprofit organizations should seize the awareness and attention raised by the Zanesville verdict to vigorously press the issue in their own communities. (Julius L. Chambers, former chancellor of N.C. Central University, is the director of the UNC Center for Civil Rights. Mark Dorosin is a senior attorney at the center.)