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Updated contact list of NC Partnership Specialists

NC Partnership SpecialistsContact NumberCounties Covered
Crawford, Lisa704-308-6344Cabarrus, Catawba, Gaston, Iredell, Lincoln, Mecklenburg, Rowan
Coley, Jan910-658-7626Cumberland, Harnett, Hoke, Lee, Moore, Richmond, Scotland
Ensley, Akilah919-333-2186Beaufort, Camden, Carteret, Craven, Dare, Greene, Hyde, Jones, Lenoir, Martin, Pamlico, Pitt, Tyrrell, Washington
Hyman, Constance910-583-1021Bladen, Brunswick, Columbus, Duplin, New Hanover, Onslow, Pender
Mackey, Christine919-327-7319Durham, Franklin, Granville, Orange, Person, Vance, Wake, Warren
Smith, Tosheka252-259-1845Bertie, Chowan, Currituck, Edgecombe, Gates, Halifax, Hertford, Nash, North Hampton, Pasquotank, Perquimans, Sampson, Wayne, Wilson
Suarez-Webster, Susan704-308-0250Anson, Montgomery, Stanly, Union
Tolan, Dayling919-696-9277Chatham, Johnson
Robel, Andrea828-423-4633Alleghany, Ashe, Avery, Buncombe, Burke, Caldwell, Cherokee, Clay, Graham, Haywood, Henderson, Jackson, Macon, Madison, McDowell, Mitchell, Polk, Rutherford, Swain, Transylvania, Watauga, Wilkes, Yancey
Villmarin, Teresa704-293-4830Alexander, Cleveland, Gaston, Mecklenburg, Randolph
Bond, Peter336-340-3077Alamance, Caswell, Davie, Davidson, Forsyth, Guilford, Rockingham, Stokes, Surry, Yadkin
Jacobs, Elizabeth910-658-7252Robeson

Print out sample Census forms and access census form guides

The Census Bureau has updated their website, and with it comes interactive sample Census forms in both English and Spanish. A recent webinar with the Nonprofit Voter Engagement Network has also confirmed that the Bureau will soon have sample forms available in Chinese, Vietnamese and Russian. In addition, their new website provides access to census form guides in 49 different languages. To access these, visit the Census Bureau homepage and click on the “Select a Language” drop down menu to select one of 49 languages. You will be redirected to a page where you can download the form in the language of your choosing. Be Counted sites will be equipped with these forms in all 49 languages.

Take the Census over the Phone!

The Census Bureau's Telephone Questionnaire Assistance Hotline is up and running and can be used to get counted. Households and individuals that have not received a census form or a house visit can use the hotline to phone in their information. For folks living in homes or apartments, it's best to wait until after July 10th, when door-to-door follow up ends, before using the hotline. IMPORTANT: The closer it gets to August 13th -- the end date for ALL census counting operations -- the harder it will be for the Census Bureau to add people to the count who phone in responses. This is because census workers are required to verify the phoned in address with a house visit. The house visit may not require a knock on the door, just a visual confirmation of the address. Hotline numbers: English: 1-866-872-6868 Chinese: 1-866-935-2010 Korean: 1-866-955-2010 Russian: 1-866-965-2010 Spanish: 1-866-928-2010 Vietnamese: 1-866-945-2010 TDD (Telephone Display Device for the hearing impaired): 1-866-783-2010 Puerto Rico (in English): 1-866-939-2010 Puerto Rico (in Spanish): 1-866-929-2010

NC groups: There's still time to become a QAC or Be Counted site

It's not too late for North Carolina community groups to becomes Questionnaire Assistance Centers or Be Counted sites. SCSJ will be coordinating with the State Census Liaison. Email your group's name and contact information to anita@scsj.org or call (919) 323-3380 ASAP if you or groups you know in NC want to become a QAC or Be Counted site.

New Online Mapping Tool for Targeting HTC Tracts

This interactive map provides amazing detail of data on why specific areas throughout the entire United States are "hard to count." The map not only pinpoints census tracts throughout the entire United States that the Census Bureau considers difficult to enumerate, it also displays the detailed demographic and housing characteristics that the Census Bureau believes will create challenges to achieving an accurate count in certain communities. The Leadership Conference on Civil Rights Education Fund is said to be producing a tutorial to help people use the map. Check out their census website (which has many other terrific resources) to find the tutorial when it becomes available. We would like to encourage you to email the creators at cunymapping@gc.cuny.edu and ask to add your group in the Local Resources tab which pops up when clicking on a certain tract. For instance, SCSJ has asked the creators to add our website for census tracts in Durham, NC.

In Solidarity with Haiti

The world mourns with Haiti in the aftermath of one of the deadliest earthquakes in the past century, devastating a country already considered one of the poorest in the Western Hemisphere. As we seek solidarity with the victims of this disaster, and as U.S. and U.N. troops pour into Haiti to deliver aid, we must ensure that said aid is delivered with transparency and accountability. There are a number of steps the Obama administration can take to ensure aid is truly effective. SCSJ appreciates the recommendations made by Bill Quigley, Legal Director of the Center for Constitutional Rights: http://louisianajusticeinstitute.blogspot.com/2010/01/ten-things-us-can-and-should-do-for.html

Voting Rights Victory for Incarcerated People in Washington State

On January 5th the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals issued an important ruling holding that the Voting Rights Act prohibits the State of Washington from denying the right to vote to persons in prison because of racial discrimination in that state's criminal justice system. The opinion in the Farrakhan v. Gregoire case has the immediate result of declaring that all citizens of Washington State, including all those currently in prison, have the right to register and vote. The opinion is significant for the rest of the country in at least two ways: First, it demonstrates the type of evidence that persuaded a court that there is racial discrimination in the criminal justice system. The factors present in Washington State are also true of other states. These Plaintiffs presented research by University of Washington sociologists demonstrating that blacks are 70 percent more likely — and Latinos and Native Americans 50 percent more likely — than whites to be searched in traffic stops. The research also showed that blacks are nine times more likely to be incarcerated than whites, despite the fact that the ratio of arrests for violent crime among blacks and whites is less than four-to-one. After reviewing the studies the Court held that the evidence "speak[s] to a durable, sustained indifference in treatment faced by minorities in Washington's criminal justice system — systemic disparities which cannot be explained by 'factors independent of race.' " The implication of this racial discrimination for voting rights is that 25 percent of black men in Washington State were ineligible to vote. Second, the case illustrates how the Voting Rights Act’s guarantee of equal participation in democracy extends beyond redistricting to all aspects of elections and voting. In the Voting Rights movement, we have become accustomed to thinking of at-large election methods as the main barrier to equal opportunity in the political process, but other modern day barriers remain. The court in this case held that discrimination in the criminal justice system, leading to racially disproportionate rates of disenfranchisement, is another institutional barrier to equal participation. Read the full text of the ruling here.

New Heirs' Property Fellow Joins SCSJ

We’re pleased to announce that Becky Jaffe has just joined the Southern Coalition as a fellow focusing on the heirs’ property problem. Heirs’ property refers to property that has passed down through successive generations of family members who have died without a will. As the property passes to each new generation, more and more people come to own the property in increasingly small, fractional interests. This ownership structure is a huge cause of black land loss in the South. Families often lose their land through bankruptcy proceedings, tax sales, foreclosure, and partition sales. Becky will work with staff attorney Chris Brook, using a combination of mediation, consensus-building, and legal skills, to help families with heirs’ property protect their land. Becky graduated cum laude from Harvard Law School. In the fall of 2009, she served as a lecturer for the Program on Negotiation at Harvard Law School. Before attending law school, she served in the Peace Corps in Uzbekistan, where she worked with rural Uzbek villagers to help them improve health conditions in their community. She received her B.A. from Yale University. Becky first worked with the Southern Coalition in the spring of 2009 as a clinical student from the Harvard Negotiation and Mediation Clinical Program (http://www.law.harvard.edu/academics/clinical/hnmcp/web/index.html). The clinical project involved helping the Pitt family resolve internal differences and formulate a plan for protecting their land. (