Posted on 19 January 2010. Tags: Connecticut, economic justice, education, event, healthcare, homelessness, social justice, state budget
February 9th is fast approaching and the Permanent Commission on the Status of Women is looking for oral or written testimony from the public on issues that are important to women.
Any interested individuals may testify by submitting oral and/or written or electronic testimony. For oral testimony, sign-up will begin at 9:00 a.m in the same room as the hearing. Oral testimony should be no longer than 3 minutes. Read the full story
Posted in News
Posted on 28 December 2009. Tags: Connecticut, economic justice, economy, Hartford, Homeless, homelessness
Concerned residents rallied at Hartford City Hall in support of a no-freeze shelter downtown and for additional support to combat homelessness.
Click here to download the MP3
Posted in Features, RadioActive
Posted on 20 July 2009. Tags: arts, Connecticut, economic justice, economy, Hartford, poverty, theater

Greg Tate, founding co-artistic director, and actors Chinaza Uche and Brian Kopp discuss Hartbeat Ensemble’s Plays in the Parks 2009 and its theme: the economy hits home.
Click here to download the MP3
Posted in RadioActive
Posted on 15 June 2009. Tags: economic justice, politics, poverty, social justice
I don’t count. And maybe you don’t count either. What makes us important to the people that we the people, put in office are; what color our skin is, how much money and power we have, what gender we are and how old we are. On the surface, the landscape seems to be diversifying; but the attitudes, practices and injustices are the same. The same racist attitudes, sexist beliefs and flagrant discrimination towards our elderly population still exist. It is right before our eyes, as it has been for years; and still, and still, and still; we won’t crawl out of the abyss.
Listen, my people. I have been around a long time. I have not only seen discrimination and injustice; I have felt its sting more than once. And I’m feeling it again. What is currently happening in our state and local government in the way of budget cuts and backroom tactics is just that, discriminatory and unjust. The poor, people who are currently experiencing homelessness, the sick, the mentally ill and the aged are all getting hit hard. Social services are always the first to go. Public safety services are the next and then it goes into our schools with the removal of arts programming and transportation. It’s always the same. It never changes, and that is apparent again in the way our state and local government is trying to fix budgetary issues.
The thing is; they know exactly what they are doing, they know who will suffer and they just don’t care because it doesn’t further their own political careers or agendas. It doesn’t fund those special projects and it doesn’t get a certain populations vote. You’re fooling yourself if you think otherwise. You see – if you are poor, homeless, sick, in recovery, mentally ill or from another culture there is this punitive attitude that permeates. In the good old US of A, you’ve got to pull yourselves up by the bootstraps and if you don’t, if you can’t, you are penalized and punished by those in power. You are punished repeatedly by society as well. I think that attitude is part of the reason why many of our elected officials are getting away with obvious discriminatory practices towards and upon this States poor, ill and aged. Not only do politicians have this attitude, so does the constituency. But I ask this: how can we pull ourselves up, when we keep getting set up to fail? How can we help ourselves without the resources?
It’s a cycle that is long overdue to be broken.
It’s written somewhere that hope springs eternal, but based on what I’ve seen over and over again, my level of hope for this city and this state is waning fast. Until we the people change our attitudes towards racist ideals, gender and age discrimination; and how we treat our fellow human beings, it will remain the same.
Posted in Commentary
Comments