Archive for the ‘Black Lives Matter’ Category

Police Are Cutting Ties With Domestic Violence Programs That Support Black Lives Matter – HuffPost

Over the summer, Embrace, a domestic violence organization in northwestern Wisconsin, decided to hang Black Lives Matter signs at its four locations.

It was a small but meaningful sign of allyship amid a national reckoning on police violence and systemic racism. Embrace serves survivors of domestic violence and sexual assault in four rural, predominantly white counties Rusk, Washburn, Barron and Price and Katie Bement, the executive director, wanted to ensure people of color felt comfortable visiting it.

We were approaching it from an accessibility standpoint, she told HuffPost over Zoom on Thursday. We needed to show that were safe for those communities of color.

In September, Bement said, she began receiving emails from local law enforcement who were disturbed by the signs, interpreting them as anti-police. Around the same time, mass protests had erupted in Wisconsin over the police shooting of Jacob Blake. After some private back-and-forths, Embrace issued a formal statement online to explain its support for Black Lives Matter. If we want to end intimate partner violence and sexual violence, we must grapple with our countrys long history of racism, slavery, genocide, and colonization, the letter, posted to Facebook on Sept. 30, read. We hope you will join us in breaking the cycle of trauma created by racism and violence.

The goal was to clear up any misunderstandings, Bement said. Instead, it has led to an all-out revolt from local officials and law enforcement who have since cut ties with the domestic violence agency.

Nicole Neri for HuffPostKatie Bement, executive director of Embrace, poses at Rusk County Office & Safe Shelter in Ladysmith, Wisconsin. The agency recently lost both funding and police support after displaying Black Lives Matter signs at its four locations.

Eight days after Embraces statement was posted online, Barron Countyvoted to strip the organization of $25,000 in funding for 2021. The countys director of health and human services resigned from Embraces board of directors. Since then, a majority of the 17 law enforcement agencies that work with Embrace have indicated that they will no longer partner with the domestic violence organization, including all law enforcement in Washburn County. That means women who call the police for help, for instance, may not be referred to Embrace for help with safety planning, counseling and support.

Embrace is not the only domestic violence organization feeling the backlash. In multiple states, a number of groups are experiencing a similar reckoning with law enforcement agencies for backing the Black Lives Matter movement. Support is being withdrawn, alliances broken.

As an emotional dialogue over police brutality and racial justice has roiled the nation, domestic violence agencies have found themselves in an uneasy position. Founded on anti-violence principles, many have felt compelled to reflect on the ways in which their historical reliance on the criminal justice system has excluded and even harmed some victims, especially people of color. In internal meetings and on private email lists, domestic violence advocates have embarked on soul-searching. A working group of national leaders has even been formed to discuss the issue.

But staking out a public position that might be perceived as anti-police can be perilous for domestic violence groups, who rely on partnerships with local law enforcement and often receive funding from criminal justice sources. Some have still chosen to do so. In June, 47 state and territorial coalitions against sexual assault and domestic violencesigned a letter decrying the the consequences of centering police and prisons as the solution to violence and calling for greater investment in community resources.

At home, some of the signers faced backlash. In Nebraska, the Coalition to End Sexual and Domestic Violence was contacted by the state Sheriffs Association, which requested that it remove the coalitions name from the letter. It declined.

Nicole Neri for HuffPostTop left: Kendra Carillon, youth development advocate at Embrace, is shown working at the shelter. Top right: Binders and toys sit on shelves inside the shelter, which serves clients in four rural counties. Bottom left: A drawing from a child who stayed in the shelter is pinned up. Bottom right: Bement walks by a Maya Angelou quote on the wall.

Our organization has chosen to intentionally center our work with an anti-oppression lens, and to raise the voices of women of color, said Lynne Lange, the coalitions executive director. We will not shy away from that now.

In Idaho, the state Chiefs of Police Association, Sheriffs Association, and the Prosecuting Attorneys Association withdrew their support from the states coalition against sexual and domestic violence because it signed the letter, according to its executive director Kelly Miller.

We wonder how these responses will support the healing and safety of people who experience violence? she wrote in an email to HuffPost.

The experience of survivors is not a monolith, Miller added. Some who call the police experience safety and the form of justice they seek. Others experience revictimization as a result of implicit bias or discrimination, or choose not report to police, often fearing they would not be believed, nothing would be done, or that the criminal justice system would not otherwise offer what is most helpful to their healing, she said.

That complicated picture was captured in an anonymous survey of survivors conducted by Alliance for Hope International, a domestic violence organization based in California, in August. When survivors were asked if they had positive experiences with police officers or detectives during domestic violence incidents, almost 57% said yes. But when asked if theyd had a negative experience, 50% also said yes.

To date, Embrace is the most extreme example of a domestic violence agency losing law enforcement support over its anti-racism work.

To me, it sounded like they were declaring war on Embrace, none of which is good for victims and survivors, said Gricel Santiago-Rivera, the interim executive director of Wisconsins state coalition, End Domestic Abuse.

Embrace has three outreach offices and one shelter serving victims from all four counties, a geographic area almost the size of Connecticut. In 2019, it provided services to almost a thousand people.It is the only domestic violence agency in the four-county area.

While the counties are around 95% white, a reservation for the St. Croix Chippewa Tribe falls partially within Embraces service area, and a large community of Somali Muslim refugees reside in Barron County. According to Embraces annual report, around 15% of survivors seen by the organization are Black, Indigenous or people of color.

Exactly how Embrace will be affected by the police revolt will vary from county to county, police department to police department. In Barron County, Sheriff Chris Fitzgerald told a local news outlet that while his office would no longer partner with Embrace on projects, it would continue to refer victims until an alternative was found. Some other police departments in Barron have indicated they will not make referrals, Bement said. Either way, the domestic violence agency will have less money to work with, as the county has withdrawn $25,000 in funding.

Nicole Neri for HuffPostIf you put the most marginalized and oppressed person in our community at the center of our work and you work towards their safety and liberation, its going to necessitate the safety and liberation of everybody else, said Bement.

In Rusk County, where the shelter is located, law enforcement has not changed its relationship with Embrace. In Price County, two departments have indicated to Bement that they are looking for different service options.

In Washburn County, all law enforcement has cut ties with Embrace.

On Oct. 8, the day after Barron County stripped Embraces funding, Bement received an email from Washburn County Chief Deputy Nick Helstern, notifying her that the Washburn County Sheriffs Office, Shell Lake Police Department, Spooner Police Department, Minong Police Department and the Birchwood Police Department had withdrawn their partnership from Embrace.

Bement said police in Washburn County will no longer refer victims to Embrace for help. They asked us to come pick up all of our brochures and referral materials because they dont need them anymore, she said.

HuffPost reached out to law enforcement in Washburn County for comment and did not receive a response.

Among her biggest concerns is how police will handle high-risk domestic violence cases. In the four counties that Embrace serves, police are encouraged to screen victims for risk of lethality using a questionnaire, and to immediately refer high-risk victims to a domestic violence advocate for safety planning or shelter. Lethality assessments, as they are called, have been found to reduce domestic violence homicides.

Bement said she did not know what police in Washburn County will do now when they interact with victims who are at high risk of homicide, as Embrace is the only domestic violence agency in the county.

A lot of times, what those calls result in is either somebody being transported to our shelter, or using a hotel voucher system that we have set up in each of our counties, she said. Were extremely worried about this collaborative program in particular not existing as we believe it saves lives.

Embrace has set up a GoFundMepage to raise money. October is National Domestic Violence Awareness month.

Bement said she never expected the level of pushback that Embrace has received from law enforcement. She believed the Black Lives Matter statement would inspire tough, important conversations with Embraces partners, she added, not having her budget held hostage, and ultimately victims denied services.

The best practices philosophy in our field is if you put the most marginalized and oppressed person in our community at the center of our work and you work towards their safety and liberation, its going to necessitate the safety and liberation of everybody else, she said. We felt we couldnt stay silent and neutral.

Need help? In the U.S., call 1-800-799-SAFE (7233) for theNational Domestic Violence Hotline.

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Police Are Cutting Ties With Domestic Violence Programs That Support Black Lives Matter - HuffPost

6 Reasons Why Trump is Behind in the Polls: Black Lives Matter Analyst Weighs In – City Watch

DECISION 2020Racial tension amid the backdrop of a pandemic that has affected disproportionate numbers of Black and Brown people could significantly impact the outcome of the 2020 presidential election.

In fact, according to legal, political and race relations analyst Atty. Malik Zulu Shabazz, The race issue will be the albatross that will sink Trumps electoral boat.

Atty. Shabazz outlines six reasons why he thinks President Trump will lose his bid for re-election:

There will be no miraculous comeback for the ego-maniac President of the United States, Atty. Shabazz says. For the man who lusted and craved the attention of the top spotlight in the world and who tweeted with no regard for policy or decency, the chickens have come home to roost.

Through his work as an attorney, author, activist and organizer,Malik Zulu Shabazz has maintained a frontline position in the fight for justice with cutting-edge lawyering and otherwise exemplary work as a Black professional.Shabazz has established a stellar careerwith anear-unparalleled record of accomplishments in effective organizing, lecturingand litigating.

He is currently theNational President of Black Lawyers for Justice and Black Rights Matter (www.blackrightsmatter.org) andcontinues to make great strides in the legal field. Throughout his career as anactivist,he hasmaintained a Civil Rights practice and personal injury practice that serves and gives justice to victims.Hissuccessful cases haveincluded The Million Youth March Court battles,Washington D.C.public school andjail abuse cases,consumer racism cases,and now several high-profile Federal Court cases currently fillhis calendar. Shabazz has been featuredon many major television news broadcasts and in printed news outlets. He is also the author of the long-awaitedThe Book of Khallid,a biographical account of the notorious Dr. Khallid Abdul Muhammad.

(Phoebe Emmanuel is with Black Lawyer for Justice.)

-cw

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6 Reasons Why Trump is Behind in the Polls: Black Lives Matter Analyst Weighs In - City Watch

Black Lives Matter Just not in Wiltshire, according to local teens – Euro Weekly News

A RACE row has erupted after teenagers demanded a Black Lives Matters message should be posted in a disused phone box in their home town of Wiltshire.

Urchfont, near Salisbury Plain in Wiltshire has a population of around 1,000 people, but it has become the setting of an international race row.

Teenagers have accused village elders of racism after they prevented the youngsters from posting messages supporting theBLMmovement.

Urchfont Parish Council was asked by a group of young people, upset by the death ofGeorge Floyd in America if they could use the box to create a historical information point.

The teenagers who went down all appropriate channels, have been told the plan has been rejected by five votes to three.

Emily Kinnaird told the meeting, Me and my friends thought it would be beneficial if Urchfont showed its support for the Black community.

I think it is important to use education to raise awareness of racism especially in predominantly white Wiltshire.

However, a majority of the local council claimed, The telephone box should be used only for local community purposes, as such this proposal covering the wider issue of racism should be rejected.

Thank you for taking the time to read this news article Black Lives Matter Just not in Wiltshire, according to local teens. For more UK daily news, Spanish daily news, and Global news stories, visit the Euro Weekly News home page.

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Black Lives Matter Just not in Wiltshire, according to local teens - Euro Weekly News

Lizzo and David Letterman Discuss the Black Lives Matter Movement – HYPEBEAST

A clip from David Lettermans My Next Guest Needs No Introduction released yesterday, previewing the hosts conversation with Lizzo from the upcoming third season. The pair speak on the Black Lives Matter movement and specifically Lizzos recollections of Tamir Rice, who was killed by police in Cleveland in 2014, and Jamar Clark, who was killed by police in Minneapolis in 2015.

As a Black citizen of this country Ive been heartbroken by the way weve been treated and seen my entire life, the artist says in the video. The artist goes on to explain the pain of watching people politicize the murder of a child following the death of Rice. She adds that the recent protests and the allyship of white Americans have been encouraging to her, after a long period of numbness and hopelessness. I cant help but be optimistic and hopeful, she says.

Lizzo has been a strong voice for racial justice in the last few months and wore gown printed with the word VOTE to deliver a powerful speech on the power of using our voices to affect change at last nights 2020 Billboard Music Awards.

The third season of My Next Guest Needs No Introduction will be available on Netflix on October 23. The season will also include interviews with Kim Kardashian-West, Robert Downey Jr., and Dave Chappelle.

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Lizzo and David Letterman Discuss the Black Lives Matter Movement - HYPEBEAST

Iqaluit councillor resigns over social media post about Black Lives Matter – Kamloops This Week

IQALUIT, Nunavut An Iqaluit city councillor has resigned over comments she made on social media last week about the Black Lives Matter movement.

At a meeting Tuesday night, city council unanimously passed a motion calling for the resignation of Malaiya Lucassie.

Lucassie issued a statement Wednesday saying she would resign immediately.

The resignation comes after Lucassie's father, Nunavut legislature member Patterk Netser, made a Facebook post last week criticizing Black women for having abortions. Soon after, the premier stripped Netser of his cabinet portfolios.

Lucassie commented on her father's Facebook post. She said "all lives matter" and questioned why there wasn't a similar movement to Black Lives Matter for Indigenous people.

In her statement Wednesday, Lucassie apologized to the Black community for her comments.

"The city has portrayed me as an Inuk with a racist attitude. Please note that I am not against anyone or the BLM movement. I support and understand the movement as a member of a minority," she wrote.

"All I tried to say and sorry if it was misinterpreted is, why did we not have anything done for the lives of Inuit that have been murdered, raped, and abused? Why was there no such movement?"

She also said minorities "are often told to keep our mouths shut."

"It's time we stand up together and work together rather than going against each other."

The discussion around Lucassie's comments was held in-camera, but all eight councillors voted publicly in favour of her resignation.

Lucassie did not attend the meeting.

Janet Pitsiulaaq Brewster, Iqaluit's deputy mayor, made a public statement before council went in-camera.

"As soon as we hear 'all lives matter' or 'what about Inuit lives', it gives voice and power to anti-Blacks and promotes racism for all racialized groups, as racism affects us all," Pitsiulaaq Brewster said.

"I for one feel honoured that the Black Lives Matter movement has come to Nunavut and has specifically elevated the issue of Inuit rights along with Black and all Indigenous lives."

In a statement, Coun. Romeyn Stevenson said Lucassie's comments breached the city's code of conduct.

"The city council for the municipality of Iqaluit does not abide with the comments that were made by Councillor Lucassie," Stevenson's statement says.

"The council does not condone racism or gender violence and does not accept a world where such comments, or comments such as those made over the weekend, are let go without censure."

Lucassie was first elected to Iqaluit's city council in 2019.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 14, 2020.

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Iqaluit councillor resigns over social media post about Black Lives Matter - Kamloops This Week