| No Need Among You Conference September 11-13 Travis Park Church
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| No Need Among You Conference September 11-13 Travis Park Church
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The Red Bench: Aging
Please join us for a Red Bench conversation on the topic of Aging on Tuesday, September 17, 2019 from 6:30-8:30pm at Fo Guang Shan Xiang Yun Sing Temple (6720 N Capital of Texas Hwy, Austin, TX 78731). Parking is available on the premises and a light vegetarian meal will be served. If you would like to attend, please be sure to RSVP.
100th Birthday & Fall Kickoff
League of Women Voters Austin Area invites you to celebrate our 100th Birthday at our Fall Kickoff Event on Sunday, September 22nd. Doors open at 12:45pm and the day’s activities will include a 100 Years Strong celebration (featuring cake and beverages), remarks from our leadership, a special performance, and more! Free admission and parking. Open to the public.
| RSVP Today! |
The League of Women Voters, a nonpartisan political organization, encourages the informed and active participation of citizens in government and influences public policy through education and advocacy.
League of Women Voters Austin Area
512.451.6710
Empowering Voters. Defending Democracy.
United Methodist Environmental Justice Training Coming to Austin Sept 26-29, 2019
The General Board of Global Ministries of the United Methodist Church is hosting an EarthKeepers training at First United Methodist Church in Austin, TX September 26-29, 2019. Global Ministries EarthKeepers equips United Methodists to develop environmental initiatives in their churches and communities, and connects them with a broader community of United Methodists who are actively engaged in creation care. Training topics will include eco-theology, anti-racism, strategies for social change, and United Methodist resources. We’ll also explore the intersection of climate change and migration with leaders from San Antonio Justice for Our Neighbors and Texas Impact.
During the training, participants will develop a plan to implement a project in their churches and/or communities. After the training, participants will have the opportunity to apply for a grant of up to $10,000 to support their projects.
Training, food and lodging expenses during the event are paid for by Global Ministries. Participants are responsible for their own travel, parking and incidental expenses. Local participants may sleep at home.
Global Ministries EarthKeepers come from annual conferences around the United States and range in age from 13-99. Participants ages 13-18 may attend with a participating parent or guardian.
More information and application are at: www.umcmission.org/EarthKeepers
2019 State of the Safety Net Forums
Commemorating the 10th Anniversary of the CAN Dashboard Report
The CAN Dashboard provides an overview of the socio-economic well-being of Austin and Travis County. The Dashboard reports on community conditions relating to 17 indicators in four different goal areas 1. Our Basic Needs are Met 2. We are Safe, Just and Engaged 3. We are Healthy 4. We Achieve Our Full Potential. In 2019, CAN is commemorating the 10th edition of the CAN Dashboard by hosting a series forums to assess the “State of the Safety Net” using dashboard data to asses community well-being, highlight positive outcomes and identify areas requiring further attention, analysis and action. These forums provide an opportunity for CAN staff, partners, Dashboard Steering Committee members and community members to discuss successes and challenges that our community has experienced over the last 10 years and how these relate to the challenges of today. Please register below if you would like to attend the forums that are already scheduled. Space is limited, so register early!
Safety Net Forum #3: Safety, Justice & Engagement Indicators
September 18th, 2019
Including Perspectives on Criminal Justice Indicators by:
Mary Mergler – Texas Appleseed
Roger Jeffries – Travis County Justice Planning
Perspectives on Civic Engagement by:
Dr. Patrick Bixler, U.T. RGK Center for Philanthropy & Community Service
Safety Net Forum #4: Achieving Our Full Potential Indicators
October 16, 2019
Join Us to Discuss Education and Economic Indicators Such as Kindergarten Readiness, High School Graduation Rates, Postsecondary Success Rates, etc.
If you have questions about the forums or want to help with the planning of these forums, please contact CAN’s Program Coordinator: JelinaTunstill.
Saturday, September 28 at 9:00 a.m.
The Long Center, 701 W Riverside Dr, Austin, TX 78704
NAMIWalks is an inspiring fun, family- and dog-friendly event and there is no cost to register.
Featuring:
Together we are changing the way our community addresses mental health.
There are multiple ways you can make a difference with NAMIWalks: as a sponsor, committee member, team captain, team member, individual walker, or volunteer! However you participate in NAMIWalks, you will be joining NAMI’s movement to raise awareness of mental illness and raise funds for our mission to help individuals and families right here in Central Texas.
https://www.namiwalks.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=donorDrive.event&eventID=830
On behalf of Interfaith Action of Central Texas (iACT), we cordially invite you to our fall fundraiser A Night Under One Sky on Tuesday, September 24, 2019 at UMLAUF Scuplture Garden and Museum at 6:30pm. Join us for a night of music, dinner and dialogue in celebration of the relationships we have, and those we hope to build. Let us come together to appreciate our unity.
Tickets: https://interland3.donorperfect.net/weblink/weblink.aspx?name=E144253&id=7
Together at the Table
Hunger & Poverty Summit
at Baylor University
Save the Date!
SOCA Luncheon – November 1, 2019
Foundation for the Homeless is thrilled to announce
Ann Howard the first Executive Director at
ECHO – Ending Community Homelessness Coalition
will be the Keynote Speaker at our annual
Spirit of Compassion Awards Luncheon
Friday November 1, 2019 at Hotel Ella!
Ann Howard was a co-founder of ECHO, and has been credited with
building effective collaborations to address homelessness, and more
specifically helping to end homelessness among veterans in Austin.
Ann Howard is praised for her advocacy and effective leadership of ECHO,
and known for her ability to listen to others on an issue that can cause
sharp public division.
We hope that you can join us for this amazing event!
Thank you Travis Park Church for your Migrant Ministry
Methodist Federation for Social Action (MFSA) program that meets monthly on the second Sunday of each month at noon. MFSA mobilizes clergy and laity within The United Methodist Church to take action on issues of peace, poverty and people’s rights within the church, the nation and the world.
Working primarily through the ministries of the United Methodist Church, MFSA supports and augments peace and justice ministries at the local, conference, and national levels. As an independent organization, we call our church to expand its understanding of the radical call of the Gospel to be the inclusive, justice-seeking, risk-taking Body of Christ.
MFSA lives out our belief that to be faithful witnesses to the Gospel of Jesus Christ is to be involved in the transformation of the social order.
Moreover, MFSA affirms the vital importance of theological reflection as the Church weighs great issues of faithfulness to Jesus Christ and the Gospel in United Methodist worship, governance and witness. We offer to following paragraphs as a point of departure for reflection and discussion.
For information on this committee, email John Patterson.
ROBIN LAKOFF ON “NARRATIVE CONTROL AND THE HUMAN PROJECT”
Date: September 11, 2019
Robin Lakoff, Professor Emerita of Linguistics at the University of California, Berkeley, will speak on “Narrative Control and the Human Project” as part of the University of Texas Humanities Institute’sDistinguished Visiting Lecture Series focused on “Narrative and Social Justice.” Analysis of the 2020 presidential campaign has often focused on “narrative control”–which candidate will control the central story that ultimately defines the campaign? What does this fight for narrative control tell us about how early 21st century Americans are constructing our roles as actors in the human project?
Lakoff is an expert on language and gender, the politics of language, sociolinguistics, and pragmatics. She is the author of several books, including the groundbreaking 1975 book Language and Woman’s Place.
More information online. RSVPs are appreciated but not required.
Location: Avaya Auditorium, POB 2.302, 201 E. 24th Street (SE corner of 24th and Speedway), UT Campus
BUILDING GREEN JUSTICE FORUM: “POTENTIAL THROUGH PLACE”
Date: October 15, 2019
Huston-Tillotson University will host the sixth annual Building Green Justice Forum, this year focusing on “Potential through Place.”
The modern environmental justice movement understands that our fates are linked to the places we live and work, and that for people of color those places often are ignored, under-resourced, and overly burdened with polluted air, water, and soil. Yet these places also are home to the environmental justice community’s pride, strength, and motivation.
Registration and coffee begins at 8 am, with speakers, panels, and workshops throughout the day. The speakers and schedule will be announced soon. Light breakfast and lunch will be provided. The forum is free but please register online. More information on the Facebook event page.
The event is sponsored by the HT Center for Sustainability and Environmental Justice, Green is the New Black, The Dumpster Project, City of Austin Office of Sustainability, and the Third Coast Activist Resource Center.
For more information on sponsorship, contact Karen Magid, kmagid@htu.edu, or Amanda Masino, htmasino@gmail.com.
Location: Dickey-Lawless Science Building, Huston-Tillotson University, 900 Chicon St., Austin, 78702, with free parking in the Chalmers Avenue lot and free street parking around campus
| posted on August 25
Dismantling the Sin of Racism and White Supremacy: Methodist Federation for Social Action is committed to dismantling the sin of racism and white supremacy. We have vowed to you to hold ourselves accountable when we fail to fully live into this commitment. White members of the board of directors write to you to publicly repent for the ways we have been complicit in failing to interrupt white supremacy, even within our own organization. MFSA received feedback from within our own leadership that we have failed to be obedient to our highest ideals. We are sorry and we will do better. We commit ourselves to do whatever is necessary to repair the harm we have inflicted and reorganize ourselves and our priorities to do the work of dismantling white supremacy. Like The United Methodist Church, MFSA is white-dominated and white-centered. This sin will only end after very intentional changes in behavior institutionally and personally. We call on all MFSA communities to join us taking the necessary steps to repair the brokenness caused by generations of harm. It is our collective responsibility and call. We continue to commit to these values and seek to be transparent in our learnings and growings in ways that help our movement, church, and world to make real change. We will continue to make mistakes. However, we believe that the fear of making mistakes should not hold us back from taking a close look at ourselves, our practices, and the ways we show up. We commit to seeking ways to show our commitment through our actions and welcome feedback and conversation. Our belief that intersectional justice must do the hard work of hearing all voices remains strong. All members of the MFSA board of directors continue to affirm and believe in the leadership of Bridget Cabrera as our executive director and we are grateful for her leadership during this difficult season. We recognize that, as a queer woman of color, she has experienced much of the harm we seek to repair, even as she leads us. We also acknowledge a similar heaviness and pain experienced by people of color on our board and in our organization, and with our coalition partners. We board members who identify as white are growing in our awareness of how our whiteness has reinforced this harm and we vow to show up in greater ways to shoulder the weight of our responsibility. Now is the time to work on putting into action the change we have talked about and hope for. We call on all MFSA communities and members (regional and congregational), all Justice Seeking United Methodists, and all white-dominated congregations and organizations to join us. MFSA’s 110-year history is one of responding to society’s challenges and challenging the UMC to live up to God’s call – we must now refine that for a new century. You will hear more from us as we continue to hold ourselves accountable to people of color-led partners and most impacted communities on all of our justice-seeking efforts. In full transparency, please read the words of our departing board chairs. We are grateful for Lydia’s and Amy’s service and we will work to live into the organization they hoped us to be. Sincerely, MFSA Board of Directors Rev. Adrienne Brewington |
In this edition:
Scheduled executions and case updates: The State of Texas is scheduled to put 11 people to death before the end of the year, including two executions this month; federal executions set for first time since 2003; prosecutors take the death penalty off the table in two cases; El Paso death row inmate dies of natural causes
In case you missed it: Faith leaders call for clergy to be allowed in the execution chamber; Texas legislators form House Criminal Justice Reform Caucus; remembering former U.S. Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens
New resource: “The Penalty” documentary film now available on Amazon
Featured event: TCADP’s San Antonio Chapter will meet on August 14