On the 8th anniversary of the Shelby vs Holder, Supreme Court decision, which gutted the 1965 Voting Rights Act of its critical ‘pre-clearance procedures’, a collaborative coalition of organizations is holding a day of actions in Shelby County to support voting rights and national legislation to protect voting rights and restore the protections stripped by the Supreme Court. The coalition supporting voting rights includes Lift Our Vote, AL NAACP, Black Voters Matter, Leadership Conference, Poor People’s Campaign, SPLC Action, World Conference of Mayors, SOS, Transformative Justice Coalition, United Mine Workers of America, Selma Jubilee, AL Black Women’s Roundtable, National Action Network AL, TOPS, AL New South Coalition, Alabama Coalition on Black Civic Participation, Transform AL, and others. These groups have joined together to educate, empower, and engage the public to highlight the reasons why America is facing sweeping voter suppression and advance the needs for voter protections through legislative measures like the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act and the For The People Act. Event coordinators and state leadership will convene at the Shelby County Courthouse, in Columbiana, on Friday June 25th at 10:00 am, CDT for a press conference and kickoff rally around their calls to action for voter protections for the entire nation. The program will then transition to Orr Park in Montevallo, AL for a day of community service and engagement to include free food, vaccinations, voter verification, registration, and restoration, and live performances. This event will further support addressing the urgent need to restore the Voting Rights Act (VRA) to ensure that every eligible voter can make their voice heard at the ballot box, free from discrimination. The coalition invites people from throughout Alabama to attend the Shelby Day events and support the voter protection demands. For more information contact: http://www.liftourvote.com and http://www.alnaacp.org or the members of the coalition listed above.
Tag: Poor People’s Campaign
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Newswire: Thousands of essential workers walk off jobs in ‘Strike for Black Lives’
by Derek Major, Black Enterprise News Service

Participants in ‘Strike for Black Lives’
Thousands of essential workers walked off the job Monday in the Strike For Black Lives, demanding corporations raise wages, provide healthcare and paid sick leave, and the right to unionize.
According to CNN, the walkout, called the Strike for Black Lives, took place in more than 100 cities across the U.S. Protesters included Black and Latino fast-food workers, home health aides, janitors, and others in industries where Black workers are disproportionately represented.
The Strike For Black Lives was organized by the Movement for Black Lives along with the Service Employees International Union (SEIU), the Fight for $15, the Poor People’s Campaign, and other labor advocacy organizations.
“Black people are dying, Black communities are in danger, and workers of all races have had enough,” said Mary Kay Henry, president of the SEIU—which represents almost 2 million service workers—in a statement. “With the Strike for Black Lives, we are uniting the interconnected fights for racial and economic justice.”
In addition to striking workers, organizers said thousands more walked away from their job for 8 minutes and 46 seconds, the amount of time Minnesota police officer Derek Chauvin laid his knee on George Floyd’s neck.
The strike was mostly aimed at large corporations such as McDonald’s, Amazon, Uber, and Lyft, who have fought against healthcare plans, paid sick leave, hazard pay, and unions.
“If you’re concerned about life, you have to challenge corporations that will put up a hashtag or slogan but do nothing about workers having healthcare or a living wage or decent employment,” Rev. Dr. William Barber II, leader of the Poor People’s Campaign, told CNN.
A study in May found Black Americans, who make up a disproportionate percentage of essential workers, are more likely to die from the coronavirus, representing 60% of deaths and only 13.4% of the population.
Many large corporations have ended the pay raises and sick leave policies they instituted at the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic. Kroger and Rite Aid ended the pay bumps in May and Amazon and Albertsons ended the hikes in June. Stop & Shop ended its pay raises earlier this month.
“The danger facing essential workers hasn’t diminished. Any job where a worker is interacting closely with the public or coworkers for an extended period of time elevates the possibility of contracting coronavirus,” said Indeed economist AnnElizabeth Konkel.
