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Why vote yes to change the NYC Charter - even if you don't live in NYC this concerns you [1]
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Date: 2022-11-07
Racism is a Public Health Crisis, April 2021, New York City, Asian and Black Solidarity March, Photo by: Mariposa Fernandez
A friend of mine who lives in Massachusetts sent me her friend's “food for thought” email Sunday morning, which I found quite nauseating. It was a push to not vote for the 3 proposal questions that will change the New York City Charter for the better. The 3 proposal questions, put forth by the New York Racial Justice Commission under Mayor Bill DeBlasio, came out of weeks of protests in June 2020, after the murders of George Floyd on May 25, 2020, and the murders of Breonna Taylor, and Ahmaud Arbery a short time earlier.
x The 3 proposal questions on the NYC ballot to change the NYC charter came out of the protests in June of 2020! Make sure you vote. I'm voting YES on all 3 questions! Put a racial justice for NYC begins w/ ur vote #NYCRacialJustice #FlipYourBallot #NYCRacialJustice #RacialEquity pic.twitter.com/n9BgCwohxp — Mariposa Fernández (@LaPoetaMariposa) November 7, 2022
A New York Times article published in March 2021, After Unrest and Protests N.Y.C. created Group to Dismantle Structural Racism , can help us recall the people power that got us to this point. We now have 3 proposal questions on the ballot that can change our city and our lives, if we flip the ballot, vote and not leave those questions blank.
The change, if New Yorkers participate by voting and not leaving these questions blank, will add a Preamble to the New York City Charter stating that New York City is a “mulitracial democracy and that our diversity is our strength,” and will add “ racial justice infrastructure ,” as well as “ measure the true cost of living ” in the city — if the change goes through it can set a trend that can have an impact on the entire country. This is my take on it anyway. I am an optimist. I think that it can help countless communities and people who are my kinfolk, who have been historically harmed and marginalized by systemic racism.
If you live in New York City, and care about racial and economic justice, I am counting on you to vote yes too. If you live anywhere in the country, or the world for that matter, and know someone who lives in New York City, pick up the phone. Call or text your friends and loved ones, and tell them to #flipyourballot and vote yes on all three proposal questions.
As a trend setting city, we can help set a bar. These efforts are simply another step in the right direction, forward, not backwards. If you care about racial justice and economic fairness and democracy this concerns you. You do not need to live in New York City. New York City is a trend setting city, from fashion to politics.
As a working class Black Puerto Rican I am voting yes on all 3 proposal questions to endorse the efforts that amend the New York City Charter to make sure that our charter has language that puts it on the table that we need an office dedicated to address racism. The fact of the matter is that racism exists in New York City. We live in a segregated city with a segregated school system. We need to have an Office of Racial Justice and Equity. This is the same city that spawned Trump and Trumpism. This is a city that is not as cosmopolitan as people would like to think, even if we have a Black mayor ( as the saying goes, not all skin folk are kinfolk). This is a city where the Don’t Tread on Me flag is flown in certain districts including the North East Bronx. In a recent public meeting, as reported in The Bronx Times, Chaos ensues as CB11 Just Home public hearing leaves little room for disagreement , so even though Ted Cruz got a bunch of boos at Yankee Stadium, reactionary sectors are alive and well and coming out of the woodwork. Liberal friends who are pushing against New York City’s 3 proposals by telling people to leave it blank ain't doin us any favors.
Lurie Daniel Favors, one of the ten Racial Justice Commissioners, explains how the 3 Ballot Proposals came about and why it is important for people to flip their ballot and vote on this charter, in the New York City election. “A few things became clear. #1, we can’t create just one good program to solve racism #2, we just create nice policies to solve racism. We have to deal with the way that racism permeates our governments. So that’s what we did. We have the power to change the New York City charter…Our city charter is hundreds and hundreds of pages long… There are literally hundreds and hundreds of provisions and we could literally spend the next ten years going through each one to figure out how racism shows up in sanitation, how does racism show up in [the] NYPD, and that would take forever — we don’t have that time, because our commission ends...at the end of election day. So what we did instead was, we came up with three ballot proposals… that will basically, fundamentally change the way that government deals with issues of racism in this city from now into perpetuity, if New Yorkers vote.”
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