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The Police Officers for Equal Rights have given City Council our plans for a Citizen Review Board over seven years ago. We reinstated our position about the citizen review board during the U. S. Department of Justice Investigation. Our view points have not changed. The problem of racial profiling in our community has reinforced our position.

It appears that certain organizations and so called leaders what to “reinvent our citizen review board” and take credit for all the hard work our organization has done on the issue of racial profiling. The P.O.E.R. is committed to increase the awareness and education our Black Community. We will not engage in political games or give into any city leader selfish motivation.

The P.O.E.R. has given the city government enough time to do the right thing regarding these issues. Mayor Coleman was a city councilman and now he is mayor of Columbus. The leadership of this city has not changed to protect the rights of Black citizens. It is time for action – it is not the time for more panel discussions and committees.

For the past year, EcoCity Cleveland has been working with partners around Ohio to develop a campaign to change state policies that influence land use and development. The goal is to promote policies and incentives that make it easier to redevelop existing cities and towns -- and easier to conserve farmland and open space in the Ohio countryside.

This initiative is being called Greater Ohio, and it has now recieved funds to allow the hiring of a state project director. The project is seeking an experienced person who can lead a statewide campaign for policy reform. The job description and application instructions are attached.

EcoCity Cleveland is the fiscal agent for the grant that is funding this position. We are pleased to be helping facilitate this important state policy initiative.

DETAILS: Greater Ohio -- State Project Director

The strike at Miami University of Ohio is over and although we did not gain much monetarily, we consider it a big first step and a great moral victory. We went out against the odds. We had no previous strike experience, no strike fund, and less than half our bargaining unit with us. And we were up against a university administration that does not see its workers as having intrinsic worth and has a lot of money available to spend on keeping us down.

In spite of this, something happened here at Miami that is rarely observed in life. Some percentage of the members of AFSCME Local 209 decided to put their self-interest aside and base their actions on a deeper conviction about what is right and just. A group of janitors, maintenance people, and food service workers decided to take a stand. People found their voice, where yesterday we heard mostly silence. New leaders emerged. We saw courage displayed where yesterday there was mostly fear. We saw people chanting and marching together - yesterday there was mostly isolation.

We learned a lot. We learned that most of the university community is behind us! We experienced a great outpouring of
You've probably seen in the news that Congress is about to vote on an energy bill that is dirty, dangerous, and doesn't deliver for consumers.

It's no surprise that the big winner in this bill is big oil. The big loser is anyone who breathes, pays a utility bill or drinks water. Instead of this bill, America deserves a safe, clean, affordable energy future.

Please take a moment to call and urge your senators to do everything they can to stop this dirty and expensive energy bill from passing. Then, ask your family and friends to help by forwarding this e-mail to them.

You can call your senators through the Congressional switchboard at 202-224-3121 (just tell the operator which state you're from and they can connect you to your senators - you may have to call twice to reach both senators). Here's a sample message you can leave:

"Hello, my name is _____ and I live in _______. Please do everything you can to stop the dirty and expensive energy bill from passing."

Then, let us know you called so that we can keep track of the number of calls everyone has made.

-- Fast from 6 AM till 5:14 PM on Wednesday the 19th;
-- Gather at the Ohio Union Ballrooms at 4:30 PM;
-- Break fast with milk and dates at 5:14 PM
-- Free international dinner served at 5:45 PM

* Location: The Ohio Union, the East and West Ballrooms

 The Muslim students of OSU are inviting all to Get Hungry For Change! Various forms of fasting are practiced worldwide. It is a way to cleanse out the physical body and understand what it means to be hungry.

WHAT IS BEING ASKED OF YOU???

Go hungry for a day, so someone doesn't have to!!!

Here is how it works:

You pledge to fast for one day (Wednesday, November 19th) and be part of the Ramadan Fast-A-Thon, and, in return, businesses will sponsor $1 for each person who fasts.  The money donated by businesses will then go to the Clintonville-Beechwold Community Resources Center and benefit the needy in Columbus.

Universal Purifying Technology is obtaining a permit from the Ohio EPA to install a tire pyrolysis operation.  The comment period is still open, until November 28th.  There is little doubt that they will grant the permit even though over a dozen south Columbus citizens testified against it at the public hearing on November 6, and they have no lease arrangement with the City that own the facility.  The mayor of Grove City said that this should be of concern to all the people in Franklin County.  The city council of Grove City has passed a resolution condemning the plan.

Ohio Citizen Action and Teresa Mills have formed residents in the area into a weekly meeting group that adopted the name, SouthWest Neighbors Protecting Our Environment.  Their plan is to apply pressure on SWACO and the Columbus City Council to prevent UPT from using the facility.  I have never seen this much outrage from a citizen group on environmental issues before.  They are tired of being dumped on, and are determined to make their voices heard.

Contact Information:

Ohio Citizen Action:
(614) 263-4111
As another Veteran's Day passes by, George W. Bush has sent a clear and present message to the men and women of America's armed forces:  Drop Dead.  

In an astonishing series of cynical attacks on veterans rights, benefits and sanctity, the administration has shortchanged our military personnel on their medical care, pensions, compensation for having been tortured, access to vital information about health dangers suffered in service, and even their body armor.     

After promising that the Iraqi people would be "dancing in the streets" upon their arrival, US troops are being attacked up to three dozen times a day.  In response,  Bush has imposed an unprecedented media blackout on coverage of their corpses coming home. 

Bush himself has yet to attend the funeral of any soldier slain in Iraq.  But he has attacked those within the military who would express a democratic opinion against his policies.  

Bush has also violated a crucial national tradition---dating to George Washington---against a Chief Executive appearing in military garb while in civilian office.  

Here's a signpost, pointing along the road many are doomed to follow since Clinton's attack on welfare. I found it planted in a dispatch from Ohio by Julian Borger in the London Guardian on Nov. 3. By way of heralding Bush's impending visit to Britain, Borger was edifying his readers with an account of Bush's America, in the form of a visit to a soup kitchen in Ohio, where he reports that "hunger is an epidemic."

            Since Ohio went for Bush in 2000, Borger narrates, the state has lost one in six of its manufacturing jobs, many of them on account of the trade policies espoused by Clinton and now Bush. Two million of Ohio's 11 million population resorted to food charities last year, up 18 percent from 2001. In 25 major cities across the country last year the need for emergency food rose an average of 19 percent.

            Last year, another 1.7 million Americans slid below the poverty line, bringing the overall total to 34.6 million, one in eight as a proportion of the population. Over 13 million are children. The U.S. has the worst child poverty and the lowest life expectancy of all the world's industrialized countries.

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