About wibailoutpeople

We are a part of the national Bail Out The People movement which formed in 2008 to fight against the bailouts to the banks. Since then we have been in numerous fights against poverty, racism and war. We demand that the people be bailed out not the banks, a moratorium on all foreclosures, a federal jobs program now and other demands. We have been participating in the Wisconsin people's uprising, Bloombergville in NYC and numerous other people's actions.

Juneteenth Day Festival 2019 Milwaukee

Juneteenth Day Festival 2019

57th Annual Juneteenth Day Parade and Festival taking place on Wednesday, June 19.

This year’s parade steps off at 10:00 am from North 19th and West Atkinson Avenue and proceeding to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Drive. Northcott Neighborhood House’s Executive Director MacArthur Weddle is the parade’s Grand Marshall.

The Juneteenth Day Festival takes place from 10:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. on Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Drive between Center and Burleigh Streets.

The Festival features musical performances, numerous vendors from food to toys, along with community organizations sharing helpful resources for residents of all ages.
To be part of the parade or to be a vendor, please go to:

https://www.juneteenthdaymilwaukee.com/milwaukeejuneteenthd…
Juneteenth Day is the oldest known celebration commemorating the ending of slavery in the United States. The world-wide event, dating back to June 1865 began when the Union soldiers, landed at Galveston Texas with the news that the war had ended and that the enslaved were now free. Milwaukee’s Juneteenth Day event is organized by the Northcott Neighborhood House.

No photo description available.

Venezuela Builds 2 Million Affordable Homes in Just Seven Years

https://bit.ly/2Ng3CvV

https://www.telesurenglish.net/

President Nicolas Maduro said the new homes belong to the Venezuelan people.

The government plans to build another million homes by 2019.

The Venezuelan government has built two million houses in seven years as part of the People’s Social Protection System.

President Nicolas Maduro made the announcement in a Venezuela Housing Great Mission (GMVV) event in the new “Mirador de Caiza” housing complex in Charallave, state of Miranda, in which he also spoke of future housing plans.

The housing project is intended to deliver 500,000 homes during 2018, and the Venezuelan government plans to soon reach the historic number of five million houses for people with low resources.

“That’s almost two houses per day since the mission was born. There’s no country in the world that has built like Commander Hugo Chavez‘ government, and now President Nicolas Maduro’s, built,” said Jorge Rodriguez, the Communications and Information Minister.

The GMVV was created on April 30, 2011, by the revolutionary leader Hugo Chavez. It intends to bring into reality the ideas of the late commander of the Bolivarian Revolution, who looked after the needs of the Venezuelan people. Since he was sworn in as president, Maduro has kept the promise of Chavez projects.

Maduro promised to deliver another million homes by December 2019 and appointed 1,058 new land pieces to start building them.

The Venezuelan government wants to make the Housing Mission the most successful and ambitious housing policy in the history of the country. It’s based on five main action points: people, land, material, financing, and executors.

CTU suspends CICS strike, winning CPS pay schedules, class size reductions, and guarantees on social workers and counselors

For Immediate Release:  February 18, 2019

Contact:

Chris Geovanis | 312-329-6250 | chrisgeovanis@ctulocal1.org | Mobile: 312-446-4939

4PM Tuesday, 2/19: CICS quarterly public board meeting
11 E. Adams St., Chicago. AFT President Randi Weingarten, CTU, allies to attend.

Parents, educators plan to join AFT president Randi Weingarten Tuesday to demand reforms at CICS quarterly board meeting, as elected officials advance legislation to reign in exorbitant management fees that drove strike. Video update from CICS bargaining team is below.

CHICAGO—After nine days on the picket lines, striking CTU teachers and paraprofessionals have reached a tentative agreement with CICS management that protects counselors and social workers, limits class sizes, and raises teacher and paraprofessional pay up to CPS standards.

The tentative agreement immediately raises paraprofessional pay to the CPS schedule. Teachers are now placed on a salary schedule with extra pay lanes for advanced degrees. They receive an immediate average raise averaging 8% and will meet or exceed CPS salary rates by the last year of the four-year agreement.

The agreement ensures that future increases in public school funding are invested directly in the schools, rather than being captured by corporate management fees. Strikers were also able to beat back management’s attempt to cut family leave for paraprofessionals, and won paid parental leave for teachers for the first time ever.

Striking educators won sanctuary language in the contract—particularly critical for immigrant students and families—as well as stronger language on school safety, including a commitment to facilities improvements that include classroom doors that lock from the inside. Special education language has been written into the contract that holds CICS to providing legally mandated services for students. Educators also won guaranteed full-time staffing of teaching assistants in every kindergarten through 2nd grade class, a 7% pension pick-up and more affordable health care coverage for families.

Educators won reductions in class sizes—a key sticking point in negotiations—setting class size goals at 28 and barring any classroom from holding more than 30 students. The work year and work day for educators has been reduced—with no cuts to daily instructional minutes.

As a result of public pressure from the CTU, including union efforts to raise awareness about CICS’ bloated management structure, CICS has also announced that it will be ‘revising’ its fee structure for schools, which until this contract has siphoned off up to 30% of the public dollars CICS receives away from students’ educations. Both CEP and CICS were forced to return a combined $4 million back into their classrooms that CICS and its corporate management operations have siphoned out of school communities.

Educators, some of whom earn barely $30,000/year, will see average pay raises of nearly 35% over the contract term. The tentative agreement now goes to the full rank for review and a vote.

Parents, educators and allies are mobilizing at 4PM on Tuesday for CICS’ quarterly board meeting to demand that they realign their bloated fee structure across the network, and call in CICS to sign onto legislation that would reign in profit-taking through bloated fees and corporate bureaucracies across the charter industry.

CICS has more than $36 million in unrestricted cash and cash equivalents in hoarded public education dollars—and increased fees more than 25% over the previous year. CICS has parked $19.8 million of that unrestricted $36.5 million in cash with C.W. Henderson, a firm controlled by CICS co-founder and former board president/treasurer Craig Henderson, one of a number of insider financial deals that have drawn the concern of state officials.

A growing number of elected officials have raised concerns about CICS’ financial practices. On Friday, State Senator Andy Manar and State Representative Will Davis, key architects of the state’s landmark new school funding formula, SB 1947, expressed concern that CICS was “violat[ing] the spirit of the new funding model and deny[ing] students the services they deserve.”

The day before, Rev. Jesse Jackson joined educators to demand that management settle the contract, just hours after the City Council Latino Caucus wrote to CEO Shaw, calling management’s failure to reach a fair agreement ‘shameful’. Striking educators filed a formal complaint with the Illinois Attorney General earlier in the week about CICS’ shady financial practices, insider deals, cash hoarding, rapid expansion of corporate positions and outrageous management fees.

On Friday, U.S. Senator Tammy Duckworth joined State Senators Ram Villivilam (8) and Jacqueline Collins (16) and State Rep. Mary Flowers (31) to meet striking educators and pledge their support to strikers’ struggle for educational justice for their students. Over a dozen elected officials and progressive candidates joined strikers in the first week of the strike at a picket of the charter industry’s lobby, INCS, which has backed CICS’ dawdling at the bargaining table. “Teachers’ working conditions are students’ learning conditions—and both need to improve at CICS,” said Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle.

Positions for CICS non-educational corporate staff earning over $100,000/year have ballooned from four in 2017 to 14 today, while schools confront serious shortages in special education teachers, counselors and social workers, as well as facilities needs, supplies like books and paper, and working computer equipment for students.

#StrikeReady: How We Can Support Oakland Teachers and Students

https://bit.ly/2EgaXce

Oakland Unified School District is filled with overcrowded classrooms, unsafe caseloads for support staff, and underpaid educators. Meanwhile OUSD is spending far more than comparable school districts on administration and consultants. They’ve got their priorities backwards. Oakland students deserve better, and teachers are ready to strike for smaller class sizes, more support for students, a living wage for teachers, and an end to school closings. And we can make a HUGE difference by showing that the community has their back.

There are many ways to show up:*

Picket updates: the strike will begin on Thursday, 2/21, and priority times to support the picket lines are 7-10am and 2-4pm. Map of priority sites coming soon!

Still confused about how to support? Email us at info@bayresistance.org and we’ll try to connect you to the right people.

For updates on the strike, follow Oakland Education Association on social media

*teachers, parents, and many community organizations are planning these efforts, we just compiled them here

El Distrito Escolar Unificado de Oakland (OUSD por sus siglas en inglés) está plagado de clases demasiado llenos, cantidades inmanejables de casos para el personal de apoyo, y educadores mal pagados. Mientras tanto, el distrito está gastando mucho más que otros distritos parecidos en salarios para administradores y consultores/asesores. Tienen sus prioridades al revés. Los estudiantes de Oakland merecen lo mejor. Los maestros están listos para luchar para clases más pequeñas, más apoyo estudiantil, un salario digno, programas para reclutar y retener educadores de calidad (especialmente educadores de color), más apoyo para las comunidades con mayor necesidad, y defensa de la educación pública: OUSD debe dejar de cerrar las escuelas públicas.

Puedes ayudar en varias maneras:

¿Todavía confundido en cómo apoyar? Contáctanos en info@bayresistance.org e trataremos de conectarlo con las personas adecuadas.

Para actualizaciones sobre la huelga, siga a la Asociación de Educación de Oakland en las redes sociales *maestros, padres y muchas organizaciones comunitarias están planeando estos esfuerzos, solo los compilamos aquí

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A Guide for Parents and Guardians – Preparing for a possible Teacher Strike

https://bit.ly/2Ik41Pq

The teachers of the Oakland Education Association just took a momentous vote to authorize a strike if OUSD does not meet their demands, and with 84% of all Oakland teachers voting, 95% voted to authorize a strike. That does not mean that they will be on strike immediately, but it does mean that they could announce a strike any time after February 15th. We know from seeing what happened in Los Angeles that the key to a successful strike is for teachers and OUSD families to stay united. Here is a comprehensive list of things that parents and guardians can do to support our teachers now and during a strike.

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Kenosha, Feb. 21, 2019: Pack The Court For Chrystul! (Prelim Hearing)

Pack The Court For Chrystul! (Prelim Hearing)

912 56th Street, #L, Kenosha, WI, 10:30 A.M. – 1:30 P.M.

This is the next preliminary hearing for Chrystul. It will likely be short, probably the lawyers arguing for their motions regarding the release of discovery evidence to the defense and the judge possibly making a decision on that.

Chrystul will be there, riding a cold prison bus almost 2 hours there and back from Taycheedah, so it would likely boost her spirits to see some supporters in court.

A note on court etiquette: try to dress nice (not formal, but presentable), take off hats when you enter the room, no using phones or talking while court is in session (when the judge is in the room). Some members of Volar’s family showed up at the last hearing, so we should try to sit together as a group. Be polite, but try to avoid interaction with them.

We want to show the judge and the DA that Chrystul is loved and missed, without making them feel disrespected or antagonistic.

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