The Equal Justice Society (www.equaljusticesociety.org) is a national strategy group heightening conscious on race in the law and popular discourse. Using strategies including law, public policy, communications, convenings and the arts, EJS seeks to restore race equity issues to the national consciousness, build effective progressive alliances and create a discourse on the positive role of government.


Keith Kamisugi

Keith Kamisugi is the director of communications at the San Francisco-based Equal Justice Society.

8.20.2008

James Rucker: Are we finally ready to help rebuild the Gulf Coast?

James Rucker of ColorOfChange.org today sent out an email promoting a bill in Congress that will give Katrina survivors a fair chance to rebuild their lives. But it won't become law if enough representatives don't stand up to support it.

Three years after Hurricane Katrina, there's finally legislation.

The Gulf Coast Civic Works Act would hire 100,000 Gulf Coast residents and evacuees, providing them with training and jobs to rebuild their homes and communities. It started as nothing more than a good idea, but after thousands of ColorOfChange.org members called on Congress to support the plan, and after years of persistent activism from students and Gulf Coast organizations, it now has a real chance of bringing some justice to the Gulf.

Even though it's come this far, it will take massive public pressure on each member of Congress to get the bill passed. If we want justice for Katrina survivors, we need to make our voices heard now as the media focuses its attention on the third anniversary of Hurricane Katrina.

I've signed on with ColorOfChange.org to tell my member of Congress to co-sponsor the Gulf Coast Civic Works Act, will you join us?

http://www.colorofchange.org/gulfcoast/?id=2188-126103

The Gulf Coast Civic Works Act represents a powerful shift from what's currently happening in the Gulf. It calls for hiring 100,000 Gulf Coast residents to rebuild New Orleans and the surrounding region. They'll be provided with temporary housing and job-training and will build and repair houses, schools, parks, and other civic buildings.

The idea behind the Gulf Coast Civic Works Project is not new. During the Great Depression, the federal government believed it had a responsibility to ensure that those hit hardest did not fall through the cracks. It also knew that those Americans wanted a hand up, not a handout. So, in 1935, Congress created a program to hire out-of-work Americans to get things done to benefit their communities.

It's a plan that makes sense--for displaced survivors, for the communities of the Gulf Coast, for the nation as a whole. It provides an opportunity to invest in Americans while reversing the most glaring problems that plague current rebuilding plans: gentrification, government waste, and massive corporate profiteering. It would revitalize the Gulf Coast's economy while rebuilding its infrastructure, and it's a model that could be applied to solve similar problems across the country.

Learn more and please join us by calling on your representative to co-sponsor the Gulf Coast Civic Works Act. It only takes a minute:

http://www.colorofchange.org/gulfcoast/?id=2188-126103

Thanks.

8.13.2008

ACS Criticizes Attorney General's Inaction On Justice Department Hiring Scandal

Our friends at the American Constitution Society for Law and Policy today criticized Attorney General Michael B. Mukasey's lack of response to the actions of several former top Justice Department officials who improperly used political criteria to fill career positions at the Department.

"Attorney General Mukasey has abdicated his responsibility to ensure that the Department of Justice is dedicated to the impartial administration of Justice," said ACS executive director Lisa Brown. "Rather than addressing the corruption of the hiring process and the harm that has been done to the Department, the Attorney General offers no substantive response."

Since June, the Justice Department's Office of the Inspector General and Office of Professional Responsibility have released two comprehensive reports chronicling the use of political hiring for nonpolitical positions in violation of both civil service law and Department of Justice policy. The first report examined the Department's honors and summer intern programs, detailing bias against candidates affiliated with "liberal" groups, including ACS. The second report, released in late July, identified the improper actions of top aides to former Attorney General Alberto Gonzales concerning the screening of potential U.S. prosecutors and immigration judges.

Speaking to the American Bar Association yesterday, the Attorney General acknowledged the serious problems at the Justice Department, noting that "the system failed," but at the same time he made clear that he would not take action against the wrongdoers, saying that they have been sufficiently punished by "substantial negative publicity."

"It may be, as Attorney General Mukasey says, that 'not every wrong, or even every violation of the law, is a crime,'" said Brown. "But it does not follow that every violation of the law is to be met with blank indifference. What the Attorney General apparently does not grasp is that failing to address widespread and systemic wrongs at the nation's highest institute of justice undermines the very mission of the Department and the confidence that Americans have in their government and its ability to pursue justice.

"The U.S. Department of Justice has been seriously undermined by improper partisan activities and policies over the past eight years," Brown added. "Unfortunately, Attorney General Mukasey's disheartening remarks yesterday offer nothing to a nation looking for a return to leadership on principles of justice and fair and equal treatment for all.

"When the Attorney General was chosen to be the nation's top law enforcement officer, he pledged to restore integrity to the Department of Justice," Brown stated. "His comments yesterday reveal, through both his tone and the lack of understanding of the need for a serious response, that his promise was an empty one."