What’s the Purpose of a Platform?

Next month, the Massachusetts Democratic Party will be updating its party platform. Last updated in 2017, the platform is a solidly progressive document (possibly the most progressive in the country), even if it is out of date on some issues.

However, the problem activists always face is that in a state with an overwhelming 80% Democratic Legislature, why do we not see more of the platform planks become law? We typically understand a party platform to be a roadmap for governance: what a party would seek to implement if in power.

But we see a fundamental disconnect. And that’s why it’s so important to see the work of year-round organizing, outside of a party structure, to push all elected officials to be bolder in their ambitions.

However, in the short term, it is also good to bring the party platform up to date with where the state is today, what activists are calling for today, and what we need so that everyone can thrive.

If you want to submit testimony, you can do so here by Saturday at 5 pm. Want some ideas? Feel free to pull from the suggestions below.

Education

  • Change “Fixing the public education funding formula to fully fund high-quality public education for all students” to “Fully and equitably funding K-12 public education for all school districts as outlined in the Student Opportunity Act.”
  • Change “Providing in-state tuition for all residents admitted to Massachusetts public colleges and universities and exploring debt-free models of higher education” to “Guaranteeing that all Massachusetts students are able to graduate from our public colleges and universities without debt.”
  • Add “Requires school districts to provide sex education that is comprehensive, age-appropriate, and LGBTQ-inclusive, with an emphasis on informed consent to prevent sexual violence.”

Environment, Climate Change, and Renewable Energy

  • Change “Achieving the goals of the Massachusetts Global Warming Solutions Act to reduce emissions by at least 25 percent by 2020, at least 45 percent by 2030, and at least 80 percent by 2050” to at least “Achieving the goals of the Next-Generation Roadmap Act to reduce emissions by 50% from 1990 levels by 2030, 75% by 2040, and at least 85% by 2050”
  • Change “Doubling our commitment to renewable energy by increasing the Massachusetts renewable portfolio standard to at least 50 percent by 2030” to “Increasing the Massachusetts renewable portfolio standard to 100 percent by 2030.”

Ethics and Transparency

  • Add “with both in-person and virtual components” to “Public hearings and other opportunities for citizens to influence the legislative process”
  • Add “including the online posting of committee votes and testimony submitted to committees (with appropriate redactions for sensitive information)” to “Ensuring the public has convenient and financially reasonable access to all public documents and data at the executive, legislative, judicial, and local levels of government.”

Gender and Racial Equality

  • Change “Protection of a women’s right to choose” to “Protection of every person’s right to access the full range of reproductive health options, including preventing unintended pregnancy, bearing healthy children, and choosing legal abortion.”

Healthcare and Human Services

  • Add “Improving vaccination rates by standardizing immunization requirements and exemption processes, filling gaps in vaccine rate data, and boosting outreach efforts.”
  • Change “Protection women’s reproductive rights and a woman’s right to choose” to “Protection of every person’s right to access the full range of reproductive health options, including preventing unintended pregnancy, bearing healthy children, and choosing legal abortion.”

Housing

  • Add “Lifting the statewide ban on municipalities’ ability to pass their own laws to stabilize rents and protect the rights of tenants.”
  • Add “Enabling municipalities to tax high-end real estate transactions in order to provide dedicated funding for affordable housing”
  • Add “Eliminating zoning laws that discriminate against the construction of multifamily housing and the creation of diverse communities”
  • Add “Sealing eviction records for tenants who were evicted through no fault of their own, and creating a process for the sealing of all other such records, out of a recognition that housing is a human right.”
  • Add “Strengthening and promoting the Community Preservation Act, which provides vital resources for affordable housing, green and open space, and historic preservation”
  • Add “Guaranteeing legal representation for low-income tenants and owner-occupants in eviction proceedings”

Justice, Civil Rights, and Civil Liberties

  • Add “Eliminating the use of solitary confinement for more than 15 days.”

Labor and Workforce

  • Add “Eliminating all subminimum wages, which reinforce gender and racial inequities.”
  • Add “Guaranteeing paid vacation time to all workers.”
  • Add “Guaranteeing fair scheduling for all workers, including the right to 14 days advance notice of hours, the right to request specific hours without retaliation from the employer, and the right to rest for 11 hours between shifts.”

Public Safety and Crime Prevention

  • Add “Raising the age of criminal majority to 21 in order to allow to have better access to treatment and educational services and thereby reduce recidivism.”
  • Add “Imposing a moratorium on the construction of new jails and prisons or the expansion of existing ones.”
  • Add “Banning facial surveillance technology, which invades privacy rights and is well-known to be both racist and inaccurate”
  • Add “Banning tear gas, rubber bullets, attack dogs, and other forms of crowd control that escalate a situation and put protesters’ health and lives at risk.”
  • Add “Preventing prisons and jails from charging individuals who are incarcerated for phone calls to loved ones.”
  • Add “Eliminating qualified immunity protections for law enforcement in order to ensure that victims of police brutality have their fair day in court.”
  • Add “Funding local efforts to divert 911 calls away from the police and toward trained mental health workers, social work professions, or community members.”

Revenue and Expenditures

  • Add “and ensure that the wealthy and large corporations pay their fair share” to “Fair, equitable corporate and personal taxes and fees, which do not unduly burden low income families.”

Transportation and Infrastructure

  • Add “Phasing out the production of new fossil fuel-powered vehicles by 2030.”
  • Add “Making public transportation fare-free because mobility is a human right.”

Voting and Democracy

  • Add “and the ability to vote by mail” to “Ensuring early voting in all elections.”  
  • Add “Enabling cities and towns to increase civic engagement by lowering the voting age for local elections to 16 and allowing all legal residents the ability to vote in local elections.”

Book Talk: Lily Geismer and Tracy O’Connell Novick on “Don’t Blame Us”

In her book Don’t Blame Us: Suburban Liberals and the Transformation of the Democratic Party, Lily Geismer traces the evolution of modern liberalism by focusing on the suburban organizing along the high-tech corridor of Route 128 around Boston in the 1950s and 1960s. Surveying political fights around fair housing, education, war/peace, and land use, Geismer explores both the possibilities and limitations of such organizing, with important lessons for activists of today.

What can we learn about the political landscape in our state, and how can the history of such organizing inform our work today? We invited Worcester School Committee Member Tracy O’Connell Novick to facilitate a discussion with Geismer. Check it out!

MA Needs to Ban Facial Surveillance

Facial surveillance

Last year, the Legislature passed a police accountability bill that created better standards for police professionalization as well as stronger limitations on the use of force. It was a step forward, but there is much more to be done. 

One such example? Banning Facial surveillance technologies. 

Facial surveillance technologies are notoriously racist, inaccurate, and harmful. Rather than banning such practices, the bill offered only narrowly tailored regulations and created a Commission to study whether to do more. 

They need to do more. 

The Commission will be hearing public comment this Friday at 11 am. 

Want to see stronger regulations of facial surveillance? You can sign up to give public testimony here — or submit written testimony here.

PM in the News: “Activists seek moratorium on prison construction”

Lily Robinson, “Activists seek moratorium on prison construction,” CommonWealth, July 20, 2021, https://commonwealthmagazine.org/criminal-justice/activists-seek-moratorium-on-prison-construction/.

“If you build this prison, I guarantee you, women will be beaten. Women will be starved. Women will be raped. How does that make our community safer?” asked Caroline Bays, board president of Progressive Massachusetts, an organization that pushes for racial, social and environmental justice, at a legislative hearing on the bill Tuesday.

A representative of the Massachusetts Department of Correction said that no final decisions have been made regarding the future of MCI-Framingham or women’s correctional facilities in the state.

From 2011 to 2018, the average daily prison population in Massachusetts declined by 21 percent. At the same time, the state ramped up spending by 25 percent, taking the budget from $254 million to nearly $1.4 billion. Few of those extra dollars went to programs to reduce recidivism, according to a study by MassINC, the parent company of CommonWealth.

Testifying in support of the bill, Bays recalled visiting an incarcerated friend at Cedar Junction, a prison in Norfolk, and laughing—then sometimes crying—over the irony of a sign in the waiting room declaring the facility a place of rehabilitation. She said she knew the reality of what went on within those walls: beatings and assaults such as the one that permanently crippled her friend.

Bays pointed out that Massachusetts has one of the highest prison budgets in the country, despite housing one of the smallest populations of people behind bars. The Department of Correction spends about $70,000 per inmate annually. For about two thirds of that cost, a student could spend a year at Harvard University. “Instead of a prison, why don’t you build a university?” suggested Bays. “At the end [of the sentence, an inmate] would have a degree and a future instead of a black hole on their resume and more trauma to recover from.”

There Is No Such Thing as a “Trauma-Informed” Prison

Tomorrow, the Legislature will hold a hearing on a bill to impose a five-year moratorium on the construction of new prisons and jails.

This is particularly urgent because the state wants to spend 50 million dollars to build a new prison to house just over 100 women, most of whom are safe to release to their homes and families.

This bill is personal because for the last five years I have been visiting a friend in prison, and I have watched with horror what prisons are really like and what they do to a person. My friend has endured torture unlike anything you can imagine — four years in solitary confinement, starvation, and assaults. The prisons here in Massachusetts are brutal, nightmarish places. As a system and institution for rehabilitation, they simply do not work.

Please submit testimony in support of a prison construction moratorium.

The state says this new facility will be different — it will be a “trauma-informed” prison. But, in visiting Andrew over the last five years, I have learned that there is no such thing as a trauma-informed prison because when a person has no autonomy or freedom in their life and when other human beings have complete and total control over them, there can be no progress towards rehabilitation and no healing from past trauma. We have an opportunity to use this five-year moratorium to reimagine rehabilitation. It costs less to send someone to Harvard then it does to keep someone imprisoned in our state. Think of how much money we could save, how many people could be healed if we were putting that $50,000,000 into education, into therapy, into affordable housing, or even just into food to feed hungry babies. 

Please submit testimony in support of a prison construction moratorium.

Every time I visited my friend, I would look at the sign on Cedar Junction’s waiting room that said the goal of the prison was rehabilitation. Sometimes when I read that sign, I would laugh at the absurdity of it, sometimes I would cry at the false promise of it. Massachusetts has an opportunity to think outside the box. We can come up with another alternative for treating people — people who have harmed others and themselves. But inflicting cruel punishment and torture does not make anyone safer. Instead we can approach solving this problem with true compassion and real rehabilitation.  

PS: For more information, check out this helpful toolkit from Families for Justice as Healing, Building up People Not Prisons, and the National Council of Incarcerated and Formerly Incarcerated Women and Girls.

Book Talk with Lily Geismer, Author of “Don’t Blame Us”

In her book Don’t Blame Us: Suburban Liberals and the Transformation of the Democratic Party, Lily Geismer traces the evolution of modern liberalism by focusing on the suburban organizing along the high-tech corridor of Route 128 around Boston in the 1950s and 1960s. Surveying political fights around fair housing, education, war/peace, and land use, Geismer explores both the possibilities and limitations of such organizing, with important lessons for activists of today.

What can we learn about the political landscape in our state, and how can the history of such organizing inform our work today? Worcester School Committee Member Tracy O’Connell Novick will facilitate the discussion.

RSVP here.

TAKE ACTION: MA Should Prioritize Public Health

Public health image

In 2020, Massachusetts passed a police reform bill that created a standards and accreditation commission, put limits on the use of force, and took other steps to address systemic racism in law enforcement. But left out of the police reform bill was a simple realization: the best way to reduce the incidence of police brutality is to limit the scope of policing.

Too often, armed police officers are called in to respond to situations that they are not equipped to handle, situations that are better handled by someone with an expertise in social work or mental health or someone from the community itself. Shifting such calls away from police and towards alternative response programs ensures that situations do not escalate and that people can best be connected to the services that they need.

The ACES bill — An Act to Create Alternatives for Community Emergency Services (S.1552 / H.2519), filed by Sen. Sonia Chang-Diaz and Rep. Lindsay Sabadosa — would direct the Executive Office of Health and Human Services to establish and oversee the Alternatives for Community Emergency Services Grant Program (A.C.E.S.) to increase the availability of non-law-enforcement, unarmed community-based response options for calls to 911.

Can you email your state legislators in support of the ACES bill? 

Want to learn (or do) more? Check out our guide at https://progressivemass.com/aces2021.

Suppor the Community Immunity Act!

Yesterday, the Joint Committee on Public Health held a hearing on legislation to improve vaccination rates. 

Over 15+ hours, the Committee heard from literally hundreds of individuals, including licensed medical professionals at Mass General Hospital and Tufts Medical Center, who espoused toxic disinformation about the safety and efficacy of vaccines, grossly distorted and flatly misstated the content of the Community Immunity Act, and personally attacked the character of any legislators and public health professionals who care about strong immunization policy and infectious disease prevention. 

We need to make sure that the Legislature hears the voices of people who support science and public health. Here’s what you can do

Copy the list of members of the Joint Committee on Public Health and send them an email like the one below — Or send a pre-filled email here.

Jo.Comerford@masenate.gov 

Marjorie.Decker@mahouse.gov 

Becca.Rausch@masenate.gov 

Julian.Cyr@masenate.gov 

Patrick.OConnor@masenate.gov 

Susan.Moran@masenate.gov 

Harriette.Chandler@masenate.gov 

Brian.Murray@mahouse.gov 

Brian.Ashe@mahouse.gov 

Paul.Schmid@mahouse.gov 

Kay.Khan@mahouse.gov 

Jack.Lewis@mahouse.gov 

Andy.Vargas@mahouse.gov 

Vanna.Howard@mahouse.gov 

Hannah.Kane@mahouse.gov 

Shawn.Dooley@mahouse.gov 

Jon.Santiago@mahouse.gov 

Dear Chair Comerford, Chair Decker, and Distinguished Members of the Joint Committee on Public Health:  

I write to express my strong support for S.1517/H.2271, the Community Immunity Act, filed by Senator Rausch and Representatives Donato and Vargas. You heard testimony on this critical legislation on Monday, July 12.As we endeavor to emerge from a global pandemic, I urge you to expediently advance the Community Immunity Act with a favorable report.  

We need only look around to see the importance of widespread herd immunity (both localized and statewide) and the need to improve our public health infrastructure. Unfortunately, our current infectious disease prevention provisions leave gaping holes in our public health protections. Every corner of our Commonwealth faces a concerningly high rate of under- or unimmunized youth, threatening our communities’ health and safety. (Please consider these maps: https://www.beccarauschma.com/communityimmunitymap.) 

The Community Immunity Act fixes the holes by creating the statutory immunization infrastructure our Commonwealth needs, without mandating vaccines or striking the religious exemption. I support this comprehensive bill because [insert your reasons here].  

As our elected leaders, please embrace this once-in-a-generation moment to protect generations to come. I ask that you swiftly advance the Community Immunity Act out of the Public Health Committee with a favorable report. Please help to keep all of us safe and healthy, particularly people who are immunocompromised and rely on community immunity. 

Thank you for your consideration and your service to the people of the Commonwealth. 

Sincerely, 

[your full name] 

[your phone number (optional)] 

[complete address – street, city, state, zip] 

ALERT: Take Action in Support of a More Transparent & Accountable State House

Back in January (remember January?), the MA House delayed consideration of a rules package for the new legislative session, instead creating a committee to explore possible reforms.

Unsurprisingly, that committee did little of its work in public, but it finally issued its report last week. Although there are some recommended reforms worth celebrating (Floor votes will continue to be easier to access on the website, virtual participation will not become a thing of the past when COVID is over, and members will get summaries of bills before voting on them), the new rules package that resulted still leaves much to be desired.

Every system is perfectly designed to produce the results it gets. And if we want to see different outcomes, part of that requires changing the rules.

Can you email your state rep today in support of key rules reforms that will make a more democratic and transparent Legislature?

In particular, your state rep should support the following reforms, championed by the People’s House campaign:

  • Amendment #2 (Gouveia): Speaker Term Limits, ensuring that no one holds the office of Speaker of the House for more than eight years
  • Amendment #16 (Uyterhoeven): Public Committee Votes, ensuring that the full record of the yes and no votes taken in committee are made public, rather than a mere tally of the vote
  • Amendment #17 (Uyterhoeven): Adequate Time to Review, ensuring that members have at least 72 hours to read bills before they vote on them and allowing for greater public participation 
Sunlight on Beacon Hill

Also, as the Globe pointed out recently, the House and Senate have yet to agree to a set of joint rules, and your state rep should hear from you about that too.

Globe - No Rules Agreement - July 2021

But The Fight Continues On

Here in Massachusetts, with a progressive electorate, we should already be leading the country in climate action, in providing Medicare for All, and more — but policies that have majority support languish in the State House year after year.

We’ll be joining together with a coalition of progressive organizations to build a movement for change through Incorruptible Mass. Incorruptible Mass has an 18-month plan to raise awareness of the deep problems at our State House and to amplify our demands for progressive policies, building pressure in each district.

Want to get involved? You can sign up here to get involved with your Incorruptible Mass district team. You’ll play an integral part by contributing your knowledge of the people and issues right in your own backyard, engaging people on what matters most to them.  

There’s a LOT Going on This Week

This past weekend marked the first time that Juneteenth was recognized as a federal holiday.

Juneteenth is the oldest known celebration of the end of slavery, with its date stemming from when the Union General Gordon Granger formally announced enforcement of the Emancipation Proclamation in Galveston, Texas.

Juneteenth is a day to celebrate, but also a reminder of how much work is still to be done, as the legacies of slavery live on in our policing systems, carceral systems, housing segregation, inequalities of wealth and access to public goods, and more. 

TODAY & TOMORROW: Fair Share Amendment Campaign Launches

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Boston! 

Calling all Boston area Fair Share Amendment supporters!

RSVP to attend the campaign launch for Fair Share in Boston tonight at 5 pm outside the Bolling Building (2300 Washington St) in Roxbury! 

Springfield & Western Mass!

Calling all Springfield are Fair Share Amendment supporters!

RSVP to attend the campaign launch tomorrow (Tuesday) at 6 pm outside Springfield City Hall. 

Anywhere & Everywhere! 

Don’t forget to sign a Fair Share pledge card!

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WEDNESDAY: Driving Families Forward Hearing Watch Party 

Driving Families Forward

The Driving Families Forward Coalition will be hosting a virtual watch and action party for supporters and coalition partners from 2-4PM on Wednesday, June 23rd, during the bill’s hearing!

RSVP HERE to join.

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SATURDAY: FREEDOM TO VOTE RALLY 

Pass S1: For the People

Join us at the Freedom to Vote Rally on 6/26/21 at 2 – 3:30PM in the Boston Common! There is overwhelming public support for voting rights! Push the Senate to pass S.1 for the People Act.

Join Indivisible Mass Coalition, Swing Blue Alliance, NAACP-Boston, Common Cause MA, Progressive Mass, JALSA, Act on Mass, Free Speech for People, Mass Peace Action, TPS Alliance, Indivisible Acton Area & others at the Rally.

Your strong voice at this critical moment is essential. The fate of our democracy hangs in the balance. This rally is one of the thousands of events to be held across the country to demonstrate massive grassroots support of the For the People Act.

Voter suppression has a disproportionate impact on voters of color. The Boston Freedom to Vote rally will coincide with the arrival in Washington D.C. of the Freedom Ride bus tour. This bus tour, organized by Black Voters Matter, commemorates the 60th anniversary of the original Freedom Ride movement as a means to unite voters in the fight to protect voting rights. We cannot let legislators continue to strip away voting rights, particularly impacting Black voters.

To meet this moment, we are assembling all the supports that are needed, including event marshals and peacekeepers, water stations, medical support and a fully equipped stage with a state of the art sound system. If you can volunteer, please email debi.cpaul@gmail.com.

Hope to see you this week!

When the Right to Vote Is Under Attack

Join us at the Freedom to Vote Rally on 6/26/21 at 2 – 3:30PM in the Boston Common! There is overwhelming public support for voting rights! Push the Senate to pass S.1 for the People Act.

Join Indivisible Mass Coalition, Swing Blue Alliance, NAACP-Boston, Common Cause MA, Progressive Mass, JALSA, Act on Mass, Free Speech for People, Mass Peace Action, TPS Alliance, Indivisible Acton Area & others at the Rally.

Your strong voice at this critical moment is essential. The fate of our democracy hangs in the balance. This rally is one of the thousands of events to be held across the country to demonstrate massive grassroots support of the For the People Act.

Voter suppression has a disproportionate impact on voters of color. The Boston Freedom to Vote rally will coincide with the arrival in Washington D.C. of the Freedom Ride bus tour. This bus tour, organized by Black Voters Matter, commemorates the 60th anniversary of the original Freedom Ride movement as a means to unite voters in the fight to protect voting rights. We cannot let legislators continue to strip away voting rights, particularly impacting Black voters.

To meet this moment, we are assembling all the supports that are needed, including event marshals and peacekeepers, water stations, medical support and a fully equipped stage with a state of the art sound system. If you can volunteer, please email debi.cpaul@gmail.com.

Next Wednesday @ 6 PM: Democracy Denied Town Hall 

A town hall discussion on hyper-incarceration’s effect on political power, and the movement to ensure democracy does not stop at prisons and jails.

Presented by the Democracy Behind Bars Coalition, Senator Adam Hinds, and Representatives Tyler and Miranda

RSVP here.