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End of Regular Session down in Olympia – Two Weeks until the Beginning of Special Session!

Posted on May 1, 2013 by Kathryn Murdock - UCC Social Justice Intern

Sunday marked the end of the 105 day regular session down in Olympia with no budget agreement in sight.  Governor Inslee has called all the legislators back down to Olympia for a special session to work out the budget beginning on May 13.  While it may seem frustrating that the legislators couldn’t work out a budget in 105 days, it’s actually really great for housing and homelessness advocates to have an extended session.  A special session means that we are more likely to end up with a final budget that reflects what we want: adequate investment in affordable housing (at least $65 million for the Housing Trust Fund + $28.5 million allotted to affordable housing projects by the House) and investment in the services that the people we serve need most, including Disability Lifeline (Housing and Essential Needs and Aged, Blind and Disabled) and Temporary Assistance to Needy Families (TANF).

Your legislators will be back home in their district for the next two weeks, so now it is MORE important than ever before to stay in touch with your legislators.  Email them or better yet invite them to your programs and show them how your programs – especially programs that are funded by the Housing Trust Fund or Housing and Essential Needs programs – work!  If we don’t keep in touch with our elected officials, we will not end up with the budget that we want in the end – one that protects affordable housing and services for our homeless and low-income neighbors.

Jay Inslee signing the Fair Tenant Screening Act (SB 5568)

Governor Inslee signing the Fair Tenant Screening Act (SB 5568)

The end of regular session  also marks a time to celebrate our advocacy as a community this session and what it helped us to win. Our collective advocacy helped us pass part 2 of the Fair Tenant Screening Act, Foster Care to 21, and 72-hour notification for youth shelters.  These wins are truly something to be proud of so let’s build on them and ask our legislators to pass a budget that Washingtonians can be proud of!

Posted in Advocacy, Children, Families, Housing, Poverty, Single Adults, Take Action!, Youth & Young Adults | Tagged 2013 Legislative Session, Becca Bill, Civic engagement, Fair Tenant Screening Act, Housing and Essential Needs, Public policy, Temporary Assistance to Needy Families (TANF), Washington State Representatives, Washington State Senate

Some Good News From Olympia last week as the budget process continues

Posted on April 15, 2013 by Kathryn Murdock - UCC Social Justice Intern

Last week was a busy week for housing and homelessness advocates. First, the House passed its proposed budget, a huge improvement over the Senate’s version.

On Wednesday at noon, the House Appropriations Committee released their proposed budget and then passed it through the House of Representatives late Friday night.  The House’s proposed budget protects important parts of our state’s safety net and includes revenue.  It preserves funding for:

  • Housing and Essential Needs (HEN)
  • Aged, Blind and Disabled (ABD)
  • Working Connections Child Care
  • Consolidated Homeless Grants (CHG) which funds homeless housing programs across the state,  including domestic violence shelters, transitional housing for families, and short-term rent assistance.
  • Temporary Assistance to Needy Families

The House also allocated $71 million for the Housing Trust Fund, more than double what the Senate allocated.  This is very important, however, it is still well below the $175 million that we need in our state to create housing that is affordable to low income and working families.

On April 10, the same day that the House released their budget, our friends at Poverty Action issued a call to action to “Save our Safety Net.” We joined them in urging our members to call Olympia to tell their legislators to protect Washington’s safety net.  We had some surprising evidence (in addition to people e-mailing us and posting on our facebook page) that lots of people took action:  last Wednesday evening, members of the Coalition’s Board of Directors made their calls to the free Legislative Hotline. Board president Emily Meyer called, and began to deliver our short message.  After her first few words, “Please vote for full funding for vital programs,” the hotline operator recited the rest of our message back to her, “that really help families and people with disabilities in our community: HEN, ABD, TANF. Please include new revenue and end tax giveaways in the final budget. Thank you.”  Now that is what we call effective advocacy!!

Take Action Today!

Now that both houses are in the process of negotiating our final budget, please use Poverty Action’s handy email template to keep this message in front of your legislators: our safety net must be protected in the final budget, and our state needs revenue.

The Fair Tenant Screening Act has passed the House and is headed for the Governor’s desk!

We had a piece of GREAT NEWS: on Friday, Part II of the Fair Tenant Screening Act passed the House unanimously and moved on to the Governor’s desk for signature. Thanks for the tireless advocacy of the Tenants Union, the Washington Low Income Housing Alliance, and all of you for helping this bill become law!

Posted in Advocacy, Children, Families, Housing, In the news, Poverty, Single Adults, State and local homelessness & housing issues, Take Action! | Tagged 2013 Legislative Session, advocacy, Aged, and Disabled, Blind, Civic engagement, Consolidated Homeless Grants, Fair Tenant Screening Act, Housing and Essential Needs, Housing Trust Fund, Public policy, Temporary Assistance to Needy Families (TANF), Washington State Legislators, Washington State Representatives, Washington State Senate, Working Connecting Child Care

Huge Success for Youth! But there’s still work to be done!

Posted on February 20, 2013 by Kathryn Murdock - UCC Social Justice Intern

It is true, bipartisanship really does still exist! The 72-hour notification bill (SB 5147/HB 1250), one of the Coalition’s legislative priorities, passed the Senate unanimously and easily passed in the House this past week with only seven voting against it.

This bill sought to reinstate an important part of the Becca Bill which gave youth shelters up to 72 hours to notify a youth’s guardian after they checked into a youth shelter.  It had previously been law, but had sunset and had decreased the number of hours down to only eight.  Eight hours is not enough time for the shelter to engage with youth and be able to provide rehabilitative services.  Many youth also come to shelters after they have runaway from their families and eight hours does not allow families enough time to resolve conflicts and reunify. Thanks to all the legislators of our State, our youth will have a safe and stable place to stay and they will not have to avoid shelters in fear of their parents being notified immediately. We are now asking Governor Jay Inslee to sign the bill into law on Youth Advocacy Day this Friday, February 22 to show the youth of Washington State that their governor and legislators are behind them.

Even though we have a very exciting win, youth advocacy does not stop here.  As Youth Advocacy Day approaches, one of the Coalition’s priorities, the Youth Opportunities Act (HB 1651 / SB 5689 ), is still under consideration. Currently Washington is one of only 8 states that makes juvenile records open to the public and available to be published online. This means that people with criminal records from their youth, before the age of 18, are subject to additional barriers accessing housing, education, and employment. The Youth Opportunities Act would seal juvenile records to the public, except in the case of serious violent offenses, and prohibit courts from disseminating or selling this information. This information is currently sold to background check companies who make money at the expense of youth and young adults.

The Youth Opportunities Act would remove barriers for young people seeking opportunities, and keep them from paying for childhood mistakes in their adult lives. Please take action to move this bill out of committee and onto the house floor by making a public comment on the Senate version of the bill or by calling your legislators using the legislative hotline, 1-800-562-6000.

P.S. For a great summary of youth advocacy around these and other important issues, check out Senator Frockt’s blog post!

Posted in Advocacy, Children, Poverty, State and local homelessness & housing issues, Take Action!, Youth & Young Adults | Tagged 2013 Legislative Session, advocacy, Becca Bill, Civic engagement, Public policy, Washington State Legislators, youth and young adults, youth and young adults committee

A thrilling week for advocacy in Seattle, Bellevue, and Olympia!

Posted on February 19, 2013 by Kathryn Murdock - UCC Social Justice Intern
Hundreds of people signed these  pink "I believe" postcards after the One Night Count.  We delivered every single one of them to legislators in Olympia!

Hundreds of people signed these pink “I believe” postcards after the One Night Count. We delivered every single one of them to legislators in Olympia!

This week was an exciting one for housing and homelessness advocacy!

Last Saturday, 80 people took part in  the Coalition’s Homelessness Advocacy 101 workshops in Seattle and Bellevue.  We had an amazingly diverse group of participants, including many people who had volunteered for the One  Night Count.  Among those who came were social workers; two doctors from the local VA; a member of the Redmond Human Services Commission; a nurse from the Harborview Women and Children’s Clinic; a Weyerhaueser manager; retirees; teenagers; people from local churches; people who are currently homeless; and people who were once homeless. Everyone had a simple and powerful idea in common:  that it is unacceptable to allow more than 2,736 people to struggle to survive outside in our community.

Our starting point for each workshop is, of course, a summary of the One Night Count.  The point of the Homelessness Advocacy 101 workshops is to make sure that the 2,736 men, women and children who were counted outside on a cold, wet night a few weeks ago inspire us to take action to make things better.  We have to go beyond the One Night Count, and make the results more than just a number.  We have to advocate for affordable housing and vital services so that everyone can have the the opportunity to live in a safe, healthy, affordable home.

Stina and Ben find Nancy Amidei's workshop antics funny!

Stina and Ben find Nancy Amidei’s workshop antics funny!

Two great presenters helped explain several key legislative proposals currently being considered in the State Legislature that will help prevent and end homelessness.  Ben Miksch from the Washington Low Income Housing Alliance spoke about the need to reform the state’s revenue system as the foundation for allowing positive investments in housing, services, education, and other important priorities.  Ben also highlighted adding $175 million to the Housing Trust Fund, and maintaining and strengthening the Housing and Essential Needs (HEN) program.  Stina Janssen, an organizer with the Tenants Union, explained why it is so important that legislators pass the Fair Tenant Screening Act (HB1529/SB5568).

Once we had a grasp on these legislative priorities, Nancy Amidei began her famous and lively presentation describing how EVERYONE can be an advocate! She gave the workshop participants several tips on being effective advocates:

  • Sign up for a good Advocacy Alert list.
  • Contact your legislators often ~ they want to hear from you! (If you don’t know who your legislators are, you can look them up on the Washington State Legislature website.)
  • Bring the legislative hotline phone number (1-800-562-6000) to a board meeting, a staff meeting, or a community gathering, and invite everyone to call legislators about a current issue.

Two Legislative Aides came to the workshops to help Nancy demonstrate that we shouldn’t be intimidated when contacting our legislators.  Samantha Kersul works with Senator David Frockt (46th district), and Marilyn Pedersen works with Representative Ross Hunter (48th district).  Both Samantha and Marilyn are very experienced and knowledgeable about policy and legislative processes.  They encouraged us to communicate about the issues that matter, and helped us see how easy it is to call or visit a legislator’s office and have a real conversation with the staff people who sit at the front desk.

Our workshops ended with 80 enthusiastic and well-trained advocates ready to put their skills into practice!  I believe these workshops are important because they both empower and inspire advocacy. Participants came up to me afterwards to tell me which issue they were going to call their legislator about or which issue they were going to focus on when they went to Olympia.  Nancy Amidei asked us if we each knew 10 people with access to phones.  She pointed out that “If each of you asked just five friends to call or e-mail their legislators, that would be over 400 calls about housing and homelessness issues!”

Sally Kinney,  Coalition Board member, ready to  fight the good fight at Housing & Homelessness Advocacy Day!

Sally Kinney, Coalition Board member, ready to fight the good fight at Housing & Homelessness Advocacy Day!

Our exciting week of advocacy continued last Monday, when Coalition members and allies headed to Olympia for Housing and Homelessness Advocacy Day, hosted by the Washington Low Income Housing Alliance. We were in great company, with more than 600 people from around the state. This was the biggest Housing and Homelessness Advocacy Day ever.  People from 43 of the 49 legislative districts in Olympia came in person to speak with their elected officials.  Fellow Coalition intern, Katharine, and I went to the offices of Democratic and Republican leaders in the House and Senate to deliver hundreds of postcards about our legislative priorities signed by One Night Count volunteers and Coalition members.  We also handed letters and examples of these postcards to the staff of every single King County legislator.

Our combined voices this week showed our legislators that many housing and homelessness advocates are active, informed, and paying attention to the votes being taken in Olympia.  I hope they understand that they cannot solve our budget crisis by cutting programs that are lifelines for many of Washington’s citizens.

Some of the great signs made by women from Rose of Lima House for Advocacy Day.  In case you're wondering, these were left outside the main doors to the Capitol Building because they aren't allowed inside.  They "take up too much room" is the reason given.  Of course, Washington state does allow people to carry AK47s and other guns into the building.  http://www.columbian.com/news/2013/feb/10/capitol-friendly-to-gun-rights/

Some great signs made by women from Rose of Lima House for Advocacy Day.

A seasoned advocate from Rose of Lima House with her sign just before the "Homes for All" rally on the Capitol steps!

A seasoned advocate from Rose of Lima House with her sign just before the “Homes for All” rally on the Capitol steps!

 

WLIHA director Rachael Myers, and two inspiring rally speakers led the chanting: What do we want? Homes for all!

Housing Alliance director Rachael Myers, and inspiring rally speakers, Quiana and Brittany, led chanting: “What do we want? Homes for all!”

SKCCH Board member Niki Amarantides and member Maya Opavska at Advocacy Day.

Coalition Board member Niki Amarantides and member Maya Opavska at Advocacy Day.

Posted in Advocacy, Housing, One Night Count, State and local homelessness & housing issues, Workshops & Trainings | Tagged 2013 Legislative Session, advocacy, Civic engagement, Public policy, Revenue, training, Washington State Legislators

The Power of Kids

Posted on January 31, 2013 by Kathryn Murdock - UCC Social Justice Intern

Yesterday, I had a great time as one of hundreds of advocates who joined the Children’s Alliance for 2013 0130 Olympia capitolHave a Heart for Kids Advocacy Day in Olympia. The marble halls of Olympia are usually filled with the low, booming voices of adults, but yesterday the Capitol was filled with the squeals of excited kids running around. Samantha Kersul, Legislative Aide to Senator Frockt (my senator in the 46th Legislative District!) told me, it was a nice change to have kids around the Capitol.

Before going to meet with our legislators, we marched to the Capitol and held a rally.  At the2013 0130 Crowd at Have a Heart for Kids Day rally, a young girl gave the opening remarks. She called to action all the adults in the audience: “as kids we need the help of adults to get a good start in life.  We need you to help fight for us.”  She is exactly right: if we as adults don’t fight for the kids of our state, they will not have a fair chance at a future.  It was a truly amazing and inspiring speech.

Next, Governor Inslee began his speech with a reference to a photo of a 4-year-old child sleeping on a bench that was captured during the homeless point-in-time count in Olympia and published in the local paper.  Moved by this picture, Inslee stated, “I am governor of this state and we should not be a state where a 4-year-old does not have a place to sleep at night.”  He spoke about how important it is that we give the kids of our state a fair chance at a good start and a promising future. He spoke about the exciting prospects of the McCleary decision and the possible benefits it could bring to our state, but he also had a warning that he wanted us to pass onto our legislators: “It is not a solution to our educational crisis to create a homelessness, nutrition and health care crisis for our kids” by not funding important state programs.  Governor Inslee’s passionate support of the reasons we were all there strengthened our drive and inspiration as we headed out to meet with our legislators and advocate for kids!

I had called ahead to set up meetings with two of my legislators from the 46th legislative district, Representative2013 0130 Hungry Kids Can't Learn Pollet and Senator Frockt, and a meeting with Representative Farrell’s Legislative Aide. I spoke with all of them about one of the Coalition on Homelessness’ key funding priorities, restoring the 15% cuts in already-too-small TANF benefits to families with children.  I also asked them to fund State Food Assistance, and to help pass one of the Children’s Alliance’s priority bills,  the Dental Access Bill (SB5433/HB1516).

Why did I pick these bills to talk about with my elected officials?   It’s simple: if a child is hungry, she can’t learn, and if a child is sitting in class in pain with a cavity, he can’t learn either.  If families can’t cover the basics of rent, food,  utilities, transportation, and clothes, kids will suffer.  Jenn Estroff, the Governmental Relations Director with the Children’s Alliance said it well: even if the legislature makes sure that all of our schools have great teachers and the best equipment possible, as long as our kids are still sitting in class hungry or in pain, none of those investments will be worth it.

Having hundreds of parents and children at Have a Heart for Kids Day served as a reminder to the legislators that they are not only voting for those who have the power to vote for them now, but they are voting for the future of every single one of Washington’s citizens.  I can hardly wait to head back to Olympia on February 11 for Housing & Homelessness Advocacy Day!  I’m going to help make sure that every legislator from King County gets one of our special buttons highlighting the results of the Coalition’s 2013 One Night Count,  and excerpts from the powerful comments people have written on the hundreds of advocacy postcards we’re collecting. See you there!

Posted in Advocacy, Children, Families, Poverty, State and local homelessness & housing issues, Take Action! | Tagged 2013 Legislative Session, advocacy, Civic engagement

Why we need revenue on the table in the 2013 State Legislative Session

Posted on December 20, 2012 by Ally Seidel

Early this week, Governor Gregoire released a 2013-2015 biennial budget, outlining how she plans to close the state’s $970 million deficit. The good news is that the Governor included new revenue in her proposal. The bad news is that even with this revenue, she proposed to eliminate cash assistance to 18,000 blind and disabled adults and to completely eliminate the State Food Assistance Program (along with additional cuts to Working Connections Child Care and TANF).

Since 2009, Washington has made $11 billion in cuts to state services that protect the health and safety of our communities – we cannot afford any more. Governor-elect Jay Inslee has thus far not indicated any willingness to consider the need to raise revenue in order to balance the state’s budge.  It is clear that including new revenue will be crucial to avoid further devastation to our state’s infrastructure and safety net programs. 

See the Coalition’s postcard campaign for our message to Governor-elect Jay Inslee about why revenue needs to be on the table this session. (Download, print, and send your own!)

At our December General Membership meeting, we covered some of the key issues and positive legislation we’ll be speaking up about in the 2013 Legislative Session.  Thanks to the more than 50 people who attended, and to our friends from Columbia Legal Services and the Washington Low Income Housing Alliance who dove into policy details and opportunities for our members to help educate legislators about these issues and proposals:

  • Invest in the Housing Trust Fund to built more affordable housing across Washington State
  • Pass Part 2 of the Fair Tenant Screening Act
  • Enact REVENUE to Avoid Cuts to Services and Programs
  • Protect and strengthen life-saving programs:
    • Disability Lifeline Programs: Housing and Essential Needs (HEN) and Aged, Blind, and Disabled (ABD) Assistance
      • Increase the Aged, Blind & Disabled cash grant
      • Restore a modest cash grant for Housing and Essential Needs recipients to buy their own essential needs: Everyone needs a little cash
      • Include ADATSA clients in eligibility for Housing and Essential Needs program (2013 Briefing Paper from King County)
    • Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF)
      • Restore cash grant to pre-2011 levels, before 15% reduction
      • Carve out more exceptions to the 5 year life-time limit
      • Increase time allowed for participants to pursue education and vocational training from 12 to 24 months
      • See the TANF priorities of the Welfare Advocate Group here: fact sheet
  • Pass Legislation that Addresses Youth Homelessness
    • Reinstate the 72-hour notification rule for youth shelters (fact sheet)
    • Expand the Extended Foster Care Program to allow ALL youth aging
      out of foster care to have access to safe housing until age 21
    • Remove barriers for rehabilitated youth by making youth juvenile offense records private (fact sheet)
    • Provide legal representation to vulnerable foster children and youth (fact sheet)
    • Contact our partners at The Mockingbird Society or Columbia Legal Services for more information on these bills.

The Coalition also strongly supports the whole Washington Low Income Housing Alliance’s legislative agenda for the 2013 Session.

Posted in Advocacy, Families, Housing, Single Adults, State and local homelessness & housing issues, Youth & Young Adults | Tagged 2013 Legislative Session, Civic engagement, SKCCH General Membership Meeting

Fair Tenant Screening Act – What’s At Stake in the 2013 Legislative Session?

Posted on December 14, 2012 by Kathryn Murdock - UCC Social Justice Intern

In 2009, advocates proposed a bill in our state legislature that would become the Fair Tenant Screening Act. Intended to solve the unjust and unfair tenant screening system in Washington state, the bill’s overarching goals were to:

  • Prevent & address homelessness
  • Maintain housing access for survivors of domestic violence
  • Reduce burden on nonprofit housing providers by increasing tenants’ access to the private rental housing market
  • Ensure access to justice, and fair & accurate tenant screening
  • Address affordability of tenant screening reports

This was a community effort with many organizations, including the Seattle/King County Coalition on Homelessness, endorsing the bill.

In the 2012 Legislative Session, part of the bill successfully passed through the legislature.  The Fair Tenant Screening Act, passed in 2012, guarantees increased transparency for tenants when applying for housing.  Landlords are required to disclose the criteria they use to screen tenants and the screening company they hire to run the reports.  Landlords must also give tenants “adverse action notices” explaining why prospective tenants are rejected for tenancy. What does this mean for tenants? When a company screens a tenant and there is a mistake on that individual’s record, the tenant will know what the mistake is and who to contact to fix it. Before this was passed, tenants had no idea what was on the screening reports and why they were constantly being rejected by landlords. They would spend hundreds of dollars in screening fees at each rental property they applied to without ever securing a place to live and not being told why.

This was a huge win for tenant rights in Washington, but as only part of the proposed bill passed, there is still more to be done in 2013 to create a just and fair screening system.  Advocates for tenant rights are proposing a robust agenda for the 2013 Legislative Session on fair tenant screening, here are some highlights:

  • Prevent tenant screening companies from showing eviction cases on records where the tenant prevailed or was not found guilty. Currently when a tenant prevails in an eviction charge or settles with their landlord, it still shows up on their record as an eviction – preventing them from getting housing from another landlord.
  • Work on portable screening reports.  In order to reduce costs, advocates are proposing implementing a system where a prospective tenant could pay for one screening report that would be accepted by multiple landlords. This would help low-income tenants avoid the hundreds of dollars they are forced to spend on screening fees each time they apply for a place.  This idea is still not very popular in the legislature, but advocates will continue to work on this idea and research into how it might be possible to implement in Washington.
  • Make sure that victims of domestic violence, sexual assault or stalkers are not further victimized by the system. Right now, law forbids landlords to discriminate against prospective tenants based on their history of sexual assault. However, related incidence reports show up on screening reports, influencing landlords and contributing to the refusal of housing even though it’s against the law. Advocates will push for this information to be removed from screening materials so that landlords do not include it in the criteria they consider.

What can you do to help make sure that fair tenant screening legislation passes this session? You can take the following actions to make sure your voice is heard:

  • Come to Housing and Homelessness Advocacy Day and tell your legislators how important this act is to you.
  • Write letters, call, or email your legislators and remind them of the importance of this act. Not sure who your legislators are? Click here to find out.
  • If you are a service provider and have clients who have stories to share about their experiences as tenants, you can help connect them with the Tenants Union or Washington Low Income Housing Alliance. Their stories can help educate legislators on the importance of this bill.

 

Posted in Advocacy, Families, Housing, Poverty, Single Adults, State and local homelessness & housing issues, Take Action! | Tagged 2013 Legislative Session, advocacy, Civic engagement, Fair Tenant Screening Act, Public policy, Washington State Legislators

How Can You Help Protect Food Stamps?

Posted on December 5, 2012 by Kathryn Murdock - UCC Social Justice Intern

The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) program, otherwise known as food stamps, is on the cutting block in the fiscal cliff discussion. This is a crucial time and your legislators need to hear from YOU about how important this program is to sustaining the lives of many Washingtonians. The Anti-Hunger and Nutrition Coalition states that over 1 million Washingtonians rely on food stamps and that if the Farm Bill passes in its current state, then the monthly food budget of at least 234,000 homes in WA will decrease by $90 and 80,000 homes will be ineligible for the program.

The Food Resource and Action Center (FRAC) commented that it is very important to contact your legislators NOW because if the Farm Bill, which includes our nation’s food stamp program, becomes part of a larger legislative package, it will be much harder to convince legislators to vote against it.  To contact your legislators, simply call the Legislative Hotline and they will connect you to your legislator’s office: (202) 224-3121.  You can also write your legislator an email. If you are not sure who your legislators are,  you can find out on the Washington State Legislature Page.

Here are some sample messages you can use from FRAC when contacting your legislators. Make sure to educate your representatives on the impact this bill would have on WA families (see above details).

“Over time, spending money to reduce hunger in America is a good investment. It more than pays for itself because it reduces long-term social costs such as the problems hungry children have in school and the health problems of people who don’t eat properly.”

“The food stamp program is working for the most vulnerable people in our nation. It is the country’s first line of defense against hunger, and cutting help for this most basic human need would be immoral.”

Make the call today, your representatives want to hear from YOU!

Posted in Advocacy, Children, Families, National homelessness, housing, and related issues, Poverty, Take Action! | Tagged Civic engagement, Congress, Federal Budget Advocacy, Fiscal Cliff, Food Stamps, Public policy, SNAP, Washington DC

VOTE: Don’t Forget to Turn in Your Ballot BY NOVEMBER 6!

Posted on November 5, 2012 by Kathryn Murdock - UCC Social Justice Intern

As many of you know, TOMORROW, is the final day of the 2012 general election, so don’t forget to turn in those ballots! You should have received your ballot a few weeks ago and at this point if you have not mailed it in, you should drop it off at one of the drop-box locations, which you can find on our 2012 Homeless Voter’s Guide.  At this point, it may be better to drop your ballot off at a drop-box rather than put it in the mail since we are so close to election day – any ballots postmarked after November 6 will not be counted (keep in mind USPS hours!). All ballots must be post-marked by election day (that’s tomorrow!) or dropped off at drop-box by 8pm. 

Posted in In the news, Take Action! | Tagged Civic engagement

Making sure EVERY VOTER COUNTS

Posted on October 22, 2012 by Katharine Revello - MSW Student Intern

Here at SKCCH we are passionate about providing voter registration and information for people experiencing homelessness. SKCCH interns and volunteers spent the last two weeks out in the community providing information and helping people to register. We went to shelters, day centers, and food banks and helped 70 people register to vote or update their address.

Many times we heard people say, “I can’t vote,” and in most cases we were able to respond, yes you can! Although legislation was passed in 2009 that restored voting rights to people with felony convictions, many people are still unaware of their rights. We were able to inform people that as long as they are no longer under D.O.C. supervision, their voting rights are automatically restored. This is the first presidential election since that legislation passed and people were excited to register once they heard they could!

One man came through the line to get a sandwich for lunch and we asked if he was registered to vote and he told us he was not registered because he couldn’t register to vote. We asked him why and he said that thirty years ago he had committed a felony.  We then told him that he could ABSOLUTELY register to vote. At first, he was skeptical, but we explained the new law to him and told him that as long as he was no longer on parole he had the right to vote. Seeing the joy on his face once he found out he could vote was amazing. He told us that he had wanted to vote all his life but he had thought once he committed a felony his voting rights were stripped away for life. We then helped him register, and as he completed the form, his face began to light up; he realized that voting was finally becoming a reality for him and that he would have a voice.  He told us as he was leaving that we had made his day and that he couldn’t wait to vote and would definitely be casting his ballot in November.

This is a perfect example of how important it is to give everyone who has the right to vote a voice in the democratic process. This story highlights why voter registration is so important and why we believe in making sure EVERY VOTER COUNTS.

A big thank you goes out to our wonderful volunteers, especially Molly Matter who went to three different sites and registered 24 people! We’d also like to thank the ACLU of Washington for their excellent voting rights restoration materials, and the Washington Low Income Housing Alliance for their help with publishing our 2012 Homeless Voters’ Information Guide.

click this image to download our Homeless Voters’ Information Guide!

Posted in Poverty, State and local homelessness & housing issues | Tagged Civic engagement, Voter Registration

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