Showing posts with label Charles Williams. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Charles Williams. Show all posts

Thursday, March 17, 2016

Congressman John Conyers to Join National Action Network for Press Conference To Urge Congressional Action on the Flint Water Crisis


Immediately following the testimony of Michigan Republican Governor Rick Snyder before the House Oversight Committee, Congressman John Conyers (D-MI), Rev. Sharpton and Rev. Williams will join families from Flint, Michigan that have been impacted by the water crisis to call for a greater Congressional response.

WASHINGTON – Tomorrow, March 17, 2016, U.S. Congressman John Conyers, Jr. (MI-13) will join the National Action Network in urging Congressional action to resolve the Flint water crisis and to announce introduction of legislation to reform the Michigan Emergency Financial Manager law.

Dean of the u.S. House
of Representatives
John Conyers, Jr.
WHO:  U.S. Congressman John Conyers, Jr. (MI-13)
Rev. Al Sharpton, President and Founder of National Action Network
Rev. Charles Williams, President of National Action Network Michigan Chapter
Families from Flint, Michigan affected by water crisis

WHAT:  Press conference to announce introduction of legislation to reform the MI Emergency Financial Manager law and urge Congressional action to resolve the Flint water crisis.

WHEN:  Thursday, March 17, 2016 – NOON

WHERE:  House TriangleU.S. Capitol Complex (map)
*Please note the House Triangle is adjacent to the intersection of Independence Avenue and South Capitol Street SE. *

All media is invited to attend/cover the press conference. For any specific questions, please reach out to Stephanie Báez at(202) 999 – 9699.

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Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Conyers, Governor Snyder, Rev. Williams Discuss Emergency Managers Law

**Follow Me On Twitter @HouseJudDems**
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For Immediate Release
Date: Wednesday, February 1, 2012
Contact: Matthew Morgan – 202-226-5543

Conyers, Governor Snyder, Rev. Williams Discuss Emergency Managers Law

(WASHINGTON) –  Today, House Judiciary Committee Ranking Member John Conyers, Jr. (D-Mich.) and Reverend Charles E. Williams II, President of the Detroit chapter of the National Action Network, met Governor Rick Snyder to discuss Michigan’s Emergency Managers law, Public Act 4.  The meeting occurred prior to Governor Snyder’s testimony before the House Committee on Education and Workforce. 

U.S. Representative John Conyers, Jr. and Michigan
Governor Rick Snyder discussing Emergency
Manager Law in D.C.
At today’s meeting, Representative Conyers and Reverend Williams expressed to Governor Snyder their continuing concerns regarding the constitutionality and inherently undemocratic nature of the Emergency Manager law.  Governor Snyder expressed his willingness to continue the dialogue regarding the Emergency Manager law and possible remedies to current financial problems facing many municipalities within the State of Michigan.

Previously in a letter written to U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder last December, Representative Conyers requested the Department of Justice to review, monitor, and if necessary challenge the application of Michigan’s Emergency Manager law on the basis that it may violate the U.S. Constitution. 

Last December, Representative Conyers sent a letter to Governor Snyder, along with two other members of the Michigan’s U.S. House Delegation, 55 State Legislators (9 State Senators and 46 State Representatives) and 8 Detroit City Council Members, requesting a meeting with Governor Snyder before he took any further actions under the Emergency Manager Law.  The letter also expressed concerns that the Emergency Manager law undermines voting rights and democratic principles (including disproportionately disenfranchising persons of color), as well as collective bargaining rights.  Furthermore, It expressed their concern regarding efforts by Governor Snyder’s administration to pursue additional stop-gap legislation to thwart voter initiatives to revoke the Emergency Manager law. 

U.S. Representative John Conyers, Jr.'s Letter to Attorney General Regarding Michigan Emergency Manager, De...

Congressional and Stete Elected Officials Letter to Governor Snyder Regarding Emergency Manager Law Public ...
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Monday, January 16, 2012

Sharpton to protest Mich. emergency takeover law

Al Sharpton, Charles Williams, John Conyers
SUPERIOR TOWNSHIP, Mich. (AP) - The Rev. Al Sharpton and others say they plan a demonstration outside the gated community where Republican Gov. Rick Snyder lives to protest what they say is a racially biased law that makes it easier for Michigan to take over financially struggling communities and school districts.
The protest is scheduled on Martin Luther King Day at Snyder's home in Washtenaw County's Superior Township, near Ann Arbor.
The protesters plan to march Monday afternoon to a gatehouse outside the private subdivision that includes the governor's home.
Sharpton and U.S. Rep. John Conyers talked about the protest Sunday at a news at a Detroit church.
Organizers say the law seems to target mostly black communities. Snyder has said the law isn't racially motivated.


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Activists invoke spirit of MLK

Activists invoke spirit of MLK

King would oppose EM law, pastor says

"I have a Dream" speech debuted in Detroit: Mike Smith, archivist at Wayne State's Walter P. Reuther Library, talks about Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s iconic speech at Cobo Arena.
Detroit — The Rev. Charles Williams II was still a college student when he got involved in activism just over a decade ago.
Now 30, Williams plans to mark Martin Luther King Jr. Day by following the civil rights icon's example and protesting what he sees as injustice.
The pastor of Detroit's Historic King Solomon Missionary Baptist Church will lead a demonstration today outside the Ann Arbor residence of Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder against Public Act 4. The measure, enacted last year, allows the state to appoint emergency managers to oversee struggling municipalities and school districts.
Williams says the law is an attack on the voting rights of African-Americans, whose communities have been mostly affected by the law. Public Act 4 gives emergency managers broad powers to alter or cancel contracts.
"I believe if Dr. King were alive today, he would not be concerned about chicken dinners and other celebrations," said Williams. "He would be most concerned about the issues of the day."
Williams is among many local young activists who say they were inspired by King and other civil rights leaders to pursue a career of community organizing.
As the nation observes the birthday of the late civil rights leader, renewed focus is being placed on the future of the modern-day civil rights movement and who will take up the mantle of the movement.
For Williams, King's dream of racial equality is one that still requires work and dedication even more than half a century since the beginning of King's career as a civil rights advocate.
"We still have a long way to go," said Williams. "We are not at all in a post-racial era."
Today, numerous marches and other celebrations locally and around the nation will celebrate King's legacy. The federal holiday honoring the slain civil rights leader is observed on the third Monday in January.
King, who would have been 83 on Sunday, was shot to death April 4, 1968, on the balcony of a motel in Memphis, Tenn., by James Earl Ray. King, then 39, had gone to the Southern city in support of striking sanitation workers.
There are more than two dozen local events honoring King today. At Oakland University, the rapper and activist Common will be the keynote speaker at the Keeper of the Dream Scholarship Awards celebration.
Other local young activists such as Ryan Bates said King and others in the Southern civil rights battles of the 1950s and 1960s have spurred their own peaceful protests.
Bates, 28, is the executive director of the Alliance for Immigrants Rights & Reform/Michigan Organizing Project.
"I am inspired and encouraged by the incredible works by the civil rights movement," said Bates. "It shows people can win and justice can be achieved (and) we can do it through hard work and hope."
Bates said the legacy of King and those who worked with him proves "regular people" can do extraordinary things.
"They were sick and tired of being sick and tired," Bates said.
Nadia Tonova said the King legacy and the lessons learned from the modern civil rights movement have helped in her work with local Arab-Americans and Muslims. Tonova, 28, is the director of the National Network of Arab American Communities, a national project of the Dearborn-based ACCESS organization.
"The Arab-American and Muslim communities are facing their own civil rights (battle). Certainly, Dr. King and the African-American community are a huge inspiration in how we move our own movement forward," said Tonova.
The National Network of Arab American Communities is involved in bipartisan voter registration drives and other community projects.
Today, it will bring together local Arab-American and Muslim youngsters to feed Detroiters in need and pass out coats to the poor during A Day of Service. The service event will begin with a rally from 9-11 a.m. at 500 E. Lafayette Blvd.
"The way (Dr. King) really reached out on a grass-roots level and helped people to realize their own power and their own role in making change is something we definitely try to do in our own work," said Tonova.
Veteran labor activist William Lucy marched with King in Memphis to help the sanitation workers get better working conditions and pay through a new labor contract. To him, young activists will help define the future of the civil rights movement.
"The occupy (Wall Street) crowd is playing a big part," said Lucy, 77, who's in town as part of the AFL-CIO's annual "We Are One" King Day observance.
Lucy, also the president of the Coalition of Black Trade Unionists, said the King legacy is "stronger than ever before."
"People are still very conscious of his ideals and projects," he said.

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