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The ACORN Memorial Orchard is going strong at the ACORN Farm in the Lower 9th Ward, New Orleans.
Pecans starting to bud, citrus already blooming with more holes dug for more citrus, and fig tree budding.
Members of the New Orleans Permaculture Group and baristas from Fair Grinds Coffeehouse installing herb borders around raised beds to discourage pests at the ACORN farm. The herbs will later be harvested for tea at Fair Grinds Coffeehouse. This is our second of three planned permaculture installations this year.
A PROGRESSIVE REPORT FOR THE MONTH OF DECEMBER, 2014
27nd DECEMBER, 2014
Introduction
The Organization spent the early part of December in planning for the celebrations for People Living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHIA) as part of campaigning and championing for their rights. After the activity which was a huge success we reviewed the same and made a follow up of the stakeholders who had attended as guests and members of PLWHA. Majority had already traveled up country for December festive season.
Celebrations
The celebrations took place on 9th December, 2014 as scheduled at the Word of life Church in Kariobangi which gave us a free venue for the celebrations.
The main goal of the event was to give part of our members (PLWHIA) a forum for celebration in this December festive season and sharing their challenges and experiences. It also provided an opportunity to engage the government to seriously look into the issues of health especially HIV/AIDS in Korogocho and the neighboring estates.
The event started at 9.30am and ended at 2.00pm and this is the summary of what took place during that day.
In attendance
Community members 140
Invited Guests 12
– Representatives from Care For Aids (CFA )
– Representative from Word of life Church
– COPA- KENYA
– Local Administration
– Representative from the County Government
– Faulu Kenya bank among many other
They all made an inspiring speech and suggested on how together we can push the County and Central government to bring health services in Korogocho and the Neighboring estates.
ACORN will convene a meeting in the second week of January, 2015.
Activities
Membership Recruitment
VILLAGE
RECRUITED NEW MEMBERS
Kariobangi
10
Ngomongo
6
Gitathuru
5
Grogon B
3
Grogon A
4
Total
28
Meetings
DATE
VENUE
ATTENDANCE
AGENDA
–
16th December,2014
Word of Hope Church, Kariobangi
10 (Planning committee of the celebrations)
Evaluation of the celebrations and planning for the members meetings.
Kariobangi and surrounding areas
19th December,2014
at 4.00pm
Word of life Church Kariobangi
48 members
-Membership recruitment drive.- Up-dates
-Dues collection
Highridge and the surrounding villages up to Babandogo
23rd December, 2014
at 3.00pm
Calvary church
57
-membership recruitment drive.
– Other up-dates.
– -dues collection
Dues collection
NO. OF MEMBERS
TOTAL IN KSHS
40
800
High ridge
51
1020
Other villages
50
1000
TOTAL
141
2,820
Dues collected will be used to subsidize payment of the Office rent.
Report by Sammy and David
ACORN Kenya Community Organizers
Planting has begun on the ACORN Memorial Orchard at the ACORN Farm in the Lower 9th Ward of New Orleans thanks to the generous donations we recently received. Pecans and citrus planted in the ground. There will be 30 trees of various varieties. Thanks to the Permaculture Club for their help, as well as Zee Thornton and Chaco Rathke.
To support the ACORN FARM or to buy a tree for us to plant as a memorial to honor the memory of a social justice fighter or someone who made a difference in the world, please click on the link below. You can give us the name of the person you are honoring, and we will take very special of his/her tree.
Quito, diciembre 01 del 2014
Hola Marcos
C.C. Wade Rathke
Muy apreciados señores:
Un saludo fraterno como siempre augurando toda clase de éxitos en sus trabajos y en todo lo que desempeñan.
En cuanto a las actividades que hemos tenido acá en el barrio Pinar Bajo de Toctiuco entre otras cosas realizadas puedo informarles lo siguiente:
Después de una larga concientización a los moradores del barrio, el día domingo 23 de noviembre, pudimos realizar una minga para tratar de arreglar el empedrado de la calle principal, ya que hace muchos meses no se le daba mantenimiento y estaba en condiciones muy desfavorable, empezamos a las 8:30 am y terminamos a las 12pm con un receso a media mañana para tomar un refrigerio. Hubo mucho que hacer y todos terminamos bien cansados (adjunto fotos).
Bueno, yo aproveché este momento que fue como un preámbulo para prepararles y direccionarles a tener una reunión, y es así que todos los asistentes quedamos auto-convocados para una reunión urgente el día sábado 30 de noviembre del presente año a las 4 pm., porque nació una moción entre todos los asistentes de dar una cuota de 7 a 10 dólares para continuar con el trámite de legalización de la nueva directiva. Para que el resto de personas se enteren, quedamos en poner un anuncio en un lugar visible para que sea leído y puedan asistir.
Hasta ahí todo estaba bien, en esa semana continué visitando los hogares para recordarles la reunión e incentivarles a contribuir económicamente para las gestiones que se necesitaban hacer.
Llegó el día de la reunión, al presidente le había ocurrido un imprevisto de ultima hora, estuvimos esperando hasta las 6 pm. hasta cuando llegó el presidente y brevemente con unas 8 personas que habíamos quedado se tuvo una pequeña reunión en donde se expuso el tema en mención (adjunto fotos), pero como habían pocos miembros se decidió tener otra reunión para este próximo domingo 7 de diciembre a las 8 am en la cual se espera tener una mejor asistencia y poder tomar las decisiones que sean necesarias con el apoyo de la mayoría.
Esto es brevemente un resumen de lo más importante de las actividades que hemos tenido en este mes.
Un abrazo,
Marlene Castro
ASSOCIATION OF COMMUNITY ORGANIZATIONS FOR REFORMS NOW
Mobile Contact: 0722416343
P.O. Box 6253-00200 Nairobi, Kenya
Email:Kenya@acornkenya.org
Website: www.acorninternational.com
A PROGRESSIVE REPORT FOR THE MONTH OF NOVEMBER, 2014
29TH NEVEMBER, 2014
The month of November was vibrant with a number of activities on the ground being membership recruitment drive, planning committee meetings and membership meetings.
As a country, we faced a major challenge of insecurity as the Al- Shabab militia massacred 28 people in Mandera North Eastern part of the country.
In Korogocho and the neighboring estates same issue of insecurity was witnessed in form of mugging and other petty crimes. These cases normally increase as we approach the festive seasons of December every year.
Campaigns.
The organizing committee is planning for big celebration for people living with HIV/AIDs on 9 December 2014. We are targeting 1,000 people from Korogocho and the neighboring estates to attend. It will be a two-day event. On 8 December we will have Testing and Counseling for HIV/AIDs which will culminate into a celebration on the following day. Faulu Kenya Bank one of our stakeholders has agreed to partially sponsor the event.
The celebration for children as part of campaigns to push for guiding policies on use of drugs and child neglect has been scheduled for 19 December 2014. We are yet to confirm any organization interested in sponsor this event but it that crucial that we have to do it to reduce the issues of drug trafficking and child abuse in the area.
Membership Recruitment.
2
18
Membership Meetings
27th December,2014
ACORNS office in Kariobangi
39
Highridge and the surrounding villages to Babandogo
28th December, 2014
47
-membership recruitment drive.- Other up-dates.- -dues collection
33
700
45
900
23
460
101
2,060
Report from ACORN Honduras for August 2014.
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Bonjour,
Puisque vous aviez participer à la réalisation d’une vidéo pour le Centre d’engagement mondial et communautaire, nous vous envoyons le lien vers la version finale de la vidéo:
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Merci encore une fois de votre participation. Cette vidéo permettra au CEMC de partager ses succès et informer les étudiants de nos services.
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Hello,
As you were involved in the realisation of a video for the Centre for Global and Community engagement, we are sending you the link to the final version of the video:
Thank you again for your participation. This video will allow us to share the CGCE’s success and inform students on our services.
Protesters rally for low-income families that fall victim to the ‘digital divide’
Samantha Wright Allen More from Samantha Wright Allen
Published on: August 21, 2014Last Updated: August 21, 2014 10:00 PM EDT
The group wants the federal government and the CRTC to lower broadband prices for low income families so kids can do homework at home.
A national advocacy organization wants the federal government to better regulate broadband to give cheaper access to Internet for low income families.
Leeann Gates — a member of ACORN, the organization that coordinated Thursday afternoon’s rally to close what they say is a “digital divide” in society — says that, for years she went without Internet service, but buckled a few years back so that her daughter, now in Grade 9, could use the web for schoolwork.
But in the summer, they go without service.
“It’s important … A lot of teachers do homework through the Internet,” said Gates at the downtown Ottawa Public Library brand where about 25 protesters formed a mock library lineup, then marched to Parliament Hill.
Gates says her daughter has a learning disability and online resources can help with comprehension.
“I’m paying money that I don’t have,” said Gates, who estimates she pays about $50 a month for Internet. Lowering that would leave more for expenses like hydro or basic items for her family. “I could stop saying ‘Hey, don’t eat so much bread or milk this week.'”
The rally was part of a series of Canada-wide “back-to-school actions” by members of ACORN, the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now. The protests demanded more affordable Internet, arguing their children shouldn’t have rely on libraries to complete homework.
According to the organization about 18 per cent of Canadians don’t have broadband, but that number jumps to nearly half for low income earners.
None of the $132 million allocated by the CRTC in 2012 to ensure Canadians connect to a “world-class communications system” specifically helped poor Canadians access home broadband, the organization contents.
Robert Fitzpatrick said Internet access is a necessity.
“As someone who’s on disability for being vision impaired as well as a permanent resident working to become a citizen, I need to stay connected (with immigration websites) so I can keep on top of my paperwork,” said Fitzpatrick, 26, who has been in Canada for just over two years and is 95-per-cent blind.
He pays about $75 a month with a roommate, and says a lower rate would mean “extra food or more clothing.”
Kathleen Fortin, who is in a wheelchair, echoed those sentiments.
The Ottawa resident said that web access is important for communication, health reasons, but also for practical purposes like job applications.
“It becomes a society of have and have-nots.”
Breaking down the digital divide for lower-income families: Editorial: Major broadband carriers can play a role in breaking down socio-economic barriers in education.
Published on Sun Aug 17 2014
A lot of time, study, and money has been spent making sure lower-income kids receive a good education.
But a new barrier threatens to divide the haves from the have-nots at school — and later on in their careers.
It’s a lack of access to home computers and affordable, fast connections to the Internet. In 2012, almost 98 per cent of the top income households were connected to the Internet, compared to only 58 per cent of those earning less than $30,000.
A home computer and Internet connection may sound like a luxury, but study after study shows it’s a necessity to help kids from lower-income families keep up at school.
Pew Research, a leading U.S. think-tank, found that 56 per cent of teachers face a “major challenge” incorporating more digital tools into their teaching, because of low-income kids’ lack of access. And 84 per cent of teachers agree digital technologies are leading to greater disparities between affluent and disadvantaged schools and school districts.
A London School of Economics study found providing home Internet access to low income households closes the gap in use, “potentially reducing disadvantage.” It also found kids who have Internet access at home spend more time online, providing them with “higher levels of online skills and self-efficacy.”
Interestingly, home computers may also keep kids out of trouble. A PCs for People study found kids who can connect to the Internet at home were 6 to 8 per cent more likely to graduate from high school than those who couldn’t. Why? Simply by giving them something constructive to do that engages their interest. It’s a source of entertainment, as well as an educational opportunity.
All of this is why ACORN Canada (the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now), which represents low- and moderate-income families, is holding back-to-school “actions” across the country this coming week.
Plans include setting up fake Internet cafés outside Bell Canada offices in Toronto and forming a line-up from the Ottawa Public Library to Parliament Hill with three goals in mind. The first is to highlight the problem. The second is to ask the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission to invest in breaking down the digital divide for low income kids (as they recently did for rural Canadians). The pressure broadband providers to create $10-a-month Internet connection packages for all low-income families. It’s not a pipedream.
Rogers Communications, to its credit, rolled out a $10 connection program in 2013 for 58,000 low-income families living in Toronto Community Housing.
Educators are stepping in, too. Peel District School Board, for example, partnered with computer companies to provide low-cost tablets and refurbished computers to low-income families and now is reaching out to Internet providers “to level the playing field,” says Carla Pereira, acting manager of communications.
That’s because teachers recognize libraries can’t fill the gap.
Ashley Morris, a single mum of a 7-year-old Owen and 2-year-old Charlotte, proves the point. When Owen has homework to do, she lugs both kids to the library through a “not great neighbourhood” at night. Even then, Owen may have to line up to use the computer and it doesn’t give him time for other creative activities.
Using computers is not just about doing homework, but about “a growing experience with using technology and supporting learning in other ways,” says Heather Mathis, the acting director of Toronto’s branch libraries.
ACORN’s protests should prompt Canada’s major Internet connectors — companies such as Rogers, Bell, Telus, and TekSavvy — to work out programs for low-income families to narrow the digital divide.
It’s not just an investment in young people, but one in Canada’s future economic competitiveness. Let’s get our kids connected. All of them.
Fighting for the right to log on: Halifax protesters want $10 internet for low-income families
Darryl King is hoping internet companies will help level the playing field for low-income kids trying to get an education in today’s web-centric world.
On Thursday afternoon, King and other members of the local ACORN chapter (Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now) brought signs to the lawn of the Spring Garden Memorial Library in downtown Halifax to call attention to the “digital divide.”
King said families and individuals that fall below $30,000 a year often don’t have enough money to pay for high-speed internet and a computer they can use at home.
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“At libraries the ones that are there are booked and leaves them at a disadvantage,” King said. “They’re our next generation, we need them to succeed. How do they succeed if they don’t have the resources or the tools to make a difference?”
ACORN is calling on companies like Bell Aliant to offer a $10 per month web service and subsidized computers or tablets, and King is hoping they choose people over profit.
“What is more important, your bottom line or people who have the right to pursue an education … to contribute to society, eventually find employment through the computers, get off assistance and get back in the community?
King said they have contacted Bell so far, but have yet to hear anything back.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper has committed to getting high-speed internet in rural communities, but King said another priority should be helping low-income families in urban areas connect to the web.
“It’s not the same as it was 37 years ago, everything is … technology based,” King said. “It’s important to get out there and have that access like everybody else. The same playing field.”