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I Stand For Latina Equal Pay!

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LATINA EQUAL PAY DAY!

 

LatinaEqualPay Day brings awareness of the reality that a Latina woman, on average, must work until November 2nd to make the same amount of money white non-Hispanic men did in the previous year. Over the course of a 40-year career, Latinas will be denied over a million dollars in earnings because of the gender wage gap. Today, we join the #Trabajadoras across the country who demand equal pay for equal work. A Latina’s potential and success should not be limited by inequality. Let’s fight for equal wages and put an end to the inequality that #Trabajadoras face.

 

 

ADDITIONAL FACTS

1. It takes the average Latina 22 months to earn the same amount that an average white man earns in 12 months.

2. The gender wage gap unfairly limits the potential of Latinas to succeed in their careers. Latinas deserve equal pay for equal work.

3. #LatinaEqualPayLatina workers’ rights are under attack, they are currently making 54 cents compared to the white, non-Hispanic man’s $1.

4. Among all women, Latinas represent the group of women that are most affected by the gender wage gap. Latinas would need to work for 73 years to make what a white non-Hispanic man makes in 40 years.

 

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Fresno City Council Meetings
NOVEMBER 2017Nov. 2 8:30 AM
Nov. 9 8:30 AM
Nov. 16 NO MEETING
Nov. 23 NO MEETING
Nov. 30 NO MEETING

 

 

 

Regional Water Main Construction Project

 

Projecto De Construcción

 

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“I am proud to represent District 1 on the Fresno City Council. Working together we will make our neighborhoods safer and stronger.”
Councilmember Esmeralda Soria

 

Meet and Greet with US Senate Candidate Pat Harris 11/1

Pat Harris, U.S. Senate Candidate will be visiting the Fresno area on Wednesday, November 1st. We have arranged for a meet and greet at the Fresno County Democratic Party Headquarters from 4-5p.m. you are all welcome to attend and listen to Mr. Harris personally.

 

 

Meet Pat

Pat Harris is an unapologetic progressive Democrat running for U.S. Senate in 2018 from the State of California. Pat is running as a Democrat because he believes that the progressive movement can change the direction of the party, resurrecting a Democratic Party that fights for the working class and isn’t influenced by corporate donations i.e. ‘Dark Money.’

Pat believes in modernizing the party to emphasize single-payer healthcare and the transition to 100% renewables—all while working to pass meaningful criminal justice reform, provide more affordable housing, and offer tuition-free higher education and vocational training to its citizens. In addition, he wants to provide a path to citizenship for immigrants, work to give students relief from student loan debt and push for increased funding for scientific research.

Why he’s running

Pat was drawn to the race after recognizing a once in a generation opportunity for progressives to rise up and assume leadership, rejecting career politicians of both parties who have stopped listening to constituents and are only focused on their own re-election. He believes that by bringing all voices to the table and by putting forward a true progressive platform, TOGETHER, we can realize the vast promises of our hardworking and technologically advanced state. As the saying goes, everything starts in California and works its way across the country. California should be the epicenter of the progressive movement – that is why he is running for office.

Pat will not accept corporate donations. He believes that politicians are being bought and paid for through dark money and that it is threatening the very foundation of our democracy. Pat will immediately push for a constitutional amendment that will limit the ability of corporations and PACs to fund political candidates.

Pat’s Background

Pat grew up in a small farming town in Arkansas. His father was an industrial engineer at a local shoe factory, and had three side jobs at night: bagging groceries, clerking at Wal-Mart and refereeing local football games to make ends meet. His mother was an 8th Grade History teacher who was very involved in local politics, attending the 1984 Democratic Convention as a Gary Hart delegate. From his father and mother, Pat learned the importance of listening, hard work, and empathy – all values that he intends to bring in his service to the people of California.

Pat graduated from the University of Arkansas with a degree in history with honors.  In his senior year, he was awarded the J. William Fulbright award as the outstanding history student for the college and was selected to the Phi Beta Kappa honorary society.   He was also a Rhodes Scholar state finalist.  In 1993, he graduated from the University of Michigan Law School in Ann Arbor, Michigan.

For the past 23 years, Pat has practiced law, as a public defender and later as a criminal defense attorney in California.  Over the past few years, his practice has shifted from criminal defense to an emphasis on civil rights cases. Pat has deep concerns about the direction and the fairness of the criminal justice system, something he wrote about in the book “Mistrial: An Inside Look at How the Criminal Justice System Works…and Sometimes Doesn’t.” Pat also co-authored “The Woman Who Wouldn’t Talk,” which spent several weeks on the New York Times bestseller list.  The book is account of Susan McDougal’s experiences surrounding the Whitewater Investigation.

Personal

Pat lives in Los Angeles with his wife Carol Welsman, a world-class Canadian jazz singer and pianist who is fluent in Spanish, French, Italian, and English. In his free time, Pat is an admitted sports fanatic. Before going to law school he even briefly worked for the Texas Rangers baseball team, although his favorite sport is actually college football. Pat has lived in California for over 22 years and would be honored to serve a state that he views as so visionary – a state that he believes will lead the nation to a future where we don’t live in fear but rather where we take a bold, innovative path forward.

Jobs and Justice Campaign Launch on Monday, October 30, 6-8 PM at Orange Center Elementary

Dear West Fresno residents and friends of West Fresno,

Please join other community residents of West Fresno on October 30th, 6 to 8 PM at Orange Center Elementary School (3530 S. Cherry Ave, in the cafeteria) for the launch of the Jobs and Justice Campaign, which calls upon the large corporations coming into West Fresno to BE A GOOD NEIGHBOR.

Orange Center Elementary is at ground zero of Fresno’s new corporate development, directly adjacent to the Ulta Beauty truck ports and close by the soon-to-be-built Amazon Fulfillment Center and the proposed two-million-square-foot Caglia Industrial Park. Children and residents will be subjected to traffic and exhaust from thousands of semi-trucks using the roads in front of and nearby the school. [Read about it here: http://www.cvobserver.com/land-use/caglia-joins-blitz-on-sw-fresno-reverse-triangle-industrial-park/]

The City of Fresno is allowing these developments without new CEQA-mandated analyses, using instead negative mitigating declarations on years-old environmental impact reports. They have also offered these companies decades of tax breaks to come to Fresno with their promise to hire only a very small percentage of jobs locally.

We are asking these companies to return the favor to the community by improving their hiring policies and by giving back to the city by making improvements in nearby neighborhoods — in other words, by being good corporate neighbors.

The purpose of this launch is to lay out the research and vision of what we have gathered so far, and to create opportunities for our community to take action that creates jobs for those who need them most and promotes a cleaner environment in West Fresno. We believe there is still an opportunity to impact these projects to better serve the community.

Please see the attached flyer, and forward this message to other concerned residents of West Fresno. We hope to see you there.

Call Thomas Weiler at (559) 549-4605 for more information.