
Portland State University: Stop Violating The Sexual Assault Law: Title IX |
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Portland State University: Stop Violating The Sexual Assault Law: Title IX |
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Finding cleaning products that are safer for you, your family, and the environment should be easy. That’s why EPA’s Design for the Environment (DfE) program is redesigning their safer product label. Products with a DfE Label have met high standards in the health, performance, and environmental spectrum and contain only those ingredients that pose the least concern among chemicals in their class. This label helps customers, businesses, and institutional buyers identify cleaning and other products that perform well and are safer for human health and the environment.
The EPA wants consumers to be able to easily find safer products. To make this effort that much easier, the agency wants to hear from the American people on which label designs will help people most effectively identify household cleaning and other products that are safer for families and the environment.

Vote for your favorite by October 31st.
Thank you for your input and helping us create a more recognizable label for safer and effective household products for consumers like you!
-The Earth Day Network Team
Thanks for being a bold progressive.
— Keith Rouda, PCCC organizer
Microsoft’s CEO said that women shouldn’t ask for raises and should rely on “karma” instead.
Tell CEO Satya Nadella: Disclose Microsoft’s pay data immediately.
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella recently told an audience full of women in technology that they shouldn’t ask for raises. That instead they should rely on “karma” for career advancement.
The CEO knew he had messed up, and almost immediately posted an apology onto Microsoft’s website. (1)
The thing is: an apology isn’t enough. We need more than words to prove that this was just a slip up, and not a mentality that pervades Microsoft. We need evidence that the company is truly committed to diversity and inclusion.
For Black people, this isn’t just a women’s issue. Black men earn 73 cents for every dollar a white man earns, while Black women earn only 64 cents. (2)
If Black men and women are ever going to have a fair shot at Microsoft, or anywhere in the tech industry, big companies need to make their salary statistics public. We need to know how much Black folks are earning compared to their white counterparts.
We’re going to be waiting a long time for equality if we wait for karma to kick in. For-example, the pay gap has barely budged in a decade, and last year it got even worse for Black women. The pay gap takes $18,650 out of Black women’s pockets every year. (3) And since the recent financial crisis, the racial wealth gap has doubled: white families now have 22 times the household wealth Black families have. (4)
Microsoft is one of the biggest technology companies on the planet and employs 99,000 people – more than Apple or Google. (5) Despite a public commitment to diversifying their workforce over the last twenty years, less than a third of Microsoft employees are women, and only 3.5% are Black folks. That means the company’s workforce has four times fewer Black people than the American population. (6, 7)
With the CEO’s recent “karma” comment, the country is paying attention to what Microsoft does next. By taking action right now we can ensure that Microsoft releases its pay data — a crucial step in ensuring pay equity for Black people.
Thanks and peace,
–Arisha, Rashad, Matt, and Bhavik for the ColorOfChange team
Sources:
At a time when Ebola is all over the news and it’s easy for misinformation to get interpreted as truth, make sure you have the clear-cut facts.
1. You CAN’T get Ebola through:
2. The only way a person can get Ebola is through direct contact with the bodily fluids of someone who is already showing symptoms of the disease.
3. If a person does not have symptoms, they are not contagious.
As President Obama, leadership at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and other senior officials have reiterated, the chances of a widespread Ebola outbreak here in the United States are extremely low.
Still, you don’t want to be misinformed about Ebola. Find out more about how we’re responding to the disease, and the domestic and international efforts to contain and end the epidemic.
You can visit the CDC for more information on our response to Ebola and call 1-800-CDC-INFO (1-800-232-4636) for additional inquiries.