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Celebrate The Amazon On Sep 22nd In San Francisco


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Join Amazon Watch for Our

10th Annual Luncheon

on September 22nd in San Francisco!

 

We’re excited to invite you to Amazon Watch’s 10th Annual Luncheon on September 22nd at the beautiful Bently Reserve in San Francisco! Please join us as we share news about recent victories for the Amazon and indigenous rights.

Tuesday, September 22nd
11:30 am1:30 pm
Dessert reception to follow
The Bently Reserve
301 Battery Street (map)
San Francisco, CA

Hear directly from our indigenous partners and meet our team to learn how Amazon Watch is working to protect more than 60 million acres of rainforest in Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru. Join our growing campaign to Keep the Fossil Fuels in the Ground for the Amazon and the global climate.

A dessert reception will follow the main event. Visit our website for more information.

The Luncheon is free to attend and we will invite you to make a financial contribution. It’s our honor to offer you this opportunity to do good in the world through your support. You make Amazon Watch’s work possible.

Space is limited, and RSVPs are essential. Please take a moment to confirm your attendance here. We’re looking forward to seeing you at this very special event!

See you there!


Leila Salazar-López
Executive Director

P.S. If you would like to volunteer at the event, please email allison@amazonwatch.org.

Hearing loss not considered a disability?


Petitioning Maria Town

URGENT: Demand Hearing Loss to be Acknowledged as a Disability

Petition by Hearing Health Foundation
3,627
Supporters

Recently, Hearing Health Foundation (HHF) learned that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) conducted a study on the prevalence of disability in the U.S. The study examined vision loss, cognition, mobility, self-care and independent living, but failed to mention hearing loss, the third most common public health concern after diabetes and heart disease.

When asked about the exclusion, the CDC had the following response: “We would have loved to include data on people with hearing loss. The report is based on the BRFSS, which is a telephone survey that doesn’t reach people with hearing loss.” Whatever their reason may be, this oversight demands immediate attention and correction. On behalf of the 48 million Americans with hearing loss, we request that the CDC rethink their methodology of data collection and re-conduct the survey in a more accommodating manner.

HHF is outraged by this gross oversight and finds the exclusion of people living with hearing loss from the report to be a troubling concern. Failure to include hearing loss diminishes the fact that it warrants attention and treatment, as well as neglects to recognize its impact on a person’s quality of life, interactions in school, and ability to work. It also undervalues the effects it can have on one’s health, including but not limited to the increased risk of falls, dementia, and depression. But worst of all, this omission gives the public the excuse to discount hearing loss as a disability; to believe there is no need to protect hearing; and to lack empathy for and fail to accommodate those with hearing loss.  

HHF is not sitting back quietly, and neither should you! If you would like to take action with HHF, please sign the petition below. You can also download this letter, sign and return it to us by e-mail or mail (Take Action, c/o Hearing Health Foundation, 363 7th Ave, NY, NY, 10001).

Please forward this message to your friends, families and colleagues and encourage them to take action!

Lydia Cacho with Avaaz


Mexican photojournalist Rubén Espinosa was just found tortured and murdered. One of Latin America’s oldest democracies is now one of the most dangerous places on the planet to report the truth. Add your voice to a powerful open letter demanding an end to violence against journalists doing their jobs! When enough of us join Avaaz will publish it on the front page of key Mexican media:

SIgn now

Back-to-School Food Safety Tips


FoodSafety.govBy Marianne Gravely, Food Safety Technical Information Specialist, Food Safety & Inspection Service, USDA

Back to school, back to the books, back in the saddle or back in the car for all the parents. The new school year means it’s back to packing lunches and after-school snacks for students, scouts, athletes, dancers, and all the other children who carry these items to and from home.

One ‘back’ you do not want to reacquaint children with, however, is Bacteria.

Read our latest blog for tips on how to keep bacteria from the cafeteria by safely packing and storing school lunches and snacks.

 

 

Infographic on School Food Safety Tips

More Like National Employee Suppression Week


By

During National Employee Freedom Week, Conservatives Promote The Ruse of Right To Work Laws

Today marks the last day of “National Employee Freedom Week,” a week created by conservatives to promote the benefits of right-to-work laws. Anti-union policy groups and lawmakers in states across the country are attacking an already weakened labor movement by advancing so-called “right-to-work” laws, which inhibit workers from collectively bargaining for better wages, benefits and protections, under the guise of ‘choice.’ These laws allow some workers to get the advantages of a union contract—such as higher wages, benefits, and protection against arbitrary discipline—without paying any fee associated with negotiating on these matters.

Proponents of right-to-work argue a multitude of benefits from enacting such laws such as, lower unemployment, higher wages, less workplace injuries, and that workers’ families and states’ economies fare better. But here are the facts:

  • The typical worker in a right-to-work state makes about $1,560 less per year than she would in a state without such a law.
  • The rate of employer-sponsored health insurance is 2.6 percentage points lower in right-to-work states.
  • The rate of employer-sponsored pensions is 4.8 percentage points lower in right-to-work states.
  • Even workplace safety is affected—the rate of worker fatalities in construction is 34 percent higher in right-to-work states than non-right-to-work states

Last spring, under the leadership of Governor and presidential candidate Scott Walker, Wisconsin became the latest state to adopt a right-to-work law and take its working families in the wrong direction. Estimates by Marquette University economist Abdur Chowdhury suggest that Wisconsin workers and families will lose between $3.89 and $4.82 billion in direct income annually due to effects of the law. Unsurprisingly, Walker is one of several GOP candidates speaking at the Americans for Prosperity confab in Columbus this weekend. Americans for Prosperity, the Koch brothers’ flagship organization, has been a staunch supporter of right-to-work laws and has had a hand in almost every right-to-work fight across the country.

Over the last several decades, the share of income going to middle-class Americans has fallen in conjunction with the falling rate of union membership. Analysis by CAP Action shows a strong correlation between the decline in national union membership and the declining share of total national income going to the middle class. Take Wisconsin for example—from 1977 to 2013, Wisconsin middle-class families have seen their share of income fall more than 12 percent as the rate of union membership in the state has decreased. Meanwhile, the share of income going to the top 20 percent of households increased by nearly 20 percent during this time period.

With wages stagnant, inequality at record levels, and union membership in serious decline, we should use this misguided “Employee Freedom Week” as an opportunity to set the record straight and focus on rebuilding the middle class by raising state laws above and beyond federal standards—not by racing to the bottom with right-to-work.

BOTTOM LINE: Workers, their families, and states’ economies fare worse in right-to-work states, which is why the majority of Americans support labor unions. Proponents of right-to-work argue they’re fighting for choice and the right of workers to decide on their representation, but it’s the workers whose rights are being trampled on by this political ruse. Wisconsin and fellow right-to-work states need policies to empower workers and boost their ability to bargain collectively, not strip away the few protections they have left.