Tag Archives: republicans

I work for Bath & Body Works … Stop Dumping


Petitioning Nick Coe CEO Bath & Body Works

Stop Dumping and Start Donating

Petition by Samantha Heard
Savannah, Georgia
2,754
Supporters

Imagine not being able to afford basic household items for you and your children like hand soap, shampoo or lotion. These are things every family needs to stay healthy, just as they need food and shelter. But while there are several programs, both government and nonprofit, that assist the poor in getting the food and housing they need, there are very few programs that help them get access to the most basic personal hygiene items.

The lack of these basic necessities impacts low income families in unimaginable ways. A student that goes to school feeling unclean cannot focus on their studies, a veteran who can’t afford soap can’t go into a job interview with confidence.  

As an employee at Bath & Body Works, I have seen thousands of dollars of tested and slightly damaged  products needlessly thrown away. These products are perfectly good, perfectly usable. I love working for this company, and I know it can do better for its clients and our surrounding community.

Please join me in asking Nick Coe, CEO of Bath and Body Works, to discontinue the wasteful practice of throwing out slightly damaged or “tested” B&BW products, and donate them to local charities around the United States instead. Every family deserves the dignity that comes with meeting their basic hygiene needs.  

There are many families who are struggling right now with the decision whether to buy a loaf of bread or a bar of soap. A study conducted by Feeding America suggests that 58% of low-income individuals who were unable to buy personal care products reported cutting back on food to afford toiletries; 40% reported skipping or delaying rent payments to obtain products. This causes untold strain on them.

There are thousands, if not millions of people that could benefit from these nearly-full bottles of hand soap, shampoo, body lotion, etc. If each B&BW store put together boxes for their local homeless shelters, safe houses, churches, or just someone in need, think about the good we could do. Think of the lives we could impact.

Please sign this petition to help change the mind of the company I love and do something good for those who need it most.

A New Plan To Invest In Kids … a repost


By

Harnessing The Child Tax Credit As A Tool To Invest In The Next Generation

It’s no secret that middle-class Americans are being squeezed. The price tag on middle-class economic security has grown significantly in recent years thanks to a dramatic increase in costs associated with a middle-class lifestyle such as housing, health care, college savings, and retirement savings. The combination of rising costs and stagnant wages has left millions of American families strained. American families with kids are the most likely to be struggling—child related costs account for nearly 70 percent of the rising costs associated with being in the middle class. Moreover, the costs of child poverty are staggering, costing the U.S. economy $672 billion a year–or nearly 4 percent of GDP–in lower educational outcomes, higher health costs, and increased spending on criminal justice.

But a new report from the Center for American Progress outlines how policy makers can help relieve the middle-class squeeze by strengthening the Child Tax Credit (CTC). The current CTC has several limitations that affect the families who need it most. For example, the credit is not fully refundable, preventing it from reaching the lowest-income children, and its minimum earnings requirement excludes many families who experience job loss. Our colleagues at CAP have suggested a few key proposals to strengthen this important credit:

  • Making permanent the improvements to the CTC and Earned Income Tax Credit is slated to expire at the end of 2017, as failure to do so would push nearly 8 million children into or more deeply into poverty.
  • Eliminating the minimum earnings requirements and making the credit fully refundable to ensure it reaches all low- and moderate-income families with children.
  • Indexing the value of the credit to inflation so that it does not continue to lose value over time even as the costs of reaching or staying in the middle class are rising.
  • Enhancing the CTC with a supplemental Young Child Tax Credit of $125 a month for children under the age of 3. The Young Child Tax Credit would be made available to families on a monthly basis with the understanding that many child-related costs cannot wait until tax season.

These changes would not only help parents afford necessities associated with raising young children like buying diapers, car seats, and cribs, but they would also help parents meet the rising costs of middle-class economic security.

The birth of a child is one of the leading triggers of poverty in the United States, so families with young children are particularly at risk. Furthermore, the effect of poverty on young children is hugely detrimental: ongoing economic instability hurts children’s long-term health, educational, and employment outcomes. But enhancing the CTC would go a long way in alleviating child poverty. Along with the report, CAP also released an interactive map that shows just how much the depth of child poverty would be reduced in each state with the proposed reforms to the Child Tax Credit. Check it out!

BOTTOM LINE: Americans are being squeezed by the rising price tag of middle-class economic security, and families with children are the most likely to be struggling. The United States has shockingly high levels of child poverty, but making a few basic changes to strengthen the Child Tax Credit would help families better invest in the next generation and lessen the depth of child poverty.

Stop a pesticide that is simply too dangerous for widespread use


Enlist Duo—a highly toxic herbicide containing an active ingredient in Agent Orange—is simply too dangerous for people and animals!

Pesticide warning sign on fertile farm land | photo credit: Pgiam/iStock

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Katelyn Boronkay via Change.org


Delta, United, and American Airlines have all banned the shipment of hunting trophies. Now I am asking that FedEx, the largest shipping company in the world, join the movement and commit to a similar ban.

OBAMA in the New York Times


did you see President Obama’s letter to the editor in the New York Times? It was inspiring. Will you sign the petition and DEMAND that Congress restore the Voting Rights Act? ***
President Obama knows -- the right to vote is under attack.
Here's what he said in the New York Times: From the moment the ink was dry on the Voting Rights Act, there has been a concentrated effort to undermine this historic law and turn back the clock on its progress.
It's been two years since a key part of the VRA was struck down. As President Obama says, we must fix this crucial part of our democracy.
Congress must restore the Voting Rights Act. Our state leaders and legislatures must make it easier -- not harder -- for more Americans to have their voices heard.
ADD YOUR NAME to demand that Congress take action and fix the Voting Rights Act >>

SIGN ON HERE: https://action.dccc.org/2015-protect-voting-rights

Thanks,

DCCC