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   Seattle Community Network
Tuesday
August 8, 2000

August 8
Seattle Sites of the Day:

People's Coalition for Justice

Mailing list: pcj@scn.org

"The People's Coalition for Justice is accepting resumes for people interested in serving on a Nominating Committee to select qualified candidates for a community-based independent police review board.

"Since the City of Seattle has refused to establish a credible system for police accountability, we must create our own.

"The recent naming of Officer Tommie Doran, murderer of David Walker in April 2000, as Officer of the Month is a slap in the face to the African-American community, and clearly shows the ongoing insensitivity and emotional brutality that the Police Guild advocates in relation to communities of color in Seattle. It is time we stand up against racism and police brutality!

"Send in all resumes by Aug. 30, 2000, to: Dustin Washington, American Friends Service Committee, 814 NE 40th St., Seattle, WA 98105.

"The People's Coalition for Justice is a multiracial, grassroots coalition working for a civilian review board and police accountability since late 1999. For further information, please call (206) 632-0662 x86."

SCN Association:

Volunteering with SCN

SCN is seeking volunteers with project management experience who can commit to at least 15 hours of volunteering per month.

Volunteer Program Coordinator

Part-time contractual position:

The Volunteer Program Coordinator needs to bridge the gap between professional human resource management and the grassroots culture that is the heart of SCNA.

We currently have a dedicated core of individuals who need more structured support, including an expanded volunteer base. The VPC will develop the current volunteer program into one that better serves this great group of talented professionals. The VPC will have oversight authority and responsibility for the entire SCNA Volunteer Program.

Duties include working with volunteers, team coordinators and board members to create, implement, and maintain improved volunteer support processes. The VPC will be supported by and report directly to the Co-Presidents of the Board of Directors, Melissa & Steve Guest (guests@scn.org).

SCNA has existed as an all-volunteer organization since 1993. With no staff, the current 50+ volunteers of SCNA have very broad responsibilities for providing our programs and services - many of the volunteer tasks require very high skill levels.

Most volunteer work is being done virtually (this position is an excellent opportunity to telecommute), with no physical SCNA office at present. There are several monthly coordination meetings, usually in the Seattle area, for the different teams and committees, and a great deal of email and telephone communication.

We currently recruit volunteers with a volunteer signup form on our website, volunteer recruiting text at VolunteerMatch, SeattleWorks and Sound Opportunities, and through email to our mailing lists for currently active and "on-reserves" volunteers. We have a process for new volunteer orientation and assignment, as well as a vast list of ideas about what we wish we could do.

We expect that whomever takes this position will be supported by the 3 existing volunteers who've been working on the volunteer program, and will also be able to recruit more volunteer assistance as needed.

- Talk with existing volunteer team coordinators and committee chairs to determine specific volunteer needs throughout organization.

- Expand existing recruiting efforts, targeted for the specific volunteer skills needed.

- Help train SCNA leadership in areas of volunteer management and retention.

- Improve current intake process, with clearer task descriptions, better matching of volunteers to tasks and more follow through.

- Identify areas throughout the organization needing better volunteer support, and help suggest and implement improvements.

Accepting applications until position is filled.

August 6 - 12
Seattle Site of the Week:




The Delegation: Bert Sacks, Larry Kerschner, Brian Mack and Philip Steger

Citizens Concerned for the People of Iraq

August, 2000 Delegation Letter

"Monday, August 7th at noon at Victor Steinbrueck Park (just north of Pike Place Market) in downtown Seattle.

"Respected community leaders will break sanctions law in Seattle.

"More than 130 community leaders and citizens of Seattle have committed to publicly break US sanctions law. ... they will give food, seeds, medical journals, and water purifiers to a delegation of four local residents to take to Iraq. ...

"Hans von Sponeck, the last oil-for-food program coordinator... resigned in protest over sanctions..." [His predecessor as oil-for-food coordinator, UN Assistant Secretary General Denis Halliday, also resigned in protest of the economic embargo against Iraq, in September, 1998. Halliday will speak at the UW's Kane Hall at 7:00 PM on September 24.]

"Senator Craig said of US sanctions policy towards Iraq, 'The use of food as a weapon is wrong. Starving populations into submission is poor foreign policy.'

"International law prohibits using food as a weapon - withholding food from civilians is a crime against humanity.



"Polluted water is the 'prime killer' of Iraqi children.

"'The prime killer of children under five years of age - diarrhoeal diseases - has reached epidemic proportions... Holds on contracts for the water and sanitation sector are a prime reason for the increases in sickness and death.' Of the 18 holds on contracts... all but one was placed by the US.

"'Sanctions are the economic nuclear bomb.' - Mairead Maguire, 1976 Nobel Peace Laureate, after a March 1999 visit to Iraq.

... "This is one day after Hiroshima Day - which marks the deaths of over 125,000 Japanese civilians - and it will be the first day of the 11th year of economic sanctions against Iraq - marking the deaths of over 1,000,000 Iraqi civilians, half of them children under the age of five." ...

"Can you join the list? Whether or not you can be with us in person, adding your name is a public statement that you're willing to oppose and break an immoral law - a law which withholds food, medicine, and safe drinking water from civilians in order to coerce a foreign government.

"The more who'll openly break this law - and the more who can be there on Monday, August 7th to send us off - the more likely we will reach the media and the general public, to awaken our conscience to what is happening in Iraq." ...

"The sanctions have been widely condemned as a form of warfare, a 'weapon of mass destruction', directed against the civilian population. Nonetheless, sanctions are being sustained at the insistence of the U.S. government. For the sake of the Iraqi people, such as the child pictured on the right [above], and human rights everywhere the sanctions must be lifted with utmost urgency."




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