Showing posts with label summit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label summit. Show all posts

Saturday, June 9, 2018

A Stronger Latinx Community, Una Fuerte Comunidad Latinx


Above: Bill Fishburn, president of the Hispanic Roundtable of the South Sound, gives Olympia immigration attorney Steffani Powell a hug after Powell gave a passionate, 30 minute speech detailing the repercussions of the Trump Administrations immigration plans and policies.

South Sound Hispanic Roundtable Summit Highlights Community Resources, Immigration Issues

By Janine Gates
Little Hollywood

Una fuerte comunidad Latinx, A Stronger Latinx Community, was the theme of the first Hispanic Roundtable of the South Sound community summit held in Tumwater on Friday.

About 200 people attended the event held at the Capital Region ESD 113 event facility in Tumwater.

Many were representatives of area schools and colleges, state agencies, and nonprofit, community agencies that serve the Latinx population in Thurston, Lewis, Grays Harbor, Mason and Pacific counties.

Cosponsored by Educational Service District 113, participants were invited to collaborate, create conversations, and identify opportunities, gaps, and barriers regarding Latinx access to employment, housing, public health, education, legal, financial, and community resources.

According to 2016 Washington State Office of Financial Management statistics, Latinos comprise 12 percent of the Washington State population. Thirty-two percent of Latinos in Washington are immigrants. 

Latinos comprise eight percent of Thurston County’s population and 10 percent each of Lewis, Grays Harbor, Mason and Pacific counties.

Above: Business cards and organizational materials were exchanged throughout the day as new relationships were forged during conversational sessions at the Hispanic Roundtable community summit on Friday. 

Left to Right: Maira Ramirez, Kaleidoscope Play and Learn facilitator at Child Care Action Council, Karin Verrill, League of Women Voters Thurston County, Aleyda Cervantez, program assistant for outreach services at Highline College, Carlos Ruiz, president, ALPFA Seattle, an organization that promotes opportunities for Latinx advancement, and Pat Dickison, immediate past president of the League of Women Voters Thurston County.

The summit’s timing meant that recent national and state immigration issues and policy shifts focusing on Latinx youth, children and families took center stage.

Olympia immigration attorney Steffani Powell’s voice broke as she described the Trump Administration’s immigrant deportation plans and policies and the hundreds of parents and children who are currently being separated.

“Trump’s vision of America is exclusionary….As of last Sunday, 300 of the 550 children currently in custody at U.S. border stations had spent more than 72 hours in custody…almost half are younger than 12,” she said.

On Thursday, it was confirmed that as many as 120 asylum seekers were transferred from Texas to the federal detention center at SeaTac. The group consists of mothers who arrived with their children seeking asylum and were prosecuted for unlawful entry. Their children are being held elsewhere, with their location unknown to the mothers.

A solidarity day of action at the SeaTac Detention Center in support of the mothers being detained was scheduled for Saturday afternoon.

Above: Olympia immigration attorney Steffani Powell described the Trump Administration’s widespread immigrant deportation plans and policies at the Hispanic Roundtable Community Summit on Friday.

“This is beyond sickening….this isn’t really about law and order. Separating immigrant families is cruel and immoral. Many of the people crossing the border are fleeing from violence in Central America and seeking asylum in the United States, which they have a legal right to do.

“U.S. Homeland Security recently announced the end of temporary protective status for approximately 57,000 Hondurans living legally in the United States. In other aggressive policy moves, over the next two years, more than 300,000 individuals from El Salvador, Haiti, Honduras, Nicaragua, Nepal and Sudan, who are legally in the U.S. with permission to live and work, will be asked to depart voluntarily or be deported,” she said.

Powell said that as of March, there were 680,000 pending national immigration court cases. Each individual has just one and a half hours to present their asylum case and some judges have a 99 percent denial rate.

According to the American Immigration Council, there are 980,000 immigrants in Washington State. One in seven Washington State residents is an immigrant.

Three hundred and fifty thousand people in Washington live with at least one undocumented family member.

“This current administration has commandeered the immigrant story….they have rubbed out all color, love, hope, sacrifice and struggle. They have erased the tenacity, the courage and devotedness of their characters….This administration has vilified and dehumanized and criminalized immigrants. It’s trying to make us believe a grim, desolate life story.

“It is imperative that we take back the immigrant story…the true story is of sacrifice, endurance, fortitude, resolution and devotedness to the cause of families.…It is not a story about people who need to be kept out by a wall….The people who have arrived in our communities have traveled far….The only wall that should be built is a wall around hatred, willful ignorance, xenophobia, racism and intolerance,” said Powell.

Above: Many resources for immigrant family support were provided at the first Hispanic Roundtable community summit on Friday. Karina Brown, a Spanish teacher at Elma High School, picks up materials at a table about Sound to Harbor Head Start and ECEAP, which provides individualized preschool education, health education, and family support in Grays Harbor, Mason and Thurston counties.

For more information about the Hispanic Roundtable of the South Sound, go to www.hispanicroundtable.org

Monday, May 22, 2017

Mount St. Helens Offers Life Lessons


Above: A careful peek beyond the rim and into the crater of Mount St. Helens on May 19, 2017. Mount St. Helens, “Lawetlat’la,” pronounced Lah-weight-LOT-la, is translated as “smoker,” in the Cowlitz Indian language. Amongst the clouds, Mount Rainier can be seen in the distance.

By Janine Gates
Little Hollywood
http://www.janineslittlehollywood.blogspot.com

Almost everyone of a certain age in the Pacific Northwest remembers where they were when Mount St. Helens blew on May 18, 1980.

I was in Seattle in our apartment on Beacon Hill, talking with my mom in her bedroom. We felt the earthquake and the lamp on her desk headed my way.

For thousands of years, Mount St. Helens has been a central place in the culture and mythology of the Cowlitz and Yakama Tribes, where resources were gathered and young people were sent to test themselves.

With a few members of the Olympia Mountaineers this weekend, I had the opportunity to test my preparation skills and endurance for the 12 mile roundtrip hike to its 8,366 foot summit.

Starting at the winter route trailhead near Marble Mountain Sno-Park at 5:00 a.m., it quickly became a glorious, sunny day that required ample water, food, and sunscreen. 

Glissading down thousands of feet was a thrill, and helped shave time off on the way down. Snowshoes were helpful to deal with the slushy portions.

In 2013, the area of Mount St. Helens above the tree line, just over 12,000 acres, was designated on the National Register of Historic Places as a Traditional Cultural Property of the Cowlitz and Yakama Tribal groups.

More than 80,000 properties are listed in the National Register of Historic Places, but only twenty-three, such as Gettysburg, are traditional cultural properties. Mount St. Helens is only the second such listing in Washington. The first was Snoqualmie Falls.

“Protection of our cultural resources is one of the most important things we do. The listing of Lawetlat’la as a Traditional Cultural Property honors our relationship with one of the principal features of our traditional landscape. For millennia, the mountain has been a place to seek spiritual guidance. The mountain has erupted many times in our memory, but each time has rebuilt herself anew. She demonstrates that a slow and patient path of restoration is the successful one, a lesson we have learned long ago,” wrote Bill Iyall, chair of the Cowlitz Tribe, in the Tribe’s 2013 fall newsletter.

Iyall's words became newly relevant to me as I tested my mental and physical abilities, thought of loved ones, and made new friends along the way. Like Mount St. Helens, I'm always changing and growing.

Above: Glissading down Mount St. Helens was a blast!