ACLU San Joaquin County Chapter

ACLU San Joaquin County Chapter The San Joaquin County Chapter is working to protect and advance civil liberties and civil rights in San Joaquin County.

Rich or poor, straight or gay, black, white or brown, urban or rural, religious or not, American-born or foreign-born, able-bodied or living with a disability, the American Civil Liberties Union is here to ensure that EVERY person in this country is entitled to the same basic rights.

08/26/2021

San Joaquin offers tremendous opportunities to those that call it home. San Joaquin's communities provide affordable housing along with recreational opportunities and state-of-the-art K-12 schools and higher education institutions. Come see why greatness grows here.

12/12/2020

🗣The NAACP Stockton Branch is pleased to announce the City of Stockton Mayor Michael Tubbs as our 2020 Hall of Fame recipient‼️ Mayor Michael Tubbs was elected as Stockton’s youngest mayor and the city’s first African-American mayor. Mayor Tubbs is also the youngest recipient of the NAACP Stockton Branch Hall of Fame Award‼️ During his tenure as Mayor, Tubbs has created the following Innovated programs:

▪️ The nation’s first municipal level basic income pilot, the Stockton Economic Empowerment Demonstration.

▪️Securing over $20 million in philanthropic capital to launch the Stockton Scholars, a place-based scholarship that aims to triple the number of Stockton students entering and graduating from college.

▪️Mayors for a Guaranteed Income, bringing together more than 25 mayors across the U.S. to push for a federal guaranteed income;

▪️ Advance Peace to Stockton, a data-driven program that works to reduce gun violence in communities.

▪️Juneteenth Capital Initiative, a collaborative effort to help small Black-owned businesses and nonprofits.

Prior to becoming Mayor, Tubbs served as Stockton's District 6 City Councilmember. As a councilmember, Tubbs created the Reinvent South Stockton Coalition, championed the creation of the City’s Office of Violence Prevention and was part of the council that led the city out of bankruptcy as Chair of the Audit and Legislative Committee.

We are looking forward to celebrating Mayor Michael Tubbs’ excellence at our 2020 Annual Virtual NAACP Freedom Fund Banquet on December 19, 2020 at 6:00 pm! Complimentary Registration at: www.2020NAACPStocktonFreedomFund.Eventbrite.com

10/11/2020

Be a good neighbor! Report!

A great conversation pertaining to social injustices and inequities that stem in our community!
09/24/2020

A great conversation pertaining to social injustices and inequities that stem in our community!

Stockton Unified is pleased to announce that the District has ordered one WiFi-enabled Hotspot for every SUSD household ...
08/07/2020

Stockton Unified is pleased to announce that the District has ordered one WiFi-enabled Hotspot for every SUSD household to ensure that all students can participate in distance learning. The devices will begin arriving toward the end of August and early September. Your child’s school will contact you when the device is available for pickup. Until then, we are encouraging all students who are still in need of WiFi access to utilize the hotspot function available on some cell phones, or to take advantage of the free WiFi options that some internet providers are offering. Information regarding these options has been posted to all of our school websites, and can also be viewed at www.stocktonusd.net/TechAccess.

Please reach out to your student’s school with any technology concerns and questions.

Thank you for your patience and support as we work to get our entire community connected during distance learning.

54 years ago today, the Voting Rights Act was signed into law and Representative John Lewis was there to bear witness.On...
08/06/2020

54 years ago today, the Voting Rights Act was signed into law and Representative John Lewis was there to bear witness.

On this date last year, John Lewis said this: "I shed a little blood on that bridge in Selma and friends of mine gave their lives so that no person would be denied their right to vote. Now do your part—get registered, and vote."

Honor the legacy of John Lewis by double checking your voter registration (voterstatus.sos.ca.gov) and making a plan to !

It’s time we confront the struggles and inequities that communities of color face! Please join us in this needed convers...
06/19/2020

It’s time we confront the struggles and inequities that communities of color face! Please join us in this needed conversation surrounding race and policing.

Here’s a great virtual town hall that will explore a much needed discussion and dialogue on policies that has impacted c...
06/16/2020

Here’s a great virtual town hall that will explore a much needed discussion and dialogue on policies that has impacted communities of colors not only on a national level but on a local as well! Please join us!

Happening today! Some powerful speakers! Let’s talk about the history of Stockton and how we can move forward! Stockton ...
06/04/2020

Happening today! Some powerful speakers! Let’s talk about the history of Stockton and how we can move forward! Stockton is the home for ALL of us!

In Response to the Murder of George FloydJustice for George FloydIn Response to the Murder of George FloydJun 02, 2020  ...
06/03/2020

In Response to the Murder of George Floyd
Justice for George Floyd
In Response to the Murder of George Floyd

Jun 02, 2020

By: Abdi Soltani and Candice Francis

The killing of George Floyd on May 25 has returned the spotlight on racist policing and the dehumanization of African Americans in the criminal legal system. As America witnessed the unfiltered murder of Mr. Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police, no one could argue that his blackness wasn’t the catalyst that led to his demise. His premature death reads like an installment in a sick serial novel with intervals so short between chapters that one black life taken is followed by another and another in rapid succession. Say their names: George Floyd, Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor, Oscar Grant, Stephon Clark, Mario Woods, Jessica Williams, Stephen Taylor, Eric Garner, Tamir Rice, Trayvon Martin, Sandra Bland, Amadou Diallo, and on and on and on.

This is the backdrop that frames the ACLU of Northern California’s response to the death of Mr. Floyd, which includes the devastating effect of the Coronavirus and its disparate impact on the black community. We share the grief and anger that’s spilling into the streets calling for justice. We’re learning from our black colleagues how systemic racism forces them to contain their sorrow and rage even when there isn’t a vessel large enough to hold it.

A Three Step Process

We face myriad challenges. Immediately, we need an end to the slew of hastily announced “curfews” enacted in cities and counties across California that lack clarity as to their scope and duration. These disruptions are far broader than necessary and threaten free speech and the right to assemble, as well as prevent people from attending to their ordinary needs during this extraordinary time. Blanket closure of all public spaces gives police unfettered discretion, which has been shown to lead to selective and biased enforcement, and high potential for the exact type of racialized abuses that are being protested. We must prevent the government– locally and nationally – from seizing upon the public health crisis and this time of protest against police violence to enact broad and limitless measures that strip us of our fundamental rights.

Secondly, we must advance urgently needed reforms of our local police departments. The repetition of unjustifiable homicides and shootings must cease, replaced by broad changes to law enforcement policies, practices, and cultures. Over the past decade, with the extraordinary leadership of people impacted by police violence, California has passed meaningful legislation to gain access to racial profiling data, open misconduct records, and impose limits on police use of deadly force. Each of these laws must be faithfully and immediately implemented, which requires pressure from the public and activists and leadership from elected officials. This year our focus is on continuing to hold police accountable, limiting potential for abuse, and shifting resources away from police and towards community-based initiatives that support true safety, health, and well-being. To that end, we are a signatory to a letter by Movement for Black Lives (M4BL) calling for defunding of police and reinvestment in communities.

Third, we call on our ACLU members and supporters to proactively fight racism and to support and lift-up black-led organizations with pro-black agendas. We must focus on the issues that bring us here today – the stark racial divide that persists and the current manifestation of white supremacy. Guided by our shared humanity, we must support black leadership in the quest for justice and power without expecting black people to “cure” or “fix” the racism imposed upon them. To our members, donors, and the many foundations in our region, we urge you to donate to community led organizations mobilizing to stem the impact of police violence. Please donate monthly or annually to sustain these organizations.* Just a few of those groups are listed below.

The Path Forward

In this moment when government forces threaten those who dare to resist, including the press that reports this resistance, we must continue to speak up unambiguously for racial justice and the right to protest. In honor of George Floyd and all black and brown people who have unjustly lost their lives to police violence, we must reaffirm our unequivocal stance against police brutality.

We’re living in an unprecedented time requiring us to make stark choices like the moments expressed in the poem “First they came…”. How many more George Floyds can we watch die before us? How long can we tolerate a system that recycles fallacies about the value and worth of one human being compared to another? How long can we tolerate curfews and responses to pandemics that underscore the disparities that exist among us?

The answer is obvious but the road to get there is unpaved. History is replete with examples of barriers so imposing, it wasn’t clear if they could be challenged; but somehow they were. It is now up to us to join forces and secure the monumental changes that are needed so that the George Floyd’s of the world can live out their natural lives in peace and with justice.

*Community-led Groups:

Anti Police-Terror Project: http://www.antipoliceterrorproject.org/

Justice Teams Network: https://justiceteams.org/new-page

Black Organizing Project: http://blackorganizingproject.org

Youth Justice Coalition in LA: https://youthjusticela.org/donate2yjc/

Young Women’s Freedom Center: https://www.youngwomenfree.org/donate/

Transgender Gender-Variant & Intersex Justice Project: http://www.tgijp.org/donate.html

Families United for Justice: http://fu4jgroup.website/index.html

Law Enforcement Accountability Network: https://www.lean4change.org/

L.E.A.N. supports victims of police brutality and their families by providing crisis counseling, assisting with post-trauma response, and hosts a series called “Path from Pain to Resilience” for parents, siblings, and children of victims of police brutality and violence.

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Stockton, CA

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