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Response to Systemic Racism

June 4, 2020 By chris

Featured image from Jamar Lanham at a protest in Raleigh, NC during the weekend of May 30-31, 2020. #Lanhamphotography Posted on June 3, 2020 NCIPL envisions a stable climate where […]

Response to Systemic Racism

June 4, 2020 by chris

Featured image from Jamar Lanham at a protest in Raleigh, NC during the weekend of May 30-31, 2020. #Lanhamphotography

Posted on June 3, 2020

NCIPL envisions a stable climate where humans live in right and just relationships, interconnected with a healthy, thriving, natural world. NCIPL accomplishes its mission by encouraging a culture shift towards environmental justice and creation care, while underscoring the importance of climate action for people of faith and conscience as a moral imperative.

NCIPL has adopted the US Climate Action Network’s JEDI: Justice, Equity, Diversity, Inclusion Statement as our guiding values. In order to live into this vision, we must talk about, and unlearn, the sin of racism. That means dedicating ourselves to environmental justice and therefore racial justice. It also means speaking honestly and openly about our current moment. 

Fighting structural racism is – and must be – integral to NCIPL’s climate justice mission. As we mourn, listen, learn, and mobilize we will be redoubling our efforts to fight for equality.

We at NCIPL are fully committed to making that happen, and the first step is for us all to state unequivocally that Black Lives Matter.

As the Creation Care program of the NC Council of Churches, we are also sharing with you our Governing Board Statement and press release below.

In prayer and action,

Susannah Tuttle, M.Div
NCIPL Director

Sarah Ogletree, M.Div
NCIPL Program Coordinator


Statement from the North Carolina Council of Churches

A resolution adopted by the Governing Board of the North Carolina Council of Churches, June 2, 2020.

Whereas the North Carolina Council of Churches was founded in 1935, primarily for the purpose of addressing racial inequity and racial injustice, and 

Whereas our white founders soon recognized that racial equity and racial justice should not be discussed without including racially/ethnically diverse voices and so included black faith leaders from North Carolina as members of the Council by 1943, and 

Whereas we have striven together in these eight decades to support the Civil Rights Act, support the Voting Rights Act, lament the deaths of untold black neighbors whose names are written on the heart of God and on the hearts of those who loved them, call for justice when the systems of justice failed us, and hold firm to the belief that our diversity makes us stronger, and

Whereas the murder of George Floyd by a white police officer while three other white officers watched has exacerbated an already unacceptable devaluing of black and brown lives, and

Whereas racism has been compared to a complex underground rhizome that spreads unseen before erupting into specific social structures (e.g., law enforcement), concentrating attention on this part of the structure while the main tumor continues to strengthen racism in the remainder of the system, and 

Whereas we recognize and confess that the racist systems in which we live primarily benefit white people, we therefore place a higher expectation on white people to do the necessary work of dismantling these systems;

The Governing Board of the North Carolina Council of Churches hereby resolves to press ahead with urgency to understand the dynamics of racism in all of its manifestations and to be transformative in society by working across systems and structures where interpersonal, systemic and institutional racism operate, and to work to dismantle the racist systems that perpetuate and allow violence against black and brown bodies. 

We will immediately and actively:

  1. Bear witness to the Gospel that proclaims each of us are beloved of God; 
  2. Educate people, particularly white people, about the underlying structures of systemic racism, especially educational, health care, judicial, economic, religious, and governmental systems;
  3. Teach the truth that white privilege benefits white people in ways that must be acknowledged by them; 
  4. Empower white people to move beyond passive support to become active allies of black and brown people;
  5. Denounce the increased militarization of our local police forces and call for accountability such as: ban chokeholds and strangleholds, implement use-of-force continuums, institute de-escalation training, establish diversity and inclusion training, and require comprehensive community reporting;
  6. Confess that white supremacy infects the very systems that are meant to ensure “liberty and justice for all”; 
  7. Disrupt the current systems by refusing to accept indifference (“It’s not my problem”), claims of innocence (“I’m not a racist”), disavowal of responsibility (“I don’t see color”), minimizing the issue (“All lives matter”), or willful helplessness (“There’s nothing I can do”); and
  8. Create systems that tangibly make rapartions for the damage of over 400 years of slavery and oppression by standing in solidarity with and amplifying the voices of black and brown people who have experienced suffering, pain and violence as a result of the current systems. 

—

Founded in 1935, the North Carolina Council of Churches enables denominations, congregations, and people of faith to impact our state on issues such as racial equity, farmworker rights, environment, LGBTQ+ rights, economic justice and development, human well-being, equality, compassion and peace, following the example and mission of Jesus Christ. The Council comprises 26 distinct judicatories from 18 denominations. Across the state, our members have over 6,200 congregations with about 1.5 million congregants. For more information about the Council’s 85-year history, visit www.ncchurches.org. To stay up to date on progressive, faith-based news, follow us on Facebook and Twitter. 

 

Filed Under: Blog, The Heart of Our Work

NCIPL Earth Day Events 2020

April 21, 2020 By chris

Earth Day Events  Although many of our faith traditions throughout history have held sacred the fact that life is a gift and that our planet which nurtures and sustains life is […]

NCIPL Earth Day Events 2020

April 21, 2020 by chris

Earth Day Events 
Although many of our faith traditions throughout history have held sacred the fact that life is a gift and that our planet which nurtures and sustains life is also a gift, tomorrow is April 22, 2020, which is the 50th anniversary of Earth Day! 

The very first Earth Day sparked the passage of many bedrock environmental standards and the creation of the Environmental Protection Agency.

Today the urgency of acting to protect the sacred gift of the Earth has never been greater – we are now in an environmental emergency, a climate breakdown.

To meet this moment, together we must build the largest, most diverse online mobilization in history this week. Will you join this global united movement as we build toward the next half century of faithful, bold, and just action for our planet? 

Check Out the Faith Call to Climate Justice Summit Schedule!
 Solar 101 for Congregations: NCIPL and Southeast Faith Leaders Network
4/22, 12-1pm
NCIPL Director, Susannah Tuttle, will offer a Solar 101 presentation as a part of the Faith Call to Climate Justice Summit Schedule! Attend to learn more about solar opportunities, going solar as a Duke Energy customer, and more. Join the 12pm presentation at this link!
 NCIPL Eco-Storytime on Facebook LIVE 
4/22, 12pm
Join our NCIPL Program Coordinator for a special Earth Day Eco-Storytime on Facebook LIVE beginning at 12pm noon! Tomorrow, Sarah will read The Lorax by Dr. Seuss and The EARTH Book by Todd Parr. She’ll also offer an activity to help you and the kids in your life celebrate Earth Day from home. Join Sarah on the NCIPL Facebook Page tomorrow!
The Forgotten: How to Care in the Age of COVID
4/22, 5-6pm
The People’s Justice Council, Southeast Faith Leaders Network and Southeast Climate and Energy Network have assembled experts from fields that we often overlook in our positions of care. Join Dr. James Manuel PsyD, Kaleia Martin of Climate Reality, Rev Billy Michael Honor of Georgia New Project, and Rev Terence Lester of Love Beyond Walls. This discussion is being facilitated by Dr. Mustafa Santiago Ali. We will hear from experts in the homelessness and poverty sector, the youth sector, the voting sector, and the mental health. Find out how you can strengthen your care for the planet by seeing the people. Register here! 
National Climate Prayer
4/22, 12pm
Join in the National Prayer at noon your time on Earth Day, April 22. Sign up here to to let us build the biggest participation, in a shared prayer for the climate, yet.
Check out Earth Day LIVE 
Check out the EARTH DAY LIVE website for more information on great online events and workshops happening throughout the week. 

Happy Earth Day from all of us at NCIPL!

North Carolina Interfaith Power & Light

{NC Council of Churches}

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Filed Under: Blog

Op-Ed: When it comes to climate change, farmworkers reap what we sow

December 20, 2019 By chris

Op-Ed written by Michelle Peedin, NCIPL Youth Leaders Coordinator, published in the Winston-Salem Journal. Click here to access the article on their site. With the crispness of the fall season […]

Op-Ed: When it comes to climate change, farmworkers reap what we sow

December 20, 2019 by chris

Op-Ed written by Michelle Peedin, NCIPL Youth Leaders Coordinator, published in the Winston-Salem Journal. Click here to access the article on their site.

With the crispness of the fall season normally comes the bounty of the harvests, as grocery stores and farmers markets throughout the state overflow with all the varied agriculture that North Carolina has to offer. North Carolinians depend on the western apple orchards and eastern sweet potatoes to prepare staple dishes for the holidays. However, as is increasingly common, these harvests are feeling the effects of climate change — and so are those working in the fields. Here in North Carolina, and across the country, there are few more vulnerable than farmworkers, a population that is working hard to gain rights but will only face more challenges because of climate change.

From increasingly frequent and severe heatwaves to lower crop yields to higher risk of mosquito-borne diseases, climate change is already affecting the health of farmworkers and impacting their ability to economically sustain themselves. After a string of weather-related disasters created one of the worst years for agriculture in decades, fa

rm owners are facing extraordinary uncertainty this year as climate change-fueled extreme weather ravages otherwise productive land. Increasingly, climate change is resulting in greater instability for farmworkers, with harsher working conditions and dwindling yields resulting in fewer working hours and more risk. For farmworkers, if you don’t work, you don’t get paid.

For those who labor in our North Carolina fields, a population that is overwhelmingly Latinx immigrants, that uncertainty extends beyond their paychecks and into their physical and mental health. As a fellow with Student Action with Farmworkers, a nonprofit organization dedicated to improving the lives of farmworkers and their families, I witnessed the unimaginable conditions farmworkers endure on a daily basis while working and living in the fields. I saw farmworkers returning to cramped living quarters with no air conditioning after having worked 12-hour days in 100+ degree temperatures. With rising temperatures affecting agricultural industries around the country, outdoor laborers face a far greater risk of heatstroke, dehydration and kidney failure as a result of their environment. In an industry that is rife with abusive labor practices, these conditions all add up to make an already difficult workplace all the more precarious.

As a first-generation child of an immigrant mother, I’ve seen firsthand how these climate-fueled health disparities are affecting both documented and undocumented communities throughout North Carolina. Migrant farmworkers, in addition to many other Latinx and undocumented communities, stay in homes that are often susceptible to flooding. I remember reading heartbreaking stories of Latinx families who lost everything after Hurricane Florence. Extreme weather events, like Florence, are made more severe by climate change and have a disproportionate effect on those who work outdoors.

In addition to climate justice issues such as hurricane impacts, environmental justice issues such as water and air quality are prevalent in many local communities, too. Nationwide, insufficient access to health care among Latinx populations is one reason why children in these communities are 40% more likely to die as a result of an asthma attack compared to white children. Couple this with the fact that an estimated 39% of Latinx families live within 30 miles of a polluting power plant, and we begin to see the unique ways in which a failure to act on climate change is a particularly dire failure for communities of color.

Addressing the root cause of these injustices is going to require much more than just talking about it – we must commit to transitioning to a 100% clean energy economy. With Hurricane Florence alone costing North Carolinians nearly $17 billion, it’s clear that nothing short of bold action will suffice.

Unfortunately, our senators, Thom Tillis and Richard Burr, recently sided with big polluters over the health and wellbeing of our state by voting to support the Trump administration’s so-called “Affordable Clean Energy (ACE) rule,” which would extend the lives of dirty coal plants and do absolutely nothing to curb the carbon pollution behind climate change. While farmworkers and Latinx communities are bearing the brunt of climate change’s devastating impacts, our senators have shown themselves to be more interested in lining industries’ pockets than in taking action on climate and helping transition North Carolina to a 100% clean energy economy.

For the sake of vulnerable laborers, hardworking Latinx immigrants, and all North Carolinians, we must act on climate. It’s time our senators do the same. Join me as we call on our elected officials to take action now.

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: Climate Change, crop, farmworker, farmworkers, food, heat, heatwave, Latinx

Reflecting on the Climate Strike

October 2, 2019 By Michelle Peedin, Program Coordinator, Partners in Health and Wholeness

On Friday, September 20, 2019 NC Interfaith Power and Light participated in the biggest climate strike in North Carolina history. Raleigh’s event was only one strike in the hundreds that […]

Reflecting on the Climate Strike

October 2, 2019 by Michelle Peedin, Program Coordinator, Partners in Health and Wholeness

On Friday, September 20, 2019 NC Interfaith Power and Light participated in the biggest climate strike in North Carolina history. Raleigh’s event was only one strike in the hundreds that happened all over the world for the Global Climate Strike. It was the largest worldwide climate mobilization ever and the largest youth-led mobilization on any issue in history. It was estimated that 1500 youth climate leaders and adult allies came out to Raleigh striking to demand transformative action be taken to address the climate crisis.

The photos below are just a snapshot of the passion and energy that was seen and felt at the Raleigh Climate Strike. Don’t miss our youth-made video of participants sharing their reasons for striking! We hope the photos and video below inspire you to take action in your own faith communities!

Rishi Ranabothu, Youth Leaders Initiative Founder
Sarah Ogletree, NCIPL Program Coordinator
Rev. Dr. Jennifer Copeland, Executive Director of the NC Council of Churches
Susannah Tuttle, Director of NC Interfaith Power and Light
Michelle Peedin, NCIPL Youth Leaders Coordinator

Gary Smith, Chair of NCIPL Energy Working Group, with his group Community United Church of Christ in Raleigh.

Gary, Connie, Diana from Pittsboro Presbyterian Church

Sue Barnett from Unitarian Universalist PEACE Fellowship, Raleigh with NCIPL Program Coordinator, Sarah Ogletree

Rev. Pat Watkins and Rev. Dr. Denise Honeycutt from the United Methodist Church Caretakers of Gods Creation Community

Michelle Peedin, NCIPL Youth Leaders Coordinator

Phill Wilson from United Church of Chapel Hill

Becca Lamb, Michelle Peedin, NCIPL’s Youth Leaders Coordinator, and Avery Davis Lamb, previously with IPL DMV

Rishi Ranabothu, Tristan Peedin, Zeke DeGette

NCIPL Team: Michelle Peedin – Youth Leaders Coordinator, Sarah Ogletree – Program Coordinator,
and Susannah Tuttle – Director of NC Interfaith Power and Light

NCIPL Youth Leaders Initiative – “For The Love Of” Video

Here is a video that one of our youth made. Tristan Peedin, 16 years old, interviewed and edited this compilation video of strikers at the Climate Strike last Friday in Raleigh, NC. At NCIPL we recognize that storytelling is a powerful way to educate, inspire, and mobilize this climate justice movement.

We asked each interviewee to share with us their “For the love of” reason for striking! The ages range from 7-61! An intergenerational movement led by the youth – the generation who will carry the most weight of this climate crisis.

To learn more about NCIPL’s Youth Leaders Initiative or our newly forming network, Click Here. 

More Photos from the Raleigh Climate Strike








Filed Under: Blog, Uncategorized Tagged With: environment

Join NCIPL in Striking for the Climate

September 11, 2019 By chris

On September 20, three days before the UN Climate Summit in NYC, NC Interfaith Power and Light is joining young climate leaders and adult allies striking all across the US […]

Join NCIPL in Striking for the Climate

September 11, 2019 by chris

On September 20, three days before the UN Climate Summit in NYC, NC Interfaith Power and Light is joining young climate leaders and adult allies striking all across the US and world to demand transformative action addressing the climate crisis. Below is a compilation of resources for students, parents, and faith communities.

“FOR THE LOVE OF…” VIDEOS

NCIPL’s Youth Leaders Initiative has put together a short video sharing our “For the love of…” reasons for striking on Sep 20! We invite you to share your own video and tag us! Don’t forget to use hashtags to include everyone in the conversation! This is what youth climate leaders of faith look like:

CLICK HERE TO WATCH THE VIDEO ON FACEBOOK

#ForTheLoveOf #ClimateStrike #FaithsForTheFuture  #FaithsForFuture #StrikeWithUs
#GlobalClimateStrike #ActOnClimate #NCIPL

FIND AND/OR ORGANIZE A STRIKE NEAR YOU
strikewithus.org

Make sure to click on the title and register for your event if a link is provided.
To receive updates in preparation for the Raleigh, NC event: Register Here

SIGN THIS LETTER & LET YOUR ELECTED OFFICIALS KNOW YOU SUPPORT THE STRIKES
strikewithus.org/faith

PROMOTE THE STRIKE

Click here to access the social media “For the love of” promotional graphics

Click here to access the Faith Climate Strike Resources

Click here to access the US Climate Strike Social Media Toolkit

DOWNLOAD A PRINTABLE BULLETIN INSERT FOR THIS SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 15

Printable Bulletin Insert for Climate Strike

To print half sheets:

  1. Click the download arrow.
  2. Beside format, select “All Types”
  3. Click on the download pop-up at the bottom left of the screen
  4. Click File > Print
  5. In the print pop-up, beside “copies per page”, select 2

RESOURCES FOR STUDENT AND ALLY ORGANIZING
Click the link to access step by step guides for students and adults and ways to get started!
globalclimatestrike.net/resources/

FAITH LEADERS ORGANIZING TOOLKIT
A user-friendly check list and resources that any faith leader can use to organize their faith community.
Click here to access the toolkit

PLEDGE TO CALL YOUR SENATOR/REPRESENTATIVE ON SEPTEMBER 20

Senator Tillis: (202) 224 – 6342
Senator Burr: (202) 224 – 3154
Look up your congress members and state representatives here: www.ncleg.gov/RnR/Representation

Consider using this script as a guideline for your conversation:

Hello. My name is _________ and I live in __________, North Carolina. Today, millions of youth and their allies are striking to demand bold legislative action on climate change. I want  _________ to know that I support our youth and join them in calling for climate action. This summer, there were 3,611 emergency department visits due to heat-related illnesses in North Carolina. Just this month, Hurricane Dorian ravaged Ocracoke Island.  Both of these events were greatly intensified by climate change. As a person of faith, I know that climate change is a moral issue impacting people and places in my community. I ask that  _________ courageously and immediately join the bi-partisan climate conversation. There is no time to waste. Thank you.

This is a moral movement that demands action from people of faith and conscience.

We all have a voice. How will you use yours?

 

NC Interfaith Power and Light is co-hosting the event in Raleigh, NC at Halifax Mall from 12:30-2:30pm.

If you have any questions or comments about any of the above resources or how to get involved, feel free to email our Program Coordinator, Sarah Ogletree, at programs@ncipl.org. If you are or know a youth climate leader of faith who would be interested in joining our network, email out Youth Leader Coordinator, Michelle Peedin, at michelle@ncipl.org.

Filed Under: Blog, Uncategorized Tagged With: action, Climate Change, climate strike, faith, North Carolina

Press Release: Porch Party for the Planet

September 5, 2019 By chris

MEDIA ADVISORY Contact: Matt Duffy | (415) 370-3997 | duffy@campsightstrategies.com ENVIRONMENTAL GROUPS THROW DAY PARTY to help Dorian victims, urge Tillis and Burr to #ActOnClimate WHAT: PORCH PARTY for OUR […]

Press Release: Porch Party for the Planet

September 5, 2019 by chris

MEDIA ADVISORY

Contact: Matt Duffy | (415) 370-3997 | duffy@campsightstrategies.com

ENVIRONMENTAL GROUPS THROW DAY PARTY
to help Dorian victims, urge Tillis and Burr to #ActOnClimate

WHAT: PORCH PARTY for OUR PLANET

WHEN: Friday, September 6, 1 to 5 p.m.

WHERE: The Outpost, 306 E. Hargett Street, Raleigh, then Sen. Tillis’ Raleigh office, 310 New Bern Avenue, Suite 122 (see schedule below)

WHO: Climate Action Campaign, a partnership of Environment North Carolina, North Carolina Interfaith Power and Light, and the North Carolina League of Conservation Voters

WHY: When it comes to protecting North Carolina from rising seas, heat waves, and dirty air, U.S. Senators Tillis and Burr have been total flops. We’re collecting goods to help those impacted by Hurricane Dorian while calling on Tillis and Burr to #ActOnClimate to reduce the severity and frequency of future storms.

With Hopscotch Music Festival in town, we’re having a beach-themed party in hopes that future generations in Raleigh don’t have to deal with encroaching beach-front property.

The event is free and open to the public. Concerned citizens can enjoy music from four local bands (see schedule below), with free food from Dank Burrito and drinks from Big Boss Brewing, and The Outpost.

Attendees will also fill out flip-flop postcards with messages for Burr and Tillis. At 3:45, we will march to Tillis’ office a few blocks away, and deliver those messages to him.

Band schedule
1 p.m.: Whit Grumhaus & The Chasers
2 p.m.: Duck
3 p.m.: Bruce Randall Bickford
4 p.m.: Debonzo Brothers

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Filed Under: Blog, Uncategorized

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