ELECCION DE SEGUNDA VUELTA: 18 DE JUNIO!
Austin Interfaith les urge a votar según su consciencia en la elección de segunda vuelta para el consejo municipal.
Haz 'click' en el articulo o video abajo para descubrir como las candidatas Randi Shade y Kathy Tovo respondieron a la agenda de Austin Interfaith sobre la seguridad en el trabajo, permisos legados para los taxistas y un sueldo digno.
Artículo
Video
La votación temprano comienza Lunes, 6 de Junio y termina el Martes, 14 de Junio.
Los lugares para votar están abiertos entre 7:00 am – 7:00 pm en el Ultimo Día para Votar – Sábado, 18 de Junio.
Para Aprender Donde Votar (utilizando su numero de precinto)
Para Encontrar Donde Votar Utilizando un Mapa
Aprenda mas sobre nuestra lucha para el derecho de participar en las decisiones que afecta programas como la capacitación laboral, los clases de inglés y los programas para los niños después de la escuela.
GOTV effort by AI leaders seeks to reverse typically low turnout
So Far, Another Sleepy Austin Election
May 7, 2011 4:16 pm by: Erika Aguilar
Austin voters have showed little interest in early voting so far this year, says Travis County Clerk Dana DeBeauvoir. She says less than two percent of registered voters in Travis County have cast ballots for the Austin City Council Elections.
“We’ve only had a little more than six thousand people go in person to early vote,” DeBeauvoir said. “That is really, pretty low.”
DeBeauvoir is quick to remind people that there are still a few days left in early voting. The deadline is Tuesday.
The meager turnout is motivating community members with Austin Interfaith to hit the streets. This weekend the group block-walked in East Austin neighborhoods to remind people to vote.
Minerva Camarena Skeith knocked on apartment doors at the Booker T. Washington complex in East Austin.
“There are a lot of people who are registered, it’s concentrated, and we can go very quickly,” she said.
Travis County’s DeBeauvoir says low voter turnout is usually the norm in City Council elections, especially when there is no Mayor’s race or hot-button initiative on the ballot.
” I think the highest percentage turnout we’ve had is about 13 percent, here, in the most recent years,” DeBeauvoir said.
It was the smoking ordinance proposed in the May of 2005 that drew out that modest crowd of voters. DeBeauvoir said she believes people just haven’t gotten around to voting yet. But Minerva Camarena Skeith says some are just confused.
“Part of us coming out here walking to encourage people to vote is that you’ll hear these misconceptions and myths about voting or why people don’t vote, and we can both educate but also encourage and make sure there is a purpose for voting,” Camarena Skeith said.
Take Janice Bell. She hasn’t voted in five years because she thought she had to register to vote every year in order to cast a ballot.
“Ohh, (people are) probably like me. Thinking you have to register every year or if you done change your address, you have to go through a lot more difficulties, you know, so it’s probably just the change,” she said.
Whatever the reason, you still have until Tuesday to make your choice. Just take your driver’s license with to any polling center in town. But on Election Day, Saturday, May 14, voters will need to report to their assigned precinct to vote.
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Press Conference, letters of support
Network of Texas I.A.F. Organizations
PRESS STATEMENT FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE May 5, 2011
FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT: Paul Skeith, 484-0590
On May 5, 2011 at 11:30 a.m. , The Network of Texas IAF Organizations will hold a press conference calling on the House and Senate to pass a budget that invests in the future of Texas. This includes spending the rainy day fund and finding new sources of revenue to fully fund public education, healthcare, and economic development initiatives like the Jobs and Education for Texans (JET) Fund. The press conference will be held in room E1.026 in the Capitol.
“We cannot cut investments that secure our economic future. Education and healthcare are investments in human capital, and the JET fund is designed to help labor markets work more effectively,” said Father Alfonso Guerra of Valley Interfaith. He added “The Senate budget is better than the House budget, but both need to invest more.”
Last session, the Network of Texas IAF Organizations worked with Comptroller Susan Combs and Lt. Governor David Dewhurst to create the $25 million Jobs and Education for Texans ( JET ) Fund. This includes the $10 million Launchpad Fund for successful nonprofits such as Capital IDEA in Austin, Project QUEST in San Antonio, Project VIDA in the Rio Grande Valley, and ARRIBA in El Paso. These projects train adults earning on average $10,000 before entering the program for jobs which pay $38,000 on average after graduation. The Network of Texas IAF Organizations also supports greater investments in public education funding and scholarships programs like the Texas Grants.
“We understand that these are tough budget times, but failing to adequately invest in workforce and education will weaken our state’s ability to compete economically and attract business,” said Paul Skeith, a leader with Austin Interfaith. “With 68% of Texans without a college education, we need investment in strong public schools that prepare students for college and adult workforce projects that move people out of a cycle of poverty[i].”
Attached is a list of Texas business leaders who have written letters in support of reauthorization of the JET fund.
The Network of Texas IAF Organizations includes the following organizations: Dallas Area Interfaith, Communities Organized for Public Service, Metro Alliance Border Interfaith, Valley Interfaith, Austin Interfaith, El Paso Interreligious Sponsoring Organization, Allied Communities of Tarrant, The Border Organization, The Metropolitan Organization, West Texas Organizing Strategy.
Letters of support to the JET Fund:
Austin Interfaith
Members of the Central Texas Business Community (Martha Smiley, Mark Curry, Jay Hailey, W. Eric Hehman, Earl Maxwell, Adrian Neeley, Allyson Peerman, Pete Winstead)
The Austin Diagnostic Clinic (Robert W. Spurck, Jr., FACHE, Chief Executive Officer)
Austin Chamber of Commerce (Michael W. Rollins, CCE, President)
Real Estate Council of Austin (Jeff Howard, President)
EPISO
Bank of the West (Burt Blacksher, Executive Vice President)
Wells Fargo (Martha Rochford)
The Greater El Paso Chamber of Commerce (Richard E. Dayoub, President and CEO)
Hunt Companies, Inc. (Joshua W. Hunt, Senior Vice President)
Stephen J. Wolslager
The Electric Company, El Paso Electric (Richard Fleager, Senior Vice President, Customer Care and External Affairs)
University Medical Center of El Paso (James N. Valenti, President and CEO)
Valley Interfaith
Brownsville Chamber of Commerce (Angela R. Burton, President and CEO)
Valley Regional Medical Center (David Handley, Chief Executive Officer)
TMO
MFR, Accountants & Consultants (Gasper Mir, III, Pricipal, MFR, P.C.)
United Way of Greater Houston (Anna M. Babin, President and CEO)
Memorial Hermann Healthcare System (Dan Wolterman, President and CEO)
Marek Family of Companies (Stan Marek, CEO)
COPS/Metro
San Antonio Hispanic Chamber of Commerce (Ramiro A. Cavazos)
Tom Frost
Alamo Colleges (Bruce Leslie, Chancellor)
Dallas Area Interfaith
Baylor University Medical Center (John McWhorter, President
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