Hi John,
Iāve put off writing this newsletter for as long as possible, but Iāve gotten to the point where I either sit down and write this or it wonāt get sent out. So, here goes: this will be my last newsletter for the National Womenās Law Center. In the fall, Iām heading off to law school (guess itās time to finally learn all those legal terms after all!).
Iāve thought a lot about what I wanted to say to you all, since this community has meant so much to me during my time at NWLC. And after all that thinking, what I came up with is: thank you.
Thank you for being a part of the NWLC community. Thank you for taking our actionsāthey make a difference, I promise. Thank you for sending random notes to me; Iāve read them all and without fail they make my day. Thank you for all youāre doing in your communities to fight for gender justice. Thank you for bearing with my puns and bad jokes (or at least not saying anything to me about them). Thank you for letting me talk about my dog an excessive amount for an organizational newsletter. Thank you to everyone behind the scenes who helps this newsletter come together. Really, from the bottom of my heart, thank you.
While I usually hate change (itās hard! It sucks!), this is a change Iām excited about because I know this newsletter will be in excellent hands. Our Writer/Editor LySaundra Cambell will be taking over. Sheās already done an incredible job infusing great takes on culture to our blog and is never afraid of saying what needs to be said. Iām sure youāll love her writing as much as I already do.
Sheāll start with our next newsletter, but until then hereās one more edition of all the gender justice news you need, sprinkled with all the puns you didnāt.
BILLS, BILLS, BILLS
Iām just (a lot of) bills on Capitol Hill.
Letās just get it out of the way: there are a LOT of COVID relief packages being considered in Congress right now. It can be confusingābut itās also super important (that extra $600 per week for people on unemployment? The one that was keeping people out of poverty? Congress just let it lapse). So letās figure it out together.
The Senateās COVID āreliefā package: We probably need to stop calling them relief bills, based on what the GOP-controlled Senate put forth last week.
Hereās what the Senate bill would do:
- Protect employers who fail to protect their employees and the public from COVID by getting rid of any liability issues.
- Cut unemployment benefits by $400 per week.
- Force student loan borrowers to resume paying off federal student loans.
- Punish schools that choose to remain physically closed for the safety of their students and staff.
Hereās what the Senate bill wouldnāt do:
- Do anything to meaningfully increase access to health careā¦.during a once-in-a-century pandemic. š Seriously though, this bill doesnāt: guarantee free COVID-19 treatment, require a special ACA enrollment period, help support state Medicaid programs. It doesnāt really do...anything about health care during a public health crisis. Interesting.
- Protect people experiencing unemployment.
- Provide the $50 billion our child care system needs just to survive this crisis.
- Protect front-line workers, the majority of whom are women. š
In short: their plan puts the burden of the pandemic onto working class families and women. Instead of investing in solutions to the roots and symptoms of COVID-19, the Senateās package prioritizes businesses and the wealthy. Letās hope whatever Congress winds up passing prioritizes the people who are hurting the most instead of the other way around.
WHAT ABOUT CHILD CARE?
You know, that thing thatās the foundation of our entire economy?
Last week the House passed two child care bills. Together, they would represent the largest investment in the child care system in the United States since World War II. Iām trying to think of anything else that would be the biggest update since World War II. Maybe if we started producing a ton of abacuses now, we could produce the largest amount of abacuses since World War II? All I know: this is HUGE.
The bills would invest $50 billion into the states to keep child care businesses afloat and keep costs affordable for families during the crisis as well as providing longer-term investments in our child care system. The child care industry is women-led (and particularly led by women of color), and itās far past time our society stops taking it for granted.
FEATURED: Whatās your agenda? [CONTENT WARNING: SEXUAL VIOLENCE]
The National Womenās Law Center, alongside some other fantastic organizations, has created a multi-racial, survivor-led collective called the Survivorās Agenda. The Survivorsā Agenda believes survivors should be the ones shaping the national conversation on sexual violence, and thatās why theyāre creating the first crowd-sourced agenda on how to build power among survivors of sexual violence.
How can you be a part of this movement?
šIf you identify as a survivor or have experienced any form of sexual violence or harassment, take the survey to share whatās on your agenda.
šHost a kitchen table conversation to bring even more people into the discussion. And yes, we have a toolkit on how to do it!
šStay tuned for a virtual Survivorsā Summit at the end of September where survivors, allies, and advocates will come together to build power and take action to change the culture around sexual violence.
Must-Dos:
Must-Reads:
Compiled again by our incredible intern, Maddie Sells! Should we start calling this section Maddie Tells? No? Just me? Okay.
- (Some) classes may be going online this coming fall, but that doesnāt mean itās time to ignore the sexism, racism, and sizeism embedded in dress code policies. TikTokers are weighing in on the issue, check out this Buzzfeed article about the viral Tiktoks calling out the discrimination demonstrated in school dress codes.
- Whenās the last time you got a raise? As wages remain stagnant, the wage gap continues to grow and disproportionately affect women of color. Refinery29 breaks it all down and shares the stories of different low-wage workers, and their struggles to stay afloat.
- Women are in a bindĀ (by our very own Fatima Goss Graves and Rep. Katherine Clark!): āIn the month of April alone, the 10 million jobs secured by women since the Great Recession were completely wiped out, and industries staffed primarily by women, like food service and retail, are facing a cataclysmic collapse.ā
Feminist Moment of Joy:
Our feminist moment of joy this week is ENTERTAINMENT. Because there's been a lot of amazing news to come out of the entertainment world recently. First up, the Emmy nominations, which are maybe finally starting to be kind of representative of the world around them. Watchmen, a TV show about race and intergenerational trauma, garnered the most nominations overall, with 26 nominations (and as someone who binged it all earlier this summer, WATCH WATCHMEN). Ramy became the first Muslim-American sitcom to be nominated. And Issa Raeās Insecure continued to dominate.
In other ~entertainment~ news, Netflix announced itād be bringing a bunch of already aired shows starring Black women, including Sister Sister and Girlfriends.
And thatās it! Itās been so much fun sharing this space and this community with all of you. Hereās one last picture of my dog Willa, since who knows when I'll have the chance to make this many people look at my dog again?
Thank you,
Hannah (and Willa š¾) Finnie
she/her/hers
Senior Manager of Campaign and Digital Strategies
National Womenās Law Center
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