ELECTION
DAY, November
4:
One
Million Massachusetts Workers Need the Right to Earned Sick Time!
Raise
Up Massachusetts,
which
is leading the campaign, writes:
This
weekend will mark 30 days from Election Day and we have a lot of work to do. We’re planning canvasses across the state and we need you to join
us. So far, our canvasses have been great successes: volunteers have been
able to talk to dozens of voters a shift and have meaningful conversations that
have spread the message of our campaign. But as we get closer to Election Day
(again, we’re only 30 days out!), we need to start talking to even more voters
every weekend. You can either sign up for an event near you, or if you
there’s nothing close, sign up here to set up canvassing in your
neighborhood.
Our
friends
at Massachusetts
Peace Action are
pitching in:
You
can join Massachusetts Peace Action's work on this effort
in several ways. 1) Volunteer for shifts at regional call centers in many towns
around the state using the state of the art HubDialer system, which guarantees
many contacts with voters. 2) Use your own phone and a computer at home to do a
shift using HubDialer (after simple web based training in using the system). 3)
Call from an old fashioned paper list. 4) Join door to door canvasses to reach
likely supporters. 5) Reach out to family, friends, co-workers and in your
community to those and ask them to sign a pledge a vote for Yes on 4.
And
DORCHESTER
PEOPLE FOR PEACE
is committed to turning out
at the polls for Question 4 on Election Day – and also for our local ballot
QUESTION 5 to say “we want to get big money out of our
politics!”
Sharon
Bilodeau (sgbilodeau@gmail.com /
617-504-1645) writes:
We
need your help on Election Day, November 4. Can you cover a morning or evening
shift (or both)? Can you work the same shift you worked in September? Would you
like a new time and place? Were you busy on Primary Day but can work Election
Day? Please email at sgbilodeau@gmail.com or call me at 617-504-1645
Here are the ballot questions:
1. Earned Sick Time. Our ally, New England United for Justice, has been working for the right to earned sick time for all Massachusetts workers for seven years. In November it will be a binding question on the ballot. Many people haven't heard about it but will support it if we let them know.
2. Getting Big Money Out of Politics. Recent Supreme Court decisions have allowed billionaires and corporations to spend unlimited amounts in elections, treating corporations as ‘Persons’ with free speech rights. To show that our elected officials that voters do not agree, Sydney and Hayat led a drive that put a non-binding question on the ballot in Dan Cullinane’s district. The ballot question calls for an amendment to the U.S. Constitution to saying that corporations are not people and money is not a form of speech – it must be regulated in political campaigns.
The polling places are, in priority order with double precincts and heavier-voting precincts first:
Dorchester Academy (the former Woodrow Wilson School), 18 Croftland St, Codman Hill (Ward 17, Precincts 4 and 11)
Mildred Avenue School, Mildred Ave, Mattapan (Ward 17, Precinct 10 and Ward 18, Precinct 2)
Lower Mills Library, Richmond St (Ward 17, Precincts 13 and 14)
Groveland Community Room, Franklin Field (Ward 18, Precincts 1 and 4)
Chittick School, 154 Ruskindale Road between Cummins Highway and River St (Ward 18, Precincts 6 and 21)
Adams Street Library, near Ashmont St (Ward 16, Precinct 8)
Florian Hall, 55 Hallet St (Ward 16, Precinct 11)
Charles H. Taylor School, 1060 Morton St (Ward 17, Precinct 12)
Mattahunt School, 100 Hebron St (Ward 18, Precinct 3)
Hassan Apartments, 705 River St (Ward 18, Precinct 5)
The shifts are: 7-9 am, 5-8 pm (or 5-7 if you can't stay the whole time)
Here are the ballot questions:
1. Earned Sick Time. Our ally, New England United for Justice, has been working for the right to earned sick time for all Massachusetts workers for seven years. In November it will be a binding question on the ballot. Many people haven't heard about it but will support it if we let them know.
2. Getting Big Money Out of Politics. Recent Supreme Court decisions have allowed billionaires and corporations to spend unlimited amounts in elections, treating corporations as ‘Persons’ with free speech rights. To show that our elected officials that voters do not agree, Sydney and Hayat led a drive that put a non-binding question on the ballot in Dan Cullinane’s district. The ballot question calls for an amendment to the U.S. Constitution to saying that corporations are not people and money is not a form of speech – it must be regulated in political campaigns.
The polling places are, in priority order with double precincts and heavier-voting precincts first:
Dorchester Academy (the former Woodrow Wilson School), 18 Croftland St, Codman Hill (Ward 17, Precincts 4 and 11)
Mildred Avenue School, Mildred Ave, Mattapan (Ward 17, Precinct 10 and Ward 18, Precinct 2)
Lower Mills Library, Richmond St (Ward 17, Precincts 13 and 14)
Groveland Community Room, Franklin Field (Ward 18, Precincts 1 and 4)
Chittick School, 154 Ruskindale Road between Cummins Highway and River St (Ward 18, Precincts 6 and 21)
Adams Street Library, near Ashmont St (Ward 16, Precinct 8)
Florian Hall, 55 Hallet St (Ward 16, Precinct 11)
Charles H. Taylor School, 1060 Morton St (Ward 17, Precinct 12)
Mattahunt School, 100 Hebron St (Ward 18, Precinct 3)
Hassan Apartments, 705 River St (Ward 18, Precinct 5)
The shifts are: 7-9 am, 5-8 pm (or 5-7 if you can't stay the whole time)
Please
sign up now so
we can cover all these polling places. And thanks!
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