January 28, 2010

Sign the Petition for the Homeless and Unemployed

General — @ 6:50 pm

Please sign and return the following petition to the Arlington Green Party.  We will present this petition on February 20 to the Arlington County Board and to Congress in early March 2010:

Petition to Congress and the Arlington County Board: Establish a Year-Round Homeless Shelter and a Public Jobs Program for Unemployed Arlington

County Residents

 

Whereas:

        All people have an inalienable right to basic shelter and to be treated with dignity,

        All people have a right to a job paying a living wage to support themselves at or above poverty levels,

        Over 500 people were counted as homeless in Arlington in January 2009 (a 25-percent rise from January 2008),

        In September 2009 over 5,500 Arlington residents were officially unemployed and many more thousands unable to find full-time work,

        Average rents in Arlington in 2009 exceeded $1,700 a month and required an income in excess of $65,000 a year to be affordable,

        The county’s one winter shelter can only accommodate 73 people in a dilapidated building and is open only from November through March, and

        Many unsheltered people must live outdoors in Arlington parks and open space.

 

Therefore:

  1. Arlington County Government should open and operate a year round shelter to accommodate all unsheltered homeless people.
  1. Arlington County Government should seek federal government stimulus funds to begin a public jobs program for homeless and any unemployed resident to perform needed community work, and undertake green energy savings efforts such as weatherization and free energy audits for county residents.  Each job must pay at least a living

       wage of $13 an hour, and provide health benefits.

 

Name (Please Print)

House Number & Street Name in Arlington, VA

E-mail Address (optional)

Date

Signature

1)

 

 

 

 

2)

 

 

 

 

3)

 

 

 

 

4)

 

 

 

 

 

Return the Petition to:     Arlington Green Party, P.O. Box 50473,  Arlington, VA 22205

Or email to:   Info@Reeder4Arlington.org

January 19, 2010

Fact Sheet on Arlington Homeless and Unemployed

General — @ 11:55 am

 

 

A Fact Sheet on Homeless and Unemployed Persons in Arlington County Virginia

       l.  Over 500 people were counted as homeless in Arlington in January 2009 (a 25-percent rise from January 2008), according to the  Metro Washington Council of Governments  (http://www.mwcog.org)

 

2. In September 2009 over 5,500 Arlington residents were officially unemployed and many more thousands unable to find full-time work, according to data of U.S. Department of Labor.

 

3. Average rents in Arlington in 2009 exceed $1,700 a month, and require an income in excess of $65,000 a year to be considered affordable.  Source: Arlington County Dept. of Community Planning, Housing and Development.

 

4. The county’s one current winter shelter can only accommodate 73 people in a dilapidated building, and is open only from November through March. Source: “In Arlington, Need for Emergency Shelter Swells,” the Wash. Post, Dec. 3, 2009.

 

5. Many unsheltered people must live outdoors in Arlington parks and open space.

 

6. Fair market rent for a 1-bedroom apartment in the No. Virginia in 2009 was $1,131 per month; to be affordable a worker needs to earn $22 an hour and work 40 hours weekly to afford this rent.  Source: National Low Income Housing Coalition, Out of Reach, 2009, and SALT (Social Action Linked Together).

 7. . In Northern Virginia in 2008, the average retail salesperson, cashier, waiter and waitress, fast food cook, janitor, hotel worker, nursing aide, janitor and maid earned less than $13 an hour.  Source:  State of Virginia, VEC Occupational Employment Survey, May 2008.

Published by:  the Arlington Green Party, P.O. Box  50573, Arlington, VA 22205

For more information email info@Reeder4Arlington.org

 

January 18, 2010

Arlington Green appointed to Cty Energy/Environment Task Force

General — @ 12:42 pm
RE: Energy/environmental taskforce–appointment of an Arlington Green‏
From: John Reeder 
Sent: Mon 1/18/10 4:38 PM
To:  
Cc:  
Bcc:  
Dear Jay:
 
Thank you for appointing Mr. Davis as a representative of the Arlington Greens on this task force.  We look forward to providing input through him and receiving feed back on the progress the task force is making.  Mr. Davis is an accomplished aviation transportation economist and environmentalist and longtime Arlington resident; he will make good contributions.
 
Sincerely,
 
John Reeder
on behalf of the Arlington Green Party
 

Subject: FW: Energy/environmental taskforce
Date: Sun, 17 Jan 2010 13:47:06 -0500

Dear John –

 

Thank you for your letter regarding the Community Energy and Sustainability Task.  I appreciate your support for the effort and your interest in having a representative of the Green Party participate.  As you know, the CES Task Force is a serious effort to identify goals for the reduction of countywide greenhouse gas emission, and the strategies and actions necessary to reach those goals.  This is a bold and ambitious undertaking for a local government, but I believe Arlington is up to the task and may well establish a model for others to follow.

Since announcing this initiative, I have heard from many individuals and organizations expressing their interest in participating in the process.  As a result, we have created a category of official “Liaison” to the Community Energy and Sustainability (CES) Task Force that includes such organizations as the Nature Conservancy, George Mason University and the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments.  I would welcome Steve Davis as a Liaison from the Arlington Green Party, and have copied him on this email.  We will include Steve on the appropriate email distribution list unless we hear otherwise.

Establishing official Liaisons is meant to further open the process to other valuable organizations that can contribute to this effort.  A Liaison will:

Receive CES Task Force meeting agendas and most meeting materials (via email);

  • Have reserved space at official CES Task Force meetings to observe, though not participate in discussion;
  • Be encouraged to attend and participate in Community Energy Town Hall Meetings and other public forums;
  • Be encouraged to comment on and contribute to the development of the Community Energy Plan between official CES Task Force meetings; and
  • Be listed by name and organization in the final version of the Community Energy Plan as a Liaison to the CES Task Force.

 

The first meeting of the CES Task Force was held on January 15.  Future dates are: March 19, May 14, July 16, September 17, November 18 and January 14, 2010.  Meetings will be held at the Arlington Central Library unless otherwise stated.  Full information from the CES Task Force will be regularly refreshed at www.arlingtonva.us/energyplan.

 

John, there are no political parties represented on the CES Task Force.  But based upon your letter, I agree that it is a good idea to invite our local political parties to participate if they are interested, so I will be inviting both the Arlington Republican and Democratic Committees to identify an official Liaison to the CES Task Force as well.

 

Best,

 

Jay

 

Jay Fisette

Chair, Arlington County Board

2100 Clarendon Boulevard

Suite 300

Arlington, VA 22201

703-228-3130 Office

jfisette@arlingtonva.us

 

From: John Reeder
Sent: Thursday, January 07, 2010 11:14 AM
To: Jay Fisette
Subject: Energy/environmental taskforce

 

Jay Fisette
Chairman
Arlington County Board
Arlington, VA                                              January 7, 2010
 
Dear Jay:
 
Congratulations on your election as the chairman of the county board. 
 
We also congratulate you on appointing a task  force to address environmental sustainability in Arlington.  As you know, the Arlington Greens have long advocated better environmental program in our community.
 
Unfortunately, it appears that you have neglected to invite any Arlington Greens to participate on your taskforce.  We think this is unfortunate.  We ask that you appoint a Green to this task force: Mr. Steve Davis.  We previously nominated Mr. Davis for the Environmental, Energy and Energy Conservation Commission.
 
In early December, I contacted you and indicated that we would like to have Mr. Davis appointed to the Environmental, Energy and Conservation Commission.  At that time, you did not indicate that you were thinking of creating yet another environmental advisory group.
 
We would like your new taskforce to be non-partisan and objective and insightful, and to have recommendations that can be accepted by the Arlington community as legitimate.  It appears to us that this task force is disproportionately composed of represenatives of fossil fuel dependent companies and associations who are unlikely to come up with meaningful recommendations to move Arlington to less fossil fuel use.
 
The Arlington Green Party is the primary opposition party in Arlington in local races.  We would hope that you see the wisdom of including Greens on the taskforce.
 
 
We would be glad to meet with you to discuss  our ideas.
 
 
Sincerely,
 
John Reeder
on behalf of  the Arlington Green Party

 

Tagged:

January 15, 2010

Write a card to Jay Fisette, Arlington County Board

General — @ 5:55 pm

Please print out and mail this card to Jay Fisette, Arlington County Board urging him to fund a year round homeless shelter and to seek federal funds to begin a public jobs program in Arlington for the unemployed:

 

 

Mr. Jay Fisette

Chairman, Arlington County Board                      Date

Dear Mr. Fisette          

As a resident of Arlington, Virginia, I am concerned about the 500+ homeless

individuals and families (some of whom are living outdoors) and the 5,000

unemployed residents in our county. I urge the County Board to do more.

 >Please open a year-round homeless shelter for all. Arlington’s wintershelter

currently operates just 5 months a year, with just 50 beds.

 >Please seek federal stimulus funds to begin a public jobs program for the

unemployed, with a living wage of $13 an hour and health benefits.

If we can spend millions for a new arts center, we have the funds to care for

 those in need.  Thank you for considering my petition.

 

__________________________________________________

Name (print here, please)                                   Signature

 

__________________________________________________

Street Address                                      Arlington, VA               ZIP

Mail to:                                               Jay Fisette

                                                          Chairman, Arlington County Board

                                                           2100 Clarendon Blvd, Suite 300

                                                           Arlington, VA 22201

 

 

 

Petition to Arl Cty Board and Congress: Year-Round Shelter and a Jobs Program Needed Now

General — @ 5:48 pm

December 12, 2009

 

Good morning members of the Arlington County Board

 

My name is John Reeder, and I am here today on behalf of the Arlington Green Party to speak in favor of the petition presented to improve the situation of the homeless and the unemployed in Arlington.

 

In addition to Arlington Greens, this petition is supported by AFSCME Union Council 30, and by a number of Arlington faith-based groups that directly serve the hungry and homeless in Arlington.

 

The petition calls for a year-round homeless low-barrier shelter in Arlington from the current 5-month winter shelter.  The county currents support the 5-month per year winter shelter at a cost of about $180,000.  Extending the shelter to 12 months would mean an additional cost of about $252,000 annually.

 

With a year round shelter, we would like to see more direction of the homeless to that shelter rather than having them arrested for simply being homeless or having mental and addiction problems.  Studies across the U.S. indicate that local government actually save funds this way rather than having the criminal justice system involved.

 

The petition asks the county to seek federal funds to begin the first public jobs program in Virginia for unemployed and homeless residents to do community and Green projects to help our community.  We understand that Obama stimulus funds are or will shortly be available for this purpose.

County employees could directly administer these jobs programs for existing county programs such as cleaning up public streams and parks, repairing and improving county and Commonwealth property. Salaries of these county employees could be recouped from these federal funds so that these programs would benefit the county budget…

 

We Greens support the start of a Green jobs program.  We would like free home energy audits for residents for residents.  We believe that this would improve our environment and provide useful jobs for the unemployed.

 

During the past campaign, Mr. Fisette mentioned his desire to improve environmental programs in Arlington.  We Greens highly recommend a jobs program financed by federal funds as an important step to making Arlington a more environmentally sustainable community and at the same time giving employment to the over 6,000 unemployed or underemployed Arlington residents.

Arlington needs a year-round homeless shelter and a jobs program for unemployed

On December 12, 2009, a group of community activists and Green Party members including John Reeder presented the following petition to the Arlington County Board:

Petition to the Arlington County Board—A Plan to Improve the Well-Being of the Homeless and Near Homeless in Arlington County Virginia

            December 12, 2009

Whereas:

      All people have an inalienable right to basic shelter, and to be treated with dignity.

      Over 500 people were counted as homeless in Arlington in January 2009 (a 25-percent rise from January 2008).

      In September 2009 over 5,500 Arlington residents were officially unemployed and many more thousands unable to find full-time work.

      Average rents in Arlington in 2009 exceed $1,700 a month, and require an income  in excess of $65,000 a year to be affordable.

      The county’s one current winter shelter can only accommodate 73 people in a dilapidated building, and is open only from November through March; and

      Many unsheltered people must live outdoors in Arlington parks and open space.

 

Therefore:

  1. The County Government should open and operate a year round shelter to accommodate all unsheltered homeless people. This year-round shelter should be a “low barrier” shelter (similar to the current winter shelter) that takes care of any unsheltered individual.

 

2. The County Government will finance the establishment of single room occupancy (SRO) dormitory style housing, so that single adults can be quickly transferred from the shelter to the SRO or to any other vacant affordable apartment in the county.

 

  1. The County Board shall direct the Arlington County police who encounter homeless individuals living and sleeping in open space in the county to call county (DHS) social workers so that such homeless individuals may be directed to this safe shelter instead of being arrested for living in the open.

 

  1. The County Government should seek Obama stimulus funds to begin a public job program for homeless people and unemployed residents to perform needed community work in county parks, school buildings, community clean up efforts such as along Four-Mile Run, the Potomac River, and major roads and streets, and undertake green energy savings efforts such as weatherization and free energy audits for county residents.

 

  1. That the causes of chronic homelessness be addressed.  There needs to be increased funding for the treatment of mental illness and substance abuse. County officials, such as police officers, fire personnel, should be more rigorously trained to diagnosis, handle and treatment for such individuals. 

 

  1. That more stringent guideline should be put in place to deal with such individuals in order that they may be given treatment earlier in the progress of their disease. This will prevent treatment only when their problems have become so chronic that they pose a threat to themselves and others of our community.

 

  1. That services to combat homelessness need to be extended to all individuals regardless of their residency status (including undocumented workers).  That extra effort is exerted to contact and treat the Day Laborers of our county.