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Communities in Crisis California cities, towns, and counties suffering under corruption, crime, foreign influence or economic loss |
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This article is a rehash of an article about two years ago. Guess things are slow for the Bee and their La Raza propaganda.
Here are the nonprofits that pay/support this: NDLON Member Organizations 1. American Friends Service Committee (Newark, NJ) WEBSITE 2. Casa Freehold (Freehold, NJ) 3. CASA Latina (Seattle, WA) WEBSITE 4. CASA of Maryland (Silver Spring, MD) WEBSITE 5. Central American Resource Center (Los Angeles, CA) WEBSITE 6. Central City Lutheran Mission (San Bernardino, CA) WEBSITE 7. Centro Cultural of Washington County (Cornelius, OR) WEBSITE 8. Centro Laboral de Graton (Graton, CA) WEBSITE 9. Centro Legal de La Raza (Oakland, CA) WEBSITE 10. Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of L.A. - CHIRLA (Los Angeles, CA) WEBSITE 11. Congreso de Jornaleros de Nueva Orleans (New Orleans, LA) WEBSITE 12. Centro Humanitario Para Los Trabajadores (Denver, CO) WEBSITE 13. CRECEN/America Para Todos (Houston, TX) WEBSITE 14. El Centro de Hospitalidad (Staten Island, NY) WEBSITE 15. The Day Worker Center at Mountain View (Mountain View, CA) WEBSITE 16. Freeport Community Worklink Center (Freeport, NY) 17. Gulfton Area Neighborhood Organization – CARECEN (Houston, TX) 18. Hayward Day Labor Center (Hayward, CA) WEBSITE 19. Hispanic Resource Center (Mamaroneck, NY) WEBSITE 20. The Hispanic Westchester Coalition (White Plains, NY) WEBSITE 21. Iglesia San Pedro (Fallbrooks, CA) 22. Instituto de Educacion Popular del Sur de California - IDEPSCA (Los Angeles, CA) WEBSITE 23. La Raza Centro Legal (San Francisco, CA) WEBSITE 24. Legal Aid Justice Center-Immigrant Advocacy Program (Falls Church, VA) WEBSITE 25. Malibu Community Labor Exchange (Malibu, CA) WEBSITE 26. Neighbors’ Link (Mount Kisco, NY) WEBSITE 27. New Day Labor Center of Norwalk (Norkwalk, CT) 28. New Labor (New Brunswick, NJ) WEBSITE 29. Pomona Economic Opportunity Center - PEOC (Pomona, CA) WEBSITE 30. San Diego Day Laborer Association (San Diego, CA) WEBSITE 31. El Sol--Jupiter's Neighborhood Resource Center (Jupiter, FL) WEBSITE 32. Southside Day Laborer Center (Tucson, AZ) WEBSITE 33. Stamford Partnership (Stamford, CT) WEBSITE 34. Tenants and Workers United (Falls Church,VA) WEBSITE 35. Tonatierra (Phoenix, AZ) WEBSITE 36. Union Latina de Chicago (Chicago, IL) WEBSITE 37. United Community of Westchester (NY) WEBSITE 38. Voces de la Frontera Wisconsin (Milwaukee, WI) WEBSITE 39. VOZ (Portland, OR) WEBSITE 40. WeCount! (Miami, FL) WEBSITE 41. Westchester Hispanic Coalition (White Plains, NY) WEBSITE 42. Wind of the Spirit/Viento del Espiritu (Morristown, NJ) WEBSITE 43. Workers Defense Project (Austin, TX) WEBSITE 44. Workplace Project (Long Island, NY) WEBSITE Yes, your tax dollars are used to promote this through grants given by our Federal Government. These nonprofits are in your face, supporting the illegal labor market across the country. Yet, they are hardly mentioned by any politicians. Here is one where the ultra wealthy get their slave labor, all at a nonprofit 501c3 status and funded by federal grants. THE MISSION - The Malibu Community Labor Exchange believes that no community, city or country can ignore the existence of poverty. Moved by the reality of poverty even in the midst of affluence, the MCLE has established a day labor hiring site to provide a humane and organized center where the poorest workers in the community have an opportunity to acquire day work that could lead to regular employment and a better future. Mona Loo, Executive Director P.O. Box 2273 Malibu, CA 90265 310-317-4717 info@malibulaborexchange.org The Malibu Community Labor Exchange (MCLE), a community-based nonprofit 501c3 charity was created to establish a day worker hiring center as a convenient, organized, and humane alternative to day workers gathering on public street corners. The Labor Exchange Center finally became reality in August of 1993, but not without years of effort, community conflict, and one failed attempt at setting up a first hiring site. The first hiring site at Zuma Beach had a fiesta opening on May 5, 1990. The Zuma site was the brainchild of Connie Fox, former nun and advocate for day laborers and local homeless. She and Honey Coatsworth, founder of the Artifac Tree, a charity thrift shop, created the Coalition for Homeless and Dayworkers (CHAD). Each contributed generously in time and money toward opening the site. Other community organizers included: L.A. County Sheriff’s Captain Don Mauro, Zev Yaroslavsky’s office, and celebrity Martin Sheen. CHAD was able to obtain permission to set up a small office trailer on County-owned property near the Zuma Beach parking lot. They opened with great hopes, a lunch program, English classes, and dedicated volunteers. However, the Zuma site was closed in less than a year because it was located in proximity to residential areas whose owners filed a complaint that the center violated zoning restrictions. The closure of the site in early 1991 was a bitter disappointment to CHAD organizers. The legacy of the Zuma Hiring Site was that in late 1991, a unanimous Malibu city council voted to sanction a new site at a new location. They encouraged the formation of a volunteer Board of Directors made up of community and religious leaders and city council appointees. The first officers were: Rev. Larry Peacock, President, Mona Loo, Vice-President, Lieutenant Mike Moore, Secretary, and Dan Wallace, Treasurer. The Malibu Community Labor Exchange opened its doors and hosted its first work lottery on August 31, 1993. Today, the City of Malibu continues to contract with the MCLE to run the site at a trailer office on L.A. County property near the Malibu Civic Center and County Courthouses. In 2005 the Labor Exchange celebrated its 12th Anniversary. Having registered over 5000 workers and helped facilitate thousands of day jobs at no cost to the workers or the hirers, Malibu’s Labor Exchange is one of the oldest such hiring sites for day laborers serving all races and backgrounds in the state. Last edited by Jeanfromfillmore; 07-23-2011 at 03:44 PM. |
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