BB-PTAG outreach
Nothing About us, without us@
Disability Justice
There is so much people can do when it comes to accessibility in our community! For some of you, this may be the beginning of thinking more intentionally and expansively about accessibility, while for others this is a call to action to fight for dignity and justice in our community.
No matter what community you are a part of or are working with, there are disabled people who are part of it. Disabled people are everywhere and you probably know more disabled people than you think you do. Valuing disabled expertise, whether in your personal or work life is key to building an accessible world.
“Accessibility” is not only limited to ramps or captions or braille or scent-free spaces. Accessibility also goes beyond just disability, though BB/PTAG highlights and fights for specifically disability accessibility, amongst the coalitions in FCCAN.
We recognize that there are many disabled people who are also queer, trans and nonbinary, indigenous, black, people of color, poor and working class, parents, immigrants and more.
We work to expand our understanding of what “access” means and think about how we can create spaces–and a world–where all kinds of accessibility are centered and valued.
Accessibility can also include the following:
By:Hannia Favela I have been reading “[Decolonizing Wealth” by Edgar Villenueva](https://decolonizingwealth.com/), for a little while now; only really picking up the book when I have time between classes, my job, and internship. So far, every word that I’ve read in it has left me impacted. I wanted to highlight the first chapter of the book. While the book focuses on how to decolonize wealth and how to move away from the current state of charitable donations and grants to a decolonized version where there is more money for organizations that are not white lead, the first chapter I feel is...
Read more...**Fuerza Latina 2022 Highlights** March 2022- * March 6th. We hosted a community fair in collaboration with ISAAC of Northern Colorado and the Poudre River Library District. Over 200 people from our community attended the event, and we had a presentation about immigration with Kim Medina and offered COVID vaccines. * March 27th, zoom presentation about housing advocacy, 20 community members attended this event. April 2022- * April 21st, Poudre River Library District wrote and blog about our work- * April 30th, We hosted a Dia del Nino celebration at the Aztlan center, we hosted a big party with live...
Read more...This year, FCCAN opened its arms to accept the gifts and challenges of change as we transitioned into a new era of leadership. Together, Litzy, Yurixhi, Jesus & Rachel and I charted new horizons as we evolved our roles within the organization. We leaned deeply into adrienne marie brown’s wisdom with Emergent Strategy and Pleasure Activism- **How we bring down massive systems through small, complex, grassroots, organizing**– and drew nutrients from the well of FCCAN’s 20-year history to guide our path forward. We also celebrated our 20 year birthday party with a fundraiser in September, outdoors in the park with...
Read more...By: Litzy Lastra When I first stepped into the role of community organizer for FCCAN I had no idea what I was walking into. I was not aware that I would fall in love with the work, the people and the community. I had never taken a big role in the community as part of an organizer before. I had always seemed to do what I thought was small acts of service for the community. This time it was different, I have a bigger role in the community and I get paid for the work that I love to do!...
Read more...In October 2022, FCCAN hosted a community workshop, along with Dignity in Schools Week of Action to share some of the experiences from FCCAN community organizers, with a focus on teaching what our theory of change is- specifically some of the differences between what is community organizing, activism and healing justice work. We hope this resource will serve as a helpful resource to ground in the theory and knowledge that informs our work & begins to defines what we're doing and why. Making a difference is not just about charismatic leaders and huge protests. Social and political shifts are usually...
Read more...By: FCCAN Staff I have experienced and witnessed countless forms of police violence from my childhood, where it was a normalized daily occurrence to see people living on the streets being forcefully and violently moved, their makeshift homes in the park and under bridges being destroyed and their belongings being confiscated by the police. The instances in my life where I was harmed by police violence personally, always intersected with my own gender identity, and being in a body that is feminized and disrespected by the police and society at large. From when I was a young teenager, driving across...
Read more...At this juncture in 2022, our communities are continuing to generate strong demands for structural change, including strategies to defund police and cancel contracts or entire police programs and initiatives, FCCAN has been organizing the School Justice PSD campaign to support these local demands by BIPOC and LGTBQ students in Poudre School District. Years ago holding a sign that read “Abolish Police'' at a protest garnered blank stares or even hostility. **Now abolition is becoming a household term.** Our stories emerge from our own lived experiences as people of color living in the community, and discussions with communities across the...
Read more...Since the news broke on Friday that Roe vs. Wade has been overturned, we’ve found ourselves sharing resources and seeking wisdom to help us alchemize our rage into action. During an era when our bodily autonomy is under increasing threat, doulas — for birth, for death, for abortion, and more — are essential to supporting our collective capacity to meet change. Through situating the work of abortion doulas within a long history of communities innovating systems of care, we hope to reaffirm the link between abortion access and diverse movements for liberation. Our ancestors taught us that reclaiming the body...
Read more...#### “…To really, really admit that you understand what is happening to the planet, it will break your heart. If you don’t cry deep, hard tears for the state of this planet and all of the people on it, you don’t yet understand the problem. And so once you get to that place, the only thing that can bring you out of that kind of darkness is belief in something greater than yourself. And for me, it is that spiritual connection. For me, it is understanding a greater purpose.” _Colette Pichon Battle_ ([On Being](https://mgcp03.engage.squarespace-mail.com/r?m=62387ef50f920c05d9cffa60&u=https%3A%2F%2Fonbeing.org%2Fprograms%2Fcolette-pichon-battle-placed-here-in-this-calling%2F&w=5553551be4b079eb42c2b179&l=en-US&s=-GCyaeHYzrz2SuGH0ZZPj8HH2oM%3D) Podcast) How are your hearts? We...
Read more...Along with April 2nd being World Autism Day, April is Autism Acceptance Month. - In 1970 the Autism Society of America campaigned to promote autism awareness with the mission of assuring that all autistic people are able to have access to the highest quality of life possible. - In 1972, National Autistic Children’s Week was celebrated for the first time and it later evolved into Autistic Acceptance Month. - In 2021, the Autism Society of America campaigned to urge the media to consider the change from Autistic Awareness Month to Autistic Acceptance Month so that people would not just be...
Read more...[![](/media/unnamed11-1024x384.png)](http://fccan.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/unnamed11.png) _We wanted to share with you that the collective statement, shared with us by Phi Nguyen, Executive Director at [Advancing Justice - Atlanta with](http://We wanted to share with you that the collective statement, shared with us by Phi Nguyen, Executive Director at Advancing Justice - Atlanta with links to the collective statement, an individual sign on, and the launch of the #RememberingMarch16 artwork series. Please share the collective statement with your networks and help us uplift the beautiful artwork for our communities using #RememberingMarch16 in your posts.) and the launch of the #RememberingMarch16 artwork series. Please share the collective statement with your...
Read more...[![](/media/https-_bucketeer-e05bbc84-baa3-437e-9518-adb32be77984.s3.amazonaws.com_public_images_1852f78f-52e7-454d-a0aa-be447b707a1e_480x480.jpeg)](http://fccan.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/https-_bucketeer-e05bbc84-baa3-437e-9518-adb32be77984.s3.amazonaws.com_public_images_1852f78f-52e7-454d-a0aa-be447b707a1e_480x480.jpeg) _Art by @chiara.acu_ Times of chaos and challenge can be the most spiritually powerful… if we are brave enough to rest in their space of uncertainty. Pema Chödrön says “the main point of these methods is to dissolve the dualistic struggle, our habitual tendency to struggle against what’s happening to us or in us”.Here are Pema’s suggestions for how to use our problems as the path to awakening and joy:Go to the places that scare you: This is the primary method for working with painful situations—global pain, domestic pain, any pain at all. We can stop struggling with what...
Read more...We are planning a community ceremony to take place this spring to honor the indomitable bell hooks and mourn her passing. We will continue to cultivate love as the ground of our being, we will continue to learn as a means to elevate our mind, and we will continue to embrace loss as we open our hearts to our ancestors and the impermanence of all. Thank you bell for all you taught us about love, loss, and learning. This fall, both bell hooks and Archbishop Desmond Tutu became ancestors. These two wildly different leaders have deeply influenced me in my...
Read more...It is the time of year when we naturally reflect on where we have been and where we are going. In 2021, we cultivated partnerships and coalitions to provide opportunities for our community to explore and organize solutions to important issues and to amplify the voices of change makers. **Today we’d like to share with you some of the things we are proud of accomplishing this year.** Not all of them are about the ends, many of them are about the process, and the community we created and the love we generated in the doings. Some of our favorite projects of...
Read more..._By: Kevin Parga-Martinez, Ethnic Studies Intern_ November has arrived, and with it, has brought us closer to what may seem like a year filled with momentous achievements and instances of tragic events. Despite such a rollercoaster of emotions that we're dealing with, the month of November has become synonymous with family gatherings and the obvious all-around large feast that many either regret or enjoy once again the next day. With such festivities becoming an annual norm for the dominant culture and a majority of families all around the world but specifically in the United States, it's so important to understand...
Read more...By: Kevin Parga-Martinez FCCAN & Fuerza Latina Ethnic Studies Intern [![](/media/Screen-Shot-2021-10-18-at-6.43.32-PM.png)](http://fccan.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/Screen-Shot-2021-10-18-at-6.43.32-PM.png) It's to no one's surprise that Halloween has become an annual staple, allowing for an escape from reality and being able to come together as a community and enjoy the wonders that are trick-or-treating and terrifying decorations. While the typical festivities surrounding the holiday allow for one’s expression to flourish in terms of being able to dress up as a favorite hero, television-series character, and (yes) even their favorite food, throughout the years, many have become unaware of the real life consequences that comes with the notion of cultural...
Read more...[![](/media/unnamed.jpg)](http://fccan.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/unnamed.jpg) _\*This post was originally shared on the Chicago based, workers owned cooperative, [Tesa Collective's](https://www.tesacollective.com/five-recent-labor-struggles-you-should-know-about/?link_id=1&can_id=d570fbc7667766e0175bc13db39d7a03&source=email-five-recent-labor-struggles-you-should-know-about&email_referrer=email_1281412&email_subject=five-recent-labor-struggles-you-should-know-about) blog, and posted here with their permission._ Ever since the dawn of modern labor, there have been labor struggles. Take, for example, the wage cut protests of female mill workers in 1834, the 1877 uprising of Irish-American coal miners that resulted in 19 hangings, or the many workplace accidents that led up to the 1970 development of the Occupational Safety and Health Act. This has led to a powerful tradition in the US to fight for the wellbeing of the working class; and even though...
Read more...I've been thinking about the essential role that grieving plays in our grassroots organizing and movement building work. With the death of family members during covid, the death and transformation of our ecosystem around us, I've had an intimate relationship with death and dying. We're all losing something, We've all lost something and we're all losing something right now...and in my work as an organizer, artist and yoga teacher I really want to invite people to turn towards that so you can heal. Because, there is so much we've denied and patterns continue to persist. To be Black, Indigenous or...
Read more...###### \*\*\* seguido en español \*\*\* ## Governor Polis Signs 4 Pro-Immigrant Bills into Law in a Watershed Year for Immigration Justice _**Critical new laws include SB-131, which protects data immigrants entrust to state and local agencies from being unjustly exposed to ICE; and HB-1194, which creates a statewide legal defense fund for immigrants in deportation proceedings.**_ We are incredibly excited to announce that [CIRC](https://coloradoimmigrant.org/)’s legislative campaign bills were **signed by Governor Polis** on Friday and are now law in Colorado! CIRC's bills were among 11 pro-immigrant bills that have been signed into law this legislative session, making this one...
Read more...In case you haven't noticed, the corporate take-over of #PrideMonth has begun. As the general support for LGBTQ rights grows, so does the corporate incentive for brands and companies to position themselves in sync with that growing sentiment. ![](https://d3n8a8pro7vhmx.cloudfront.net/movetoamend/mailings/4493/attachments/original/corp_pride.png?1623030788) In that commercialization lies the disconnect: Brands promoting gay pride are not consistent in actually supporting the rights of the LGBTQ community, but they do manage to capitalize on the growing number of people (aka consumers) wanting to show support and solidarity. **But in reality, all this commercialized support is ultimately utterly empty and harmful.** ![](https://d3n8a8pro7vhmx.cloudfront.net/movetoamend/mailings/4493/attachments/original/corp_appropiation.png?1623088488) The commercialization of Pride Month...
Read more...**by Sam Murray** With my time as an intern for FCCAN coming to an end, I’ve been reflecting on the many experiences and lessons learned this past year. While 2020 was a difficult year for me, as it was for almost everyone, it was also a year of reconnection where I set out to understand who I am in relation to my family and family’s past. It’s bittersweet to know that I am leaving by the end of the summer, having finally formed a connection with this place after living within the insulated bubble of CSU for three years. However,...
Read more...The conversation about “Israel vs Palestine” is wrought with intense feelings and loyalties. It is a complex mess of history and harm that has shaped the people of the region for generations. But it is not a conflict. Conflict implies a balance of power of which there isn’t one here. “There is an active oppressor (Israel) and an oppressed (Palestine). A colonizer (Israel) and a colonized (Palestine).” Nor is it someone else’s problem. Each year, $3,800,000,000 of our tax dollars are invested in Israel's oppression of Palestinians. Palestinians have been existing under the longest illegal occupation in modern history. And the Human Rights...
Read more...[_Artemio Morales_](https://www.altsalt.com/artemiosans) _is founder of_ [_AltSalt_](http://www.altsalt.com/)_, a website aiming to connect underserved publishing communities in hopes of collectively envisioning an alternative world. We’re currently in alpha and looking to connect with zinesters, comics creators, gamemakers, and more; anyone interested in learning more can feel free to email_ _artemio@altsalt.com_ _or apply for an account onsite._ A couple of years ago, I’d been programming so much that my fingers started hurting as a result of repetitive stress injury. I’d been working on my full-time job, then coming home and moonlighting an earlier incarnation of AltSalt, but in that pursuit, I’d begun neglecting...
Read more...> "We urgently need to bring to our communities the limitless capacity to love, serve, and create for and with each other." > > \-Grace Lee Boggs [![](/media/b5e31863-5cd9-437c-8bc7-c17b8802be72.jpg)](http://fccan.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/b5e31863-5cd9-437c-8bc7-c17b8802be72.jpg) These are some extremely painful times. The violence of white supremacy, misogyny, xenophobia, anti-blackness, violence against elders, anti-sex work, capitalism, the racist police state are killing us. I am heartbroken by the acts of violence that occurred on the evening of March 16 in Atlanta. Eight people were killed at three separate spas. Six of the people killed were Asian and all but one were women. With friends (many of them working...
Read more...[![](blob:http://fccan.org/ba5eff4e-55ad-e946-b8d8-50319948523f)](blob:http://fccan.org/ba5eff4e-55ad-e946-b8d8-50319948523f) The ballots have been sent and the local city council [elections](https://www.fcgov.com/elections/election-2021-april-6) are coming up on April 6, 2021! Keep scrolling for the FCCAN candidate questionnaire or [view the PDF.](http://fccan.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/2021-FCCAN-City-Council-Questionnaire.pdf) The Fort Collins Community Action Network (FCCAN) mission is to create community based on furthering economic, social, and environmental justice, sustainability, human rights, and peace for all by building coalitions, developing strategies and actions, and supporting existing progressive organizations. Having incredible impacts on Fort Collins communities, we believe our City Council is extremely important. We care about who is representing our communities' interests and how. With that in mind, FCCAN...
Read more...** [Please sign and share this petition!](https://actionnetwork.org/petitions/urge-governor-polis-to-adopt-an-equitable-vaccine-schedule?source=direct_link&) by March 1st, and demand that Governor Polis offer vaccines to people in prisons and jails and to people experiencing homelessness.** [![](/media/Copy-of-Copy-of-Fuerza-Latina-Presents-1-1024x1024.png)](https://actionnetwork.org/petitions/urge-governor-polis-to-adopt-an-equitable-vaccine-schedule?source=direct_link&) Undeniably, the COVID-19 pandemic has revealed massive inequities in our healthcare system and throughout society. With his vaccine schedule, Governor Polis is reinforcing these inequities in Colorado. This is disturbingly evident when we look at prisons and homeless shelters. According to the COVID-19 Racial Data Tracker ,the county with the highest COVID-19 cases per capita in the entire United States is Crowley County, Colorado. The 5th highest is Bent County, Colorado....
Read more...![](/media/Crafting-Rituals-for-Care-Resilience-300x300.png) Right now, we are collectively experiencing a time of complex transitions, uncertainty and unresolved wounds that have disrupted the rhythms of our lives. Right now, we are also experiencing continuous reflection on what will sustain us and how we can conjure the practices our hearts long for through present, intentional connection. We need ritual because ritual calls us to connect with ourselves, our communities and our desired futures with intention. When we invite ritual into our lives, we say **YES** to creating compelling moments of meaning, care, celebration, acceptance, intimacy and beyond—all bravely turning us toward ourselves and each...
Read more..._by Samuel Murray_ I remember learning about calling 911 in grade school if I was in trouble. Cops would even come to our school and we would ask them questions about bad guys. The socialization of cops as heroic and essential components of a peaceful society starts at a young and impressionable age. And the reliance of policing and prisons is perpetuated by “who are you going to call when _\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\__ happens to you?” For many white people, and for many people in this police state in general, a knee-jerk first reaction is to call the police when you need...
Read more...**_Creating change with immigrant, workers-owned cooperatives_** **_Haciendo cambio con inmigrante, trabajadores- cooperativas_** ~Seguido en Español We are in a rare opportunity to push for economic and structural change, where we are all witnessing and living through the COVID pandemic, racial justice uprisings, climate crisis and a slide towards facism. What history shows us is that crises create enough fractures in the status quo to create real changes to the current paradigm. This is the moment we find ourselves in. So, if we are looking for system change, we have to be clear about what kind of system change we’re talking...
Read more...![](/media/unnamed.jpg) Octavia Butler by Katy Horan from [_Literary Witches_](https://www.brainpickings.org/2018/02/07/literary-witches/) — an illustrated celebration of women writers who have enchanted and transformed our world. Octavia Butler (June 22, 1947–February 24, 2006), the writer and world-creator explores many themes in her works that provide timely and acute wisdom. In **P_arable of the Talent_**, she explores what an ideal life looks like. She explores a life of purpose and deep fulfillment where we make what we want to see exist. Butler writes: > Self is. > > Self is body and bodily perception. Self is thought, memory, belief. Self creates. Self destroys. Self...
Read more...After much thought and careful consideration, the Fort Collins Sustainability Group (FCSG) and the Fort Collins Community Action Network (FCCAN) have decided to separate. Today, we jointly announce the departure of FCSG from FCCAN as an affiliate, effective immediately. FCSG will continue as an independent organization developing and advocating strategies for becoming a sustainable community, with a focus on reducing greenhouse gas emissions to levels consistent with a livable climate. We are proud of our years of close affiliation and the community-focused work we have done together, and we look forward to finding new ways to continue to create change...
Read more...**Monday reflections by: Annelise Fleming** It seems like these past month it has just been one bombshell after another. RBG dying, Trump getting COVID, ballots being sent out for the election, the cringe-worthy hot mess that was the first presidential debate, the Supreme Court nomination that is happening right now as I am writing this.As these events are occurring, our lives are stressful as hell. These events all will impact future generations, whether we choose to believe it or not. These bombshells that have been dropping has really had me thinking constantly about the state of this country and what...
Read more...Hi everyone, my name is Annelise Fleming and I am the intern for FCCAN this semester. I am excited to write for TimePeace. I’ve never written for a blog before but here it goes. This past summer we saw a huge unrest within the United States and around the world with COVID-19 and the BLM protests that occurred (and are still happening even if mainstream media isn’t reporting it). I've observed a few things that are different about the fires in our bellies right now, then in the past. First, the global pandemic has seized everyone's attention, making visible the...
Read more..._By: Shirley Man-Kin_ María Lugones passed away on July 14th, 2020 early in the morning. Her writings and work taught me, and so many others, how to think and be in resistance, how to dwell in coalition, and every important lesson about queer love and queer worldmaking. > Since I first heard about her struggle with cancer and subsequently her death earlier this summer, I have been reflecting on both her generosity and playfulness that shape her writings. In 1987 she wrote, _“I am not a healthy being in the ‘worlds’ that construct me unplayful.” She goes to express how...
Read more...~Sigue en español City Council is holding a first reading/vote on mobile home zoning tomorrow (Tuesday). Two options have been proposed. Option A would create strict protections for mobile home parks so that they cannot be developed for other uses and residents cannot be displaced. Option B would allow for the introduction of other types of “affordable housing.” Our fear as an organization, and that of other organizations working directly with park residents, like Mi Voz, is that this will open the door to displacement of mobile home residents and owners. We don’t know if new types of affordable housing will actually...
Read more...**_“Without community, there is no liberation.” - Audre Lorde_** Dear community, However you are choosing to engage in the uprising to defend Black Indigenous lives and defund the police in the movements to abolish all forms of state-sanctioned brutality - remember that this has been the work of lifetimes, that these are changes that happen on the outside and the inside - and pace yourself. In that spirit, we're excited to invite our fellow Queer, Trans, Black, Indigenous , People of Color (QTBIPOC) to our healing justice meditation offerings. **These will be by-donation spaces, that happen monthly on the second Sunday of...
Read more..._By Samuel Murray _ **As more violent Black murders are being shown via the media, and as more Indigenous and brown folx go missing without any coverage it is vital that we all examine our whiteness and what it means to be accountable for how we take action and rest.** As Pride Month comes to an end, we find ourselves once again face to face with both the complexity and polarizing differences within the queer community. One of these stark differences--always present (especially rearing an ugly head during Pride Month and festivities) is the blatant and excused racism within the...
Read more...The act of dividing potential allies and communities who could come together to rise up is one of the oldest and most infuriatingly effective tricks in the book. Too often social justice movements have splintered as a result of not being prepared to counter such moves. A key tool for countering such tactics is learning from the stories of how previous organizations and coalitions have avoided the pitfalls of divide and conquer. #### What are we facing? - We are witnessing white supremacy re-organize in response to destabilizations in racial capitalism, and to progressive social movement wins. - We are witnessing a...
Read more...![](/media/unnamed-1024x571.png) COVER ART OF FRONTLINE HEALTHCARE WORKERS BY AMIRA LIN (IG: @AMIRA\_LJX): I was born in Shenzhen, China. As an Asian international student, currently, the amount of hatred and discrimination towards Asian people due to coronavirus is a new experience. Most of theChinese international students worry about their families back home and fear being racial attacked. I wish to use art to communicate that our enemy is not a certain region or cultural community. We should try to understand the hardships people are going through. A new zine from the _Asian American Feminist Collective_ (AAFC) features an amazing collection of essays, resources,...
Read more...By: Shirley Coenen In "[Light in the Dark/Luz en lo Oscura](https://www.dukeupress.edu/light-in-the-dark-luz-en-lo-oscuro)" Anzaldua's final life work, she plunges head-on into the transformational potentiality of liminal spaces- **for** **moments like these, when "death and destruction do shock us out of our familiar daily rounds."** As many students and educators are taking deep sighs of relief and closing their textbooks, I'm looking forward to keep reading, without a seminar or school to hold me accountable. This post is a brief reflection sharing what I'm reading right now and how Anzaldua, as an ancestor, provides so many lessons for these times. [![Light in the...
Read more...As Amazon, Walmart and others profit amid Coronavirus crisis, [their essential workers are planning an unprecedented strike](https://itsgoingdown.org/workers-from-amazon-whole-foods-instacart-shipt-speak-out-on-may-1st-strike/). Get ready for May Day. ![](/media/EWOQF94WkAArDCt-621x1024.jpg) **Essential workers risk their lives and their families’ lives every day — they deserve appropriate safety equipment, standards, and job guarantees. On May 1, International Workers Day, we’re taking action with essential workers everywhere:** **SOLIDARITY**: The working class keeps us alive. As consumers, we are not separate from the problem. [Do your part by joining the action on May 1 from wherever you are](https://recovery4all.us/), joining us as we organize around these [global demands](https://5demands.global/) for justice during the pandemic. **BOYCOTT**: The...
Read more...Today, the City of Fort Collins intends to begin shutting down the encampment in Heritage Park. The Fort Collins Homeless Coalition is deeply concerned by this move, and believes that **the City should not clear the encampment before everyone is safely housed in individual or family housing.** - Clearing the encampment defies CDC guidelines - Dispersing campers does not end homelessness, it just makes people less visible and less able to access health and hygiene facilities - Evidence shows that disease spreads faster in congregate shelters, and that people experiencing homelessness are at greater risk of serious complications from COVID-19,...
Read more...![](/media/Abolish-Columbus-Day-1024x1024.png) If you, or someone you know would like to apply for this fund please call Fuerza Latina's hotline at 970-472-1501. **Donate to the emergency fund for undocumented immigrants in Fort Collins [here](http://ow.ly/A3W650z3QiO)!** Fuerza Latina recognizes that the nation-state does not provide a safety net for so many people, and that the United States government’s response to COVID-19 has only deepened pre-existing hierarchies that make people vulnerable to premature death. We hope for a world in which universal basic income, universal health care, and other functioning social systems exist. We know that what we are doing is an imperfect solution...
Read more...![](/media/fort-collins-homeless-coalition-3-1024x1024.png) This was oringially published in [The Coloradoan](https://www.coloradoan.com/story/opinion/2020/03/30/opinion-community-leaders-must-act-provide-housing-all/2931290001/) Sign the homeless coalitions' [petition here.](https://actionnetwork.org/petitions/fort-collins-and-larimer-county-need-to-act-immediately-to-keep-unhoused-people-safe?source=facebook&fbclid=IwAR399KoSE8J1f48mInuECurmS4M8z-fU7iFKTIkFirXFiuxSAZpX1DTyrsY) and [check out the legal action](http://fccan.org/fchc/legal-action-filed-for-immediate-housing-to-help-fight-covid-19/) filed on behalf of FCHC and other groups in the state of CO to demand housing for all. By: lynn thompson From where I stand, Fort Collins and Larimer County need to act immediately to keep unhoused people safe. The Fort Collins Homeless Coalition is calling on our elected officials to ensure: 1. **Temporary housing for everyone.** 2. **Quarantine housing for people experiencing homelessness, and a sensible plan for moving people into quarantine that takes into account the dismal shortage...
Read more...[![](/media/Abolish-Columbus-Day-1-300x300.png)](http://fccan.org/uncategorized/current-colorado-legislation-that-impacts-immigrants-contact-your-rep-today/attachment/abolish-columbus-day-1/)Calling all voices to consider how you may be able to make a difference in immigration policy! Below are three important bills being considered **right** **now** in the Colorado state legislator. Contact your representative to declare your support for these bills! You can find more information about where the bills are right now in the links! **Representatives:** Senate District 14 Senator Joann Ginal Phone: 303-866-4841 Email: [joannginal52@gmail.com](mailto:joannginal52@gmail.com) House District 53 Representative Jeni Arndt Phone: 303-866-2917 Email: [jeni.arndt.house@state.co.us](mailto:jeni.arndt.house@state.co.us) House District 52 Representative Cathy Kipp Phone: 303-866-4569 Email: [cathy.kipp.house@state.co.us](_wp_link_placeholder) **Bills to support:** [SB20-083 “Prohibit Courthouse Civil Arrest” | "Prohibir el Arresto Civil...
Read more...We see a lot of folks who are new to organizing engaging with our blog and work, so we thought it would be helpful share some best practice security protocols from our collective organizing experiences. **It is useful to remember that under our current police state nothing is “100% secure,” it is better to think of it as self-defense or harm reduction.** There is no reason to willingly serve ourselves to the state on a silver platter. COINTELPRO is very much alive today, and has transformed and grown since the 1960’s and especially post 9/11. Security is an ongoing process...
Read more...**Why Red Dresses?** - ![](/media/signal-2020-01-27-112557-2-768x1024.jpeg) - ![](/media/signal-2020-01-27-112557-3-1024x768.jpeg) - ![](/media/signal-2020-01-27-112557-4-768x1024.jpeg) - ![](/media/signal-2020-01-27-112557-768x1024.jpeg) The red dresses on this window are just the beginning of a campaign to build awareness led by both local Native & non-Native community organizers in Fort Collins. There is an epidemic in the Indigneous communities in North and South America that sparked a movement called **Missing and Murdered Indigeneous Women and Girls** or #MMIWG. This campaign is for the silenced indigenous voices of our sisters and in support of the #MMIWG. Thousands of Indigenous women go missing every year. However, we still do not know how many Native...
Read more...After over a decade of Wet’suwet’en on the front lines of pipeline construction in so called Northern Canada, local Front Range community members and Indigenous activists from the Arapaho nation are joined by water protectors from around the world to turn their attention to the funders of the fossil fuel industry. For the TransCanada coastal gaslink pipeline (CGP) project, JP Morgan Chase is the primary investor. The $6.2 billion Coastal GasLink pipeline is a part of the larger industrial energy project that will build and operate a terminal for the liquefaction, storage, and loading of liquefied natural gas (LNG) in...
Read more...As this critical year begins, we are inspired by the many of the groups we work with who are mobilizing for justice and liberation, and tackling the numerous political challenges that have been put forth since the beginning of the year. We are strategizing about how best to support leaderful movements and reflecting creatively around community accountability. Over the last few months, several FCCAN members have taken advantage of professional development opportunities: from participating in a [Practicing Justice](https://universalpartnership.org/pj/) retreat, testing out tools for effective facilitation with community members, to learning new approaches to mediation and engaging in learning from co-op movements...
Read more...By: Jovan Lovato _This is an excerpt of a piece written originally for course work at CSU. We hope you'll find this as insightful and thought-provoking as we did, in whichever stance you find yourself and your work situated in._ For most aspiring social workers, their goal is to do their best to help those whom are less privileged than themselves. Those who are at the brunt of systems of racism, sexism, classism, and ableism, among others, often find themselves working with social workers to navigate the institutions meant to help buffer the experience of such oppressions. Typically, social workers’...
Read more...- ![](/media/82103496_10157125879388667_7547182760926904320_n.jpg) - ![](/media/81199913_10157125880908667_987787798851354624_n.jpg) - ![](/media/81994420_1402618523253789_1946413358173388800_n.jpg) _Photos from Saturday's protest in old town Fort Collins_ Thanks to all of you who attended the protest on Saturday. It is critical that we follow up by contacting our representatives to make it clear that their constituents do not support war with Iran, and to urge diplomacy and de-escalation and that they reclaim their Congressional authority in matters of war and peace. The letter below can be sent to Rep. Neguse and Senators Bennet and Gardner. We will be following the leadership of national peace and activist organizations to plan additional protests. If...
Read more...![](/media/d10dd24d-5fc0-4e0e-a772-439e1f6c97ca.png) As we transition into 2020, we invite you to celebrate with us, as we reflect on the past year, ground in the present moment, and conjure the future our community needs. This year was filled with tough transitions, joyful gatherings and hard work for activists & engaged community members alike in Fort Collins. **"We are here. We are life-affirming. We are in community with one another."** _\-Healing Justice group motto co-created at our September workshop_ This will be our last blog post for the year and we'll be back in January as we take time to reflect and rest. ![](/media/979cc3f9-2ab7-465e-a42f-311b135781f4.jpeg) **Healing Justice** We continued this...
Read more...**We demand that you stop the sale to Lion Little World Beverages and Kirin. Until you stop the sale, we call for a complete boycott of your beer.** ![](/media/Untitled-6.png) For more information about New Belgium sell out check out this wonderful article by the Guardian [here](https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/dec/29/australian-craft-beer-brewer-faces-criticism-over-partnership-with-myanmar-military?fbclid=IwAR1f6jfJsQs3ADantpFDpZk2ZB26X4EQcybhj9JM3vw9kNADV1yO7MruXvc). It's sad that this is how Fort Collins makes international news headlines. To Kim Jordan and New Belgium Employee Owners: It is with great distress and outrage that we write you on the backdrop of the 71st anniversary of the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights. The sale of New Belgium to the conglomerate...
Read more..._This blog post first appeared on Hunger Free Colorado's website, and was reposted here with their permission, find out more info_ [_here_](http://blog.hungerfreecolorado.org/news/the-latest-attack-on-snap-standard-utility-allowance-rule-proposal/) _or email Anya@HungerFreeColorado.org._ ![](/media/Stand-up-for-SNAP_-Call-for-Action.png) Key points **The Proposed Standard Utility Allowance Rule Will:** - Exacerbate the struggle of affording both food and utilities for many low-income families - Have harmful impacts on health and well-being and weaken Colorado’s economy - Cause 40% of Colorado SNAP households to receive smaller SNAP monthly benefits - Disproportionately impact older adults and people with disabilities What can you do? **Submit a comment opposing the rule!** The Trump Administration must review public comments on this proposal...
Read more...![](/media/tree-roots.png) Tree roots in upstate New York Photo by Shirley Coenen We live on land that has been changed by the actions of human beings to the point that it may not continue to support our existence. This land that we talk about so much isn't just a location. It's a biosphere, a living organism of which we are one part, on which we depend. Mother earth is not just the backdrop, environment or stage for human activity that exists to support us. The current ecological crisis that we find ourselves in is in fact a crisis of human relations-...
Read more...We are now entering an important stage in the Trump Administration’s rewrite of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). Corporations are lobbying heavily to pass the renegotiated agreement as is. Without big changes, NAFTA 2.0 will continue to harm American workers and the environment while increasing the cost of healthcare and life-saving drugs. The Agreement can come up before Congress at any time and without much warning. . Contact your [representative](https://neguse.house.gov/contact) today regarding the Trump Administration's NAFTA 2.0, so they know we are watching and that we expect them to support Coloradans not a handful of multinational corporations waiting to profit...
Read more..._In Spring 2019, we had a healing justice workshop focused on how whiteness shows up in health, healing and wellness spaces in our community and the role of white folks in dismantling it. This blog post was co-written and inspired by several participants who shared space and conversation, posted here with their permission._ ![](https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/JvBZiQcAqWUj4DY5-WSM3e3JGnLW0ukmafO-VuZn3D6KyTCDZ7zbiCeBscG3ZwcLgwje_SBvQFHF7VvlS6Fh5hZYPq4h-zMx-M8IWrzJajCRKtZvyJguWS3s1UeKtjjSUzwqbipu) There have been many conversations regarding what cultural appropriation looks like, and to what extent we all participate in it. Cultural appropriation can be defined as the “cherry picking” or selecting of certain aspects of a culture, and ignoring their original significance for the purpose of...
Read more...![](/media/council-tree-799x1024.jpg) _**The Council Tree was a well-known gathering point for Arapaho and other Native people on what is now the southeast side of Fort Collins. The tree is referenced in names for a city library branch, a street, and a church. Photo: Colorado State University Libraries, Archives & Special Collections**_ _By Doreen Martinez, Ph.D., and Lindsey Schneider, Ph.D._ _This was originally written for_ [_CSU_](https://source.colostate.edu/the-land-holds-memories/?fbclid=IwAR0m33C-M4z9YQCgiNIPX2z-AjSFQkkcMD3MY1vCKfieAskNZCaxaLFlCsg)_, and has been edited and appears here with the permission of the authors._ Where the prairie converges with the plains, the foothills watch. They have long been the relatives of these lands and witnesses to all...
Read more..._Speech delivered by Kevin Cross at the Fort Collins Peace Festival on September 28, 2019_ The Fort Collins Sustainability Group/FCSG was formed back in 2005. We’ve spend the last 14 years focusing on climate action at the local level. We’ve also been involved with coalitions that focus on regional and state level climate action. The names of those organizations are Northern Colorado Partners for Clean Energy and the Colorado Coalition for a Livable Climate, respectively. What does local climate action look like? It’s included advocating for setting ambitious greenhouse gas emissions reduction goals for the City of Fort Collins. If...
Read more...We recently had our healing justice workshop at The Growing Project Farm, and enjoyed celebrating the Autumn Equinox with the community. From those gatherings we've complied a simple but soothing balm that is the following list of recommended ways to spend the start of the newest season... have anymore suggestions, feedback or ideas? Send them our [way.](http://fccan.org/contact/) ![](/media/Exploring-horizons-1024x1024.png) If you are white talk compassionately with family and friends about whiteness and racism. Be compassionate to heal ancestral cycles of trauma and abuse. Invest in loving, reciprocal relationships, let go of toxic ones. Balance your drive for activism with taking care...
Read more...What is the glue that binds our resistance work? How does healing justice fit into our resistance for the long haul? With the return of our healing justice monthly workshops, we sat down together to discuss healing justice as a foundational part of organizing and activism work. The medical and health care system says that healing happens away from your life- in a sterile, ahistorical, apolitical space- in which you are helped to go back to work tomorrow and be able to cope. That's the first thing that we need to challenge. With FCCAN, we are intentionally creating healing justice...
Read more...As residents of Fort Collins and surrounding areas, we all need to show up at the Fort Collins city council meeting on **Tuesday, August 20** at 5pm for the rally and 6pm for public comment to show our support for passing the Climate Emergency Resolution, which we hope will inspire other communities to get more active in the face of climate chaos. Here’s the address: [City Hall West, 300 LaPorte Ave. Fort Collins, CO 80521.](https://www.google.com/maps/place/City+Hall+West%2C+300+LaPorte+Ave.%2C+Fort+Collins%2C+CO+80521) The evidence is overwhelming that, despite the fact that Fort Collins has an ambitious Climate Action Plan, the national and global preparation for climate breakdown is...
Read more...By: The Fort Collins Homeless Coalition & Fuerza Latina The Fort Collins Homeless Coalition and Fuerza Latina (amongst many other community allies) have been working alongside each other in a [campaign](http://fccan.org/fchc/stop-the-jail-expansion/) to stop the first phase of the expansion of the Larimer County Jail. I won't be rehashing the [details](https://www.coloradoan.com/story/news/2019/07/22/larimer-county-colorado-jail-expansion-approved/1762401001/) or providing any updates here. Rather than being an informative piece this post is one small way for us to process, express, and hopefully provide space for others in the community to reflect on their own complicity and activism around violence, incarceration and community accountability. This is important because our...
Read more...By: Jovan Lovato Colorado State University recently unveiled a university-wide statement to acknowledge the Indigenous peoples of this land. The statement is to be read at all major university events, and, indeed, I have heard it many times over in the past year. It was drafted by a group including people from CSU’s Native American Cultural Center (NACC), administration, and others from across the campus community. It is difficult to communicate the level to which I value the introduction of this acknowledgement and how painful it is to experience when it is not taken seriously. In the hopes of preventing...
Read more...By: Chase Williams and Shirley Coenen The Larimer County Commissioners will vote to approve a $75,000,000 jail expansion at the end of this summer. It will almost double the size of the jail from its current 617 beds to 1,067. This project has been successfully hidden from the public view through the use of backhanded funding practices that do not require community input through a vote, community input or any community discussion. The Fort Collins Homeless Coalition has been working to defend the community’s right to a democratic decision-making process on whether we want to spend over $75 million to...
Read more...By: Zora Satchell and Shirley Coenen We sat down with the founders of Edana Wellness, Victoria Benjamin and Ali Owens where we talked about the intersections between white supremacy, institutionalized european-christianity- and the joy, excitement and difficult work that [healing justice](http://www.fccan.org/schedule) offers us. This is a sneak preview of the more in depth practice, coming up at our Healing Justice Workshop on Saturday, April 13th. Please [join us and RSVP!](https://www.facebook.com/events/601837563625340/) ![](/media/MG_8685b-826x1024.jpg) Victoria Benjamin on the left and Ali Owens on the right. Photo courtesy of Victoria Benjamin. **What do you define as healing justice and why is it important to...
Read more...![](/media/fc-vote.jpg) The ballets have been sent and the local city council elections are coming up on April 2, 2019! Keep scrolling for the FCCAN questionnaire or [view the PDF](http://fccan.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/FCCAN-City-Council-Questionnaire.-pdf.pdf). The Fort Collins Community Action Network (FCCAN) mission is to create community based on furthering economic, social, and environmental justice, sustainability, human rights, and peace for all by building coalitions, developing strategies and actions, and supporting existing progressive organizations. Having incredible impacts on Fort Collins community wellbeing, we believe our City Council is extremely important. We care about who is representing our communities' interests and how. With that in mind, FCCAN...
Read more...This article was originally published in the [Journal for Colorado Water Institute](http://cwi.colostate.edu/Media/img/newsletters/2019/CW_36_1.pdf). ![](/media/water-as-a-right.png) By: Cheryl Distaso and Sarah King The Fort Collins Community Action Network (FCCAN), a social justice organization, has been involved in local water justice issues for over ten years. Our interest was first piqued in 2002 at the New West Fest (NWF) music festival. In the vendor information packet that year, the [Downtown Business Association](https://downtownfortcollins.com/) (DBA) included language prohibiting nonprofits from giving away free water because it undermined the efforts of their festival sponsor, Pepsi, who was to be the main provider of all beverages. [The Rocky...
Read more...**By: Zora Satchell, FCCAN Intern** **Saturday March 9th Full Schedule:** 3:45pm Arrive at the farm 4-5pm Yoga & Meditation Practice led by Shirley Coenen 5-6pm Interactive dialogue, yummy food/ drink and tour of the gardens March's healing justice workshop will include a dialogue facilitated by local activists and farmers on food justice. Food insecurity is a problem that plagues our community. Led by long-time FCCAN activists and food growers, this talk is meant to get us thinking about how we can reconnect to food as a community. Eating food is an ultimate act of communion with our Mother Earth. Growing one's own food can...
Read more...By: Kevin Cross Last October, the City of Fort Collins put a new program in place designed to reduce the utility bills of low-income households. This initiative – the Income Qualified Assistance Program (IQAP) - comes at a particularly good time, given the skyrocketing cost of housing in Northern Colorado and the failure of wages to keep up with that and other costs of living. The City estimates that the IQAP can reduce the average bill for electric, water, and wastewater services by $32 per month, or $387 per year. The program is available to households earning up to 165%...
Read more..._Note: On Sunday, February 10th the Fort Collins Homeless Coalition (FCHC) organized a rally in solidarity with Food Not Bombs and in support of the right to share food in our parks. FCHC is continuing to collaborate on this effort to secure the right of people in our community to share food (without facing threats of tickets, fines/fees, harassment, or unfair restrictions). Having such a great demonstration of support makes a big difference- thanks to everyone who showed up and made it a joyful act of resistance. We'll continue updating_ [_here_](https://www.facebook.com/Fort-Collins-Homeless-Coalition-1712200239071528/) _and_ [_sign up_](http://fccan.org/take-action/) _to receive FCCAN's Action Bulletin for more...
Read more..._This post was inspired b a panel discussion of activists put together by Colorado State University Journalism Instructor Elissa Tivona in January 2019 and the recent closing of the Coloradoan's Opinion Section._ By: Paul Gessler The founders of our nation held opposing voices sacred by investing heavily in a free press to insure that freedom would prevail over any tyranny. Advocating our future leaders to not question capitalism is the ultimate act of cowardice and denial. Proof that Bob Schaefer’s column in the Coloradoan was as inappropriate as a hedge fund owning a newspaper. If capitalism is so sweet and omniscient,...
Read more...## People pay the price of gentrification _This was originally published in the Coloradoan's Newspaper [here](https://www.coloradoan.com/story/opinion/2018/12/02/opinion-letters-editor-gentrification-and-csus-stadium/2156026002/)._ By: Shirley Coenen, Fort Collins \[caption id="attachment\_1099" align="alignnone" width="300"\][![](/media/downtown-for-everyone-300x158.jpeg)](http://fccan.org/uncategorized/coloradoans-letter-to-the-editor-gentrification-of-jefferson-park/attachment/downtown-for-everyone/) Fort Collins Homeless Coalition protesting outside of City Council\[/caption\] A [recent article (Oct. 5)](https://www.coloradoan.com/story/life/food/2018/10/05/fort-collins-restaurants-social-union-rodizio-grill-melting-pot-restaurateurs-empire/1527271002/) featured the owners of several restaurants in Old Town. In its rush to laud local business owners, the Coloradoan failed to address the very real consequences that gentrification is having on marginalized people in this community. There is an apparent lack of historical and political understanding in Fort Collins of how space is divided up not only by private businesses, but also by...
Read more...FCCAN supporters and comrades, **This country is tearing our families apart.** We're talking about the inhumane immigration policy that was dominating headlines these past few months. While it may seem like old news- another 13,000 children traveling alone- many on their way to be reunited with family- are still in federal custody. **[Fuerza Latina](http://fccan.org/affiliates/fuerza-latina/), founded by and for immigrants in Fort Collins is doing the work to build a power base for those rendered invisible and vulnerable by our racist immigration policies.** But at FCCAN we are also talking about the institutional forces of oppression which continually tear families apart. The law which...
Read more..._An expanded version of remarks made by Kevin Cross of the Ft. Collins Community Action Network at the Ft. Collins Rally to Protect the Mueller Investigation held on November 8th, 2018_ Does anyone here think we live in normal times? We do not live in normal times! Instead, we live in a transitional time. We are in the process of transitioning out of the era of neoliberal capitalism and into a new era. That new era will either be a new version of fascism – neo-fascism, if you will – or democratic socialism. Why is a transition coming, and why...
Read more...[![](/media/disjus-300x221.png)](http://fccan.org/uncategorized/stand-up-for-public-transportation-in-fort-collins/attachment/disjus/) As members of Barrier Buster/ Public Transit Action Group, we advocate for the rights and dignity of people living in our community that have disabilities. We also stand in solidarity with undocumented, unsheltered, and other vulnerable people. In fact, BB/PTAG was started over 20 years ago when a group of low income, disabled community members, along with CSU students came together to create a community organizing group to push for disability justice and access in Fort Collins. Ever since then, BB-PTAG has made significant gains which benefit not just low income, disabled people in Fort Collins but everyone- this...
Read more...[Click here for the English translation.](#english-jump-link) \[gallery ids="1043,1044,1045,1046,1047,1048"\] Separación de familias es la amenaza más triste y aterradora que sufrimos los inmigrantes en este país. Cada día, inmigración está separando familias y con ella destrozando vidas. Yo como abuela, siento este sentimiento de impotencia recorrer mi ser cuando veo en las noticias o escucho los comentarios de como ICE llega a las viviendas de madrugada y arresta a las personas y las deportan, y con ello quedan las familias destrozadas, los sueños truncados, las esperanzas de una linda vida deshecha por una ley sin sentimiento e inhumana. No hay leyes,...
Read more..._A statement by the Fort Collins Homeless Coalition_ [![](/media/fchc_logo_color5-300x288-300x288.png)](http://fccan.org/event/fort-collins-homeless-coalition-general-meeting/attachment/fchc_logo_color5-300x288/) \[caption id="attachment\_1034" align="alignnone" width="300"\][![](/media/10-10-18-300x180.jpg)](http://fccan.org/uncategorized/the-city-of-fort-collins-lockers-decision-demonstrates-bias-against-homeless-people/attachment/10-10-18/) Community members showed up outside of City Council to rally in support of 24-7 lockers last Tuesday.\[/caption\] Last Tuesday, City Council approved the small lockers project at the Fort Collins Mennonite Fellowship (FCMF), but with new conditions that impose an absurdly heavy burden on the church. FCMF is committed and resourceful, so perhaps they will find some way to continue to meet this need in our community. But this decision reflects deeply-held prejudices on the part of our elected leaders that must be addressed. City Council...
Read more...October 3, 2018- The Fort Collins Community Action Network (FCCAN) categorically opposes the confirmation of Judge Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court. Much like the violence inherent in racism, sexism, ableism and other forms of oppression, which FCCAN recognizes as directly impacting our community, the senate hearings which we’ve all witnessed in the past week are about control and domination. The nomination of Judge Kavanaugh exposes the intention of United States judicial system. It wasn’t built to bring any sort of justice for Dr. Ford or anyone else. Instead, it was built to maintain the power of those in...
Read more...By: Shirley Coenen, FCCAN Coordinator (she, her) This Friday, we are holding space for what we're calling, Healing Justice, where we will breathe together and sit together in conversation with an intention of addressing the oppression that many queer, Women of Color (QWOC) in our activist community are facing right now. In this blog post, I will be sharing a preview of this work we must do together. [![](/media/flyer-2-page-001-232x300.jpg)](http://fccan.org/event/healing-justice-fccan-fundraiser/attachment/flyer-2-page-001/) **The untold story of internalized violence** Within social justice and community organizing work there exists an untold story of what happens away from the streets, the rallies, and the gatherings. It...
Read more...By: Lynn Thompson and Shirley Coenen For many of the members of the Fort Collins Homeless Coalition (FCHC), their daily experience of being homeless in Fort Collins revolves around trying to stay out of sight and find someplace safe to sleep where they won't have contact with police, rangers, or security guards. But security guards and city employees are one thing, and police are another. This is because sleeping outside is one of the many activities deemed illegal in parts of Colorado. The state’s 76 largest cities have collectively passed [351 ordinances](http://www.law.du.edu/documents/homeless-advocacy-policy-project/2-16-16-Final-Report.pdf) that target the homeless, from bans on...
Read more...[![](/media/TimePeaceMasthead-300x82.jpg)](http://fccan.org/uncategorized/coming-soon/attachment/timepeacemasthead/) A chronicle of social justice activism in Fort Collins, _TimePeace_ has twice surfaced as a print publication, first in the 1980’s by the Foothills Peace Center, and then twenty years later by the Fort Collins Community Action Network. Many of the issues discussed in the now 30-year history of _TimePeace_ are still painfully relevant: homelessness, civil liberties violations, the unsettled alliance between feminism and peace activism to name just a few. In order to keep these conversations alive and meaningful, we bring you _TimePeace_ in the format of a blog. Here we will be highlighting the organizing work that...
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