| From the President's Desk
From the desk:
I hope that everyone has checked their voter registration, read their Dallas County League of Women Voters Guide, or accessed Vote411.org and made their final plans for when and where to vote. Remember, early voting begins on Monday, October 21. By voting early, you can avoid long lines and ensure your voice is heard. Check voting locations and wait times at dallascountyvotes.org.
Every Presidential election is important, but there is more on the ballot than that race. We also vote for US Senate and US Representative races, Texas Senate and Texas House races, a Dallas County Commissioner race, and multiple cities’ propositions.
In our daily lives, these down-ballot races probably have more impact than the presidential race. Vote411.org allows you to enter your address and get the ballot you will see at the polls. You can also read the candidates' responses to questions. Some candidates do not respond, but many do, to help you make an informed decision. You can select your choices and print them out. You may take this with you to the voting booth. Phones are not allowed in polling locations. Don’t skip voting for these races. Your Vote is your Voice—use it. Your participation in the democratic process is crucial.
Every vote counts, and your voice matters. Use your vote to shape the future you want to see.
In League,
Sandy Thornton
President LWV Dallas |
LWV Dallas Voters Guides Available Now!
The printed version of our Voters Guide is now available at public libraries across Dallas County. Go pick on up to familiarize yourself with what's on the ballot this November, as well as candidate positions.
The Voters Guide is also online in English, Spanish, Vietnamese, and Chinese! Visit www.vote411.org/ballot and enter your address to get started. | Are you a new citizen who is preparing to vote?
Are you a new citizen? Are you registered to vote? Because of a recent communication from the Texas Secretary of State, you may have an election worker ask additional questions about your citizenship status. Be ready to confirm that you are a citizen and are ready to vote! If you know you are a citizen, verbally confirm that you are and that you're ready to vote. Don't let a question confuse what you know. | Volunteering Update: 54 for 40,000 + 55,000 | Our signature product, the Voters Guide / Vote411, takes a village of volunteers to get into our community. Our village EXCEEDED OUR DREAMS this election! There are many steps from project management to wrangling candidate responses to data entry to distribution.
54 volunteers helped at various stages of the process, some for several stages.
Vote411: Carol Farquhar, Elizabeth Walley, Jen Markley, Donna Miller, Sarah Minckler, and Terri Romine-Ortega
Drop off survey: Diane Tasian, Kelly Martin, Madge Cruse, Norma Arratia, Sarah Minckler, Terri Romine-Ortega, and Patricia Muñoz
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Distribution: AJ Cole, Amy Walton, Anthony Marshall, Barbara Larkin, Brandy Wicker, Camile White, Carol Farquhar, Cecilia McKay, Chris Guldi, Cynthia Rutherford, Diane Tasian, Debra Rogers, Denita Jones, Elaine Wiant, Elizabeth Gorman, Elizabeth Walley, Glenna Witherspoon, Jen Markley, Jennifer Wimbish, Joan Ridley, Kelly Martin, Kenda North, Loretta Reed, Madge Cruse, Marie Warwick, Mary Dibbern, Nancy Cooper, Nivasha Howrey, Norma Arratia, Patricia Muñoz, Sandy Thornton, Sarah Minckler, Sophia Dembling, Stacy Smith, Susybelle Gosslee, Terri Romine-Ortega, Velma Hodges and these college students: Aniya Robertson, Omolola Giwa, Orelie Kitonge, Suraj Karki
We owe Nivasha Howrey many thanks for finding us a space at Eastfield College to serve as our Distribution point.
We also owe Jim Jarvis thanks for making the larger deliveries. Jim has worked with Elizabeth Walley for years.
40,000 Voter Guides.
Of these, 39,830 were pledged prior to publication. Unfortunately, we had to decline
many requests after going to print.
55,000 bookmarks with QR code links to Vote411.org.
27,025 were delivered early
17,655 were delivered with the Voters Guides
7,820 used by our VDR’s or distributed by volunteers at various events
1,500 will go to Texas Voters Initiative
1,000 remain at the office. Please let us know if you would like some for GOTV.
We managed a change in the printing company, a change in distribution point, and a survey of previous and potential recipients. We worked to provide more resources to low-turnout areas.
Many lessons were learned in the process which we will bring to our next challenge – the local elections in May of 2025.
Our volunteers have so much to be proud of!! Most of you may think you didn’t do much, but these metrics show what can be accomplished when the village rises! Thank you for your service to the voters of Dallas County!!
In League,
Elizabeth Walley, Madge Cruse and Diane Tasian
| DFW Air Quality Improvement Listening Session
The North Central Texas Council of Governments (NCTCOG) is hosting a virtual listening session on November 12, 2024, at 6:30 pm, open to residents, community groups, and other organizations, to provide feedback on the Dallas-Fort Worth Air Quality Improvement Plan-Priority Climate Action Plan (DFW AQIP-PCAP). This listening session will focus on measures in the water, wastewater, and watershed management; materials management (solid waste); and agriculture, forestry, and land use sectors. Measures of interest include expanding regional green spaces, improving storm water infrastructure, and implementing waste diversion strategies.
Date: November 12, 2024
Time: 6:30 pm to 8:00 pm
Location: Virtual, via Teams
Registration: https://www.addevent.com/event/hb23432894 |
In Remembrance: Annie Jones
Annie Jones, who has been a member of LWV Dallas since 1987, passed away on October 16, 2024. Those who knew her will miss her “happy warrior” approach to life and advocacy. We don’t have an obituary yet, but I hope you enjoy this article from the Lakewood Advocate which we published in the July 2019 VOTER.
Annie Jones is so passionate about disability rights, she chained herself to a Greyhound bus
Annie Jones just wanted a nice dinner at the Spaghetti Warehouse. But she wasn’t about to relegate herself to the back entrance, where the restaurant’s only wheelchair ramp was located. Instead, she and her friends sat outside the downtown eatery in their wheelchairs in front of folding tables, complete with a candle in the center. After their nondisabled friends went inside and ordered takeout, they ate their pasta outside in front of onlookers and police officers.
The protest worked. A few weeks later, the Spaghetti Warehouse installed a wheelchair ramp at the front entrance thanks to supporters like Jones who fight for greater access for people with disabilities. Jones, an 84-year-old resident at Juliette Fowler Communities, has been a fierce advocate for the disabled community since arriving in Dallas in 1971. As a doctorate student at the University of North Texas, she had hoped to become a professor. But those plans were dashed when she was hit in the back by a basketball while walking her dog. The impact shattered her back and reinjured her spinal cord. She was in a wheelchair at 36 years old and would never work again.
She led her first demonstration in 1988 to protest the lack of accessibility on public transportation. After negotiations for greater access on Greyhound buses failed, Jones and other ADAPT members chained themselves to the front of the vehicles.
They weren’t up there long before police came to remove them. Jones and her friends refused to hand over the key, so officers cut the thick, heavy chains with a saw. Authorities encountered another challenge when their van broke down. They had to transport the protesters to the county jail in, ironically, a DART bus. Jones spent 10 hours in jail and was given a $120 fine for public disturbance.
“I wish I could be sorry, but I’m not. I hope you don’t evict me,” Jones told Juliette Fowler administrators after her arrest.
She didn’t get evicted, and she didn’t let the arrest end her advocacy. Next, Jones pushed for more curb cutouts on city sidewalks and helped start DART’s Paratransit Service. The service specifically serves the elderly and riders with disabilities who are unable to use fixed-route buses and trains. Her work caught the attention of My Ride Dallas, a program that helps people with disabilities understand their transportation options. In 2013, the organization named its most prestigious award in her honor. The Annie Jones Driver Excellence Award celebrates drivers who go above and beyond to make riders feel safe, comfortable and valued.
Full article appears in The Lakewood Advocate (May 31, 2019)
| The LWVD is a UN Day Global Leadership Award Recipient
The League of Women Voters of Dallas has been nominated and chosen as a 2024 UN Day Global Leadership Award recipient by the United Nations Association of the USA (UNA-USA) leaders and members of the UNA-USA Dallas Chapter! Our award is the category Sustainable Development Goal 5: Gender Equality. The award will be presented at the UN Day Global Leadership Brunch and Awards ceremony on Saturday, October 26, 2024, at 10:00 AM (CST) at the J. Erik Jonsson Central Library. Find more information about the event here!
| Empowering Voters. Defending Democracy. |
League of Women Voters of Dallas
6060 N. Central Expwy, Ste #500
Dallas, Texas 75206
(214) 688-4125
info@lwvdallas.org
lwvdallas.org
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