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Submission: On November 14 via api from DE — Scanned from DE
Effective URL: https://www.poorpeoplescampaign.org/
Submission Tags: tranco_l324
Submission: On November 14 via api from DE — Scanned from DE
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Search for: Select LanguageEnglishSpanish Menu * About * Our Principles * Our Demands * Covenant of Nonviolence * Jubilee Platform * 14 Policy Priorities * Anchor Organizations * Contact Us ▼ * Reconstruction * Learn * Why we need to pass a Build Back Better Plan NOW * Waking the Sleeping Giant: Poor and Low-Income Voters in the 2020 Elections * The Power of Poor Voters * Poor People’s Moral Budget * The Souls of Poor Folk Audit * Fact Sheets * Arts & Culture * We Cry Power ▼ * Press * Donate * Recurring Donations * Merchandise ▼ * Take Action * State Campaigns * Calendar * Digital Toolkit * Moral March * Livestream ▼ * Repairers of the Breach * Kairos * * * * NATIONAL MORAL WITNESS WEDNESDAY: BUILD BACK BETTER FROM THE BOTTOM UP Wednesday, November 10, 2021 FIND STATE ACTIONS HERE POOR PEOPLE’S CAMPAIGN VIRTUAL NEWS CONFERENCE WITH ECONOMIST JEFFREY SACHS Thursday November 4, 2021 12pm ET WATCH HERE MORAL MONDAY: BUILD BACK BETTER FROM THE BOTTOM UP! Monday, November 15, 12pm ET RSVP HERE WHY WE NEED TO PASS A BUILD BACK BETTER PLAN NOW READ HERE NATIONAL MORAL WITNESS WEDNESDAY: BUILD BACK BETTER FROM THE BOTTOM UP Wednesday, November 10, 2021 FIND STATE ACTIONS HERE POOR PEOPLE’S CAMPAIGN VIRTUAL NEWS CONFERENCE WITH ECONOMIST JEFFREY SACHS Thursday November 4, 2021 12pm ET WATCH HERE MORAL MONDAY: BUILD BACK BETTER FROM THE BOTTOM UP! Monday, November 15, 12pm ET RSVP HERE WHY WE NEED TO PASS A BUILD BACK BETTER PLAN NOW READ HERE JOIN THE CAMPAIGN! JOIN THE CAMPIAGN! First Name Last Name Email * Mobile Number Zip/Postal Code * Not in the US? Country * Afghanistan Aland Islands Albania Algeria American Samoa Andorra Angola Anguilla Antarctica Antigua and Barbuda Argentina Armenia Aruba Australia Austria Azerbaijan Bahamas Bahrain Bangladesh Barbados Belarus Belgium Belize Benin Bermuda Bhutan Bolivia, Plurinational State of Bonaire, Sint Eustatius and Saba Bosnia and Herzegovina Botswana Bouvet Island Brazil British Indian Ocean Territory Brunei Darussalam Bulgaria Burkina Faso Burundi Cambodia Cameroon Canada Cabo Verde Cayman Islands Central African Republic Chad Chile China Christmas Island Cocos (Keeling) Islands Colombia Comoros Congo Congo, the Democratic Republic of the Cook Islands Costa Rica Côte d'Ivoire Croatia Cuba Curaçao Cyprus Czech Republic Denmark Djibouti Dominica Dominican Republic Ecuador Egypt El Salvador Equatorial Guinea Eritrea Estonia Ethiopia Falkland Islands (Malvinas) Faroe Islands Fiji Finland France French Guiana French Polynesia French Southern Territories Gabon Gambia Georgia Germany Ghana Gibraltar Greece Greenland Grenada Guadeloupe Guam Guatemala Guernsey Guinea Guinea-Bissau Guyana Haiti Heard Island and McDonald Islands Holy See (Vatican City State) Honduras Hong Kong Hungary Iceland India Indonesia Iran, Islamic Republic of Iraq Ireland Isle of Man Israel Italy Jamaica Japan Jersey Jordan Kazakhstan Kenya Kiribati Korea, Democratic People's Republic of Korea, Republic of Kuwait Kyrgyzstan Lao People's Democratic Republic Latvia Lebanon Lesotho Liberia Libya Liechtenstein Lithuania Luxembourg Macao Macedonia, the former Yugoslav Republic of Madagascar Malawi Malaysia Maldives Mali Malta Marshall Islands Martinique Mauritania Mauritius Mayotte Mexico Micronesia, Federated States of Moldova, Republic of Monaco Mongolia Montenegro Montserrat Morocco Mozambique Myanmar Namibia Nauru Nepal Netherlands New Caledonia New Zealand Nicaragua Niger Nigeria Niue Norfolk Island Northern Mariana Islands Norway Oman Pakistan Palau Palestine, State of Panama Papua New Guinea Paraguay Peru Philippines Pitcairn Poland Portugal Puerto Rico Qatar Réunion Romania Russian Federation Rwanda Saint Barthélemy Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha Saint Kitts and Nevis Saint Lucia Saint Martin (French part) Saint Pierre and Miquelon Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Samoa San Marino Sao Tome and Principe Saudi Arabia Senegal Serbia Seychelles Sierra Leone Singapore Sint Maarten (Dutch part) Slovakia Slovenia Solomon Islands Somalia South Africa South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands South Sudan Spain Sri Lanka Sudan Suriname Svalbard and Jan Mayen Swaziland Sweden Switzerland Syrian Arab Republic Taiwan Tajikistan Tanzania, United Republic of Thailand Timor-Leste Togo Tokelau Tonga Trinidad and Tobago Tunisia Turkey Turkmenistan Turks and Caicos Islands Tuvalu Uganda Ukraine United Arab Emirates United Kingdom United States United States Minor Outlying Islands Uruguay Uzbekistan Vanuatu Venezuela, Bolivarian Republic of Viet Nam Virgin Islands, British Virgin Islands, U.S. Wallis and Futuna Western Sahara Yemen Zambia ZimbabweGermany * Opt in to email updates from A Poor People's Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival Sponsored by: A Poor People's Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival 2 2 2 3 4 2 3 3 3 5 +− Leaflet | Tiles © Esri — Esri, DeLorme, NAVTEQ Find My State Committee Search or Detect Current Location ARTS & CULTURE View our arts and culture resources, including We Rise: A Movement Songbook. JUNE 20, 2020 On June 20, 2020 we gathered together online as a powerful moral movement! STATE CAMPAIGNS Join the Poor People's Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival in your state. RESOURCES Learn more with our resources, including the Moral Audit and Budget. FACEBOOK Comments Box SVG iconsUsed for the like, share, comment, and reaction icons Poor People's Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival 14 hours ago This Sun. 11/14 at 3pm PT join our California Poor People's Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival family for an urgent Climate Crisis Event featuring: Tom Goldtooth, Indigenous Environmental Network, William Barber III, Climate Reality, Jacqueline Patterson, Chisholm Legacy Project & Josiah Edwards, Sunrise Movement. RSVP: tinyurl.com/ClimateCrisisEvent ... View View on Facebook ·Share Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on Linked InShare by Email * Likes: 12 * Shares: 4 * Comments: 0 Comment on Facebook Poor People's Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival 20 hours ago “By coming together, we create the kind of safety-net the government should be providing. We pay for war, we should pay for peace & justice!” -Patricia St. Onge California Poor People's Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival #PoorPeoplesCampaign ... Poor People’s Campaign tells Sen. Feinstein: Hold the line on Build Back Better! www.peoplesworld.org SAN FRANCISCO – Supporters of the Poor People’s Campaign: a National Call for Moral Revival gathered at Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein’s office here Nov. View on Facebook ·Share Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on Linked InShare by Email * Likes: 54 * Shares: 3 * Comments: 1 Comment on Facebook And close the loopholes and make the rich pay for this BBB job bills also. View more comments Poor People's Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival Poor People's Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival was live. 2 days ago Week 8 Freedom Fridays Vigil in front of NC Governor Roy Cooper’s mansion following pardon of Dontae Sharpe. ... View Play View on Facebook ·Share Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on Linked InShare by Email * Likes: 67 * Shares: 20 * Comments: 20 Comment on Facebook Thanks to ALL who made this ACTION available to us. THIS is what Democracy looks like. JUSTICE cannot wait for "convenient times"! 20 years! Dante's Grandma held him up! Bless you Sarah 🙏 and the Warden's care, and Katelyn Swayne 🙏 TY NAACP, Hero-Dante Shaw, courageous man! This was a family victory, praise the lord. Thank you for ringing the bell to WAKE UP the Governor!! It's TIME🔥FOR JUSTICE What BEAUTIFUL VOICES OF JUSTICE!!❤⚡❤🎶 Standing with you in Lynchburg,Va. KEEP GOING!!! Sing it! Justice is coming soon. San Diego,CA Hi 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏 I love you guys. Never stop doing what you do. Hi Dr. Barber!!!❤❤❤ Blessings on your work!! Buffalo NY Resolution For A National Workers Compensation Commission Whereas state-based workers’ compensation programs, one of the oldest types of social insurance programs in the United States, provide critical medical and income support to workers injured or made sick on the job. More than 129 million U.S. workers are covered by workers’ compensation. Every state regulates its own program, and there are no federal minimum standards that guide these programs as there are for other state-based insurance programs. Changes in state workers’ compensation programs over the past 20 years have made it increasingly difficult for injured workers to receive the full benefits to which they are entitled. Furthermore, exclusions in many state programs exempt many work-related injuries and illnesses and many workers in high-hazard occupations from receiving workers’ compensation. The result is that employers now provide only a small percentage (about 21%) of the overall financial cost of workplace injuries and illnesses through workers’ compensation. Instead, the costs of workplace injuries are borne primarily by injured workers, their families, and taxpayer-supported components of the social safety net. States are engaged in a race to the bottom over workers’ compensation benefits, and as a result, working people are at great risk of falling into poverty from work-related injuries. Reforms are needed to ensure that workers with occupational injuries and illnesses can access the medical and wage replacement benefits they need until they can go back to work. Whereas Standardized benefits paid to injured workers from 2015 to 2019 have continued to drop by 15% Nationally, in line with a 10-year trend, according to a study released by the National Academy of Social Insurance. Whereas the Massachusetts Department of Public Health found that nearly a quarter of overdose deaths in a five-year period occurred among people, mostly men, who work in construction. A trend many other states are experiencing too. Resolved Action Steps 1. Congress should appoint a new national commission to study the inadequacies of state-run workers’ compensation programs and update recommendations regarding coverage, benefit adequacy, and compensability of injuries and illnesses as well as how workers’ compensation programs can increase incentives to increase workplace safety efforts that prevent injuries and illnesses. 2. The U.S. Department of Labor’s Office of Workers’ Compensation Programs should reinstate its publication (suspended in 2004) of periodic evaluations of states’ compliance with the essential recommendations of the National Commission on State Workers’ Compensation Laws. 3. State government agencies should follow the lead of states such as Massachusetts and Maine that have enacted regulations on medical care payments for work-related injuries pending resolution of workers’ compensation claims to ensure availability of immediate medical care. 4. State government agencies must ensure universal coverage in their workers’ compensation laws and make sure that special categories of workers, such as migratory and seasonal agricultural workers, home health care workers, domestic workers, part-time workers, contractors, immigrant workers, and employees of small companies, are removed from exclusionary language. 5. State government agencies should ensure that employees who work for temporary and staffing agencies can receive benefits through requirements that contracting firms be held responsible for the failure of these agencies to carry workers’ compensation policies. 6. State government agencies should increase their efforts to prosecute employers for failure to provide workers’ compensation. 7. State governments should ensure that assessments of disability under workers’ compensation occur through an evidence-based system that considers physical and mental impairments in the context of an individual worker’s education and abilities and the available job market. Use of the American Medical Association’s guidelines on evaluating permanent impairment does not meet this standard. 8. State governments must strengthen anti-retaliation protections for workers and make it illegal for any worker to be retaliated against for filing a workers’ compensation claim. 9. State governments should ensure that workers can select their own health care practitioner for medical treatment under workers’ compensation. 10. State governments should ensure that workers’ compensation systems do not require or approve employer-mandated post-injury drug testing unless there is a proven nexus between the incident and impairment. However, all work-related injuries must be compensated regardless. 11. State governments should repeal any language that apportions blame for injuries to workers unless there is an equal decrease in the scope of exclusivity that results in expansion of tort remedies. YOU TURNED YOUR BACK on Americas injured workers Why have you left our injured workers behind? YOU SIDE with the Drs. who sell us m4a and not the ones telling us injured workers' human rights are being violated. Resolution For A National Workers Compensation Commission Whereas state-based workers’ compensation programs, one of the oldest types of social insurance programs in the United States, provide critical medical and income support to workers injured or made sick on the job. More than 129 million U.S. workers are covered by workers’ compensation. Every state regulates its own program, and there are no federal minimum standards that guide these programs as there are for other state-based insurance programs. Changes in state workers’ compensation programs over the past 20 years have made it increasingly difficult for injured workers to receive the full benefits to which they are entitled. Furthermore, exclusions in many state programs exempt many work-related injuries and illnesses and many workers in high-hazard occupations from receiving workers’ compensation. The result is that employers now provide only a small percentage (about 21%) of the overall financial cost of workplace injuries and illnesses through workers’ compensation. Instead, the costs of workplace injuries are borne primarily by injured workers, their families, and taxpayer-supported components of the social safety net. States are engaged in a race to the bottom over workers’ compensation benefits, and as a result, working people are at great risk of falling into poverty from work-related injuries. Reforms are needed to ensure that workers with occupational injuries and illnesses can access the medical and wage replacement benefits they need until they can go back to work. Whereas Standardized benefits paid to injured workers from 2015 to 2019 have continued to drop by 15% Nationally, in line with a 10-year trend, according to a study released by the National Academy of Social Insurance. Whereas the Massachusetts Department of Public Health found that nearly a quarter of overdose deaths in a five-year period occurred among people, mostly men, who work in construction. A trend many other states are experiencing too. Resolved Action Steps 1. Congress should appoint a new national commission to study the inadequacies of state-run workers’ compensation programs and update recommendations regarding coverage, benefit adequacy, and compensability of injuries and illnesses as well as how workers’ compensation programs can increase incentives to increase workplace safety efforts that prevent injuries and illnesses. 2. The U.S. Department of Labor’s Office of Workers’ Compensation Programs should reinstate its publication (suspended in 2004) of periodic evaluations of states’ compliance with the essential recommendations of the National Commission on State Workers’ Compensation Laws. 3. State government agencies should follow the lead of states such as Massachusetts and Maine that have enacted regulations on medical care payments for work-related injuries pending resolution of workers’ compensation claims to ensure availability of immediate medical care. 4. State government agencies must ensure universal coverage in their workers’ compensation laws and make sure that special categories of workers, such as migratory and seasonal agricultural workers, home health care workers, domestic workers, part-time workers, contractors, immigrant workers, and employees of small companies, are removed from exclusionary language. 5. State government agencies should ensure that employees who work for temporary and staffing agencies can receive benefits through requirements that contracting firms be held responsible for the failure of these agencies to carry workers’ compensation policies. 6. State government agencies should increase their efforts to prosecute employers for failure to provide workers’ compensation. 7. State governments should ensure that assessments of disability under workers’ compensation occur through an evidence-based system that considers physical and mental impairments in the context of an individual worker’s education and abilities and the available job market. Use of the American Medical Association’s guidelines on evaluating permanent impairment does not meet this standard. 8. State governments must strengthen anti-retaliation protections for workers and make it illegal for any worker to be retaliated against for filing a workers’ compensation claim. 9. State governments should ensure that workers can select their own health care practitioner for medical treatment under workers’ compensation. 10. State governments should ensure that workers’ compensation systems do not require or approve employer-mandated post-injury drug testing unless there is a proven nexus between the incident and impairment. However, all work-related injuries must be compensated regardless. 11. State governments should repeal any language that apportions blame for injuries to workers unless there is an equal decrease in the scope of exclusivity that results in expansion of tort remedies. Good Evening😊 Newton Grove N.C. Shoutout Yarnell View more comments Poor People's Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival 2 days ago ”Rightly hailed as a historic investment in the human infrastructure that makes a society run, but we also in the #PoorPeoplesCampaign realize that the Build Back Better Plan is not everything, it is one step.” -Joshua Kauppila, Poor People’s Campaign Maine ... View Play View on Facebook ·Share Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on Linked InShare by Email * Likes: 62 * Shares: 21 * Comments: 4 Comment on Facebook Give a man a fish 🐠 he eats for a day teach him to fish 🎣 he eats for life !!! Stop keeping people poor if they are mentally and physically healthy this is pathetic!!! wish i had known about this Right on Resolution For A National Workers Compensation Commission Whereas state-based workers’ compensation programs, one of the oldest types of social insurance programs in the United States, provide critical medical and income support to workers injured or made sick on the job. More than 129 million U.S. workers are covered by workers’ compensation. Every state regulates its own program, and there are no federal minimum standards that guide these programs as there are for other state-based insurance programs. Changes in state workers’ compensation programs over the past 20 years have made it increasingly difficult for injured workers to receive the full benefits to which they are entitled. Furthermore, exclusions in many state programs exempt many work-related injuries and illnesses and many workers in high-hazard occupations from receiving workers’ compensation. The result is that employers now provide only a small percentage (about 21%) of the overall financial cost of workplace injuries and illnesses through workers’ compensation. Instead, the costs of workplace injuries are borne primarily by injured workers, their families, and taxpayer-supported components of the social safety net. States are engaged in a race to the bottom over workers’ compensation benefits, and as a result, working people are at great risk of falling into poverty from work-related injuries. Reforms are needed to ensure that workers with occupational injuries and illnesses can access the medical and wage replacement benefits they need until they can go back to work. Whereas Standardized benefits paid to injured workers from 2015 to 2019 have continued to drop by 15% Nationally, in line with a 10-year trend, according to a study released by the National Academy of Social Insurance. Whereas the Massachusetts Department of Public Health found that nearly a quarter of overdose deaths in a five-year period occurred among people, mostly men, who work in construction. A trend many other states are experiencing too. Resolved Action Steps 1. Congress should appoint a new national commission to study the inadequacies of state-run workers’ compensation programs and update recommendations regarding coverage, benefit adequacy, and compensability of injuries and illnesses as well as how workers’ compensation programs can increase incentives to increase workplace safety efforts that prevent injuries and illnesses. 2. The U.S. Department of Labor’s Office of Workers’ Compensation Programs should reinstate its publication (suspended in 2004) of periodic evaluations of states’ compliance with the essential recommendations of the National Commission on State Workers’ Compensation Laws. 3. State government agencies should follow the lead of states such as Massachusetts and Maine that have enacted regulations on medical care payments for work-related injuries pending resolution of workers’ compensation claims to ensure availability of immediate medical care. 4. State government agencies must ensure universal coverage in their workers’ compensation laws and make sure that special categories of workers, such as migratory and seasonal agricultural workers, home health care workers, domestic workers, part-time workers, contractors, immigrant workers, and employees of small companies, are removed from exclusionary language. 5. State government agencies should ensure that employees who work for temporary and staffing agencies can receive benefits through requirements that contracting firms be held responsible for the failure of these agencies to carry workers’ compensation policies. 6. State government agencies should increase their efforts to prosecute employers for failure to provide workers’ compensation. 7. State governments should ensure that assessments of disability under workers’ compensation occur through an evidence-based system that considers physical and mental impairments in the context of an individual worker’s education and abilities and the available job market. Use of the American Medical Association’s guidelines on evaluating permanent impairment does not meet this standard. 8. State governments must strengthen anti-retaliation protections for workers and make it illegal for any worker to be retaliated against for filing a workers’ compensation claim. 9. State governments should ensure that workers can select their own health care practitioner for medical treatment under workers’ compensation. 10. State governments should ensure that workers’ compensation systems do not require or approve employer-mandated post-injury drug testing unless there is a proven nexus between the incident and impairment. However, all work-related injuries must be compensated regardless. 11. State governments should repeal any language that apportions blame for injuries to workers unless there is an equal decrease in the scope of exclusivity that results in expansion of tort remedies. View more comments Poor People's Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival Poor People's Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival was live. 2 days ago Transformative Justice Coalition Town Hall ... View Play View on Facebook ·Share Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on Linked InShare by Email * Likes: 57 * Shares: 31 * Comments: 10 Comment on Facebook From the land of white supremacy & misogyny...Texas. Praying for you guys right now ONE WORLD ONE LIFE ONE PEOPLE Does that mean we can't vote in criminals and corporate shills? Thursday, November11,2021 The Great Coalition of Coalitions continues to grow. Positive Values, Putting People First, Keeping People First, Education, Justice For All, Truth, Kindness, Patience... Not Issues. 😍😍😍😍😍😍😍 PPC Alabama Shalom means peace!✝️✝️✝️ Justice is well needed No.justice; no peace! Power to the people!! HELP our Injured workers with our federal human rights. It's THE MORAL thing to do. Resolution For A National Workers Compensation Commission Whereas state-based workers’ compensation programs, one of the oldest types of social insurance programs in the United States, provide critical medical and income support to workers injured or made sick on the job. More than 129 million U.S. workers are covered by workers’ compensation. Every state regulates its own program, and there are no federal minimum standards that guide these programs as there are for other state-based insurance programs. Changes in state workers’ compensation programs over the past 20 years have made it increasingly difficult for injured workers to receive the full benefits to which they are entitled. Furthermore, exclusions in many state programs exempt many work-related injuries and illnesses and many workers in high-hazard occupations from receiving workers’ compensation. The result is that employers now provide only a small percentage (about 21%) of the overall financial cost of workplace injuries and illnesses through workers’ compensation. Instead, the costs of workplace injuries are borne primarily by injured workers, their families, and taxpayer-supported components of the social safety net. States are engaged in a race to the bottom over workers’ compensation benefits, and as a result, working people are at great risk of falling into poverty from work-related injuries. Reforms are needed to ensure that workers with occupational injuries and illnesses can access the medical and wage replacement benefits they need until they can go back to work. Whereas Standardized benefits paid to injured workers from 2015 to 2019 have continued to drop by 15% Nationally, in line with a 10-year trend, according to a study released by the National Academy of Social Insurance. Whereas the Massachusetts Department of Public Health found that nearly a quarter of overdose deaths in a five-year period occurred among people, mostly men, who work in construction. A trend many other states are experiencing too. Resolved Action Steps 1. Congress should appoint a new national commission to study the inadequacies of state-run workers’ compensation programs and update recommendations regarding coverage, benefit adequacy, and compensability of injuries and illnesses as well as how workers’ compensation programs can increase incentives to increase workplace safety efforts that prevent injuries and illnesses. 2. The U.S. Department of Labor’s Office of Workers’ Compensation Programs should reinstate its publication (suspended in 2004) of periodic evaluations of states’ compliance with the essential recommendations of the National Commission on State Workers’ Compensation Laws. 3. State government agencies should follow the lead of states such as Massachusetts and Maine that have enacted regulations on medical care payments for work-related injuries pending resolution of workers’ compensation claims to ensure availability of immediate medical care. 4. State government agencies must ensure universal coverage in their workers’ compensation laws and make sure that special categories of workers, such as migratory and seasonal agricultural workers, home health care workers, domestic workers, part-time workers, contractors, immigrant workers, and employees of small companies, are removed from exclusionary language. 5. State government agencies should ensure that employees who work for temporary and staffing agencies can receive benefits through requirements that contracting firms be held responsible for the failure of these agencies to carry workers’ compensation policies. 6. State government agencies should increase their efforts to prosecute employers for failure to provide workers’ compensation. 7. State governments should ensure that assessments of disability under workers’ compensation occur through an evidence-based system that considers physical and mental impairments in the context of an individual worker’s education and abilities and the available job market. Use of the American Medical Association’s guidelines on evaluating permanent impairment does not meet this standard. 8. State governments must strengthen anti-retaliation protections for workers and make it illegal for any worker to be retaliated against for filing a workers’ compensation claim. 9. State governments should ensure that workers can select their own health care practitioner for medical treatment under workers’ compensation. 10. State governments should ensure that workers’ compensation systems do not require or approve employer-mandated post-injury drug testing unless there is a proven nexus between the incident and impairment. However, all work-related injuries must be compensated regardless. 11. State governments should repeal any language that apportions blame for injuries to workers unless there is an equal decrease in the scope of exclusivity that results in expansion of tort remedies. Hi everyone from Arkansas View more comments Load more TWITTER Poor People's CampaignFollow32,93999,239 Building a movement to overcome systemic racism, poverty, ecological devastation and the war economy. Everybody's got a right to live. #PoorPeoplesCampaign Retweet on TwitterPoor People's Campaign Retweeted Repairers of the Breach@BRepairers· 12h 1459667318603227137 “He has more courage than any man that has ever sat in that governor’s office — or woman — and more courage than anybody that’s ever sat in the state Legislature.” @RevDrBarber #DontaeSharpe Man pardoned after spending 24 years in prison for murder Gov. Roy Cooper of North Carolina on Friday granted a pardon to a man who spent more than 24 years in prison for murder before a judge vacated his con... www.wionews.com Reply on Twitter 1459667318603227137Retweet on Twitter 145966731860322713762Like on Twitter 1459667318603227137163Twitter 1459667318603227137 Poor People's Campaign@UniteThePoor· 12h 1459666581798203395 “If in the months to come, you stop for a moment & feel the earth beneath your feet, you might just sense the rumblings of a giant electorate of poor & low-income agents of social change waking from its slumber.” @liztheo #PoorPeoplesCampaign We Abandon Low-Income Voters at Our Peril The survival struggles of the poor and dispossessed have long been both a spark for social, political, and economic change in this country. www.thenation.com Reply on Twitter 1459666581798203395Retweet on Twitter 145966658179820339556Like on Twitter 1459666581798203395119Twitter 1459666581798203395 Poor People's Campaign@UniteThePoor· 16h 1459593532935659527 It’s huge for the people who really need it. Historically, this country has tried to build from the top down… & we have not looked out for the poor people in this country, those who have hit rock bottom. Rev. Derrick Knox @MichiganPPC #PoorPeoplesCampaign For Black Michiganders, infrastructure bill brings hope for change ⋆ Michigan Advance The recently passed $1.2 trillion infrastructure legislation has big implications for racial equity in Michigan, Black leaders said this week. Lavora ... michiganadvance.com Reply on Twitter 1459593532935659527Retweet on Twitter 14595935329356595276Like on Twitter 145959353293565952722Twitter 1459593532935659527 Poor People's Campaign@UniteThePoor· 18h 1459572912097304582 “Now is not the time for @SenDuckworth to be a centrist, now is not the time to cater to the rich & the lobbyists who control our government. Now is the time to act boldly.” -Rev. @laritarice @IllinoisPPC #HoldTheLine #BuildBackBetter #PoorPeoplesCampaign https://www.bnd.com/news/politics-government/article25574152... Reply on Twitter 1459572912097304582Retweet on Twitter 145957291209730458215Like on Twitter 145957291209730458234Twitter 1459572912097304582 Poor People's Campaign@UniteThePoor· 19h 1459557302156017672 “The #PoorPeoplesCampaign, which includes #Catholic organizations, has organized a rally for that day [11/15] on the steps of the U.S. Supreme Court to continue pressuring lawmakers.” -@CatholicReview #MoralMonday Jesuit schools join faith-based voices on immigration, environment - Catholic Review With the U.S. Capitol at his back, Darian Benitez Sanchez Nov. 8 told the story of how his father used to take him to high school math competitions on... catholicreview.org Reply on Twitter 1459557302156017672Retweet on Twitter 145955730215601767213Like on Twitter 145955730215601767240Twitter 1459557302156017672 Load More... INSTAGRAM POORPEOPLESCAMPAIGN Kairos Center and the Poor People’s Campaign sta ⚠️TMRW: Join Revs Barber, Theoharis and 1000s So thankful to our friend and a true activist @wil Join us at 10AM CT today at the Texas state Capito Posted @withregram • @kairos.center Scenes from It’s a moral abomination that there are 140 mill “We cannot pat essential workers on the back one We are just getting started! Join us online @ www. Are you ready?! 40 state #PoorPeoplesCampaign coor Today’s #MoralMonday spotlighted experts on the 📌Read Rev. Liz Theoharis’ new piece in the Na Yesterday on #MoralMonday, our faith leaders, stat 🚨Call your senators to demand federal legislati 🚨This #MoralMonday take action in solidarity wi This past #MoralMonday over 30 states and Washingt Action 🚨 Join us for 03/15 #MoralMonday as ppl This past #MoralMonday we uplifted the testimonies ⚠️Read Rev. Barber’s full statement on Congr This past #MoralMonday we uplifted the testimonies 🚨featured fight 🚨 learn more about the #stop Load More... Follow on Instagram * About * Reconstruction * Learn * Press * Donate * Take Action * Repairers of the Breach * Kairos * * * * * Privacy Policy * Site Map * Site Credits PreviousNext Previous Slide Next Slide Share Facebook ShareTwitter ShareGoogle Plus ShareLinkedin SharePinterest ShareEmail Share TwitterTwitter Hide Tweet (admin) Add this ID to the plugin's Hide Specific Tweets setting: