The Delta Grassroots Caucus (DGC) is a broad coalition of grassroots leaders in the eight-state Delta region. DGC is also a founding partner of the Economic Equality Caucus,
which advocates for economic equality across the USA.

Draft of Agenda, Economic Equality Coalition Conference, May 11-12, Washington, DC

Posted on May 02, 2016 at 10:10 AM

The May -11-12 Economic Equality Coalition conference focuses on economic, racial and gender equality, job creation at good wages, hunger and nutrition, health care, civil rights and diversity.

At the Thursday afternoon session, Rep. James Clyburn of South Carolina, third-ranking national leader in the House, speaks about why he supports the economic policy positions of Hillary Clinton, then Rep. Raul M. Grijalva of Arizona, Co-Chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus speaks for Bernie Sanders, and then Congressman Tom Reed of New York speaking in support of Donald Trump’s campaign.

This section of the program with Rep. Clyburn, Rep. Grijalva and Rep. Reed is from 1 p.m. to 2:15 p.m., followed by leaders on economic, racial and gender equality, hunger and poverty from across the country.

Key participants are Members of Congress from both parties, nationally recognized leaders who have endorsed each of the major Presidential candidates, and grassroots advocates from all over the country.

BASIC SCHEDULE

House session: Wednesday evening, May 11, from 4:30 p.m. to 7:45 p.m., Banquet Room B-340 of US House of Representatives Rayburn building

Senate session: Thursday morning, May 12, from 8:30 a.m. to 11 a.m., Senate Caucus Room 385, Russell building

Closing session for supporters of major Presidential campaigns and grassroots advocates from across the country, May 12, 11:45 a.m. to 3:45 p.m., historic Lutheran Church of the Reformation on Capitol Hill near the US Supreme Court, 212 E. Capitol

Lunch in the Parish Hall, 11:45 a.m. to 1 p.m. (requested $15 donation to pay for catering costs;

Lutheran Church of the Reformation: 1 p.m. to 3:45 p.m., Rep. James Clyburn of South Carolina speaking about why he supports the economic equality positions of Secretary Hillary Clinton, followed by an opportunity for a supporter of the Republican front-runner to do the same for Donald Trump, and then nonpartisan nationally recognized experts on economic inequality, hunger, poverty, civil rights and diversity from across the country.

ROUGH DRAFT OF AGENDA FOR MAY 11-12, 2016 Economic Equality Coalition

This is a rough draft and is subject to change because Members of Congress and other speakers may have to change their schedules due to factors beyond our control.

Wednesday, May 11, 2016 House session, 4:30 p.m. to 7:45 p.m.: Rayburn House of Representatives building Room B-340

4:45 P.M.–Millie Atkins, CenturyLink program for expanding access to broadband for lower income people in Louisiana, Arkansas and Mississippi, based in Monroe, Louisiana

5 p.m.—Jacqueline Pata, Executive Director, National Congress of American Indians, from Alaska

5:15 p.m.—Congressman French Hill (R-AR)

5:30 p.m.—Congressman Rick Crawford (R-AR)(Arkansas Delta)

5:40 p.m.—Congressman Ruben Hinojosa (D-TX)(Southwest Border region)

6 P.M.–Congressman Steny Hoyer, National Democratic Whip (D-MD)

6:15 p.m. to 7:15 p.m.–Economic Equality

  1. Nicole Brown, CEO Carter Enterprise Solutions, young lady who grew up in an economically distressed household in southeast Washington, DC and accomplished a dynamic professional career

  2. Ilene Jacobs, California Rural Legal Assistance, serving migrant workers and other low-income people in California

  3. David Adame, CEO, Chicanos por La Causa, based in Phoenix, active across Arizona, New Mexico and Nevada

  4. Suzanne Anarde, Program Director for National Rural LISC (Local Initiatives Support Corp.), based in Colorado

  5. Lisa Oelfke, Medicaid Dept. of Maryland with experience implementing the Affordable Care Act, Maryland AFT union

Thursday, May 12, 2016 Senate session, 8:30 a.m. to 11 a.m, Senate Caucus Room 385, Senate Russell Building

8:30 to 9:30 a.m.—four grassroots speakers

HUNGER AND NUTRITION SPEAKERS

Ellen Vollinger, Legal Director, Food Research and Action Center

Lisa Davis, Feeding America, Washington, DC

Lisa Hamler—Fugitt, Executive Director, Ohio Association of Food Banks

9:30 a.m.–Sen. John Boozman (R-AR)

9:45 a.m.—Rep. Bruce Westerman (R-AR)

10 a.m.—Annette Dove, TOPPS nonprofit in Pine Bluff, Arkansas, working on job training, education, mentoring for young people, and nutrition

10:15 a.m.–Perry Jones, Heifer International, US Domestic Programs in the Delta

10:30 a.m.–Shannon Maynard, Executive Director, Congressional Hunger Center

10:45 a.m. to 11 a.m.—Rep. Terri Sewell (D-AL) representing Selma and the historic Alabama Black Belt

Thursday, May 12, 2016 session for Presidential campaigns at the historic Lutheran Church of the Reformation on Capitol Hill near the US Supreme Court, 11:45 a.m. to 3:45 p.m.:

LUNCHEON—11:45 A.M. TO 1 P.M.

Rev. Mike Wilker, senior pastor, Lutheran Church of the Reformation, Washington, DC

Washington, DC Deputy Mayor for Economic Opportunity Courtney Snowden

Washington, DC Council Member Anita Bonds (member of Foundry United Methodist Church)

Edsell Brown, NAACP Economic Chair, Maryland

George A. Jones, CEO, Bread for the City

Rev. Roger Gench, senior pastor, New York Avenue Presbyterian Church, Washington, DC

1 p.m.—Rep. James Clyburn (D-South Carolina), number three ranking leader in the US House, Assistant Democratic Leader

1:30 p.m.–Donald Trump representative (The Trump campaign indicated they plan to send a representative)

Bernie Sanders representative (invited)

2:15 p.m. to 3:30 p.m.–Nationally recognized leaders on economic inequality, hunger, poverty and civil rights

Joel Berg, Executive Director, Hunger Free America, national hunger and nutrition organization based in New York City

2:30 p.m.–Congressman Don Beyer, northern Virginia

Rev. Dwight Webster, community leader in New Orleans, senior pastor, Christian Unity Baptist Church, survivor of Hurricane Katrina

Janis Kearney, former White House aide to President Bill Clinton, author of a biography of famous civil rights leader Daisy Bates, founding publisher of Writing Our World Press in Little Rock, Arkansas

Michael Curtin, CEO, DC Central Kitchen

Moises Loza, Executive Director, Housing Assistance Council, national organization based in Washington, DC

Edsell Brown, Economic Development Chair, NAACP of Maryland

REGISTRATION

You register by sending in the registration fees by April 22, 2016.

Registration fees are reduced for those who are only coming to part of the conference or who are part of a group.

Please make out the $100 early registration fee check to “Delta Caucus” and mail to:

Delta Caucus

5030 Purslane Place

Waldorf, MD 20601

PARTICIPANTS AND KEY ISSUES

We have two of the top three national leaders in the House in Rep. Steny Hoyer (D-MD), the Whip, Rep. James Clyburn of South Carolina, the third ranking leader, Sen. John Boozman and Rep. Rick Rick Crawford (R-AR), Rep. Ruben Hinojosa, of the Texas Southwest Border region, Rep. Terri Sewell from Selma and the Alabama Black Belt; and other Members of Congress from both parties from across the country, high-level supporters of the major Presidential campaigns, as well as grassroots advocates from across the country.

Rep. James Clyburn of South Carolina, Assistant Democratic Leader in the House who has endorsed Hillary Clinton and is an old friend and ally of Secretary Clinton and President Clinton, will speak at the Thursday afternoon, May 12 session at the historic Lutheran Church of the Reformation on Capitol Hill near the Supreme Court. The Donald Trump campaign is expected to have a Trump supporter speak following Rep. Clyburn.

We make no endorsements and will hear from supporters of the other remaining campaigns as of May 12 at that session, and the remaining viable candidates. It may be just the two front-running candidates from each party. The others were invited.

This is bipartisan. We want to hear from all points of view from Congress and the remaining Presidential campaigns, and urge all of them to take stronger action for job creation at livable wages, economic, racial and gender equality and progress in America.

We would like to thank our major sponsors including:

–Nucor Yamato Steel and Nucor Steel of Arkansas,

–Thomas F. McLarty III

–the national Housing Assistance Council based in Washington, DC,

–Heifer International,

–Levin & Papantonio Family Foundation, Inc., Florida,

–Covenant Hospice, Alabama and Florida

–Judson College, Marion, Alabama,

–Mississippi County Economic Opportunity Commission in Arkansas;

–First State Bank & Trust, Caruthersville, Missouri,

–Janis Kearney and Bob Nash, Little Rock, Arkansas

–Harvey Joe Sanner, President, American Agriculture Movement of Arkansas

–Mark McElroy, Southeast Arkansas Delta,

we are updating the sponsors list and want to express our deep appreciation to all of them.

We will highlight the major regions of the country, including the Greater Delta Region from Missouri and Illinois to New Orleans and east to the Alabama Black Belt, the Midwest, Appalachia, the Southwest Border, Native Americans, and key urban areas like New Orleans, Memphis, St. Louis/Ferguson, Missouri, Charleston, South Carolina, New York, Baltimore and the Virginia/Washington, DC/Maryland Mid-Atlantic region.

Confirmed key partners thus far include two of the top three national leaders in the House, Rep. Steny Hoyer (D-MD), the Whip, the Assistant Democratic Leader Rep. James Clyburn of South Carolina, Sen. John Boozman and Rep. Rick Crawford (R-AR),Rep. Ruben Hinojosa of the Texas Southwest Border region, Rep. Don Beyer, Virginia, other Members of Congress are expected; and

-hunger and poverty experts like Joel Berg, executive director of Hunger Free America based in New York, senior executives from Feeding America, the Congressional Hunger Center,

-Wilson Golden, former Clinton administration appointee, member of the board of the William Winter Institute for Racial Reconciliation at the University of Mississippi, now based in Georgia;

-Lisa Hamler-Fugitt, director of the Ohio Association of Food Banks,

-Temeka Williams, Arkansas Hunger Relief Alliance,

-Annette Dove, Director of TOPPS nonprofit in Pine Bluff, Arkansas,

-CEO Michael Curtin of DC Central Kitchen, a nationally recognized nonprofit based in Washington, DC,

-Deputy Mayor Courtney Snowden for Economic Opportunity of Washington, DC;

-Moises Loza, director of the National Housing Assistance Council,active across Appalachia, the Delta, Southwest Border, Native Americans, and other regions across the country;

-Jacqueline Pata, director of the National Congress of American Indians, from Alaska;

-Ilene Jacobs of California Rural Legal Assistance, a statewide organization that aids many low-income Californians, including many Hispanics and farm workers;

-David Adame, CEO of Chicanos por La Causa active across Arizona, New Mexico and Nevada,

-Rev. Dwight Webster, senior pastor of Christian Unity Baptist Church in New Orleans, survivor of Hurricane Katrina; his congregation has many survivors and victims of Hurricane Katrina;

-Melissa Cloud, founder and program director of Public Policy 4Kids, children’s issues organization based in the Washington, DC area with especially active programs in Florida;

-Suzanne Anarde of the national Rural LISC based in Colorado,

-Brad Cole, executive director of the Illinois Municipal League,

-Kay Goss, noted author, educator and Associate Director of FEMA for President Clinton, nationally recognized emergency relief services expert, originally from Arkansas and now based in northern Virginia;

Janis Kearney (Little Rock, Arkansas) former White House aide and diarist and author of biography of the civil rights leader Daisy Bates and many other books, founding publisher of Writing Our World Press in Little Rock, Arkansas; -Lisa Oelfke, health care professional with direct experience administering the Affordable Care Act, Baltimore, Maryland;

-and other major Hispanic, African American and women’s organizations.

We continue to add speakers, organizations and grassroots leaders and will keep updating the list.

Key issues will include job creation at livable wages, health care for under-served populations, hunger and nutrition, affordable housing, transportation, broadband and other infrastructure investments to create job and improve our deteriorating infrastructure, renewable energy/energy efficiency, developing a well-trained and educated workforce, diversity and civil rights, and other vital initiatives for improving equality and opportunity.

This is a very diverse coalition including many African Americans, Hispanics, women, Native Americans, and people from all racial, ethnic, gender, income and geographical backgrounds are welcome.

The Capitol Hill meeting rooms in the House and Senate seat a limited number of people, who will be influential economic policy advocates from across the country. The closing session will be at the sanctuary of the Lutheran Church of the Reformation on Capitol Hill, which has larger seating capacity.

The collaborative, bipartisan approach among the major economically distressed populations is broadly similar to the Clinton administration’s bipartisan New Markets Initiative, which included Appalachia, the Delta, Southwest Border, Midwest, Native Americans, and economically distressed inner city neighborhoods.

There should be a vital national priority to eliminate the situation where these populations lag far behind the rest of America in opportunity and prosperity.

The scope of this conference will be much broader-essentially national-than Delta regional events in the past, although the Delta Grassroots Caucus will be one of the key organizers. Leaders from the other regions agreed with the Delta Caucus that we can amplify our voices to the national powers that be by joining forces among those regions that have historically lagged far behind in America’s prosperity.

We are also seeing a major resurgence of interest in issues related to economic inequality, hunger, poverty and racial justice, which is very important for our diverse group that includes many African Americans, Hispanics, women and people from all racial, gender and geographic backgrounds.

Focus is both rural and urban: The national powers that be in Presidential campaigns, *Members of Congress and national economic development organizations take an approach to economic issues covering the entire country. Many issues regarding economic inequality are quite similar regardless of which region people live in.

Even in the largely small-town and rural Greater Delta Region, we have always viewed the impoverished neighborhoods in New Orleans, Memphis, Little Rock, Jackson and our other urban areas as part and parcel of our mission area, although we know that the worst poverty continues to be in the many small towns and rural areas across the region of eight states and 10 million people. The focus has to be rural and urban, and while there are differences, populations suffering from economic inequality have many common issues and challenges across the country.

Key participants and/or organizers thus far for the Economic Equality Coalition conference on Capitol Hill for May 11-12, 2015 on Capitol Hill include:

Economic Equality Coalition Steering Committee

Lee Powell, steering committee co-chairman for the Economic Equality Coalition and executive director, Delta Grassroots Caucus;

Kay Goss, EEC Senior Adviser, former Associate Director of FEMA in the Clinton administration, nationally recognized expert on disaster relief and emergency services, noted author and educator;

Joel Berg, nationally recognized expert on hunger and poverty, Executive Director of Hunger Free America, a national organization based in New York;

Moises Loza, executive director, the national Housing Assistance Council, headquarters in Washington, DC, active in Appalachia, the Delta region, Southwest Border, Midwest, and other areas across the country;

Wilson Golden, Presidential appointee at US DOT for Secretary Rodney Slater in the Clinton administration, former executive at the Xerox corporation in Washington, DC, board member of the Winter Institute for Racial Reconciliation at the University of Mississippi, a native of Mississippi now residing in Georgia;

Janis Kearney, author of a biography of the famous civil rights leader Daisy Bates, author, founder of Writing Our World Press in Little Rock, Arkansas, former White House aide and diarist to President Clinton;

-David Adame, CEO, Chicanos por La Causa, Hispanic organization active across Arizona, New Mexico and Nevada;

-CEO Michael Curtin of DC Central Kitchen, a nationally recognized nonprofit based in Washington, DC that has highly innovative job creation, training and hunger and nutrition programs;

Melissa Cloud, Founder and Program Director, Public Policy 4Kids, based in the Washington, DC area, currently with major childhood hunger activities in Florida;

Native Americans (the National Congress of American Indians, Jacqueline Pata from Alaska, is one of our speakers;

Colleagues from the Appalachian region, including the Ohio Association of Food Banks and others in the region;

Millie Atkins, manager of Century Link’s broadband access expansion in the Delta region, based in Monroe, Louisiana . This will be the broadest scope of any conference we have participated in for many years. Again, we believe we will make a bigger impact by joining forces with other major populations across the country who have not thus far participated in prosperity and economic equality in America.