The Kentucky Social Forum invites progressive organizations to convene at the inaugural 2009 Kentucky Social Forum, July 31 through Aug. 2, to envision that “Another Kentucky is Possible.”
The event will include about 50 different workshops that will take place throughout Berea College campus including the Alumni Building, Seabury Center and the Berea College Commons.
The goal of the social forum is to provide space for progressive activists to build relationships, share experiences, share analysis of the issues facing our communities and bring renewed insight and inspiration toward positive social changes. Some of the issues being addressed include: Housing, hunger, homelessness, poverty, environmental justice, workers’ rights, youth advocacy and organizing, food justice and agricultural sustainability, mountaintop removal, reproductive justice, immigrant rights, advocacy and organizing, media justice, non-partisan political mobilizing, economic justice and more.
The forum aims to develop the vision, strategy and action needed to realize a better Kentucky and a better global society.
The Peoples Movement Assembly, a national collective of grassroots community organizers, will gather at the Kentucky Social Forum on July 31.
Organized in partnership with the Central Kentucky Council for Peace and Justice, Kentucky Foundation for Women, Black Cultural Center at Berea College, Ursuline Society and Academy of Education, Kentuckians For The Commonwealth, Ms. Foundation for Women, Boilermakers Local 40, Firefighters Local 345, Presbyterian Hunger Program, PC (USA), Laborers Local 265 and 576, Steve Barger Consulting LLC, Kentucky Jobs with Justice and many other human rights and progressive social justice groups, the Kentucky Social Forum will be the first statewide social forum in the South.
Limited spots remain for human rights and social justice organizations to participate with displays, demonstrations, town hall meetings, interactive exhibits and more.
Call Angelyn Rudd, Kentucky Social Forum at 1-502-649-7833 or e-mail kentuckysocialforum@gmail.com for more details.
Local News
Berea to host Kentucky Social Forum
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‘She wasn’t just a teacher’ : Lambert retires after 43 years at Berea
Scroll to the bottom of the story to read "Love for Lambert: Berea graduates share memories of their teacher," as well as a list of other Berea retirees this year.
Writer’s Note: Brenda Lambert is the reason I write articles today (Class of 2000).
Years ago, a little blonde-haired girl from Rockcastle County gathered her friends to “play school” in a 10-by-10 foot playhouse her father built.
Even at 12 years old, Brenda Lambert knew she wanted to be a teacher one day.
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Jerry Wayne Edington, 34, of Berea Road, was charged Jan. 19 with second-degree assault after an altercation at the Blue Moon bar on East Irvine Street, according to a Richmond police report. -
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Dump of the Day
An old mattress, a car seat and other debris sit Friday afternoon on North Street between Fourth and Fifth Streets where it was first spotted Thursday. The “Dump of the Day” is a recurring series the Richmond Register publishes to highlight illegal trash piles and push local governments to cite perpetrators and get illegal dumps cleaned up. See Sunday’s Richmond Register to read a copy of the city’s ordinance related to trash pickup.
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Man is indicted on additional sex charge involving teen in 1998
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Charles W. Peyton, 63, of East Irvine Street, was indicted Wednesday by a Madison grand jury. He used “forcible compulsion” to have sexual intercourse with a 14-year-old girl between March 1 and May 1 in 1998, according to the indictment. -
Woman fends off burglar with knife
A Berea woman used a kitchen knife to fend off an alleged burglar early Wednesday morning, and police say they were able to catch the man in the act.
Officers responded to a call in the 1000 block of Scaffold Cane Road about a man trying to break into a home, according to a release from BPD Public Information Officer Jake Reed. - More Local News Headlines
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