BUILDING COMMUNITY POWER

“You have to act as if it were possible to radically transform the world. And you have to do it all the time.”

— Angela Davis

Join the movement to co-create a community-designed policy that addresses Black New Orleanians’ needs for equity and liberation!

Building Community Power is a collaborative policy design series that confronts our community’s major concerns with radical imagination.

Each of these monthly two-day meetings will be held in a different New Orleans neighborhood and focus on a different issue. Every meeting is an opportunity to #PlugIntoYourPower in the fight against efforts to repeal our rights with oppressive and racist legislation.

Up next in Building Community Power:

HEALTH EQUITY

Join our Health Equity design session to envision a healthy, happy New Orleans.

THE SESSIONS

Friday, June 21 | 5 pm - 8 pm
Saturday, June 22 | 10 am - 3 pm
TEP Center (5909 St. Claude Ave)

Decades of discrimination, neglect, and natural disasters have created a devastating affordable housing crisis in New Orleans that is displacing long-time residents and tearing apart communities.

Join our Housing Rights design session to envision a New Orleans where everyone has access to safe, stable, and affordable homes.

HOUSING RIGHTS

Friday, July 19 | 5 pm - 8 pm
Saturday, July 20 | 10 am - 3 pm
New Orleans East Hospital (5620 Read Blvd)

HEALTH EQUITY

Friday, August 16 | 5 pm - 10 pm
Saturday, August 17 | 10 am - 3 pm
Algiers

EDUCATION

Friday, September 20 | 5 pm - 8 pm
Saturday, September 21 | 10 am - 3 pm
Tremé/French Quarter

ECONOMIC JUSTICE

Friday, October 18 | 5 pm - 8 pm
Saturday, October 19 | 10 am - 3 pm
Gentilly/Lakeview

CRIMINAL JUSTICE

Friday, November 1 | 5 pm - 8 pm
Saturday, November 2 | 10 am - 3 pm
Uptown

Show up and show out at our Community Power Rally! Join us as we mobilize our community toward justice and liberation during the November election.

COMMUNITY POWER RALLY

In New Orleans, Black residents have higher rates of chronic conditions such as high blood pressure, diabetes, obesity, and poor mental health due to historic disinvestment. This has led to a 15- to 25-year deficit in life expectancy between Black communities and the city’s wealthier, whiter neighborhoods.

Join our Health Equity design session to envision a healthy, happy New Orleans.

Economic justice in New Orleans remains an ongoing challenge. The city has historically faced issues of poverty, inequality, and lack of access to economic opportunities, especially for the Black artists that contribute to the city's billion-dollar tourist industry.

Join our Economic Justice design session to envision a New Orleans where everyone can thrive financially.

Studies have shown that Black people in New Orleans are disproportionately targeted, arrested, and incarcerated compared to their white counterparts, even for similar offenses. This systemic racism has contributed to the overrepresentation of Black people in prison and has had profound social and economic consequences for the city's Black community.

Join our Criminal Justice design session to envision a liberated New Orleans.

After Katrina, the city's public school system underwent major changes, including the widespread adoption of charter schools. This has led to challenges around accessibility and quality of education for many students, particularly those from Black communities.

Join our Education design session to envision a New Orleans where all children have access to a high-quality public education.

OUR PARTNERS

OUR PARTNERS