When: 
Friday, June 24, 2011 - 3:00pm to 7:00pm
Where: 

Foley Square (Worth Street between Centre St & Lafayette St), Manhattan, NY.   The opening and closing rallys will both be held here.  Nearest Transit: Chambers St (J,Z), Brooklyn Bridge - City Hall (4,5,6,6X), Canal St (J,Z)

It is that time of year again. Come join TransJustice of the Audre Lorde Project for our annual Trans Day of Action.  We will take to the streets of New York City to raise awareness and to celebrate the accomplishments of the Trans and Gender Non Conforming community.

 
Time:   Rally & March 3:00 pm, Closing Rally 6:00pm.  Both at Foley Square

To endorse the Trans Day of Action 2011, send an email to endorsetdoa@alp.org and for more information about the march send an email to info4tdoa@alp.org or contact Mya Leilani Vazquez at 212-463-0342 x 15.

 

Endorsers

 

 

Organizations

 

Academics With Style

 

ANSWER Coalition (Act Now to Stop War and End Racism)

 

APICHA

 

Astraea Lesbian Foundation for Justice

 

BAYAN USA

 

BiNet USA

 

Books Through Bars NYC

 

Bronx Community Pride Center

 

Brooklyn Community Pride Center

 

Brothers Stand Strong

 

Butters Papi

 

CAAAV Organizing Asian Communities

 

Coalicion Orgullo Arcoiris, Puerto Rico

 

Coalition for Queer Youth

 

Common Law

 

Community Kinship Life (CKLife)

 

Community United Against Violence (CUAV)

 

Congregation Beit Simchat Torah

 

Consortium of Higher Education LGBT Resource Professionals

 

Counterpublic NYC

 

CREA (Creating Resources for Empowerment and Action)

 

CUNY Law Bathrooms Committee

 

CUNY Law Outlaws

 

Direct Action to Stop Heterosexism (DASH)

 

Feminist Press

 

FIERCE

 

Filipinas for Rights and Empowerment-Gabriela USA

 

Forum Project

 

Freedom Road Socialist Organization/Organización Socialista del Camino para la Libertad (FRSO/OSCL)

 

Freedom Socialist Party

 

Freedom Train

 

Gay Asian Pacific Islander Men of New York (GAPIMNY)

 

Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation

 

Gender Justice LA

 

GRIOT Circle Inc.

 

Hear Me ROAR! Project

 

The Hispanic AIDS Forum, Inc – TransLatina Program

 

Hunter Students for Transgender Rights And Progress

 

Ida Mae Campbell Foundation

 

International Action Center

 

International Socialist Organization - NYC

 

Latino Commission on AIDS

 

Latinos/as Unidos de New York, Inc.

 

LGBT Faith Leaders of African Descent

 

Make the Road NY's LGBTQ Justice Project

 

Members of QUNY, the LGBTQ Chartered Student Organization of the CUNY Graduate Center

 

Metropolitan Community Church

 

National Lawyers Guild-New York City Chapter

 

National Lawyers Guild-New York City Chapter's Anti-Racism Committee

 

New Alternatives for LGBT Homeless Youth

 

New York City Anti-Violence Project

 

New York Civil Liberties Union

 

New York Committee for Human RIghts in the Philippines

 

New York Transgender Rights Organization (NYTRO)

 

Palante Technology

 

Peter Cicchino Youth Project in the Urban Justice Center

 

Picture the Homeless

 

p.i.s.s. :Public Intellectual SpaceS

 

Powers Initiative

 

PuntoGayLatino.com

 

Q Center @ ACR

 

Queer Bike Gang NYC

 

Queer Commons

 

Queer Rebel Productions

 

Queer Women & Trans Caribbean Collective

 

Queerocracy

 

Queers Against Israeli Apartheid

 

Queers for Economic Justice

 

Q-WAVE

 

Radical Women

 

Roots and River Productions

 

SAGE

 

SALGA NYC

 

Schmekel: 100% Trans Jews

 

Sebastián Colón-Otero, LMSW

 

Streetwise and Safe (SAS)

 

Support New York

 

SWANK (Sex Workers Action New yorK)

 

SWOP-NYC (Sex Workers Outreach Project - New York City)

 

Sylvia Rivera Law Project

 

Taller Lesbico Creativo, Puerto Rico

 

TEAM (TRANS EMPOWERMENT AND MEDIA)

 

Third Root Community Health Center

 

Transgender College Mental and Physical Health Coalition

 

UGNAYAN ng mga Anak ng Bayan (Linking the Children of the Motherland)

 

Urban Justice Center’s Community Development Project

 

 

 

Individuals

 

Ahimsa Timoteo Bodhrán

 

Alexis Diaz

 

Allison Joy

 

Andy Humm, co-host, Gay USA

 

Aurora Jonez

 

Bob McCubbin

 

Carla Petroro

 

Catherine K. Wing

 

Debanuj DasGupta

 

Ejeris Dixon

 

Garrett Wright

 

Holiday Simmons

 

Iden Campbell McCollum-Founder

 

InSoo Joh

 

jomal alcober

 

Jasbir Puar

 

Jay Toole 

 

Jen Roman

 

Jesse Lokahi Heiwa

 

Jinhwa K. Lee

 

Joel Simpson

 

Joseph N. DeFilippis

 

Kay Ulanday Barrett

 

Kian Goh

 

Kim Ford

 

Lourdes Ashley Hunter

 

Lucky S. Michaels

 

Margarita Guzman

 

Mike Gimbel

 

Minnie Bruce Pratt

 

Nasheed Abdul-Wakil

 

Peter Tatchell, gay and human rights campaigner, UK

 

Rabbi Sharon Kleinbaum

 

Ricky Blum

 

Ronak K. Kapadia

 

Sebastian Margaret

 

Suresh Dianand

 

Tei Okamoto

 

Telesh Lopez

 

Terrence Hewitt

 

Winston Sweeting

 

Zahara Raine

The 7th Annual NYC Trans Day of Action for Social and Economic Justice

Points of Unity

Initiated by TransJustice of the Audre Lorde Project, a Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Two-Spirit, Trans and Gender Non-Conforming People of Color Center for Community Organizing.  

June 24, 2011

 

We call on our Trans and Gender Non-Conforming (TGNC) community and on all of our allies from many movements to join us for the 7th Annual Trans Day of Action for Social and Economic Justice.  We as TGNC People of Color (POC) recognize the importance of working together alongside other movements to change the world we want to see.  We live in a time when oppressed peoples including people of color, immigrants, youth and elders, people with disabilities, women and TGNC people, and poor people are underserved, face higher levels of discrimination, heightened surveillance and experience increased violence at the hands of the state.  We must unite and work together towards dismantling the transphobia, racism, classism, sexism, ageism, ableism, homophobia and xenophobia that permeates our movements for social justice. Let’s come together to let the world know that TGNC rights will not be undermined and together we will not be silenced!   These are the points of unity, which hold together the purpose of this important march:

 

We demand an end to profiling, harassment and brutality at the hands of the police.  Like many other oppressed communities such as POC, immigrants, people with disabilities and poor people, TGNC people are targeted, profiled and brutalized by the police.  This violence does not occur in isolation, and is aggravated by racism, classism, ableism, xenophobia, misogyny, ageism and homophobia.  We call for an end to the current NYPD Quality of Life Initiative and efforts to “clean up” Christopher St. with increased policing.  We support legislation that would stop police and prosecutors from using possession of condoms as evidence of ‘criminal activity’. 

 

We demand access to respectful and safe housing.  Many TGNC people face severe discrimination from landlords and housing administrators displacing us from our homes due to gender identity or expression.  A disproportionate number of TGNC people have been or are currently homeless. However, many homeless TGNC people also face discrimination and violence when trying to access shelters and other assisted living programs.  NYC law and the Department of Homeless Services (DHS) state that people will be placed in shelters according to that person’s gender identity and that discrimination based on gender identity will not be tolerated.  We support Queers for Economic Justice in their demand that all DHS shelters provide adequate Trans sensitivity trainings for all personnel and enforce clear non-discrimination policies that respect the dignity and safety of all homeless people. 

 

We demand access to community spaces without fear of harassment, profiling, or censorship.  We oppose the NYC LGBT Center’s moratorium, on groups using the Center as a meeting space to organize around ‘the issue of the Israeli/Palestinian divide’ and we support Queers for an Open LGBT Center in their demands for open board meetings and restoration of Siegebusters' and other pro-palestinian groups right to meet at the Center.  We oppose the ongoing profit driven development of our neighborhoods.  We support FIERCE’s campaign to counter the displacement and criminalization of LGBTQ youth of color at the Christopher Street Pier in the West Village.

 

We demand the full legalization of all immigrants. We stand in solidarity with Indigenous-identified Two-Spirit people and the sovereignty of the First Nations, on whose land we now see the US attempt to enforce arbitrary boarders.  TGNC people deserve the right to access competent and respectful immigration services.  We demand that the consulates of all countries respect and honor our identities and issue passports and other documentation that accurately reflects who we are.  We oppose the Secure Communities program, the guest worker program, the Real ID Act, enforcement provisions to build more walls and give greater powers to the Department of Homeland Security, increased barriers for asylum seekers, and other anti-immigrant policies.  We support Governor Cuomo’s decision to suspend the Secure Communities program in NY State and we urge all other states to do the same. 

 

We are in solidarity with all prisoners, especially the many TGNC people behind the walls who are often invisible even within prisoner’s rights movements.  We call attention to the under-reported accounts of severe violence and rape that our community faces at the hands of correction officers and other prisoners, in psychiatric facilities, and group homes. We demand an end to the torture and high level of discrimination TGNC prisoners face.  We demand that all TGNC prisoners receive competent and respectful healthcare.  We oppose the continued growth of the prison industrial complex that continues to target our communities, yet we recognize that TGNC people need access to services and facilities that lessen our vulnerability to violence within the present jails and prisons.  We call attention to the criminal injustice system that increasingly puts POC, immigrants, people with disabilities, TGNC people and poor people behind bars - further criminalizing our communities and our lives. 

 

We oppose the US “War on Terrorism” as an excuse to legitimize the expansion of the U.S. as an imperial super power and to justify a national security strategy that is really meant to militarize our boarders and heighten surveillance and control over people living in the U.S., separating our communities by fostering feelings of hate, xenophobia, and violence.  We demand the immediate removal of all U.S. troops from all countries under occupation and demand an end of use of U.S. dollars to cultivate and sponsor wars against people in the U.S. and abroad.

 

We demand health care. TGNC people deserve the right to access health care, receive hormones and necessary surgery.  We demand that health care providers and insurance providers acknowledge this right and provide this service without bias and discrimination.

 

We demand safety while utilizing public transportation.  TGNC people utilize the MTA (NYC’s public transportation system) daily.  TGNC people should be addressed by their preferred pronoun, should not be targeted by transphobic employees of the MTA or harassed by other customers.  We call on the MTA to insure the safety not only of TGNC people but of women, children and all riders.

 

We demand that all people receiving public assistance including TGNC people, be treated with respect and dignity.  We are in solidarity with all people living on public assistance. We celebrate that the Human Resources Administration (HRA), the NYC welfare agency, finally passed the procedure for serving Trans and Gender Non Conforming clients and approved a community developed training curriculum.  However we call for full implementation of the procedure including culturally competent trainings for all employees. 

 

We demand that TGNC people have equal access to employment and education opportunities.  We are outraged by the high numbers of TGNC people who are unemployed.  Many TGNC people continue to face blatant discrimination and harassment from employers due to systemic transphobia.  Few TGNC people have access to opportunities for learning in a safe school environment. TGNC people demand that all employers and educational institutions implement non-discrimination policies that respect the rights of all workers and students and that they comply with the NYC Human Rights Law that prohibits discrimination against gender identity and expression.

 

We demand justice for the many TGNC people who have been beaten, assaulted, raped, and murdered yet these incidents continue to be silenced or misclassified.  The police and the media continue to criminalize us even when we try to defend ourselves.  Hate crime laws will not solve the problem but will give increased power to the state to put more people in jail.  Instead we call for a unified effort for all of us to look deeper into the root causes of why these incidents happen.  As a society that seeks social justice we seek to find ways of holding people accountable and coming to a joint understanding of how we can make our communities safer for all of us.

 

We commemorate the memory of the many brave souls we have lost, who struggled and lived their lives fearlessly day in and day out, being true to who they were. They keep the fire of struggle burning within all of us.

 

On June 24, 2011, TGNC People of Color and allies will take on the streets of New York City once again and demand justice to let the world know that the Stonewall rebellion is not over and we will continue fighting for social and economic justice, raising our voices until we are heard.  We call on all activists from communities of color, the LGBT movement, immigrant rights movement, the anti-war movement, the reproductive justice movement, disability justice movements, youth and student groups, trade unions and worker organizations, religious communities and HIV/AIDS and social service agencies, both local and organizations around the country to endorse this call to action and to build contingents to march in solidarity together on June 24, 2011

 

To endorse the Trans Day of Action 2011, send an email to endorsetdoa@alp.org, for more information about the march send an email to info4tdoa@alp.org or contact Mya Leilani Vazquez at 212-463-0342 x 15.