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- Pleasantville church tackles segregation at MLK ceremony
- No time for handwashing, absolving ourselves of segregating schools | Opinion
- Pleasantville to Absecon march against school segregation held on Selma anniversary
- Star-Ledger Guest Columnist By Willie Dwayne Francois III
- Pleasantville school board again opposing Absecon's bid to leave district
- Statewide group mobilizes South Jersey leaders to correct school segregation
- A BLACK WOMAN SAID SHE WAS AFRAID OF THE POLICE. A NEARLY ALL-WHITE DISCIPLINARY PANEL SAID WE DON’T BELIEVE YOU.
- Tickets Out of Poverty? The American Prospect magazine
- New York Times - Justice for Blacks and Whites As the Civil Rights Act Turns 50, Creating Cross-Racial Alliances
- The Diverse Suburbs Movement Has Never Been More Relevant
- Behind tension over Texas pool party, a seismic shift in American suburbs - CSMonitor
- Communities face challenge of sustaining middle class reality
- Building One Ohio summit brings together over 150 local leaders
- 20 Years Later, Law Was Worth The Wait
- Community leaders want collaboration
- Once-aspirational Philadelphia suburbs struggle with poverty
- A tale of two towns reveals tipping point for America's suburbs
- BOA attacked in Breitbart News
- The Bad Economics of Balkanized Suburbs
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- Annual Year-End Celebration and Awards Ceremony 2023
- John Froonjian Honored at Year-End Celebration, Dec 14, 2023
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- Lloyd Henderson Honored at Year-End Celebration, Dec 14, 2023
- Rev. Dr. Albert Morgan Honored at Year-End Celebration and Awards Ceremony Dec 14, 2023
- Tennille McCoy Honored at Year-End Celebration and Awards Ceremony Dec 14, 2023
- Tribute to Gill, Giblin, Jasey at Year-End Celebration, Dec 14, 2023
- Leadership Training for Inclusive Communities, June 27 - 30, 2024, Stockton University, Galloway, New Jersey.
- School Segregation in NJ
- Summit for Civil Rights 2023
- Take Action
Register to Vote in New Jersey
ORGANIZING FOR POWER IN THE PANDEMIC
"If you are not registered your voice will not be heard"
If you have never reregistered or have changed your address since you last registered, you will need to get registered to be eligible to vote in the July 7 primary. The deadline to register for the primary is June 16.
Fill in the fields on the right and recieve a Voter Registraion form for the NJ county you currently live in.
Once you have the form you will need to:
- fill out and print the registration form,
- sign and date it,
- select Democrat or Republican if you want to vote in the July 7 primary,
- mail it to the address printed on the last page.
Fold and use the last page as an envelope. It will not need a stamp. Postage is pre-paid.
You can register to vote if you are 17 years old or older.
You can vote if you are 18 or older by election day.
Election day is July 7 for the primary and November 3 for the general election in 2020.
Because of Covid-19 all registered voters will receive a postage paid mail-in ballot.
However, you will need to choose your party affiliation as either a Democrat or a Republican in order to be eligible for the July 7 primary.
If you are registered and have not declared a party, you should receive a Political Party Affiliation Declaration Form in the mail or you can download one here and send it to the Commissioner of Registration in your county.
If you are not sure if you are registered, you can check your registraion status here.
For a registraion form for a New Jersey county other than the ones listed above, click here.
For forms in spanish and other information, click here.
If you are already registered, and you care about the outcome of this election, you are invited to join this campaign and register others through your networks and relationships such as congregation, family, friends, neighbors, civic associations, schools, universities and unions. Join us by clicking this link or the red join button below.
We’ve partnered with First Lady Michelle Obama and her non-partisan voter engagement campaign called When We All Vote. Just as with President Obama’s historic elections to the U.S. Senate and Presidency, we have to start by increasing the number of registered voters, especially among the underrepresented and historically disenfranchised populations, including African American, Latino, low-income and working-class voters of all backgrounds, and young people.
Join our campaign now and receive the Outvote App for your cell phone as well as the link to Michelle Obama's When we All Vote voter registration campaign.