September Noticias and Articles Relevant to Our Community

Celebrate Heritage and Diversity!


National Voter Registration Day 2021 is September 28!

Interested in finding out how you can help to get out the vote? Reach out to our amazing Volunteer coordinator Mandela Gardner for more information: volunteer@elcentrodelaraza.org

Register to Vote!


A virtual, community meeting will be held this Thursday, September 23 at 7:00. Please email us at ECCCinfo@elcentrodelaraza.org to receive a Zoom link, or visit our project website for more information at  https://www.elcentrodelaraza.org/get-help/housing-economic-development/columbia-city/

Viviendas económicas propuesto para el vecindario de Columbia City.  Visite nuestro sitio web https://www.elcentrodelaraza.org/get-help/housing-economic-development/columbia-city/ para mås información.

á‰ áŠźáˆŽáˆá‰ąá‹« áˆČá‰Č በዝቅተኛ ዋጋ ሊሰሩ ዹታሰቡ/ይታቀዱ ቀቶቜ:: ለተጹማሹ መሹጃ በዔህሚ ገፃቜን https://www.elcentrodelaraza.org/get-help/housing-economic-development/columbia-city/ ይመልኚቱ::

Guriyeen la awoodi karo ayaa loo soo jeediyay Magaalada Columbia. Kaga bogo boggayaga https://www.elcentrodelaraza.org/get-help/housing-economic-development/columbia-city/ wixii macluumaad dheeraad ah.

ChÆ°ÆĄng trĂŹnh nhĂ  ở giĂĄ ráș» Ä‘Æ°á»Łc đề xuáș„t cho thĂ nh phố Columbia.  Xin vĂ o Trang Web cá»§a chĂșng tĂŽi táșĄi https://www.elcentrodelaraza.org/get-help/housing-economic-development/columbia-city/ để biáșżt thĂȘm thĂŽng tin


Sentinel Event Review of Police Response to 2020 Protests in Seattle


King County launches Child Care Financial Assistance (CCFA)


Updated vendor schedule for Plaza Roberto Maestas!


Free Tax Preparation & Expanded Child Tax Credit Information at El Centro de la Raza – Every Tuesday from 2-8 PM in our Centilia Cultural Center until September 28th


Articles of Interest

Consider Writing a Letter to Your Local Newspaper [and Some Instructions on How]

Democrats Look for Plan B After Blow on Immigration

International Day of Peace | United Nations | 2021 Theme: Recovering better for an equitable and sustainable world

Mayor Durkan Announces Fourth School Year of Free, Unlimited Transit Passes to Thousands of Seattle Students

Senator Murray Hails Senate Confirmation of David Estudillo as U.S. District Court Judge

There’s Noise, There’s Music. Estelita’s is Not Your Average Seattle Library — it’s a Space for Community.

Your Guide to Hispanic Heritage Month in Seattle


Agosto Noticias y artĂ­culos relevantes para nuestra comunidad

Parque Memorial Santos Rodriguez

Este parque estĂĄ nombrado en honor de Santos Rodriguez, un niño chicano de 12 años quien vivĂ­a en Dallas, Tejas. Durante la mañana del 24 de Julio de 1973, dos policĂ­as arrestaron a Santos y a su hermano David de 13 años, y los tomaron en un carro detrĂĄs de una estaciĂłn de petrĂłleo para cuestionamiento sobre el robo de una mĂĄquina de refrescos.SegĂșn el testimonio, el oficial Darrel Cain le avisĂł a Santos que el revĂłlver contenĂ­a solo un cartucho, girĂł el cilindro y apuntĂł a la cabeza de Santos, urgiĂ©ndolo a “decir la verdad”; hizo clic el revĂłlver pero no disparĂł. Como Santos reiteraba su inocencia, el policĂ­a otra vez apretĂł el gatillo y al instante matĂł a Santos mientras su hermano lo miraba.

Unos dĂ­as despuĂ©s del asesinato, miles de personas protestaron en las calles de Dallas, descargando su enojo y su frustraciĂłn. Luego una investigaciĂłn determinĂł que las huellas de la escena no correspondieron a los de Santos ni su hermano. Cain fue condenado por asesinato con mala intenciĂłn de un jurado de todas personas blancas, pero recibiĂł una sentencia de solo 5 años; y solamente sirviĂł 2 œ. La comunidad estallĂł con furia sobre la brevedad de la sentencia, pero fallĂł cada intento de tener el juicio reconsiderado.

Los trabajadores de El Centro de la Raza han llamado de nuestros niños parque Santos Rodríguez no sólo en la memoria de esta joven víctima del racismo, pero en desafío a la sociedad que le causó la muerte, y la confianza de que vamos a ganar en nuestros esfuerzos para acabar con el racismo. Utilizamos su nombre no de luto, sino para conmemorar el día en que creamos una sociedad verdaderamente democråtica, que asegure la igualdad de derechos y una vida plena y digna para todos los pueblos. Se nombró este parque Santos Rodriguez Memorial Park para recordarles a todos de la importancia de respetar, querer, cuidar y proteger a todos los niños del mundo.

Updates to the Santos Rodriquez story:
Dallas Police Chief Apologizes for a 12-Year-Old Boy’s 1973 Killing by an Officer

In Memory of Santos Rodriquez: Almost 50 years after his murder . . .


King County launches Child Care Financial Assistance (CCFA)


August Noticias and Articles Relevant to Our Community

Santos Rodriguez Memorial Park

This park is named in honor of Santos Rodriguez, a 12-year old Chicano boy who lived in Dallas, Texas. On July 24, 1973, Santos and his 13-year old brother David were taken in a squad car behind a gas station to question a burglarized soda machine. According to testimony, Officer Darrel Cain warned that his gun contained only one cartridge, spun the cylinder, and pointed it at the back of Santos’s head, urging him to “tell the truth.” Santos maintained his innocence; the gun clicked once and did not fire. After Santos reiterated his innocence, Cain again pulled the trigger, and this time Santos was killed instantly, as his brother looked on.

Thousands of protesters marched through downtown Dallas just days after the shooting, venting their anger and frustration. An investigation later determined that the fingerprints at the scene of the burglary did not match those of Santos or his brother. Cain was tried and convicted of murder with malice by an all-white jury, but he was sentenced to a mere 5 years in prison for this heinous crime; he only served 2 œ. Outrage over the brevity of his sentence erupted from the community, but all attempts to have the case reviewed failed.

The workers of El Centro de la Raza have named our children’s park Santos Rodriguez not only in memory of this young victim of racism, but in defiance of the society that caused his death, and confident that we will win in our efforts to do away with racism. We use his name, not in mourning but to commemorate the day when we create a society that is truly democratic, that assures equal rights and a dignified, fulfilling life for all peoples. This park was named Santos Rodriguez Memorial Park to remind us all of the importance of respecting, loving, caring for, and protecting all of the world’s children.

Updates to the Santos Rodriquez story:
Dallas Police Chief Apologizes for a 12-Year-Old Boy’s 1973 Killing by an Officer

In Memory of Santos Rodriquez: Almost 50 years after his murder . . .


Please participate in this survey from our friends at ArtsFund

ArtsFund: Covid Cultural Impact Study (CCIS) – Public Participation Survey

Please help support ArtsFund by taking their short Public Participation Survey – responses you share will provide important information to plan for reopening, guide future operations, and inform future investment.

ArtsFund is an organization with a history of providing timely and quality data to the sector to better advocate conversations in the public and private sectors. The data collected will become a baseline for future conversations about the impact of COVID-19. Your participation will help to ensure that the data being collected is robust, meaningful, and relevant. You all know that our sector has permanently changed. This study attempts to capture some of that change and serve as a starting point for conversations about how to operate in the future.   Thank you in advance for completing this survey and sharing it with your friends.

The result will help to a stronger foundation for important conversations we will be having for years to come. Thank you for being a voice for the sector and thank you for supporting the mission of ArtsFund.  


King County launches Child Care Financial Assistance (CCFA)


Updated vendor schedule for Plaza Roberto Maestas!


Free Tax Preparation & Expanded Child Tax Credit Information at El Centro de la Raza – Every Tuesday from 2-8 PM in our Centilia Cultural Center until September 28th

Articles of Interest

UnidosUS President and CEO: For Equitable Recovery, Dual Infrastructure Packages Must Move Forward Together

July Noticias and Articles Relevant to Our Community

A speech on Child Tax Credits by our José Martí Child Development Center Director Hilda Magana

Good Morning, my name is Hilda Magaña. I am the program Director for the José Martí Child Development Center at El Centro de la Raza.

We are here today to spread the good news about this important benefit for our Children and Families. The American Resource Plan Expands the Child Tax Credit to Provide Support to more families during the 2021 Tax year. Families could get up to Three-thousand Six Hundred dollars per child under six years old and three-thousand dollars for Children up to 17 years of age.

This benefit will reach about thirty-nine million households by making the credit fully refundable. Nearly 90% of all the American children will now benefit from the Child Care Tax Credit.

Our champion representative Suzan DelBene was working hard to make the Child Care Tax Credit a reality. She is fighting to make this expansion permanent. This long-term goal is estimated to cut childhood poverty in half. El Centro de la Raza since our founding has always been committed to helping our families and children fight poverty.

Representative DelBene, El Centro de la Raza is committed to Support the financial benefits to our families and children. We support families with tax prep support in conjunction with the United Way of King County every Tuesday this summer here at El Centro de la Raza.

Our families who will not want to receive the 2021 child tax credit in advance can opt out through the IRS.

The IRS created two websites to allow non-filers to sign up and receive the monthly payments. Including the households that did not file in 2020-2019.

Thank you so much.


A note from our Tobacco & Marijuana Prevention & Cessation Program for NATIONAL PARENTS’ DAY – July 25, 2021

DÍA NACIONAL DE LOS PADRES – 25 de julio de 2021 | Nacional hoy , se celebra para apreciar a los padres, reconocer su trabajo en equipo en la crianza de los hijos, y simplemente bañarlos de amor y afecto. Recuerda que incluso si la persona o las personas que te criaron con amor no estĂĄn biolĂłgicamente relacionadas contigo, han estado allĂ­ durante los buenos y malos momentos. ÂĄHonrĂ©moslos a todos!

Muchos jĂłvenes y adultos jĂłvenes en nuestra comunidad LatinX estĂĄn en medio de una epidemia de tabaco y vapeo. A nivel nacional, el consumo de tabaco sigue siendo la principal causa prevenible de enfermedad y muerte. ÂĄNuestros hijos son un reflejo de nosotros! Todas nuestras peculiaridades y manierismos son reflejados por nuestros hijos; promovamos una generaciĂłn libre de humo/vapeo. Obtenga ayuda para dejar de fumar :: Washington State Department of Health

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NATIONAL PARENTS’ DAY – July 25, 2021 | National Today, is celebrated to appreciate parents, recognize their teamwork in raising children, and just shower them with love and affection. Remember that even if the person or people who raised you with love aren’t biologically-related to you, they have been there during good times and bad. Let us honor them all!

Many youth and young adults in our LatinX community are in the midst of a tobacco and vaping epidemic. Nationally, tobacco use remains the leading preventable cause of disease and death. Our children are a reflection of us! All our quirks and mannerisms are mirrored by our children; let’s promote a smoke/vape-free generation. Getting Help to Quit Tobacco :: Washington State Department of Health

MJ Resources available at/Recursos de MJ disponibles en:: Marijuana Use Prevention – El Centro de la Raza

Tobacco Resources available at/ Recursos para el tabaco disponibles en: Tobacco/Vape/E-cig Use Prevention & Education – El Centro de la Raza

For more information, please contact us at/ Para obtener más información, póngase en contacto con nosotros: Tobacco & Marijuana Prevention Contacts – El Centro de la Raza.

¥Hablamos español!

​Heidi LĂłpez at (206) 973-4404 or hlopez@elcentrodelaraza.org.

Ileana Garakani at (206) 957-4601 or igarakani@elcentrodelaraza.org.


Updated vendor schedule for la Plaza Roberto Maestas!


Articles of Interest

DACA recipients, families and advocates will push for permanent immigration status

Is It Time for Free Transit?

Proclamation by the Governor Amending and Extending Emergency Proclamations: Ratepayer Assistance and Preservation of Essential Services

OPINION: ‘Best Start for Kids’ Provides Vital Educational Support

An estimated 2,600 Latinos were killed by police or in custody in the past six years, preliminary report says

COVID-19/Coronavirus Impact Rent Assistance: Burien


Free Tax Support at El Centro de la Raza & Info on the Earned Income Tax Credit

South King County Health Fair

June Noticias and Articles Relevant to Our Community

Updated vendor schedule for la Plaza Roberto Maestas!


ECDLR’s Tobacco & Marijuana Prevention & Cessation Program

As our current legislative session ends, El Centro de la Raza’s Tobacco & Marijuana prevention & cessation program would like to thank everyone in WA for their dedicated, hard work in fighting for tobacco laws that need to be changed. Our prevention efforts focus on educating our youth, young adults and members of our LatinX community about the health effects associated with the use of tobacco, vape and e-cigarettes. We continue to promote the prevention of nicotine dependence and provide the educational resources to do so successfully. Our hope is that our work will empower and encourage individuals in our Latino/LatinX communities to stop smoking/vaping by offering services/cessation tools that may be beneficial in helping them quit successfully.

One of our strongest collaboration efforts has been reflected in our teamwork with the Tobacco, Marijuana, and Other Drugs Coalition. We worked together in addressing our support to several bills that we believe will help make a change in our fight for a smoke & vape free WA. We testified via zoom during live hearings as well as provided written testimony supporting the following bills, which affect Vape and PUP bills:

  • HB 1345 – 2021-22: Concerning the regulation of products sold to adults age 21 and over
  • HB 1550 – 2021-22: Concerning methods to prevent nicotine addiction
  • SB 5129 – 2021-22: Concerning the possession of vapor, vapor products, tobacco, and tobacco products by minors.

We were happy to have learned that on April 29, 2021, the FDA announced a federal action to end the sale of menthol cigarettes and flavored cigars from gaining new generations of smokers. We have recently learned that US Rep. Marilyn Strickland (WA-10) is also in support of this federal ban on menthol.

We as Washingtonians can do our part in having our voice heard that we want this change too! We want to give a HUGE Thank you to everyone in WA fighting to make this possible. We plan to continue to spread our message for tobacco cessation within our LatinX community via virtual/interactive means; COVID-19 will not stop us!

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Aunque la Ășltima sesiĂłn legislativa acaba de terminar, el programa de prevenciĂłn y cesaciĂłn de tabaco y marihuana de El Centro de la Raza desea agradecer a todos en Wa por su dedicado y arduo trabajo en la lucha por las leyes del tabaco que necesitan ser cambiadas. Nuestros esfuerzos de prevenciĂłn se centran en educar a nuestros jĂłvenes, adultos jĂłvenes y miembros de nuestra comunidad latina sobre los efectos en la salud asociados con el uso de tabaco, vapeo y cigarrillos electrĂłnicos. Continuamos nuestro trabajo en prevenciĂłn contra la dependencia de nicotina y proporcionando los recursos educativos necesarios para hacerlo con Ă©xito. Nuestra esperanza es que nuestro trabajo empoderarĂĄ y alentarĂĄ a las personas de nuestras comunidades latinas/latinasX a dejar de fumar/vapear ofreciendo servicios/herramientas de cese que pueden ser beneficiosas para ayudarlos a dejar de fumar con Ă©xito.

Uno de nuestros esfuerzos de colaboración mås fuertes se ha reflejado en nuestro trabajo en equipo con la Coalición Tobacco, Marijuana, and Other Drugs. Trabajamos juntos para abordar nuestro apoyo a varios proyectos de ley que creemos que ayudarån a hacer un cambio en nuestra lucha por un WA libre de humo y vapeo. Testificamos a través de zoom durante las audiencias en vivo, así como proporcionamos testimonios escritos que respaldan los siguientes proyectos de ley, que afectan las facturas de Vapeo y PUP (Posesión, Uso, Compra):

  • HB 1345 – 2021-22: Relativo a la regulaciĂłn de los productos vendidos a adultos mayores de 21 años
  • HB 1550 – 2021-22: Relativo a los mĂ©todos para prevenir la adicciĂłn a la nicotina
  • SB 5129 – 2021-22: Relativo a la posesiĂłn de vapor, productos de vapor, tabaco y productos de tabaco por menores de edad.

Nos alegró saber que el 29 de abril de 2021, la FDA anunció una acción federal para poner fin a la venta de cigarrillos mentolados y cigarros aromatizados de ganar nuevas generaciones de fumadores. Recientemente nos hemos enterado de que la representante estadounidense Marilyn Strickland (WA-10) también apoya esta prohibición federal del mentol.

¥Nosotros como washingtonianos podemos hacer nuestra parte para que nuestra voz sea escuchada que también queremos este cambio! Queremos dar un enorme agradecimiento a todos en WA luchando para hacer esto posible. Planeamos continuar difundiendo nuestro mensaje para el cese del tabaco dentro de nuestra comunidad Latina a través de medios virtuales/interactivos; COVID-19 no nos detendrå!


ITIN Assistance


Opportunities in our Community


Articles of Interest

We can’t wait: Essential workers need a path to citizenship

Biden’s Plan for Jobs, Investments, and Fairer Taxes: Fact Sheet

Beacon Hill Resident Gene Moy Celebrated as One of the Oldest Living World War Two Vets

FDA Commits to Evidence-Based Actions Aimed at Saving Lives and Preventing Future Generations of Smokers

Utility Bill Assistance Available Now

May Noticias and Articles Relevant to Our Community

Updated vendor schedule for la Plaza Roberto Maestas!


Nominate or self-nominate community members for El Centro de la Raza’s Felipe Maestas Legacy Award. 

Each year at our Building the Beloved Community Gala, we celebrate two individuals in the community who exemplify Building the Beloved spirit through multi-racial unity and work to eliminate poverty, racism, and social inequity, with a Felipe Maestas Legacy Award. We will celebrate our 2021 awardees with a humble $1,000 gift in their name to an organization of their choice and recognize each awardee at our 2021 Building the Beloved Gala on October 2nd. 

Meet our past nominees here

Nominate a community member or self-nominate by May 31st, 2021, here


Info on Child Tax Credits for families with children who files their taxes by May 17th!


Articles of Interest

Biden & Treasury Secretary Yellen; Latinos will Help with COVID Recovery

Gov. Inslee Signs Washington’s New Capital Gains Tax

How Native Communities on the Front Line of Climate Change Are Feeling the Heat

Cap-and-Trade Law, Is On It’s Way to Gov. Inslee’s Desk

Latino groups calling for federal investigation of Adam Toledo killing: report

What WA can learn from Native communities’ vaccination plan


Upcoming Events in our Community

April Noticias and Articles Relevant to Our Community

Vendor Food Schedule

Nominate or self-nominate community members for El Centro de la Raza’s Felipe Maestas Legacy Award. 

Each year at our Building the Beloved Community Gala, we celebrate two individuals in the community who exemplify Building the Beloved spirit through multi-racial unity and work to eliminate poverty, racism, and social inequity, with a Felipe Maestas Legacy Award. We will celebrate our 2021 awardees with a humble $1,000 gift in their name to an organization of their choice and recognize each awardee at our 2021 Building the Beloved Gala on October 2nd. 

Meet our past nominees here

Nominate a community member or self-nominate by May 31st, 2021, here


May Day Fest streaming on May 1st at 6p

Register for the event, here.


Upcoming Events in the Community

Nia Tero & SIFF’s cINeDIGENOUS showcase

Nia Tero and Seattle International Film Festival’s cINeDIGENOUS showcase

This program focuses on global Indigenous filmmakers sharing Indigenous stories and culture. Centering Indigenous art and artists amplifies voices and perspectives that are essential to our global well-being. cINeDIGENOUS is curated and presented in partnership with Nia Tero.

Articles of Interest

Biden & Treasury Secretary Yellen; Latinos will Help with COVID Recovery

An Overview perspective of the U.S / Mexico Border

White House Releases State-by-State Fact Sheets to Highlight Nationwide Need for the American Jobs Plan

Pew: 5% of 2019 US Black Population Identifies as Afro-Latino

Study indicates the Jan. 6 riots were motivated by racism and white resentment, not ‘election theft’

CDC Director Says Racism Is ‘serious public health threat’

Who Are The Insurrectionists and Where Did They Come From?

On Tuesday, March 30th Washington State Senate Voted to Ban For-Profit Prisons

What WA can learn from Native communities’ vaccination plan

March Noticias and Articles Relevant to Our Community

Latino Legislative Day

“Allow yourself to ask your community for help” – Nina Martinez Board Chair of Latino Civic Alliance.
on March 16th, LCA hosted the annual Latino Legislative Day. The program featured experts on COVID-19 and the Latino community, advocates for safer policing in crisis, and folks working towards reopening schools safely. We look forward to continuing to participate in this day and advocating for our Latino community. Latinos have been disproportionately affected by COVID-19 and are disproportionately forgotten when it comes to the vaccine. We appreciate points of view from our diverse Latino community advocating for the safety and support of our community.

Articles of Interest

Union leader Pedro Espinoza named to Housing Finance Commission

The ‘Crisis’ at the Border Won’t End Until We Admit We Need Immigrants at Least as Much as They Need Us (OPINION)

TRABAJEMOS JUNTOS PARA VENCER AL COVID-19(VIDEO) 

Free Multilingual Tech Support

Seattle NAACP among dozens of groups now supporting full ban on credit scoring in insurance

Important Statements from AAPI Community Orgs in Seattle

National CAPACD is Devastated by Loss of Lives in Atlanta Shootings

Love to all Massage Parlor Workers & Those Harmed by White Supremacist Violence – API Chaya

ACRS Mourns Georgia Shooting Victims, Calls for Solutions to Root Causes of Anti-Asian Violence

Youth Job Readiness Training

Over these past several months, Washington State was one of the epicenters of the Coronavirus pandemic in the USA, resulting in the closure of all public and private schools.

The Youth Job Readiness Training (YJRT) team equipped our participants with tools and resources to continue their schoolwork and involvement in the YJRT program. We have stayed connected with participants throughout these past several months by helping to provide each of them with a laptop and helping them apply to Comcast’s Internet Essentials program to get in-home internet. So far, we have completed the application for ten families, of which six families were approved to receive internet services.

We held regular virtual sessions with our YJRT participants over Zoom to cover concepts, such as the voting process, immigration and voting, community education, and crafting their resumes for the internships they have now secured. Internship sites include: the Port of Seattle, Consulate of Guatemala, Sunrise, Global Visionaries, and El Centro de la Raza.

The YJRT program is not only providing these virtual training sessions to the students but also addressing their essential needs. YJRT families have voiced their concerns about eviction. To prevent evictions, we have been helping them complete rental assistance applications. To help mitigate struggling families’ crises, for instance, we are providing rental and grocery assistance and access to job opportunities. Mil gracias to our funders and individual contributors for making these emergency services possible to our community: rental assistance, a $100 Safeway gift card, the Plate Fund, Bank of America, and MAF.

While we are all experiencing chaotic and challenging circumstances because of the COVID-19 pandemic, parental participation has been nearly perfect. We focus on helping families become economically self-sufficient and providing students and parents with daily emotional support. They are grateful to have someone listen to them or to whom they can talk.

El Centro de la Raza’s Public Statement on the Murder of George Floyd

Haga clic aquí para leer en Español.

The modern-day lynching of George Floyd by Minneapolis police is a devastating tragedy. Nearly six years after Eric Garner’s death in New York, the horrifying scenes captured on video and the eerily reminiscent cries of “I can’t breathe” demonstrate an absence of meaningful change as police continue to take the lives of Black people with callous brutality.

El Centro de la Raza condemns the senseless murder of George Floyd – in the strongest possible terms – as we remember Breonna Tayor, Ahmaud Arbery, Eric Garner, Sandra Bland, 12-year-old Tamir Rice, and Philando Castile; at a local level, we remember John T. Williams, Che Taylor, Charleena Lyles, and countless others whose names never made headlines but whose lives were also cut short by anti-Black racism and police violence.

We stand in solidarity with our Black brothers and sisters in saying enough is enough; the time for change is overdue. We demand justice and accountability, not only for the perpetrator, but also for the other officers who stood by in silence. We demand better from our leaders to stop police brutality for our children, families, and communities. There is no excuse to look the other way; no excuse to be complicit; no excuse to oppress communities of color to uphold white supremacy. It falls on us collectively to organize and mobilize.

The waves of uprisings that have ignited across the country is a natural culmination of the anger and pain at the continuous racial terror and violence that police regularly perpetuate in our Black communities. Pain exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic, which has disproportionally ravaged the Black community, and a deep economic crisis is hitting those hardest who are at the bottom of the economic ladder.

At the same time, it has been deeply disturbing to witness the frequently violent responses by police toward protestors. Police have violently charged peaceful protestors, driven police vehicles through crowds, shot rubber bullets, sprayed protesters with harmful gases, and punched, kicked, beaten, arrested, and detained people for doing nothing wrong. These assaults on protesters are unacceptable violence. Our communities should be able to protest injustices in our streets without suffering from police violence and militarized responses.

El Centro de la Raza is committed to combatting institutional racism and police brutality in all its forms. Despite decades of effort through multi-racial coalitions to address police misconduct, which has yielded some successes, we are challenged to recognize that our communities are still plagued with police brutality, which was evident this past weekend.

Twelve thousand (12,000) complaints were filed after this past weekend’s demonstrations with Seattle’s Office of Police Accountability. One complaint included an officer placing his knee on the neck area of two people who had been arrested. All this despite the Seattle Police Department (SPD) being under a Federal Consent Decree.

Several weeks ago, the City of Seattle filed a motion with the court to terminate the sustainment areas under the Federal Consent Decree, stating that the Police Department had achieved full and effective compliance for two years under ten key areas. Police Accountability continues to be an area that needs to be addressed by the City.

Discipline and Use of Force are two other areas within the sustainment plan, which should clearly remain on the table for the community, especially in light of the recent and ongoing events that have transpired in Seattle since this past weekend’s protest, and as noted in the sheer number of complaints received in the last few days by the OPA.

In 2015 and 2016, the Community Police Commission submitted recommendations to the use of blast-balls during demonstrations to the Mayor and SPD. Those recommendations are still relevant and necessary. The Mayor’s Office has not fleshed out a methodology for sustaining the reforms needed, and sadly, the need for this has now become front and centered over the weekend.

We will continue to work with Black Leaders and other leaders of color to call for concrete policy proposals to address systemic targeting and violence against Black communities. These policy proposals should include de-militarization, budget reductions, and enhanced transparency, particularly around misconduct and community oversight of police functions.

More often than not, police budgets comprise a significant proportion of discretionary spending and grow steadily year on year. The scope, militarization, and intensity of law enforcement have rapidly increased. In contrast, police have been mistakenly tasked with addressing social problems within communities of color, such as education, mental health, homelessness, and drug abuse.

These dynamics have, in turn, resulted in the criminalization and over-policing of communities of color, often with destructive and deadly consequences and minimal accountability for wrongdoing. As allies, our job is to work with the Black community to demand resources that are invested in Black communities in ways that enhance public safety and enrich our communities rather than simply expand and further militarize police ranks.

The United States is not yet a place where Black lives matter as equally as they must. As we raise our collective voices to demand justice for George Floyd and his family, we do so in continued support and solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement. We will support this movement until Black people no longer have to encounter police violence and die at the hands of law enforcement; until they no longer experience higher levels of poverty, income inequality, lack of access to jobs, and when they no longer face discrimination in housing, educational segregation, and limited access to public transportation.

The complex, hard, and necessary work to undo decades of discrimination and prejudice requires unity, leadership, and action. We will continue to work with Black community leaders and other leaders of color towards creating a more inclusive, safe, and just nation, which we believe the vast majority of Americans want. We stand ready to pursue the policy changes that will begin to root out the structural racism and injustice that led to George Floyd’s tragic death and those of many others.

Ways to take action now
 Donate to the George Floyd Memorial Fund.
 Donate to the Minnesota Freedom Fund.
 Donate to Black Visions Collective.
 Donate funds or supplies to the healthcare workers aiding and protecting protestors (Northstar Health Collective Medics).
 Support the activists working on the frontlines in Minnesota (Reclaim the Block).
 Register to vote or update your voter registration information by visiting your state’s Secretary of State’s website (King County | Washington State).