Black Lives Matter

A group of protesters marching for the Black Lives Matter movement.
This page will be updated as more information is made available.
Last Updated: June 12, 2020
 

This page was created to serve as a central place for people looking to support the movement to end violence and systemic racism towards Black people. Whether it’s donating to organizations that contribute to Black liberation, learning new strategies to become a better ally, or purchasing goods from a Black-owned business, there are many ways to make a difference.

Note: some resources are specific to Washington state.

 

Advocate from Home

26 Ways to Be in the Struggle Beyond the Streets

75 Things White People Can Do for Racial Justice

A Nervous Wreck’s Disabled Guide to Stepping Up

Allyship In Action: How Managers Can Support Black Employees Right Now

#BlackLives Matter: Support Black Disabled Activists Now and Always

Building Effective Allyship Skills is Critical: Here’s How You Can Start

Community Access (Captions, Transcripts, Image Descriptions) Facebook Group. People who need access to transcripts, captions, image or video descriptions can post a specific source and other members of the group can make the access happen.

How to Be an Activist When You’re Unable to Attend Protests

How HR Can Support Black Employees Right Now

Letters for Black Lives. Join an existing translation effort for the 2020 letter. Check out translations and recordings of the 2016 version of the letter.

@ProtestAccess on Twitter: tag this account in Black Lives Matter related audio or video recordings that need captions and/or transcripts.  

‘Standing in the gap’: One Part of Allyship That Gets Overlooked

Twitter thread: tagged list of Twitter users who are providing captions for content related to Black Lives Matter.

Twitter thread: list of ways to support protestors from home aside from donations and petitions.

We Need to Talk About How Media and Creatives Portray Black People This article includes a list of 13 action steps for the creative community, content producers, and leaders of agencies.

What Companies Can Do to Combat Systemic Racism Against Black Colleagues in the Workplace

 

 

Donate to Funds

The Bail Project‘s National Revolving Bail Fund provides free bail assistance to low-income individuals who are legally presumed innocent, and whom a judge has deemed eligible for release before trial contingent on paying bail. The Bail Project operates in jurisdictions across the county, including Spokane.

Black Lives Matter Seattle – King County Freedom Fund supports the immediate release of people protesting the murders of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and Manuel Ellis (May 2020). Any remaining funds will continue to be used for future bailout efforts as an ongoing community bail fund project.

Know Your Rights Camp‘s mission is to advance the liberation and well-being of Black and Brown communities through education, self-empowerment, mass-mobilization, and the creation of new systems that elevate the next generation of change leaders. Know Your Rights Camp also provides legal resources through its Legal Defense Initiative.

NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund fights for racial justice through litigation, advocacy, and public education.

Northwest Community Bail Fund provides cash bail for people who are unable to pay due to poverty and who are charged with crimes in King and Snohomish Counties and have no other holds. NCBF also provides support to navigate the legal process with the aim of reducing pre-trial incarceration and its consequences, reducing the pressure to plead guilty.

WA Therapy Fund is raising money for at least 100 Black people in Washington state to have access to free mental health services.⁣ Fund organizer Ashley McGirt is a Black author, speaker, and licensed mental health therapist servicing Pierce and King Counties. She is proposing that non-Black allies donate money to pay for the therapy for Black people. The WA Therapy Fund page on her website has two forms: one for therapists who are interested in taking on Black clients and one for Black folks seeking mental health services.

Where to Donate to Help Black People with Disabilities

 

 

 

Learn

The 1619 Project

Anti-Racism Resource List

Anti-Racism Resources for White People

Black Disabled Woman Syllabus

Black Lives Matter and Disability

Disability Rights in Black

Disability Visibility Project – Episode 78: Hate Crimes

Disability Visibility Project – Leroy Moore Jr. and Keith Jones Interview

Free Library of Writing from Black Activists and Scholars

Resources for Race, Equity, Anti-Racism, and Inclusion

Solitary Budget: Update and Call to Action (transcript)

Skin, Tooth, and Bone: The Basis of Movement is Our People, A Disability Justice Primer book and digital download

The State of Black Immigrants

We Can’t Breathe: The Deaf & Disabled Margin of Police Brutality Project

 

Support Businesses and Organizations

Africatown Community Land Trust advocates for community ownership of land in the Central District that can support the cultural and economic thriving of people who are part of the African diaspora in the Greater Seattle region.

Abundance of Hope provides at-risk youth with quality basic care needs, education, community resources, case management, advocacy, transitioning skills, and goal-setting meetings.

Black Dot Seattle connects Black entrepreneurs, creatives, and technologists through co-working space and workshops.

Black Girls RUN! Seattle/Tacoma is a running group that provides encouragement and resources to both new and veteran African-American women runners (including trail runners).

Black Prisoners’ Caucus promotes cultural growth and provides incarcerated men and women the tools and platform to confront social issues that perpetuate discrimination, inequality and oppression among prisoners and poor communities of color.

Campfire Coffee offers wood fire roasted whole bean coffee from Tacoma.

CD Forum empowers Black artists and builds community through art.

Clean Greens Farm & Market is a small nonprofit organization, owned and operated by residents of Seattle’s Central District. They increase access to healthy, affordable foods in three ways: through their neighborhood farm stands, their Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) program, and their Giveback Program.

Creative Justice NW builds community with youth most impacted by the school-to-prison-(to-deportation) pipeline. Youth and mentor artists attack systemic issues that contribute to oppression, while building healing-centered spaces that strengthen the protective factors that help us all to thrive.

Community Passageways is a Seattle based nonprofit founded in 2017 with a vision for zero youth incarceration. As a felony diversion and prevention program, CP is leading the way in reimagining and actively creating an alternative to today’s criminal legal system.

East African Community Services provides culturally responsive K-12th education programs that keep youth safe and help them succeed in school and life.

Epiphanies of Equity, LLC provides Diversity, Social Equity, Inclusion (DEI) consulting and Intersectional Disability justice advocacy.

Hilltop Urban Gardens is a community-based urban agriculture, justice, and equity organization in Tacoma, WA. HUG is led by and centers economically poor people and people of color in their work and leadership.

Horn of Africa Services is a nonprofit that serves the East African immigrant and refugee community in Seattle. Services include social services, educational assistance, youth programs, and economic empowerment to address the needs of the community.

Langston Hughes Performing Arts Institute celebrates, nurtures, preserves and presents African American and Diaspora performing arts, cultural wealth and iconic legacies.

Liberation Medicine School is a growing collective of AfroTGNC, AfroQueer, and AfroIntersex medicine-seekers and medicine-makers on a radical mission: to create a decolonial, indigenous-rooted, autonomous, and collective care-driven medical system that is dedicated to the healing needs of the diasporic Black LGBTQI+ community.

Loren Miller Bar Association is a Washington statewide organization and the local affiliate of the National Bar Association (NBA), which is the oldest minority bar and the largest organization of African-American attorneys in the United States.

NAACP – Washington state branches.

Northwest African American Museum‘s exhibitions and programs feature the visual arts, music, crafts, literature and history of African Americans in the Northwest.

Not This Time! was formed by Andrè Taylor after a pair of city police officers fatally shot his brother, Che, in 2016. Not This Time! serves communities impacted by systemic violence, especially police violence. The Seattle-based non-profit also successfully backed Initiative 940.

Nurturing Roots is a Black-founded community garden in south Seattle. They educate community members about eating and cultivating healthy food, providing resources to support a healthier environment for youth and families in communities of color.

Outdoor Afro Seattle celebrates and inspires Black leadership in nature. They reconnect African-Americans with natural spaces and one another through recreational activities such as camping, hiking, biking, birding, fishing, gardening, skiing — and more!

Seattle | King County – Equity Now! This campaign will be an 18-year campaign to bring the Black community in King County to true equity (i.e., homeownership, wealth, mortality rate, college admissions, organizational control, etc.) by 2038 – the 175th anniversary of the emancipation proclamation and the 75th anniversary of Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I have a dream” speech.

**Trigger Warning: the petition page linked at the bottom of the Seattle King County Equity Now donation page has an illustration of Derek Chauvin, a white police officer, kneeling on the neck of George Floyd, a Black man.

Seattle Urban League Young Professional Chapter supports emerging local leaders by providing opportunities for personal and professional development, networking, volunteering and leadership.

The Noble Foundation is a community-based, non-profit organization dedicated to ensuring marginalized communities gain the connections, knowledge, and empowerment to build a more just and equitable society.

The Postman Seattle is a mailing services and mailbox rental business in Seattle’s Central District opened by husband and wife team KeAnna and D’Vonne Pickett. D’Vonne’s great-grandfather, Jacques Chappell, worked as a United States Postal Service mail carrier in the Central District for 37 years. His family has lived in the Central District for five generations.

Sky Island Farm is a 15 acre organic vegetable, herb, fruit and flower farm in Hoquiam. They run Grays Harbor’s longest running and largest Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) program.

The Tacoma Urban League is devoted to empowering African Americans and other disenfranchised groups to enter the economic and social mainstream.

Troop 008 serves the Rainier Valley community in Seattle, WA and is an active unit in the Thunderbird District of the Chief Seattle Council, Scouts BSA.

Urban League of Metropolitan Seattle provides support, services, programming, and opportunities related to education, housing, workforce development, health, and civic engagement.

Wa Na Wari creates space for Black ownership, possibility, and belonging through art, historic preservation, and connection.

Washington Building Leaders of Change (WA-BLOC) ignites transformation and builds leaders of change through revolutionary education and social justice leadership development.

ARTICLE: “Black Lives Matter: A Guide to Resistance Events, Black-Owned Restaurants, and Other Ways to Stand Against Racism in Seattle”

DIRECTORY: Black-Owned Businesses

LIST: Black-Owned Businesses & Restaurants in Seattle

LIST: Social Justice Fund Northwest’s Black-Led Grantees

EVENT: All proceeds from June film screenings at Northwest Film Forum will benefit the Black Lives Matter Seattle Freedom Fund, Trans Women of Color Solidarity Network, and other organizations to be announced. In partnership with Three Dollar Bill Cinema and Black Cinema Collective.

 

 

Other Resources

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Rooted in Rights exists to amplify the perspectives of the disability community. Blog posts and storyteller videos that we publish and content we re-share on social media do not necessarily reflect the opinions or values of Rooted in Rights nor indicate an endorsement of a program or service by Rooted in Rights. We respect and aim to reflect the diversity of opinions and experiences of the disability community. Rooted in Rights seeks to highlight discussions, not direct them. Learn more about Rooted In Rights

Click here to pitch a blog post to Rooted in Rights.

 

COVID-19 (Coronavirus) Information, Response, and Planning for Washingtonians

Access Bus
This page will be updated as more information is made available.
Last Updated: February 17, 2021

It’s important to take steps to protect yourself from COVID-19 and prevent further spread of the virus if you do become sick. Here is a list of other recommendations for staying safe, informed, and prepared.

Know Your Legal Rights

Even in a crisis, people with disabilities have the right to live, work, learn, and access their community without discrimination.

Resources

Create a Household Plan of Action

Reach out to your service providers and circles of support to start planning. You may want to discuss a plan with family, roommates, and neighbors. If you already have a plan, review it to make sure it will still work.

Things to Consider:

  • Are you signed up for emergency warnings in your county? Do you know how to do that?
  • Do you know which phone numbers to call if you feel sick?
  • Have you identified people in the community who may provide you with support if you need it? Do you know their contact information?

Resources

Stay Informed 

Information about how communities and governments are responding to COVID-19 is being regularly updated. It can be a lot of information to take in but it’s important to stay up to date on policies like changes in transportation service or requirements to stay at home.

Resources

Funding, Mutual Aid, and Support in Washington State

General Funding, Mutual Aid, and Support

Other resources

Do you have questions about your legal rights?

Are you unable to access critical information?

Disability Rights Washington is here to help.

Please note that in order to protect the health and safety of our staff and ensure that we will be able to continue to provide high quality legal services, we will conduct meetings remotely and our office will be closed to the general public. Our phone lines will remain open during regular business hours and people in need of legal assistance should call to schedule an appointment for Technical Assistance.


Rooted in Rights exists to amplify the perspectives of the disability community. Blog posts and storyteller videos that we publish and content we re-share on social media do not necessarily reflect the opinions or values of Rooted in Rights nor indicate an endorsement of a program or service by Rooted in Rights. We respect and aim to reflect the diversity of opinions and experiences of the disability community. Rooted in Rights seeks to highlight discussions, not direct them. Learn more about Rooted In Rights

Click here to pitch a blog post to Rooted in Rights.