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NYRA Freedom
ISSN 1933-5229
Scott Davidson and Adam King
Volume 6, Issue 7
July 14, 2006
Contents:
Introduction
Election Started, Be Sure to Vote
Bylaw Proposals and Amendments
Teen Driving Story in USA Today Quotes NYRA
New Poll Shows Youth Support for Lowering the Voting Age
NYRAthon2006 is Over, Winners Announced
Secretary Appears on “Hardfire”
Berkeley City Council Tabled Efforts by Youth Commission
Treasurer Introduces ‘Spell NYRA’ Fundraiser
Introducing a Revamped “NYRA Freedom”
Staff Requests
Upcoming Events
News from the Web
Conclusion
Introduction
By Scott Davidson
A lot of interesting things have happened since the last issue, and a
lot of interesting things are likely to occur this summer. With the
election underway, NYRA members are asking candidates questions about
the issues and deciding who is most qualified to lead NYRA. The
organization maintains a significant presence in the media, and the
Berkeley chapter continues its struggle against ageism. While our
annual fundraiser could have gone better, I am confident that if
everyone does their part, we will raise more money during the next term
than we did over the term that is now ending.
Election Started, Be Sure to Vote
By Adam King
The 2006 board election started on July 5 and will last until August
5. Eleven NYRA members are running, the full list: Jessica Campbell,
Scott Davidson (incumbent), Zach Hobesh, Alex Hull-Richter, Rich Jahn,
Adam King, Alex Koroknay-Palicz (incumbent), Keith Mandell
(incumbent), Katrina Moncure (incumbent), Chip Sinton, and Pamela
Tatz (incumbent). All candidates have answered a questionnaire about
issues facing the organization and have submitted a bio statement to
provide more information to voters. Check that out and more at our
election page: http://www.youthrights.org/election.shtml
At the end of the election, on August 5, the annual meeting will be
held in Berkeley, Cali., where leaders and members of the organization
will meet to discuss the past year’s events and the results from the
election. All members and supporters are invited and encouraged to
attend. If you are able to attend the annual meeting, please Register
Online. Space is still available if you want free housing, but time is
running out! Register here: http://berkeley.youthrights.org/
In addition to electing NYRA's new board of directors for the next
year, members will vote to approve a new policy regarding NYRA's local
and state chapters. To vote in the election, you must be a paid
member of the organization. The membership fee is only $10, and it
must be renewed every year. Be sure to pay your dues so you can vote:
http://www.youthrights.org/donate.shtml
Bylaw Proposals and Amendments
By Scott Davidson
Each year, during NYRA’s annual election, members vote to elect the next
board of directors, as well as whether to approve or reject amendments
to the bylaws proposed by the previous board of directors. This year,
there are several such proposed bylaw amendments.
Most importantly, the board is asking that the membership vote for
NYRA’s chapter policy. These new bylaws deal with the relationship
between NYRA chapters and the national office. Before they were
approved by the board, NYRA had no official policy articulating the role
of chapters. The policy, which has been split in to a number of
separate ballot items, sets forth requirements that must be met before a
chapter can be formed, and lists reasons that chapter status may be
revoked. It also defines chapters as entities legally separate from the
national office, and lists conditions under which new state wide
chapters can be formed.
The other proposed bylaw amendments include a stricter attendance policy
for directors and non-director officers and a higher quorum for board
meetings. There are no new position papers this year. All of the
ballot items were approved by the board unanimously or nearly unanimously.
New Poll Shows Youth Support for Lowering the Voting Age
By Alex Koroknay-Palicz
A group called Do Something has conducted a poll that went out and
asked teens what they thought of the voting age. The results: "When
results for a lower voting age are combined, there is a clear majority
of young people who believe that the voting age should be lowered to
at least 17. If the voting age were going to be lowered to either 16
or 17, young people would prefer 16."
The survey also found that between 54% and 61% would sign a petition
to lower the voting age. An interesting result of the poll found that
a full 76% percent of youth think that they are responsible to vote,
yet only 25-35% think others their age are responsible to vote.
The Do Something analysis is right on the mark: "It is clear that
young people have a greatly diminished opinion (compared to a
self-opinion) about their demographic as a whole. There is no
definitive explanation for this disparity. It is possible that when
teens think of their contemporaries they only envision the
predominantly negative portraits published by sensational media." Read
the poll here:
http://www.youthrights.org/docs/LoweringVotingAge_PollAnalysis.pdf
Teen Driving Story in USA Today Quotes NYRA
By Scott Davidson
USA Today, which is among the country’s most widely circulated
publications, recently quoted NYRA’s Executive Director in an article on
teen driving. Specifically, the article dealt with a report put out by
the National Highway Safety Administration, which presented a biased,
anti-youth interpretation of driving fatality statistics aimed at
convincing states to make seventeen the age at which young people can
have full driving “privileges.”
The study never looked at whether or not teen driving restrictions shift
fatalities to the next demographic, which was among the findings of a
study conducted by Dr. Mike Males at UC-Santa Cruz. The NHSA study
merely points out the obvious, that if you keep people from driving they
will be involved in fewer accidents. The study takes that fact and
frames it as an argument for limiting the rights of young people. As
NYRA Executive Director Alex Koroknay-Palicz said, “Our society is
dependent on cars, to have driving stripped away from young people is
discriminating.”
This is the second time NYRA has appeared in a USA Today related to
youth driving. This quote will expose many thousands of people to our
perspective. The full article is available at
http://www.youthrights.org/forums/article.php?threadid=8063.
NYRAthon2006 is Over, Winners Announced
By Scott Davidson
The results from the annual NYRAthon for 2006 are in. The first place
winner of the individual competition was Adam King, who donated $380.
The second place winner was Keith Mandell, who donated $370, and the
third place winner was Frederick Mutooni, who donated $300. King will
receive $100 in award money; Mandell, $50; and Mutooni, $25.
The winner of the chapter competition was the NYRA-DC chapter which
donated a total of $310. The DC chapter will receive $100 worth of NYRA
merchandise, such as buttons, T-shirts, and flyers.
The total amount raised in the competition was $2,499.60.
The amount raised did not exceed the amount raised in last year’s
fundraiser, but it was not off by very far. Every bit of that money
will help NYRA remain the prominent youth rights organization that it is.
Secretary Appears on "Hardfire"
By Adam King
NYRA’s Secretary Scott Davidson was invited to appear on “Hardfire,” a
Libertarian talk show broadcast in Brooklyn, New York. “Hardfire” is
hosted by Joseph Dobrian, the Chair of the Manhattan Libertarian Party,
and produced by Gary Popkin, the Libertarian candidate for Brooklyn
Borough President. Davidson had initially been scheduled to debate the
minimum legal drinking age with Charles Barron of The New York City
Council, but Barron cancelled the day of the taping.
The people at “Hardfire” arranged for Abu Abu, a former School Board
Chairman, to discuss ageism and youth rights with Davidson. Abu,
Davidson, and Dobrian talked about issues like the democratization of
education, youth rights within the family, and the voting age for half
an hour. Abu agreed with NYRA on the minimum legal drinking age, but
took ageist positions on almost every other issue. At one point, Abu
went so far as to praise corporal punishment as an effective educational
tool. While Davidson feels that he made a few regrettable errors, most
agree that the taping went well.
The discussion was not limited to one issue, and the three had a chance
to explore some areas that NYRA does not often get to address in the
media. Much of the discussion was very broad and theoretical, and thus
not limited to any specific piece of legislation, or a specific
manifestation of ageism that happens to be getting main stream media
attention.
The appearance can be viewed at
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=4629022687862103627.
Berkeley City Council Tabled Efforts by Youth Commission
By Adam King
On June 20, several members from NYRA-Berkeley and the Berkeley Youth
Commission attended a city council meeting concerning a proposal
passed by the youth commission. The proposal sought to add a survey
on the ballot for the November 2006 election that would poll the
registered voters if they support lowering the voting age to seventeen
in school board elections in the city.
The resolution from the youth commission detailed projected expenses,
the background and support for the idea. The complete document can be
found here:
http://www.ci.berkeley.ca.us/citycouncil/2006citycouncil/packet/061306/2006-06-13%20Item%2034a%20YOUTH%20Lowering%20Voting%20Age.pdf
However, Phil Kamlarz, the city manager, issued a report suggesting that
no action be taken at this time. In his report, he said that city
charters cannot lower the voting age for any election in the state
because the voting age is specified in the California state
constitution. “In any event, in the absence of a constitutional
amendment to authorize a City Charter to provide for a lowered voting
age for a local school board election,” he wrote in his report, “a
survey of local Berkeley voter opinion on this subject would be
pointless.” His complete report can be found here:
http://www.ci.berkeley.ca.us/citycouncil/2006citycouncil/packet/061306/2006-06-13%20Item%2034b%20YOUTH-CM%20Lowering%20Voting%20Age.pdf.
About five hours into the meeting, the agenda item was tabled 4-4.
Treasurer Introduces "Spell NYRA" Fundraiser
By Adam King
NYRA's Treasurer Katrina Moncure has a new fundraising idea. She made
a big grid that spells out "NYRA" in a multitude of 50 by
10 pixel spaces. Each space is only $25, and it will make up a small
part of the large NYRA picture. Moncure wants everyone to spread the
word by promoting it on their own websites and on other forums that they
visit. All money from this project goes to NYRA. The more competitive
this becomes, the faster the spaces will fill up, and thus, the more
money NYRA receives. For more information, go to www.spellnyra.org. This
is a great way to promote your own website and help NYRA at the same time.
Introducing a Revamped "NYRA Freedom"
By Adam King
I would like to introduce you to some new features of our organization's
monthly publication, "NYRA Freedom."
--To give the publication a more respectable look, a masthead has been
developed. The masthead is a graphic displaying the publication title,
the organization's address and logo, and the contact information for
Scott and I.
--To make the publication look more professional, an ISSN (International
Standard Serial Number) has been applied for from the United States
Library of Congress. Other organizations' newsletters and publications
have an ISSN, and there is no reason for the Library to deny us one.
There is no charge to apply for a number, and it will make future
cataloging of the publication easier. The status of the number should be
known by August.
--The publication's history has been compiled from the Youth Rights
Network, and it has been expanded and updated.
--All of the past issues of the publication - at one time sent out over
Yahoo - have been converted to HTML for easy reading on NYRA's website.
We no longer have to depend on an outside source to host our
publication, and since we no longer use the Yahoo groups, we could have
lost those issues if they hadn't been stored on our website.
All of this and more can be found on NYRA's website at
http://www.youthrights.org/nyrafreedom.
Scott and I are still looking for people to contribute writing or letters to the editors, so feel free to contact us.
Staff Requests
By Adam King
NYRA is seeking to hire regional captains for chapter formation in the
Central region. If you are interested, fill out an
application here: http://www.youthrights.org/chapterformation.php or
contact Adam King
Upcoming Events
July 5, 2006 - August 5, 2006 - Annual Board Election
July 18, 2006, 8:00 p.m. EST - NYRA Chat in the AIM chatroom, “NYRA”
August 5, 2006 - Annual Meeting in Berkeley, California
News from the Web
Teen Fights for Right to Pick Cancer Treatment
http://youthrights.org/forums/article.php?threadid=8136
17-year-olds now can vote in major political contests
http://www.youthrights.org/forums/article.php?threadid=7859
MySpace Sued After Alleged Sexual Assault
http://www.youthrights.org/forums/article.php?threadid=7959
Kicked Out of Graduation for Wave
http://www.youthrights.org/forums/article.php?threadid=7869
MySpace plans new restrictions for youths
http://www.youthrights.org/forums/article.php?threadid=7966
Students regularly wronged on rights
http://www.youthrights.org/forums/article.php?threadid=7955
A Ring Tone Meant to Fall on Deaf Ears
http://www.youthrights.org/forums/article.php?threadid=7907
Cell phone bill would hang up on N.C.'s teenage drivers
http://www.youthrights.org/forums/article.php?threadid=7885
Restrictions cut teen driving deaths
http://www.youthrights.org/forums/article.php?threadid=8063
Conclusion
By Adam King
It’s hard for me to believe, but the year is almost over once again.
It’s that time again for the election and for the new board members to
replace the old. Time seems to fly by so fast. It seems like it was
only yesterday when I started writing for the “Freedom,” but in reality,
this is my seventh issue. It seems like it was only a couple of weeks
ago when I joined NYRA. Now, before the Latin phrase (and my name on
the forums (“Tempus Fugit”)) can continue to hold true, it is time for
all of us to step up to the plate. There are quite a few of us, myself
included, who cannot vote in political elections in the fall of every
year, but there is one thing we all can do - and that is voting in the
NYRA board elections every August. There is certainly no age
requirement to vote, and in fact, the only thing necessary is a $10
annual membership fee. As a supporter or member of this organization,
it is your duty to vote. Exercise your right. Be sure to vote sometime
between now and August 5 - If you don’t vote, you are giving up a lot.
------NYRA------
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