Call for Volunteers to Help Friends and Families of Louisiana’s
Incarcerated Children
Bring the Ruckus
September 13th 2005
In response to the Katrina crisis, Bring the Ruckus (BtR) has formed a solidarity
network with Friends and Families of Louisiana’s Incarcerated Children (FFLIC
– pronounced “flick” for short). BtR aims to help FFLIC locate its missing
leadership; regain its organizing structure; and connect displaced people
with their family member(s) who were locked up in Louisiana prisons and jails
when Katrina hit.
FFLIC is a grassroots organization comprised mostly of mothers and grandmothers
in Louisiana who have incarcerated kids. Prior to Katrina, the work of FFLIC
was focused on closing Louisiana’s juvenile prisons and mandating that the
state redirect the money toward quality community based programs for youth.
In recent years, FFLIC, in partnership with their parent organization, the
Juvenile Justice Project of Louisiana (JJPL), has helped reduce the number
of incarcerated children in Louisiana from 2,000 to less than 600, and together
they won a huge campaign not long ago which paved the way for significant
changes in the juvenile justice system, including the separation of the state’s
juvenile system from the Department of Corrections. There was a private juvenile
prison in Tallulah, Louisiana which FFLIC and JJPL first forced the state
to take over from the private owners, then successfully campaigned to have
closed altogether. Prior to Katrina, FFLIC was working with the community
of Tallulah to have this prison transformed into a learning center – essentially,
to turn a prison into a school.
Since Katrina, FFLIC organizers have taken on the huge task of trying to
connect displaced people to their family members – kids and adults – who
were locked up in Louisiana when Katrina hit. Currently, the system in Louisiana
is a mess – they still don’t know where thousands of prisoners are being
held. FFLIC organizers are homeless and staying with friends and family in
the Gulf region and Atlanta while trying to piece together their organization
and figure out what needs to be done. Families scattered across the U.S.
are desperately trying to find out where their kids and other family members
are being locked up, where everyone is, and what’s going on.
HOW TO GET INVOLVED
Starting immediately, Bring the Ruckus is recruiting volunteers to do direct
outreach to displaced people, both in the South and in their local regions
where evacuees are being sheltered; coordinating that outreach with FLICC;
and helping FFLIC build an online database of family members and people locked
up in Louisiana – who they are, where they are, etc.
Direct outreach to evacuees
At the BtR website www.agitatorindex.org, there is are downloadable PDF posters
from FFLIC providing information to displaced people on how to possibly contact
their kids and other family members who were locked up prior to Katrina.
(11 x 17 pdf poster is here, 22 x 35 pdf poster is here). If your city has
an evacuee shelter, small or large, you can help by distributing this informational
flyer, so at least people will have phone numbers to call. Optimally, this
involves getting into shelters (this could be difficult) and asking evacuees
personally if they have family members in prison in Louisiana. Volunteers
should also be ready to take down information for FFLIC – evacuees’ names,
address and phone # in Louisiana, address and phone # now (as much as is
known), any other contact info, how long they expect to be there; as well
as name of family member in prison, where and when family member was locked
up before Katrina, if they’ve heard anything yet. In short, FFLIC needs as
much information as possible.
At the very least, try to get the shelter to post a flyer where folks can
see it. FFLIC hopes to have a poster available soon, too.
If you are able to do direct outreach to evacuees, either in your local area
or by traveling to the South, please contact BtR at katrinacrisis@agitatorindex.org.
For the time being, Bring the Ruckus is working with others to coordinate
volunteers and is acting as a liaison to FFLIC because its organizers are
swamped with work and emails.
Please report to katrinacrisis@agitatorindex.org:
Progress on flyer distribution to evacuees
Difficulties encountered at evacuee shelters
Any and all information on prisoners and displaced family members
Bring the Ruckus will compile and forward all information to FFLIC.
Financial support
Bring the Ruckus has established a Solidarity Fund to cover travel expenses
for people going to evacuee centers where FFLIC needs personnel and to offer
general financial support of FFLIC. FFLIC is also working to create a list
of needed resources and supplies; BtR will post this information as soon
as we
have it.
To donate to BtR’s Solidarity Fund, please make a check payable to Bring
the Ruckus (note Solidarity Fund on memo line) and mail it to Bring the Ruckus-Hurricane
Relief, PO Box 2252, Amherst, MA 01004. It would be helpful to let us know
by email that a donation is en route: katrinacrisis@agitatorindex.org.
Donations made to BtR’s Solidarity Fund are not tax-deductible. If you prefer
to make a tax-deductible contribution, you can donate to FFLIC directly.
Make check payable to JJPL, write “FFLIC Hurricane Relief Fund” in the memo
field, and send to 920 Platt Street, Sulphur, Louisiana, 70663.
Questions?
Please email questions, as well as any information regarding Louisiana’s
displaced prisoners and their families, to katrinacrisis@agitatorindex.org
For more information about Bring the Ruckus,
a revolutionary organization of organizers, committed to an anti-statist,
revolutionary feminist, and anti-capitalist vision of a new society, check
out their website at http://www.agitatorindex.org/