Gay & Lesbian Fund for Colorado and Community Partners Complete Latest Push to Get Latino Residents to Apply for U.S. Citizenship.National Campaign Aims to Increase Latino Voter Turnout in 2008 Elections COLORADO SPRINGS Colorado Springs, city (1990 pop. 281,140), seat of El Paso co., central Colo., on Monument and Fountain creeks, at the foot of Pikes Peak; inc. 1886. It is a year-round resort and a booming military, technological, and commercial city. , Colo. -- The Gay & Lesbian Fund for Colorado and a group of community partners have just completed a series of five workshops intended to get Denver's Latino residents to apply for U.S. citizenship. The workshops, a component of the national Ya Es Hora ho·ra also ho·rah n. A traditional round dance of Romania and Israel. [Modern Hebrew h Ciudadania! Citizenship Drive, took place throughout the month of July in the Denver metro area This article is about the music production team. For the article about population centers, see metropolitan area. Metro Area are a Brooklyn-based dance music production team composed of Morgan Geist and Darshan Jesrani. . The local citizenship drive attracted more than 400 people. Ya Es Hora Ciudadania! ("Citizenship: It's Time!") is a year-long national campaign intended to inform, educate, and motivate eligible permanent residents in the U.S. to apply for citizenship. A major impetus behind the campaign is to increase voter turnout among Colorado's Latino residents. Of the 2,882,438 registered voters in Colorado, only 277,241 or 9.6 percent are Latinos (Source: NALEO NALEO National Association of Latino Elected Officials Educational Fund). In addition, among the estimated 100,000 legal permanent residents in the state, approximately 70,000 are Latinos. On July 30, 2007, U.S. citizenship application fees increase from $400 to $675. Timed to immediately precede these fee hikes, Denver's citizenship drive helped Latinos navigate the application process and fill out the N-400 citizenship application forms. "There are many Latinos in Colorado who have been residents for a long time - a few decades - but have never registered to vote. With growing concerns over the country's immigration reform, the recent raids, and now the citizenship fee increase, Latinos have a heightened sense of urgency about their well being. They want to make a change for their families and their communities and better their lifestyle. By becoming citizens, they will secure their right to vote and be able to take a stand," said Maria De Cambra, program coordinator for the Latina Initiative, one of the campaign's community sponsors. Organized by a collection of groups committed to promoting Latino civic participation and advocacy, the Ya Es Hora campaign was first launched in Los Angeles in January 2007. Since then, the number of citizen applications submitted in the Los Angeles region has increased by up to 149 percent. Garnering national attention for its success, the program has spawned similar campaigns throughout other regions of the country by community leaders and media outlets. The Gay & Lesbian Fund joined the Colorado campaign as a workshop sponsor and is an active participate on the Ya Es Hora steering committee. "We at the Gay & Lesbian Fund hold a firm belief that all people should be guaranteed quality of life. Having a good quality of life includes the freedom to have a voice in the decisions that impact our country, and the ability to vote is one piece of that. Latinos comprise such an important and impactful part of Colorado's population, and they need to be more fairly represented. As part of our commitment to promoting civic engagement, we are taking an active stance toward helping Latinos get U.S. citizenship so that they may exercise their right to vote," said Marcie Moore-Gantz, deputy director of the Gay & Lesbian Fund. By the campaign's end in December 2007, Ya Es Hora anticipates facilitating the naturalization naturalization, official act by which a person is made a national of a country other than his or her native one. In some countries naturalized persons do not necessarily become citizens but may merely acquire a new nationality. process for over one million legal permanent residents in the United States, and beginning a voter mobilization campaign to motivate these new citizens to vote in the 2008 presidential elections. The campaign's community strategists are a nationwide alliance of immigrant, grassroots, labor, local, statewide, and national organizations including the NALEO Educational Fund, the National Council of La Raza The National Council of La Raza (NCLR) is the largest Hispanic advocacy organization in the United States. The NCLR was founded in 1968 as a nonpartisan nonprofit organization dedicated to reducing discrimination and poverty and to improving the lives and economic opportunities of , the Service Employees International Union, and the We Are America Alliance The We Are Americe Alliance (WAAA) is a national alliance of immigrant rights organizations and allies in the United States that work towards social justice, including comprehensive immigration reform and immigrants' civic participation. . Univision, the nation's largest Spanish-language media company, is the media sponsor. Colorado community partner organizations include: The Latina Initiative, SEIU SEIU Service Employees International Union SEIU Special Education Intake Unit SEIU Secondary Education Interdisciplinary Unit SEIU Software Engineering Institute Union Local 105, the Gay & Lesbian Fund, Mi Familia This article is about the Polish political party. For other uses, see Familia (disambiguation). Familia ("The Family," from the Romain familia Vota, Colorado Immigrant Rights Coalition, Rights for all People, ACORN-Colorado, El Comite de Longmont, LARASA LARASA Latin American Research and Service Agency (Denver, CO) , FRESC FRESC Forest and Rangeland Ecosystem Science Center (USGS) , Colorado Organization for Latina Opportunity and, Reproductive Rights, Colorado Progressive Coalition, Mi Casa Resource Center, and Metro Organizations for People. About the Gay & Lesbian Fund for Colorado The Gay & Lesbian Fund for Colorado was established in 1996 as a program to financially support nonprofit organizations that enhance the quality of life in Colorado and promote equality for all people. Since its inception, the fund has awarded more than $18 million to hundreds of nonprofit organizations whose program areas include arts and culture, civic leadership, healthy families, and public broadcasting. In addition to providing financial assistance, the Gay & Lesbian Fund for Colorado offers training programs, workshops, technical assistance, and public meeting space to strengthen nonprofit organizations' ability to grow, flourish and succeed. The organization is headquartered in Colorado Springs, Colorado The City of Colorado Springs is the second most populous city (after Denver) in the state of Colorado and the 48th most populous city in the United States.[4] The city is the county seat of El Paso County. . For more information please visit www.gayandlesbianfund.org. About the Funds Every year, the Gay & Lesbian Fund for Colorado receives a financial allocation from its parent organization, the Gill Foundation, that must be donated in the form of grants to nonprofit organizations that have an IRS An abbreviation for the Internal Revenue Service, a federal agency charged with the responsibility of administering and enforcing internal revenue laws. 501(c)(3) status and adhere to a nondiscrimination policy inclusive of sexual orientation sexual orientation n. The direction of one's sexual interest toward members of the same, opposite, or both sexes, especially a direction seen to be dictated by physiologic rather than sociologic forces. . These monies, which typically amount to approximately 18 to 20 percent of the Gill Foundation's earned investments, are not used for private or political purposes, in accordance with IRS regulations. |
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