Teachers march in support of the community control board during the Ocean HillBrownsville teacher dispute, October 1, 1968. (Louis Liotta / New York Post Archives / NYP Holdings, Inc., via Getty Images)
Subscribe now for as little as $2 a month!
In late May, as the national uprising against police brutality forced on America a crash course in defunding and abolishing the police, another concept also began circulating: community control.Ad Policy
This likely drew a few blank stares, and not without reason: Community control sounds utopian, even in a federalist country like ours that leaves great autonomy to the states. But its not a new idea, and its not only relevant to our current crisis of a law enforcement regime unaccountable to the people it polices. Community control proposes that the institutions people depend upon should be controlled by community members working in cooperation, not private individuals, corporate shareholders, or government bureaucrats.
Weve known for decades that the things that our communities really need to be healthy and safe not only arent being invested in, but are actually being starved of resources, said Monifa Bandele of the Movement for Black Lives Policy Table. Thats why the Movement for Black Lives has made community control a key plank in its Vision for Black Lives platform, demanding community control of the laws, institutions, and policies that are meant to serve usfrom our schools to our local budgets, economies, police departments, and our land.
To begin building community control in the 21st century, activists can look to experiments dating back centuries that have attempted to address systemic inequality and build Black power across different areas of American life, including land, work, education, and law enforcement. Successive Black freedom movements have advocated or enacted versions of community control, from the Abolitionists through the civil rights era, the New Left and the Black Power movement.
Examining key experiments in community control from the not-so-distant pastone that attempted to build power outside existing institutions, and one that aimed squarely at the structures standing in the way of Black empowermentreveals both its potential as a tool for abolishing systemic racism and the challenges the model faces for enacting transformative change. These reflect the larger question that motivated the earlier experiments: How to end systemic racism when it is baked into every crumb of American life?
The idea, if not the reality, of direct, democratic control over the institutions that shape our lives was present at our countrys founding. Despite the varied inspirations for community control in the United StatesBritish socialism, utopian communes, intentional communitiesthe most important of these is the history of black organized communities of the nineteenth century, political scientist James DeFilippis writes in Unmaking Goliath: Community Control in the Face of Global Capital. These trailblazing efforts emerged at a time of great discrimination and oppression in order to pool the limited resources of individuals toward collective aims: surviving slavery, racial violence, discrimination, and poverty, as the political economist Jessica Gordon Nembhard describes in Collective Courage: A History of African American Cooperative Economic Thought and Practice.
Until the end of the Civil War, Black fugitive slaves ran communes where they educated themselves, made a living, managed communal farms, and organized abolitionist resistance along the Underground Railroad. Black urban communities collected dues from members to establish their own schools, health benefits, and social welfare. Turning inward and working together, these organizations were born of necessity, and similar mutual aid efforts have also emerged in other communities neglected and targeted by racist society, such as Chinese and Mexican immigrants in the 19th and 20th century.Current Issue
Subscribe today and Save up to $129.
The early Black cooperative organizations became a springboard for cooperative businesses and trade unions, as W.E.B. Du Bois observed in 1907. He argued that maintaining economic self-sufficiency through collective ownership and control was essential for Black peopleand all Americansto achieve racial equality in a society defined by white supremacy, and a fundamentally unequal economic system. Cooperation would weld the majority of our people into an impregnable, economic phalanx, he wrote in 1933.
But by the 1960s, it was obvious that America still wasnt meeting the basic needs of Black Americans. In 1968, a global influenza was killing 100,000 in the United States, cities across the country were roiled with mass disturbances following the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., and Richard Nixon was riding a wave of pent-up white rage to the White House. In this volatile climate, the civil rights, Black Power, and New Left movements revisited the notion that cooperation, collective ownership, and community governance could give poor, marginalized people more control of their lives, and by extension, more power.
In Southwest Georgia, civil rights activists had been registering Albanys Black voters and organizing sit-ins, boycotts, mass meetings, and demonstrations against the citys segregated bus stations through the 60s, but by decades end, they hadnt yielded many concrete improvements in Black peoples standard of living. The activists began building islands of Black self-determination to strengthen their position within the seas of white supremacy. We were trying to organize people in the rural area, and we knew the struggle, one of the activists, Shirley Sherrod, told me for a story I reported for Harpers Magazine.
The Black community lacked wealth, and farming is hard, low-paying, capital-intensive work. It was even more difficult for Black farmers who were discriminated against by banks, the USDA, and other institutions. Waves of Black farmers lost their land and went out of business during this era, as the historian Pete Daniel describes in Dispossession: Discrimination Against African American Farmers in the Age of Civil Rights. Sherrod knew that racial equality would remain elusive so long as Black people lacked economic clout and stability. In 1968, after visiting Israel to study different land communities, Albanys civil rights activists began a cooperative venture on collectively owned land. We were thinking that we would develop something so that we would never lose the land, Sherrod said.
If you like this article, please give today to help fund The Nations work.
New Communities, a Black-led, multiracial cooperative farm, broke ground in 1969 on 6,000 acres of land near Albany. It is widely considered to be the first Community Land Trust, a model of landholding that places the land in a trust that is governed by a board of community members, managed by a nonprofit, and used for whatever the community chooses, whether thats housing, small businesses, cultural spaces, gardens, parks, or farms. Maximizing the communitys resources and spreading the risks across the collective, community control of land ensures that the land remains in the communityand for the communitybeyond the lifespan, efforts, whims, or fate of any one individual. New Communities was then the largest tract of Black-owned land in the United States.
This was not an intentional community, those enclaves of like-minded individuals that were popular in the 60s. Enmeshed in the civil rights movement, collective ownership and control was a way to buttress the economic power of its members. Collectively, they grew soybeans, peanuts, corn, peas, strawberries, collard greens, okra, and eight acres of muscadine grapes. They sold some of it in the New Communities store, along with syrup they made from their own sugarcane, and ham, bacon and sausage they cured in their own smokehouse, from the hundreds of hogs they raised. You can sustain better because its a group thing, said Gerald Holley, the resident storekeeper and meat-smoker, who later ran his own shoe business. Its not an individual companyone man holding up the company.
Robert Christian, the former treasurer of New Communities, examines some of the muscadine grapes that he grows on his farm outside of Albany, Ga., in 2001. The muscadines are siblings of the original vines grown at New Communities, once the largest Black-owned tract of land in the nation. (Ric Feld / AP Photo)
The collective spirit of New Communities also protected them against the hostility of their white neighbors. They didnt want to see the new community succeed, Holley told me, but the white racists still bought cigarettes and gas from their store. But they were still a relatively small Black-run outfit in a hostile white-run state. In 1969, the government reneged on a grant they had promised to help New Communities buy the landSherrod believes they caved to white oppositionand the farmers were forced to take out a private loan. When severe droughts began in 1981, the USDA denied them a loan to install irrigation, despite approving nearby white farmers for similar financingpart of a pattern of racial discrimination that became the focus of Pigford vs. Glickman, the Supreme Court case that produced the largest civil rights settlements in US history. Within their 6,000 acres, New Communities farmers had achieved a measure of autonomy that mightve eluded them as individuals, but their island wasnt completely protected from the whims of the wider world. Unable to pay their mortgage, they foreclosed in 1985.
As an experiment in building power apart from existing institutions, New Communities shows the often-insurmountable barriers such efforts at self-determination face. But it has proved even more difficult to establish community control over existing institutions head-on. Following Brown vs. Board of Education, New York City failed to integrate its public schools: Black children bused into white neighborhoods were greeted with fierce white opposition, schools in Black and brown neighborhoods were overcrowded and underfunded, and the mostly white teachers union, the United Federation of Teachers, blocked efforts to encourage the best teachers to take assignments there. Parents also saw the mostly white teachers and principalsonly 1 percent of principals and 8 percent of teachers in the citys schools were Blackpunishing their children for being disruptive, rather than treating them with patience, empathy, and care. So instead of waiting for complacent white politicians and administrators to change the system, they began seeking a more formal role in hiring, firing, and day-to-day management of their schools.
Their organizing worked. In 1967, the city set up three experimental community control school districts: one in Harlem, one in lower Manhattan, and one in Ocean Hill-Brownsville, a Black and Puerto Rican neighborhood in Central Brooklyn. Under community control, parents in each district elected a governing board that could hire superintendents and principals, decentralizing powers once concentrated in the Board of Education. Though supported by the citys liberal elites and shaped by the Ford Foundationcommunity control would boost the self-esteem and boot-strapping capacities of Black people without threatening the power of white communities, they thoughtthe plan soon drew the ire of the UFT. It threatened their control over the citys schools, including a contract clause they were seeking from the Board of Education to allow teachers to remove disruptive children from schools. So in May 1968, when the Ocean HillBrownsville community control board transferred 19 teachers and administrators out of their district, claiming they were hostile to community control, the UFT objected. And when classes started in September, the union called a citywide teacher strike, shutting down all of New York Citys public schools for ten weeks.
The events stoked deep, long-lasting racial divisions in New York City and Americas progressive movements. For the UFT, the communitys reaction to the strike was just union-busting. In Ocean HillBrownsville, the multiracial teaching staffhired by the community control board, and backed by Black and brown parents, the Ocean HillBrownsville community, civil rights leaders, and the Afro-American Teachers Associationcrossed the picket line each day to keep their schools open. The daily spectacle of activists, community members, journalists, and police became a flashpoint of racial tensions in the city, as New Yorks white middle-class rallied around the union, and Black and brown New Yorkers coalesced around Ocean HillBrownsville leaders. But the UFT didnt let up. Only once the city reinstated the transferred teachers and ended the community control experiment in mid-November was the strike called off.
A skirmish between community members and police during the Ocean HillBrownsville teachers strike, October 9, 1968. (AP Photo)
For the Black Power movement, the Ocean Hill-Brownsville struggle was yet another instance of a progressive white institution reversing course on its civil rights commitments the moment it meant giving up any power. Echoes of community control still exist, if watered-down, in the citys school districtsin 1969, New York State passed a UFT-backed decentralization bill that created 30 new elected school boards without giving them much control. But for Mark Winston Griffith, cohost of School Colors, a podcast that examines the afterlives of Ocean HillBrownsville, and an organizer who has helped to launch a community-controlled bank and grocery store in Central Brooklyn, Ocean HillBrownsville also highlighted the immense challenges of establishing community controland negotiating varied, sometimes-clashing aimswithin large, diverse communities.
Its a challenge that any community control experiment will face in taking on an entrenched institution. Powerful white opposition can quash any new community control experiment, as it did to New Communities and Ocean HillBrownsville. Governments and institutions can co-opt community control rhetoric or structures without redistributing real power to the people, like the 1969 decentralization law.
Shirley Sherrod at the Department of Agriculture in 2010. (Mark Wilson / Getty Images)
Yet New Communities was also an unlikely success. After its end, Shirley Sherrod spent two decades assisting countless black farmers through the Federation of Southern Cooperatives/Land Assistance Fund, a nonprofit association of Black farmers and cooperatives founded in 1967. Under Obama, she became the USDAs first black rural development director in Georgiaa radical shift for the agency she once sued. (Sherrod was infamously forced from her position at the USDA after the Obama administration caved to outcry over a doctored video clip. When the full clip was made public, the USDA offered Sherrod a new job, which she declined).
Also, New Communities birthed a new model of landholding that other communities continue to modify, strengthen, and adapt. Two hundred and sixty CLTs are thriving in the United States today, meaning that the experiment never truly ended.
In a way, the current push for community control over police is an amalgam of the inside-outside approaches: defunding police departmentstargeting an existing institution that is harming Black communitiesallows people to build their own institutions to meet their needs. Control is essential to our platform, because thats about self-determination, the Movement for Black Lives Bandele explains. If you dont control the institutions that are critical to your life, to your existence, then you cannot survive. You cant thrive.
Activists are divided on the real meaning of community control when it comes to law enforcement, and how such control would relate to the calls to defund or abolish the police. In 1971, the city of Berkeley voted down the Black Panther Partys program for community control of police, which proposed the formation of elected civilian review boards to investigate police shootings, in a referendum. This version of community control of police remains the most well-known, and civilian review boards have been criticized by the abolish camp as largely symbolic, vulnerable to cooptation by pro-police interests, and attempting to tweak a fundamentally oppressive institution without giving the people any real control.
But its not the only program. After the Ferguson uprising in 2014, Max Rameau and his Pan-African Community Action (PACA) began formulating a proposal for Community Control of Police that has since become a central campaign of the National Alliance Against Racist & Political Repression. It proposes a directly elected, all-civilian council with full or final authoritynot just the right to offer inputover police policy, budgets, disciplinary measures, hiring and firing (including of the police chief), full access to all investigations, and negotiations with police unions. By granting real power over these essential functions to the civilian council, communities can choose to completely overhaulto abolish and remaketheir police. Whats missing from this brief, skeletal proposal are answers to the litany of questions that people often raise: How will communities handle violence? Can I send my children to the playground and expect them to return unscathed? How do we deal with the barrage of fireworks exploding through the night on our block?
We need you to reimagine public safety in your communityRameau and PACA give this directive to communities they engage on the proposal. Its a prompt for people to figure out what safety would mean outside of a world that only knows to punish people for social violations, and an indication that this program might be more accurately described as community control of public safety. Imagine that you have 100 organizers. They all have cars. They have walkie-talkies. They could have guns. They dont have to have them, but they could have them. Its up to you, he continues. Theyre all wearing uniforms. You know who they are. How would you use them to improve your community?
No one ever suggests catching truant kids and putting them in jail, he reports. No one says they need military-grade weapons or tanks. Most envision safety and security as someone picking up elderly people from the supermarket in the winter, so theyre not waiting for the bus in the cold, or someone finding out why a homeless person is on the street, and then helping them to address the root cause.
These answers still leave conspicuous blank spaces in the same spots where our collective imaginations usually fail, but the point of sticking with the exercise is to fill them in. We have good answers for why you shouldnt call the police, Rameau says. Namely, that they are instruments of terror for poor communities, even if they are also sometimes protectors. But we dont have an answer for what to do when somethings legitimately happening to you, and you need some help and support. And we need to build that, he said. We need to get people to a viable alternative.
That is what New Communities created: not just a commitment to reimagine the world but an actual model that, despite its limitations, has allowed hundreds of communities to fill in the blanks, improve on the model, and collectively build a different system for the nation, one plot at a time. Im not opposed to the idea of defunding, said Rameau. Defunding is a crucial step to achieving public safety, but in the era of New Communities and Ocean Hill-Brownsville, police budgets were half what they are today, and police were still abusive because of who held the power, he said. Yet power is the reason Rameau doesnt use the term abolition, even if his end goal sounds suspiciously abolitionist: a system of public safety controlled by the people most brutalized and oppressed by police today, and so radically different from existing police that it shouldnt be called police. The real question is: Has power shifted?
A march against police violence through the West End of Detroit on July 11, 2020. (Matthew Hatcher / Getty Images)
One thing hasnt changed since the late 60s, or even the 19th century: power remains concentrated in Americas wealthy white communities. But since that era, proponents of neoliberalism have also steadily strengthened the power of corporations, at the expense of collective and public institutions. Prisons have been privatized. The private security industry is ballooning, globally and in the United States, with bodyguards and private patrols protecting shopping malls, luxury hotels, gated communities, and the 1 percent. Without a viable alternative like the one Rameau seeks, its not hard to imagine this industry absorbing the functions of public police, but with less accountability, fewer restrictions, and, by extension, more brutality. Walmart is not going to say, Well, theres no police here, I guess well take whatever losses come.
The divergence between community control of public safety and abolition seems to reflect the same question that animated the movements of the late 60s: Do we get to our goala world structured by principles of justiceby targeting, outwardly, the oppressive system, or by building our own power and, through it, our own alternative? Yet if theres a lesson to draw from the earlier community control experiments, it is that each approach also requires the other. Decentralization, a goal shared by right-wing libertarians, leaves intact the seas of white supremacy, while community control mechanisms, like civilian boards, risk being corrupted or co-opted by reformist agendas. If abolish doesnt carry this risk, thats because it doesnt offer a formal alternativea proposed roadmap, how ever imperfect, that doesnt just lead away from injustice, but toward a more fair society.
With no models of community-controlled public safety at a large scale in the United States, we are ultimately limited by the road maps we create. We want to be visionary and think about things that can and should work, says Rameau. Not to say, Were going to limit ourselves to the things that weve seen already work.
Follow this link:
Building Community Power in a White Supremacist Country - The Nation
- Twin Oaks Intentional Community - Twin Oaks Intentional ... [Last Updated On: December 8th, 2016] [Originally Added On: December 8th, 2016]
- The Camphill Assocation of North America Communities [Last Updated On: December 9th, 2016] [Originally Added On: December 9th, 2016]
- Cohousing - Wikipedia [Last Updated On: December 11th, 2016] [Originally Added On: December 11th, 2016]
- Communes: the pros & cons of intentional community ... [Last Updated On: December 21st, 2016] [Originally Added On: December 21st, 2016]
- Jewish Intentional Communities Conference - Hazon [Last Updated On: December 25th, 2016] [Originally Added On: December 25th, 2016]
- Common Fire Beacon-Newburgh | Creating diverse ... [Last Updated On: January 2nd, 2017] [Originally Added On: January 2nd, 2017]
- Intentional Housing Communities | www.hampshire.edu [Last Updated On: February 5th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 5th, 2017]
- A First Gen Lawyer-Turned-Entrepreneur Pioneers New Standards for College Freshmen - Huffington Post [Last Updated On: February 7th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 7th, 2017]
- Disparities in minority unemployment targeted by Iowa officials - DesMoinesRegister.com [Last Updated On: February 7th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 7th, 2017]
- ACE program benefits low-income communities - Observer Online [Last Updated On: February 7th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 7th, 2017]
- Want a happy old age? Get your friends to be your neighbours - Independent Online [Last Updated On: February 7th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 7th, 2017]
- Coalition Calls Itself The 'Eyes, Ears & Voice' Of Pittsburgh's Black Community - 90.5 WESA [Last Updated On: February 7th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 7th, 2017]
- 'A community remembers' coming to Hesston - Butler County Times Gazette [Last Updated On: February 7th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 7th, 2017]
- Krista Tippett February 01, 2017 - America Magazine [Last Updated On: February 7th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 7th, 2017]
- Serving the most diverse urban area on the planet - New York Nonprofit Media [Last Updated On: February 8th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 8th, 2017]
- To truly serve the public, community stations must apply standards for what's said on-air - Current [Last Updated On: February 8th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 8th, 2017]
- Here's what went down at the NYC launch of Ashley Biden's charitable clothing line - Technical.ly [Last Updated On: February 9th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 9th, 2017]
- Appalachian's Alternative Service Experience among nation's top 10 higher education institutions for number of programs - Appalachian State University [Last Updated On: February 9th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 9th, 2017]
- Pastor: We must build bridges between police and local black communities - Fort Worth Star Telegram (blog) [Last Updated On: February 9th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 9th, 2017]
- Chris Wood: Now more than ever localize! - vtdigger.org [Last Updated On: February 10th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 10th, 2017]
- A Business Plan for Healthy Communities - Hospitals & Health Networks [Last Updated On: February 10th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 10th, 2017]
- The Death of the Ski Bum and Intentional Tourism - The Catalyst [Last Updated On: February 11th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 11th, 2017]
- Heroin hits home: Highways provide "easy access" for drug trafficking in Franklin County - Herald-Mail Media [Last Updated On: February 11th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 11th, 2017]
- How Anarchists and Intentional Communities Are Reacting to ... [Last Updated On: February 11th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 11th, 2017]
- Ohio Continues with Next Phase of InsideOut Initiative to Combat Win-at-All Costs Sports Mentality - Norwalk Reflector [Last Updated On: February 13th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 13th, 2017]
- Microsoft Executives to Keynote Summit EMEA 2017 Conference - Yahoo Finance [Last Updated On: February 13th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 13th, 2017]
- Marnita's Table set for Wednesday - Daily Globe [Last Updated On: February 14th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 14th, 2017]
- David Littlewood, guest columnist: Time to repeal Dodd-Frank Act and free up our community banks - Waco Tribune-Herald [Last Updated On: February 15th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 15th, 2017]
- Ithaca organization encourages people to participate in National Random Acts of Kindness Week - The Ithaca Voice [Last Updated On: February 15th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 15th, 2017]
- Portland groups form coalition to eradicate hate - KOIN.com [Last Updated On: February 15th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 15th, 2017]
- Nash says 'there's more to do' on diversity at State of the County address - Gwinnettdailypost.com [Last Updated On: February 16th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 16th, 2017]
- Anson County community meeting to fight poverty planned for Feb. 18 - Ansonrecord [Last Updated On: February 16th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 16th, 2017]
- Spreading the Faith: Moving Coins and Moving Communities - Patheos (blog) [Last Updated On: February 17th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 17th, 2017]
- If It Walks Like a Duck - ChicagoNow (blog) [Last Updated On: February 18th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 18th, 2017]
- Immigrant Round-ups Stir Fears - Consortium News [Last Updated On: February 18th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 18th, 2017]
- Pace: What Should I Give Up This Year? - Covington News [Last Updated On: February 20th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 20th, 2017]
- J Mase III of #BlackTransMagick seeks to redistribute resources - Daily Illini [Last Updated On: February 20th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 20th, 2017]
- South Side getting trauma center, but it'll be far more than just an emergency room - Fox 32 Chicago [Last Updated On: February 21st, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 21st, 2017]
- St. Louis Park cohousing community welcomes home all ages - Minneapolis Star Tribune [Last Updated On: February 22nd, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 22nd, 2017]
- The Benedict Option and Rod Dreher's LGBT Challenge - The Atlantic - The Atlantic [Last Updated On: February 23rd, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 23rd, 2017]
- Mark Sundeen looks for a better way to live - Missoula Independent [Last Updated On: February 23rd, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 23rd, 2017]
- Cohousing communities gain popularity, including here in Nashville - WKRN.com [Last Updated On: February 24th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 24th, 2017]
- The Christian Retreat From Public Life - The Atlantic [Last Updated On: February 24th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 24th, 2017]
- New senior living community eyeing Waxahachie - Waxahachie Daily Light [Last Updated On: February 24th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 24th, 2017]
- Better health needs a diverse workforce - Greenville Daily Reflector [Last Updated On: February 25th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 25th, 2017]
- Businesses: State needs more immigrants - Mankato Free Press [Last Updated On: February 25th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 25th, 2017]
- Cohousing communities gain popularity - WDTN [Last Updated On: February 25th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 25th, 2017]
- Letters: Dismiss Schimel, others for maps - The Sheboygan Press [Last Updated On: February 28th, 2017] [Originally Added On: February 28th, 2017]
- Drums, Voices, and Circles - Memphis Democrat [Last Updated On: March 1st, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 1st, 2017]
- Food: Four Short Talks brings community to the table - Dailyuw [Last Updated On: March 2nd, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 2nd, 2017]
- Family School rebuts report on lack of diversity - Coastal View News [Last Updated On: March 2nd, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 2nd, 2017]
- The Wall Street Journal explores trends in Christian community life sort of - GetReligion (blog) [Last Updated On: March 2nd, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 2nd, 2017]
- Renting land to highest bidder stumbling block for young people looking to start in agriculture - INFORUM [Last Updated On: March 3rd, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 3rd, 2017]
- Transportation/Traveling While Living Off Grid - Mother Earth News [Last Updated On: March 4th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 4th, 2017]
- New School Board President Believes Schools Belong to Communities - The Exponent Telegram (press release) (registration) [Last Updated On: March 6th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 6th, 2017]
- Worcester's retiree health costs 'unsustainable' - telegram.com - Worcester Telegram [Last Updated On: March 7th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 7th, 2017]
- 12 on Tuesday: Leslie Orrantia - WISC - Channel 3000 - Channel3000.com - WISC-TV3 [Last Updated On: March 8th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 8th, 2017]
- By walking the beat, Kalamazoo officers nurture genuine ... - Michigan Radio [Last Updated On: March 8th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 8th, 2017]
- Sometimes the Grass Really is Greener - Memphis Democrat [Last Updated On: March 8th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 8th, 2017]
- Is Clallam opening the door to tiny houses? | Sequim Gazette - Sequim Gazette [Last Updated On: March 8th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 8th, 2017]
- New St. Paul police program aims to mentor recruits - Minneapolis Star Tribune [Last Updated On: March 9th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 9th, 2017]
- A New Kind of Homeless Village is Coming to Kenton. It's a Big Deal. - The Portland Mercury (blog) [Last Updated On: March 10th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 10th, 2017]
- Why We Need the Benedict Option and How It Doesn't Have to ... - Patheos (blog) [Last Updated On: March 10th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 10th, 2017]
- National Expert Shares Thoughts on Environmental Justice - WUWM [Last Updated On: March 11th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 11th, 2017]
- The Promise of Paradise features area - 100 Mile House Free Press [Last Updated On: March 12th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 12th, 2017]
- Speak out about your experiences - Hibbing Daily Tribune [Last Updated On: March 12th, 2017] [Originally Added On: March 12th, 2017]
- Trust comes in several varieties - Muncie Star Press [Last Updated On: April 8th, 2017] [Originally Added On: April 8th, 2017]
- Intentional neighborhoods take root across country - LancasterOnline [Last Updated On: April 8th, 2017] [Originally Added On: April 8th, 2017]
- my family did the benedict option before it was cool and here's why it doesn't work - Patheos (blog) [Last Updated On: April 8th, 2017] [Originally Added On: April 8th, 2017]
- Saint Benedict's Mandate - Patheos (blog) [Last Updated On: April 8th, 2017] [Originally Added On: April 8th, 2017]
- Cohousing Part I: Creating community and reducing social isolation - Michigan State University Extension [Last Updated On: April 8th, 2017] [Originally Added On: April 8th, 2017]
- Searching for a greater interfaith understanding - Seattle Globalist [Last Updated On: June 6th, 2017] [Originally Added On: June 6th, 2017]
- The fight for affordable housing in Jefferson Park continues - Chicago Tribune [Last Updated On: June 6th, 2017] [Originally Added On: June 6th, 2017]
- A 'Justin Option'? Justin Martyr and the Ben-Op - National Catholic Register (blog) [Last Updated On: June 6th, 2017] [Originally Added On: June 6th, 2017]
- The Groves of Academe: On Keep the Damned Women Out - lareviewofbooks [Last Updated On: June 6th, 2017] [Originally Added On: June 6th, 2017]
- Curating Community through Intentional Placemaking - Urban Land [Last Updated On: June 6th, 2017] [Originally Added On: June 6th, 2017]
- Local ties: New tailgate market locations highlight business and community connections - Mountain Xpress [Last Updated On: June 7th, 2017] [Originally Added On: June 7th, 2017]
- How Power Street Theatre Company is taking on representation in the arts - Generocity [Last Updated On: June 7th, 2017] [Originally Added On: June 7th, 2017]
- Open house will celebrate Folk Art Guild's 50 years - News - The ... - Penn Yan Chronicle-Express (blog) [Last Updated On: June 7th, 2017] [Originally Added On: June 7th, 2017]
- Archbishop: In 'post-Christian world' fidelity, charity, truth stand out - CatholicPhilly.com [Last Updated On: June 7th, 2017] [Originally Added On: June 7th, 2017]