Annual Report and 69th Annual Meeting May 3, 2022

Greetings, Fellow Leaguers!

Join in for the LWV of Roseville Area Annual Meeting which will be held on Tuesday, May 3 at the Autumn Grove Park Building, 1365 Lydia Ave. W., Roseville, 6:00 p.m. social, 7:00  p.m. meeting. We will celebrate our past year, elect new board officers and members, and approve a new budget and local advocacy positions.

It is not too late to register if you plan to attend. Here is the link: https://www3.thedatabank.com/dpg/601/mtglistproc.asp?formid=RosevilleCalend&caleventid=6855. We look forward to seeing you in person! 

The Annual Report can be viewed here. The action items for this year's meeting consist of: 

Centennial Exhibit at Roseville Library, April 5 - 29 2022

This is the last week to visit the Roseville Library, 2180 Hamline Ave. N, to view this vibrant exhibit that features Minnesota's suffrage story and LWV Roseville Area history, highlighting the women who made it happen – and who continue to lead through the League of Women Voters to make democracy work for all.

Tags: 

Annual Meeting Set for May 3, 2022

The Annual Meeting of the League of Women Voters Roseville Area is set for May 3 at the Autumn Grove Park Building, 1365 Lydia Ave. W., Roseville. A social hour will begin at 6:00 p.m. with desserts and beverages followed by the business meeting. We will celebrate our past year, elect new board officers and members and approve a new budget and local advocacy positions.  

Tags: 

April 2022 Voter

This month's issue of The Voter is packed with information, including:

  • President Barb Barany’s article on the work being done by many of our committees
  •  A thought-provoking article Moral Silhouette by Florence Sprague
  • Two environmental articles encouraging ways for us to go green and what we can do about the plastic crisis
  • Voter Services opportunities for League members to become involved in furthering the League mission of Empowering Voters. Defending Democracy
  • Who is our first LWV of Roseville Area Student Scholarship Recipient?

And much more!

Windows and Mirrors - Moral Silhouette - Florence Sprague - April 2022

Moral silhouette. Such an evocative phrase. While I quickly recall the general topic of the article wherein I saw it—the Berlin Wall—and I recall the phrase—moral silhouette—so evocative while still so malleable, yet I cannot recall the source of the article or the precise meaning the author imparted to this phrase. Was it the wall itself, the people who resisted it, the people who built it, or the Cold War in totality whose moral silhouettes the author was seeking to evoke? It could be any or all of the above. Some manifest in my mind as negative space for the harm done, some more like old-fashioned silhouette paper cuttings, for persons of courage in the face of brutality. These are events of my lifetime. How long beyond the lives of those then living will these moral silhouettes persist?

"Shoot Suffrage to Death": A Short History of Race, Violence, and the Right to Vote - March 15, 2022

If you were not able to attend this excellent presentation, Ramsey County Library has provided a link to the recording: https://my.nicheacademy.com/rcladult/course/45833

In this session, Dr. Yohuru Williams, will explore the history of the use of violence to suppress voting in communities of color from the Reconstruction era to Present. Dr. Williams is Distinguished University Chair and Professor of History at the University of St. Thomas. He is the Founding Director of the Racial Justice Initiative at the university, and has often served as a political commentator on regional and national radio and television programs. The League of Women Voters Roseville Area and Ramsey County Library are excited to sponsor Dr. Williams in this important presentation. Reviewing the material in the following links will enhance the program experience:

Tags: 

Windows and Mirrors - Upwardly Mobile? - Florence Sprague - March 2022

It sounds so easy, so straightforward. Give someone who could not otherwise afford college a
scholarship and you give them access to a better life. But that transition is not always so easy or
straightforward. Listen to the stories of first-generation college students stumbling through school
unaware of the unstated “rules” and expectations of college. What are office hours? Where do my
parents belong in my life now? How do I socialize with classmates who have so much money?

Windows and Mirrors - (Ex) Termination - Florence Sprague - February 2022

How smooth must be the language of the whites, when they can make right look wrong, and wrong look right.

—Black Hawk, An Autobiography (quote seen on plaque embedded in the sidewalk in Iowa City)

Many LWVMN and LWV of Roseville Area events now incorporate an acknowledgement that our
communities are located on the ancestral lands of Native Americans, the Dakota and Ojibwe peoples here in
Minnesota. I did not initiate this custom, coming to it after hearing it at several events. We are all aware at
some level that the entire North American continent was totally reallocated, reorganized, and just outright
taken from indigenous peoples by European colonists due to orthogonal understandings of the concept of
property and a massive power differential. The land grants from European kings to early colonies had no
ethical foundation and treaties under which millions of acres of land were ceded in the 1800s were grossly
unfair.

Pages