168 weeks down, 39 weeks to the presidential election.
The AoC Checklist features clear, well-researched actions for Americans who value democracy, equality, voting, and respect. To stay engaged through challenging times, we practice gratitude, self-care, and celebration.
Note: Every action on the AoC Checklist is now *clickable*. Help us track our collective impact by clicking any action you complete within two weeks of the publish date, and we’ll count it in our monthly tally.
I value equality.
Support the dignity of your rainbow of neighbors from every religion, race, ethnicity, culture, gender, sexual orientation, economic status, age, and ability.
▢ Action 1: Oppose the new Muslim ban and support diversity. [h/t Muslim Advocates, ACLU, Leadership Conference]
Call: Your one House rep (look up).
Script: Hi. I’m calling (again) from [ZIP], to express my opposition to the administration’s travel ban targeting Muslim-majority countries. Before the president adds more countries to the list, Congress must pass the NO BAN Act (H.R. 2214). It not only ends the current ban, it also prohibits religious discrimination in our immigration policies and imposes needed checks on executive decisions in this area. I ask that [NAME] co-sponsor this legislation immediately and vote for its passage.
Oops! We could not locate your form.
▢ Action 2: Support expanded voting access for vulnerable communities. [h/t ACLU]
Call: Your two senators (look up).
Script: Hi. I’m calling from [ZIP], because I believe all Americans have the right to participate in our democracy. Voter turnout in the 2018 midterms reflected a nearly 5% gap between disabled and non-disabled voters, often due to inaccessible polling places. Many elderly people and non-native English speakers also experience barriers to voting. I’m asking [NAME] to co-sponsor the Accessible Voting Act of 2020 (S.3206), which will provide resources to address these issues at the state and local levels.
Oops! We could not locate your form.
▢ Action 3: Support the right to protest. [h/t Columbus Freedom Coalition, Show Up for Racial Justice]
At a Martin Luther King Day observance in Columbus, OH, police arrested two people protesting the 2018 police shooting of a black teenager.
Write: Columbus Mayor Andrew Ginther
Script: In your own words, using this template, ask him to request dismissal of criminal trespass charges against Dkeama Alexis and Mia Santiago.
Address: Columbus City Hall, 2nd Floor, 90 West Broad Street, Columbus, OH 43215.
Oops! We could not locate your form.
▢ Action 4: Advocate for asylum seekers’ lives. [h/t Freedom for Immigrants]
Call: ICE Field Director William Joyce at (504) 599-7800
*Calls may not go through, so consider writing the above at 30-35 Hackensack Avenue, Kearny, NJ 07032
Call: Deputy ICE Field Director Caridad Cephas-Kimbrough at (504) 599-7889
Script: I am calling to make two demands regarding the LaSalle Detention Facility asylum seekers who are hunger striking to reclaim their dignity and basic freedom. First, stop subjecting them to force-feeding or force-hydration, a human rights violation that defies medical ethical guidelines and basic decency. Second, release them immediately to receive urgent medical attention and be with their loved ones while their legal asylum cases are proceeding. Thank you.
Oops! We could not locate your form.
▢ Action 5: EXTENDED: Advocate for fair and moral policies for people seeking asylum protection and citizenship. [h/t CLINIC and AILA]
Submit a written comment in your own words: by Monday, February 10th at 11:59pm EST on Regulations.gov via the blue “Comment Now!” button, stating why you oppose the proposed requirements based on your values and the points below.
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- The U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) published its proposed fee schedule in November, revealing increases between 55-83% on existing fees for citizenship services, as well as a new fee to seek asylum in the U.S.
- The administration seeks to divert over $200 million of USCIS and other DHS funding to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
- In recent years, USCIS case processing has slowed dramatically, due in significant part to the agency’s own inefficient policies. These fee hikes would charge aspiring Americans more money for continually declining service.
- Individuals currently protected by DACA would face even greater uncertainty as funding for their program is reallocated and renewal fees for protected status multiply.
- The proposed asylum fee would place a major burden on those who have already suffered tremendous hardship to reach our country, and directly contradicts our moral and constitutional obligation to provide sanctuary to those seeking it.
Oops! We could not locate your form.
▢ Action 6: Stop feeding corporate profit by criminalizing people seeking safety and a better life. [h/t Detention Watch]
Write: Your two senators and one House rep (look up).
Script: Hi. I’m from [ZIP] and I’m writing to express my frustration at extending federal private prison contracts in Texas for another 10 years with my tax dollars. If these contracts are approved, it will further link Texas to an already bloated and deadly detention system. Detention of immigrants strips people of their dignity, is expensive, and unnecessary to ensure court appearances. I demand [NAME] votes no on extending contracts for both the South Texas Detention Complex, the T. Don Hutto Detention Center, and the Houston Processing Center. Thank you.
Oops! We could not locate your form.
I value democracy.
With respect and collaboration, we work to create a nation that welcomes all people, expands freedoms, and upholds the Constitution. Each citizen must be able to freely and fairly elect those who represent their values.
▢ Action 7: Register and vote in your state’s 2020 presidential primary election. [h/t Vote.org]
Check: Voter ID requirements in your state (also available in Spanish).
Alabama: Register by February 14 by mail or in-person, or February 17 online, for the March 3 primary election.
Arizona: Register by mail, in-person, or online by February 18 for the March 17 primary election (registered Democrats only; no Republican primary). Any registered voter can request a mail-in ballot, and early voting is available.
California: Register by mail or online by February 18 for the March 3 primary election. Any registered voter can request a mail-in ballot if the request is received by February 25, and early voting is available (dates vary by county).
Colorado: Same-day registration is available for the March 3 primary election. All voters registered by February 10 will be sent vote-by-mail ballots.
Florida: Register by mail, in-person, or online by February 18 for the March 17 primary election. Any registered voter can request a mail-in ballot by March 7, and early voting is available March 7-14.
Idaho: Register by mail or online by February 14 for the March 10 primary election, with same-day registration available at polling places. Any registered voter can request a mail-in ballot by February 28, and early voting is available in some counties February 24-March 6.
Illinois: Register by mail by February 18 or online by March 1 for the March 17 primary election, with election-day in-person registration also available. Any registered voter can request a mail-in ballot by March 12, and early voting is available February 6-March 16.
Maine: Register in-person by March 3 for the March 3 primary election. Any registered voter can request a mail-in ballot by February 27.
Massachusetts: Register by mail, in-person, or online by February 12 for the March 3 primary election. Early voting is available February 24-28.
Michigan: Register by mail or online by February 24. Same-day registration is available for the March 10 primary election. Any registered voter can request a mail-in ballot by March 6, and early voting is available through March 9.
Minnesota: Register by mail or online by February 11. Same-day registration is available at polling places for the March 3 primary election. Any registered voter can request a mail-in ballot, and early voting is available through March 2.
Mississippi: Register by mail or in-person by February 10 for the March 10 primary election.
Missouri: Register by mail, in-person, or online by February 12 for the March 10 primary election.
Nevada: Register online or in-person by February 22. Same-day registration available for Democratic caucus February 22 (no Republican caucus). Early voting is available February 15-18.
New Hampshire: Register by mail by January 29 (although some towns have later deadlines) or in-person on the day of the February 11 primary election.
North Carolina: Register by mail by February 7 or in-person by February 29 for the March 3 primary election. Any registered voter can request a mail-in ballot by February 25, and early voting is available February 12-28.
Ohio: Register online by February 18 for the March 17 primary election. Any registered voter can request a mail-in ballot by March 14, and early voting is available February 19-March 16.
Oklahoma: Register by mail or in-person by February 7 for the March 3 primary election. Any registered voter can request a mail-in ballot by February 26, and early voting is available February 27-29.
Utah: Register online by February 25 for the all-mail March 3 primary election. Mailed ballots must be postmarked March 2 or earlier, but election-day registration and mail-ballot drop-off will also be available at polling places on March 3.
Virginia: Register online by February 10 for the March 3 primary election.
Bonus: Remind friends in these states with upcoming primaries to vote!
Oops! We could not locate your form.
▢ Action 8: Keep foreign interests from interfering with our elections. [h/t Brennan Center]
Call: Your one House rep and two senators (look up).
Script: Hi, I’m calling (again) from [ZIP] because I believe online political ads should be subject to the same disclosure requirements as TV and radio ads. The Honest Ads Act would mandate such disclosure, and would ban foreign entities from secretly buying political ads to interfere in our elections. Can I count on [NAME] to co-sponsor S. 1356 / H.R. 2592, which already has strong bipartisan support? Thank you.
Oops! We could not locate your form.
▢ Action 9: Support online voter registration in your state.
If you live in: AR, ME, MI, MS, MT, NH, NC, ND, SD, TX, WY: Contact your two state legislators (look up).
Script: Hi, I’m calling from [ZIP] to support online voter registration. Can I count on [NAME] to help [STATE] join 39 other states and the District of Columbia by introducing a bill like New Jersey’s recent S. 589 that would allow eligible voters to register to vote online? Thank you.
If you live in any other state, consider donating to Spread the Vote to support their voter-registration efforts nationwide.
Oops! We could not locate your form.
Acts of Gratitude
Get out your stamps, postcards, and sparkle markers for some gratitude mail.
Thank Sens. Bob Casey (D-PA) and Amy Klobuchar (D-MN) for working to increase voting accessibility for all Americans, especially disabled, elderly and indigenous people, and those with limited English proficiency. [Share why you appreciate strengthening the integrity of the vote.]
Addresses:
BC: 2000 Market Street, Suite 610, Philadelphia, PA 19103
AK: 1200 Washington Avenue South, Room 250, Minneapolis, MN 55415
Oops! We could not locate your form.
Thank Reps. Rashida Tlaib (D-MI), Joaquin Castro (D-TX), and Veronica Escobar (D-TX) for calling on USCIS to abandon a pilot program collecting DNA from aspiring Americans. [Share why you value respecting the human right to privacy.]
Addresses:
RT: 7700 2nd Ave., 4th Floor, Detroit, MI 48202
JC: 727 E. César E. Chávez Blvd., #B-128, San Antonio, TX 78206
VE: 3011 Yandell Dr., El Paso, TX 79903
Oops! We could not locate your form.
Good news
Decent people everywhere are speaking up and working together. Just look. #GoodNews
National
- Senate passes the Broadband DATA Act, which will improve the accuracy of broadband maps and lead to high-speed internet access in more rural areas.
- Federal court finds aspiring Americans have a right to in-person access to their attorneys before and during non-refoulement interviews with CBP.
- Federal court rules ICE violated federal law by refusing to release documents about people who are not citizens and orders ICE to comply with the Freedom of Information Act.
- More than 140 lawmakers in the House and Senate sign a statement against a “harmful and unjustified” administration proposal that could see thousands lose their disability benefits.
- House files an amicus brief against proposed SNAP work requirements.
- Senate Judiciary Committee agrees to hold off on hearings and votes on judicial nominees for the duration of the presidential impeachment trial.
State
- AZ: Court rules that Arizona’s ban on mail-in ballots is illegal and unconstitutional, finding it intentionally discriminatory towards people of color.
- MO Supreme Court upholds a decision forbidding the Secretary of State from publishing information indicating photo identification is required to vote.
- NJ passes a law ending prison gerrymandering; when the state next redraws its legislative districts, it will count incarcerated people at their most recent residence.
- PA court rules that families detained by ICE at Berks have the right to participate in a legal challenge to the facility’s childcare license.
- RI’s public pension fund will no longer invest public money in for-profit prison companies or companies that manufacture assault weapons for civilian use.
- RI: Gov. Gina Raimondo signs an executive order committing the state to be powered by 100 percent renewable electricity by the end of the decade.
- SC election officials change a rule requiring voter registration applicants to submit their full Social Security numbers.
- WI: Gov. Tony Evers signs an executive order creating a nonpartisan commission to draw new legislative maps in 2021.
Local
- New York City Council determines stores in NYC must accept cash, making shopping accessible to those who are unable or unwilling to use other forms of payment.
- Cincinnati passes legislation requiring landlords to offer accessible alternatives to lump-sum security deposits.
- San Francisco ends the use of money bail by prosecutors as a condition for pretrial detention.
- Darlene Lombos is elected leader of the Greater Boston Labor Council, becoming the first woman and first person of color to head the council in its 62-year history.
- Edgar Torres Gutierrez is awarded $18,750 in a settlement with the city of Laguna Beach after being held by local police for ICE despite his status as a DACA recipient.
- Contra Costa County, CA’s Hazardous Materials Commission creates a board position specifically to advocate for communities facing environmental justice issues.
Corporate/business
- Microsoft pledges to become 100% “carbon-negative” by 2030 by removing more carbon from the environment than it emits.
- The Guardian refuses advertising from oil and gas companies, becoming the first major global news organization to outright ban ads from companies that extract fossil fuels.
Groups and organizations
- Eagle Rock, CA church pays off $5.3M in medical debt for thousands of low-income households.
- New York City Bar Association calls on Congress to launch an investigation into Attorney General William Barr, saying his public remarks threaten “public confidence in the fair and impartial administration of justice.”
- Hundreds of Amazon workers publicly protest the company’s lack of sufficient action against the climate crisis.
- AILA, in partnership with the city of San Antonio, will hold a free citizenship workshop on February 1.
- The Puentes Libres project connects people seeking asylum who have been forced to wait in Mexico with lawyers in the U.S. via teleconferencing.
- Migrant Justice Platform proposes radical changes to immigration policies, including a moratorium on all deportations, detentions, checkpoints, and raids; immediate legal status for all aspiring Americans living in the U.S.; and decriminalization of border crossings.
- Coalition of 90 community rights organizations demands the release of all transgender people from ICE custody, citing the unique harms detention causes transgender aspiring Americans.
- The Archdiocese of Dubuque provides affordable legal services for aspiring Americans through Catholic Charities’ Immigration Legal Services.
- AILA hosts a National Day of Action on March 5 in Washington, D.C. to advocate for USCIS accountability, immigration court reform, and due process for aspiring Americans.
- All 16 of Texas’ Catholic bishops condemn Gov. Greg Abbott’s decision to refuse to resettle people seeking refuge in the state in 2020.
- Violet Protest launches a project to send 50 handmade textile squares to each and every member of Congress in support of core American values.
News with heart
- Hennepin County, MN deputies now hand out vouchers to help pay for repairs instead of fix-it tickets.
- Nine parents who recently reunited with their children in the U.S. will have their asylum cases reheard a year and a half after being separated and deported under administration policy.
- Manuel Amaya Portillo, an asylum seeker with a severe physical disability that put his life at risk in Honduras, is released from ICE detention to join his sponsor family.
- An aspiring American sent to Tijuana under the administration’s so-called “Remain In Mexico” policy wins her own asylum after arguing her case in court without access to an attorney.
- Voters are less likely to vote for a candidate who endorses the administration’s ban on travelers from five Muslim-majority countries, according to an ISPU poll.
- Access to puberty blockers significantly reduces the risk of suicide among transgender youth, according to a study by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
- Curtis Flowers is granted bail following his conviction being overturned by the Supreme Court after six prior trials.
- An institution that worked to systematically discredit childhood sexual abuse survivors officially dissolves.
- U.S. greenhouse gas emissions fell by 2.1% in 2019.
- Astronaut Christina Koch sets a record for longest spaceflight by a woman.
- 49ers assistant coach Katie Sowers is the first woman and the first openly LGBTQ coach to head to the Super Bowl.
- Alyssa Nakken joins the Giants coaching staff as an assistant coach, becoming the first woman to hold a coaching position in Major League Baseball.
- Seventeen-year-old high school student Wolf Cukier discovers a new planet three days into his NASA internship.
- With her past and present students supporting her at the ceremony, teacher Annmarie Small becomes a U.S. citizen.
- Fiona Apple will donate two years’ worth of royalties from her hit song “Criminal” to immigration rights group While They Wait.
- See more good news at Women in the World, Small Victories, Good Black News, and What Went Right.
Housekeeping
- Sign up: Get the weekly Americans of Conscience Checklist here.
- Get inspired: Complete the Self-Care Worksheet.
- Stay focused: Complete the Action Worksheet (or Kelly Wooten’s artistic version).
- Share: Follow us and share the Checklist on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.
- Merch: Spread the word with stickers, magnets, and more.
- Gratitude: Big thanks to JEB and the Production Team, Social Media volunteers, the Research Sous Chefs teams, and to the amazing angel patrons who make it possible.
Note: The AoC Checklist is always ad-free and no-cost. If you’re able, please support this full-time effort on patreon or paypal.
I live in California. My Senators and representative support the causes and legislation you do (mostly). Is it beneficial to add my voice for them or are would it be better to call those for whom I am not a constituent?
I live in the DIstrict of Columbia. AOC suggestions are frequently to contact our representative or senators but our D.C. representative does not have the power of a vote. I often contact our representative’s office anyway or legislators outside of my district but is there someone else you can suggest that I contact?
For a variety ord reasons, we don’t recommend contacting elected officials other than your own. The best thing is to work for DC statehood and voting Congressional representation.
Michael,
I feel you, and it’s a good problem to have! Fortunately, my senators are also strong advocates for human, environmental and immigrant rights. Instead of calling to urge them to take action they are already taking, I chose to send thank you cards and/or support their reelection campaigns. In terms of this list, I put my focus elsewhere, such as writing letters or calling on behalf of groups/organizations and causes my senators may or may not be able to prioritize. I have also committed to donating the majority of my donations to the organizations committed to electing women, queer folks and Black, Indigenous and people of color so that I’m working on the long-game as well as this immediate need. Finally, I support campaigns such as Fair Fight 2020 to ensure that when it comes to the long-game, all people who are eligible to vote, have access. I hope this example is useful and inspires you to find your own way through the many decision-points we must make to support the movement for liberation and justice. Thanks for all you ARE doing!
What I hear from my State Senator (who is totally aligned with my values) is to call anyway, even though you know that your legislator supports the legislation. That way, they can say “I’ve gotten sixty-seven calls since yesterday morning about this, and ALL of them support it.” Or something like that.
I notice that at least my version of the checklist did not have a space to mark off acts of gratitude. Is this intentional? I would think it would be encouraging admission to know if that’s something people are doing as well.
I love this idea. Thank you!
If you’re actually on line (not working with the downloaded version), you should see a place to click “I took this action,” and then you verify it with another click.
And by the way, I think adding this level of accountability is BRILLIANT! I always print out the checklist and sometimes make a few calls, but this opportunity to click “I did this” really added to my incentive to ACTUALLY DO MANY OF THE ACTIONS. Thanks, whoever that brilliant person is.
Last week I learned about the US Capitol switchboard which is open 24/7 either with live operators or an automated system. It is a MARVELOUS way to leave messages for any US Senator or Congressperson. I did that today to thank the three reps in your Gratitude section who oppose the DNA collection program by Customs & Immigration. I think you should publicize that as a quick, simple alternative to writing to members of Congress who are not from one’s own state (those I email through their websites).
I absolutely agree that the switchboard is convenient, we recommend writing elected officials that are not our own (over calling). This way their staffed phone lines can be used to address the concerns of the citizens they represent. Thank you so much for speaking up for the good all elected officials are doing!
I was not able to reach either the ICE Director or the deputy director by phone. No answer and no voicemail.
Thanks for letting us know. We’ve had several messages about this problem. Unfortunately, ICE and DHS are not interested in hearing citizens’ concerns and sometimes re-route calls or leave voicemail boxes un-emptied.
I was not able to reach the ICE Director or Deputy ICE Director by phone (no answer/nor voicemail
Love this list. Thank you to everyone involved in creating it. Love the new checkbox option, too.