Petitions filed for Candidates
Well,
its official! On
Tuesday June 26 the last batch of nominating petitions were filed
with the state Division of Elections in Trenton to get the Green
Partys candidates on the ballot for the November election.
More than
double the number of required
signatures were submitted for Jerry Coleman for Governor and David
Alcantara for State Senate (2nd District), and just short
of double for Robert Gabe Gabrielsky for State Assembly (2nd
District).
Emily
Cook also submitted more than double the required number of
signatures to get on the ballot for Princeton Township Committee,
and her running mate Jeff Gorman also filed to run in Princeton
Township. (Jeff, with
much help, gathered enough signatures in just two days!)
In
Atlantic County, Ray Higbee and Mary Snyder filed to run for
Freeholder.
Everyone
who participated in the petition drive deserves congratulations and
the thanks of the Green Party of New Jersey.
Dear Greens:
I'd like to put a few thoughts on paper about how I see where we are
and where we are going as a State Green Party.
Hopefully, this will generate some discussion.
Overall, I think there are strong grounds for
feeling pretty good about where we are.
We have more functioning locals, more members and a larger
database (over 2,000, I'm told) than ever before.
Clearly, the Nader campaign marked a qualitative change in
our level of organization.
The challenge is now to build on the advances
of the Nader campaign. That
was a period of expansion for us; now we are in a period of
consolidation. That is,
we have to consolidate the many new contacts we made into the Green
Party. Expansion may be
more sexy and fun, kind of like the early stages of a romance,
maybe, but now it's time to get down to the serious tasks of
building solid relationships.
First, let's make sure we consolidate our
existing membership. A
renewal letter is going out with this GreenGram.
Please recommit to the Green party with a renewal of your
membership. We have a
new dues structure now whereby money collected will be distributed
between the state party and locals.
We can build a strong financial base to accomplish a more
widespread statewide presence with the financial support of existing
and past members.
Second, let's go back and contact all those new
people we met during the Nader campaign. Call them up and ask
them how they're thinking about things today. If they have questions about what we did, i.e., if they
express concern over the "You elected Bush" propaganda,
struggle with them, using our many resources to defeat that
argument. Invite them
to join the Coleman campaign or a local campaign in their area.
And please, if you haven't done so already, send the names of
all new contacts to Steve at ecovillager@aol.com so that they can be
added to our database.
Third, let's strengthen our locals by holding
regular meetings and educational forums.
Let's build for these local meetings by advertising them
through letters, email and follow-up phone calls in advance.
Some successful forums we've held since the campaign have
included topics like Instant Run-off Voting, FTAA/globalization, and
police brutality. Consider
holding such forums in conjunction with other organizations, such as
POP, labor union locals, student groups or the NAACP.
Fourth, let's start now to build for our
September convention. It
will be held on Sunday, September 23rd at the Rutgers Labor Ed.
Center. We still need speakers, proposals and people to
help with logistics. Let's
commit to making this our largest and most successful convention to
date.
Fifth, let's build the Coleman campaign and the
local campaigns with the same enthusiasm with which we built the
Nader campaign. We have
an exceptional candidate in Jerry and we need to let the people of
this State know that. The
same is true for all of our local candidates.
Let's understand how these campaigns can fit together and can
help build the Party. It's
not a question of State vs. local in my opinion.
Sixth, let's improve our internal
communications. Let's
make sure we get local news to the Communication Committee on time
so that we can have monthly and timely GreenGrams.
An effective Party press is essential to our work.
Seventh, let's intensify our mass work.
I'm glad to see that the labor committee is discussing strike
support for the Dunkin Donuts workers.
Let's expand and develop this.
In addition, let's continue to mobilize to strike the death
knell for police brutality, racial profiling and white supremacy in
NJ. As many Greens as
possible should turn out in Morristown at the Courthouse (with
banners and literature) on the morning of the Fourth of July to say
to Richard Barrett and his band of neo-Nazis, not here, not ever.
Let's also be in the Federal Courthouse in Newark on July
10th when three Orange police officers are sentenced for violating
the civil rights of Earl Faison, a struggle we've been involved with
since the beginning.
Eighth, let's have some fun. Let's socialize this summer.
I attended a small picnic organized by Steinert High School
Greens recently. Let's
do more of this. Veggie
burgers are an excellent organizing tool.
If we can do these things, we are surely here
to stay.
Joe Fortunato
The
by-laws of the Green Party of New Jersey may only be amended by a
vote of the membership at the Green Party of New Jersey annual
convention. Current
by-laws require that any proposed changes be published to the
membership 30 days prior to the annual convention.
Please submit any proposed changes to Jane Hunter (janemhunter@att.net
or 732-560-0276 or 792 Watchung Road, Bound Brook, NJ 08805) or to
any member of the Executive Committee by August 1 in order to allow
time for publishing the change by August 23, 2001.
This will allow a vote at the convention on September 23.
Call for Nomination
of Officers
GPNJ
officers are elected each year at the annual convention for a
one-year term. The
officers are Chair, 2 Vice-chairs, Secretary and Treasurer.
One of the Vice-chairs is traditionally a member of an
"underrepresented group" (minority, female, etc.) and
chairs the Ad Hoc Diversity Committee.
Terms are currently limited to two years. If
you would like to run for GPNJ office or would like to nominate
another GPNJ member, please submit a brief candidate statement for
publication and member review by August 14, 2001, to any member of
the Communications Committee.
On June 21, Green Party candidate Jerry Coleman
was featured on the front page of the Montclair Times
in an article by Steven DeVries.
Heres an excerpt:
Green Machine:
Jerry Coleman Bids For Governor Post
Jerry Coleman feels that Green is just the
color for the New Jersey governor's chair.
The Lawrenceville accountant, activist and Montclair State
University alumnus was elected by The Green Party of New Jersey to
run as its candidate for governor.
He was one of the party's top vote earners in the 2000 race
for Congress, earning more votes than even Joseph Fortunato, the
Montclair attorney and state party chairman.
"Basically the will of the party was 'we
have to have someone pick up the ball now who is a proven
vote-getter and a proven organizer and someone who will help build
this thing,'" said Fortunato, now Coleman's campaign manager.
"It's a perfect fit for what we're trying to do, which
is develop a base -- not only in the white middle class, but among
people of color, among labor and among independents throughout the
state."
Twice elected to the City Council in Rahway and
even serving as its president in 1994, Coleman explained, he's
already faced, albeit on a smaller scale, having to negotiate
legislation with members of the Democratic and Republican parties.
On the local level, he found most of the other councilmen to
be in favor of providing adequate services to their constituents.
However, Coleman said that if, as governor, he finds members
of the New Jersey Legislature who bend to what he called "big
business," and reject policies in favor of the people, he's
going to make sure the people find out.
"I'm going to put it up there and say
either you support it, or your constituents are going to know that
you're not in favor of it," said Coleman.
Balking Big Business
"Big business" is a term used by
everyone from union sympathizers to the anti-globalization movement
to conjure an image akin to the one in Oliver Stone's film,
"Nixon," where Larry Hagman and a room full of other oil
tycoons fund the winning candidate for president then try to tailor
his agenda to their own interests.
It's an image the Green Party wants to stay as
far away from as possible. Coleman
said that his campaign only accepts contributions from individuals
and fundraisers and not from companies who might return later
looking for a favor. In
the long run, the Green Party cannot afford corporate support,
explained Coleman.
"You've heard and you've read about
companies that dump waste illegally, these people have no
conscience. We just want them to run a clean business, we want
to be sure that if you pollute, you've got to pay the loot,"
said Coleman. He said he wants to run a policy of responsible
industry, and if he were to accept funding from businesses looking
to buy legislation, that goal would be impossible.
For Coleman and Fortunato, the other parties
have taken the long road to the ideals on which the Green Party was
formed. "Three
years ago, when POP [The People's Organization for Progress] began
to organize," said Fortunato, "Jerry was there.
And now we have the gubernatorial candidates speaking out
against consent searches and racial profiling. But it was two or
three years ago, before these issues were being discussed on a
statewide level, that we
were out there on the picket lines, the meetings and meeting the
victims of racial profiling."
Coleman's vision for New Jersey is unique, at
times blending nuances of Republican and Democratic ideals or
rejecting them flat out. For
instance, his idea for education calls for less government academic
control, while at the same time, Coleman feels that a New Jersey
state-run health-care system could prove the model of fairness and
efficiency for the nation.
"I'm not against insurance agents, but
when it comes to some of the basics -- health, education and
welfare, those are things we could provide as a government and
that's why I say the state of New Jersey could be used as a test
state for that kind of a program," said Coleman.
He explained that in a state-run health insurance model,
people will still pay a premium, but the
middleman insurance agents and their stockholder-centric interests
would be removed from the picture.
This would ensure that everyone has health coverage and would
end HMO
discernment over what treatment people can and can't receive, said
Coleman. And of those
many agents and claims adjusters, who may find themselves out of
work due to an abandonment of their industry, Coleman said they
would be needed to work at the new state agency.
As the state moves into the health-care
profession, according to Coleman, they need to abandon the business
of proficiency testing for school children.
"We have to stop this hysteria about testing these kids
in these early grades," said Coleman.
"Children in fourth grade are in traumatic situations
when faced with the possibility of not going on to the next grade
because
they didn't pass the standardized test."
New Jersey students today are taught to take
tests, he explained, and teachers are often put under terrific
pressure to have their students perform well or face potential job
discipline. This must
change, Coleman suggested. Instead,
the Green Party's vision is for each community to take
responsibility and plan for its children's education, while at the
same time continuing with funding by federal, state and local
sources.
Community-based initiatives are a favorite of
the Green Party. Coleman
said he recently wrote a proposal which won a tenants association in
Paterson $15,000 from the local housing
authority to build and run a store in their own
complex. Such
initiatives could be extended to other communities where they could
spur entrepreneurial programs amongst the young people, he
suggested.
In Santa Monica, Calif., Green Party Mayor
Michael Feinstein recently proposed a living wage for the city, said
Fortunato, which he felt was a good model of community-based
economics and social justice. Coleman,
on the other hand, has his own idea for economic and social justice.
"You have people who are really struggling
to pay property taxes, working two or three jobs," he said.
"I've talked to two families, wage earners now, who have
to work two jobs just to do two things: keep their kids in school
and keep a roof over their heads.
It's ridiculous.
"When we look at the tax base, we want a
progressive tax base whereby those who make more are paying more. We should eliminate a lot of these tax shelters in
which you find a lot of the loopholes.
They, meaning the rich and the wealthy, can hide their assets
in a lot of different ways so that it's not looked at as just cash.
I also want to look at asset-based taxation, too,
so that those who are wealthy can pay their fair share and not put
the burden on the working class of the state of New Jersey."
Copyright (c) 2001 North Jersey
Media Group, Inc.
Volunteers are desperately needed to organize
our upcoming annual convention.
If you are interested in working on the agenda, setting up
workshops, organizing food and refreshments or publicizing the event
and working with the press, please contact Jane Hunter at
732-560-0276 or janemhunter@att.net.
"Gabe" Gabrielsky for NJ Assembly
Platform
·
Build the Green Party
·
Foster Cooperation between the Green Party, the Labor
Movement and other progressive social movements
·
Pass pending New Jersey legislation for paid family leave
·
End Police Brutality.
For democratically elected civilian police review boards with
enforcement powers and democratically elected chief officers based
on the County Sheriff model
·
A living wage for all New Jerseyites
·
Affordable housing for all New Jerseyites
·
Universal Health Care based on the Massachusetts model
·
Massive commercial reinvestment in urban centers
·
Massive reinvestment in Public Mass Transit, Particularly
Railroads
·
Strengthen the Occupational Safety and Health Act to
mandate democratically elected work place based health and safety
committees with the power to enforce the Act based on the
Connecticut model
·
Lifelong Free Public Education, Pre-K through graduate
school
·
Equitable funding of public schools through graduated
income and corporate taxes rather than property taxes to foster
equity in education, so that dollars go where they are most needed
rather than to the richest communities
·
Just transition for Salem Nuclear Plant. Shut it down with corporate responsibility for full
compensation of displaced workers until they find equivalent
positions
·
End corporate welfare and tax breaks for the corporations
and the wealthy
·
Substantially increase taxes on the corporations and the
very wealthy
·
Impose substantial fines on corporations that run away to
cheaper labor markets
Grassroots News from the locals
Atlantic County Green Party
The Atlantic
County Greens have added a slate of candidates to run in this
years election, in addition to David Alcantara's candidacy for
State Senate. Joining
David in the 2nd District will be Robert Gabe
Gabrielsky running for State Assembly.
Running for Atlantic county Freeholder will be Ray Higbee and
Mary Snyder.
Burlington County Greens
The
Burlington Greens helped bring campaign finance reform to the
doorstep of the county Freeholders in June, as County Coordinator
Aaron M. Kromash joined activist Steve Ma and local politician
Martha Issod to highlight the need for reforms at every level from
federal to local.
In
a June 21 press conference outside the County Administration
Building, the three presented an "Open Letter to the Burlington
County Freeholders" seeking their participation in a proposed
town hall-style meeting on campaign finance reform to be held before
the November elections. After
the event they delivered the letter personally to
Freeholder-Director Vince Farias and lobbied him on the issue.
Steve
Ma is an activist from Metuchen in the midst of a 1,500-mile walk
through New Jersey to press the case for campaign finance reform. Martha Issod is a non-partisan member of Medford
Township Council who has previously introduced legislation mandating
local campaign finance reform.
The Times (Trenton) covered this event on June 22.
The
Burlington Greens also now have their own website at www.burlingtongreens.org
Camden/Gloucester Greens
The Camden /
Gloucester Greens are supporting the striking workers of UFCW local
1360 at the Dunkin Donuts Mid-Atlantic Distribution Center in
Swedesboro, NJ. The
warehousemen and truck drivers are ON STRIKE because theyve been
working without a contract since they organized 3 years ago at this
facility, which has been guilty of over 70 unfair labor practices.
Local Greens
also participated in Rock N Register, a free outdoor
concert and voter registration drive sponsored by the Camden county
government to get more young adults into the political process.
The group has also adopted its own by-laws, and has its own
website at www.camdengloucestergreens.org
Mercer Greens
The
Mercer County Green Party recently finished taping its 8th show for
public access cable TV. The
show topics so far include: Homelessness, Non Profits in Mercer
County, The Marlboro man in Mercer County, The Mercer County Deer
Alliance, Why African Americans should vote Green, The million Mom
March/Mercer County interview (30mins), The NJ Food Bank (30mins),
and NJ Moratorium (anti Death Penalty).
All
shows are 60 minutes except where noted.
In July we will be dedicating two episodes to identity
politics. The first
subject will be on why High School students should organize and vote
Green. The other
topic
will be why GLBT persons should organize and vote Green.
All tapes are available for purchase by sending in $10.00 per
tape and $1.30 for postage.
Students
from Steinert High School in Hamilton Township have also started the
first NJ chapter of high school Greens.
Hudson Greens
Hudson
County Greens created a Voter's Guide/Jerry Coleman flier during the
recent Hoboken and Jersey City non-partisan elections.
We
recommended -- not endorsed -- 12 candidates in a field of over 50
people in Jersey City to provide a service to the voters in
distinguishing who were acceptable in terms of Green Party values.
In 3 of the 6 Wards we recommended more than one candidate,
in one ward, we stated that there was no acceptable candidate. These candidates did not ask us to recommend them
-- we used their candidacies to gain public recognition for
ourselves.
In
Hoboken, in a very crucial race where two reform tickets were
running against an extremely corrupt administration we went further
and endorsed two candidates -- a candidate from each from the two
competing reform tickets -- on the basis of their outstanding and
unusual records of public service.
In
this non-partisan election, our focus was not on getting any quid
pro quo from any candidate, but providing a service to the public in
the electoral arena, so that the name "Green Party" stays
in front of the public as active in our chosen area, in this case by
empowering the citizenry with information.
Our focus was also in raising voter awareness that the Green
Party has a candidate running for Governor.
We
used the process of sending questionnaires to all candidates and
posting their responses on the Hudson Greens web site (www.hudsongreens.org)
and also making them available in hardcopy to anyone who wanted a
copy. We distributed
approx. 7000 fliers and had letters to the editors published in the
local papers. One of
the endorsed candidates from Hoboken brought four people and
participated for the entire meeting.
He and the people he brought will be working with the Hoboken
Green group that is forming as a result of our participation.
Ocean County Greens
Members
of the Ocean County Greens took part in a teach-in and car caravan
from Ocean County College to the Oyster Creek Nuclear plant on June
18 to protest nuclear power.
On
June 24, the Greens hosted Steve Ma at the home of Rena Amada.
Ma is an independent activist walking across NJ for campaign
finance reform.
Communications Committee
The Communications Committee is actively
recruiting members for the Webmasters Council and for the GreenGram
editorial board. Please
contact Jane Hunter at 732-560-0276 or janemhunter@worldnet.att.net if
you are interested in either of these working
groups.
Also, if you know of any GPNJ-related email
list server you would like to have listed on our website, please
notify Jane by email.
Finance Committee
The Finance
Committee needs members and a Chairperson. The committee has
essentially two functions: budgeting and fundraising.
GPNJ is in desperate need of both.
Membership Committee
The annual GPNJ
convention will be held on Sunday, September 23, at the Labor
Education Center, New Brunswick.
Please mark your calendar and plan to attend!
Policy Committee
The Policy
Committee has drafted several position papers on international
trade. They will be
published in the GG over the next few issues.
These are drafts and the committee welcomes all comment.
Email Earl Gray at earlgray119@aol.com
or the Policy list at gpnj-policy@yahoogroups.com.
Labor Caucus
The Labor caucus has been actively working
with the Camden/Gloucester Greens to discuss ways in which the Green
Party can support the striking UFCW workers at the Dunkin Donuts
distribution center in Swedesboro (Gloucester county).
The caucus is working on a leaflet which Greens statewide can
use to distribute in front of Dunkin Donuts stores to show
solidarity. Marty Nolan of the Camden Greens recently paid a
visit to the striking workers.
His thoughts:
There were
about ten or so picketers out there.
They have a RV setup with the inflatable rat crowning it and
signs galore. The
picket line is running 24/7 and yes, they are allowed to leaflet the
local outlets. My visit
was well received and they were happy to see the leaflet Kati Sipp
and Nick Alpers designed that some of us will be using.
I also took the opportunity to tell them about the Greens and
pass out some info. Right
now they are out 29 days. Thats
basically a month without a paycheck and this will more than likely
last longer so our support is helpful.
The plant continues to run using scabs from temp agencies and
DD trucks pass the line every several minutes.
Directions to
plant: 295 South to exit 11, Rt. 322 east to first light.
Make right on Berekely then a right on Arlington follow
Arlington and you can not miss them.
OR, Turnpike South to exit two, then Rt. 322 west to Berekely,
make a left, then make right on Arlington and go straight.
On June 12 in New Brunswick the Green Party
co-sponsored a seminar, Derail Fast Track!
Stop the FTAA! which was attended by about 85 activists. (The FTAA is the proposed Free Trade Area of the
Americas, which would expand NAFTA to include all of North and South
America) Perhaps the
most impressive part of the meeting was the list of sponsors and
co-sponsors. This included about 12 labor unions and union
oriented organizations. The
top environmental organizations were also represented, including the
Sierra Club and NJ Environmental Federation.
Jim Mohn of the Greens invited the entire NJ
Congressional delegation to send observers, and Congressmen Menendez
and Pallone and Senator Torricelli complied.
Congressmen Pallone and Pascrell have circulated a "Dear
Colleague" letter opposing Fast Track, and about half of the NJ
delegation have signed on plus Sen. Torricelli.
Derailing Fast Track is clearly winnable and without Fast
Track, FTAA gets very shaky.
Four of the activists who were present at
Quebec told personal stories about the massive protest and the
police attacks. At
every place that the World Trade Organization has met, from Seattle
to Florham Park, NJ, massive demonstrations greeted the delegates.
We have driven them to such despair that the next meeting
will be in Qatar, a feudal nation in the Persian Gulf where
demonstrations are forbidden.
Two speakers, Alesha Daughtry from Global Trade
Watch and Ruth Caplan from Alliance for Democracy were well-informed
and described the dangers of FTAA which includes a serious loss of
sovereignty as well as an expected loss of jobs.
[NAFTA has caused a loss of 766,000 jobs so far - 19,000 in
NJ.]
GATS [General Agreement on Trade in Services]
another aspect of FTAA will put all of the public services at risk
of privatization. This
would include schools, hospitals, transportation, waterworks and
even the Postal Service. GATS
would undermine laws passed by cities, states and counties.
As a result we have available 2 suggested Resolutions
opposing FTAA and GATS - one from the City of Burlington, VT, and
the other from the city of Vancouver.
We encourage all activists to persuade their town councils to
pass such resolutions. This
is an issue cutting across party lines since it involves loss of
political sovereignty. Copies
are available from Jim Mohn 201 861-7360.
Sponsors
of the Derail Fast Track, Stop the FTAA!
were:
NJ Mobilization for Global Justice. NJ Jobs With Justice,
Democracy and Corporate Accountability Project, Bergen Action
Network, NJ Industrial Union Council
Co-sponsors
were:
Bergen Central Trades Council, BMWE, Burlington Central Labor
Council, CWA local 1058, CWA local 1084, District 1199/AFSCME, Green
Party of New Jersey, Los Amates and Garden State US-El Salvador
Sister Cities, Mercer County Central Labor Council, NJ Citizen
Action, NJ Environmental Federation, NJ Sierra Club, NJ Peace
Action, NJWEC, Pace 2149, Peace Works, Rutgers Mobilization for
Global Justice, Unitarian Universalists for a just Economic
Community, UNITE NY/NJ Region
Draft
Policy Paper: INTERNATIONAL TRADE
FTAA (Free Trade Area of the Americas)
Oppose FTAA Provisions
Submitted
by the Policy Committee
Statement:
The
Green Party of New Jersey disavows the provisions being prepared for
the FTAA (Super-NAFTA), and calls for a new Bretton Woods
Conference.
THE PROBLEM:
The sponsors of the World Trade Organization (WTO)
are now preparing a new western hemispheric Trade Treaty, the FTAA,
which will update and expand all of the existing provisions of the
WTO and its approved and unapproved previous trade treaties.
The Model of Development being used by the WTO and its
associated extra-legal organizations (IMF, OEDC, and the World
Bank), and which will be expanded in the FTAA, is one which has as
its goal "The massive transfer of political, economic, and
social power away from national governments and into the hands of
global corporations and the trade bureaucracies they help create.
This transfer of power is producing dire consequences for the
environment, human rights, social welfare, agriculture, food safety,
workers' rights, national sovereignty, and democracy."
With the inclusion in FTAA of an expanded GATS agreement
(General Agreement on Trade Services), all public goods and services
(parts of "the common") which traditionally have been seen
as the proper functions of government will be considered as
profit-making commodities to be privatized.
The WTO and its trade "treaties", NAFTA and FTAA
adhere to an ideology of Corporatism, advocating expansion of Free
Trade, Corporate Power, Corporate Welfare, Commodification of public
goods, Privatization of public functions, Devolution of government
power, Diminishment of government size, and Deregulation of
government overview. Under
the coercive tactics of the IMF and the World Bank, countries
throughout the world are being forced to adopt export-oriented
production favoring the theories of specialization, and demonizing
the principles of self-sufficiency.
To diminish national government power over corporations, the
FTAA can use the following coercive "power tools" to
enforce any of its 19 sub-agreements.
1. Legal Standing
- Gives
Foreign Corporations more power than domestic corporations;
- Most
Favored Nation Status; corporations in signatory countries
are given preferential treatment with regard to their
investments;
- National
Treatment Status; countries must ensure that
foreign-based corporations will be treated "no less
favorably" than domestic companies,
- Quasi-Diplomatic
Status; grants foreign corporations' key personnel
(executives, managers, specialists) free and unrestricted entry.
2.
Performance Ban:
Forbids all performance standards, such as:
1)
Employment levels
2)
Local Hiring Quotas
3)
Joint Ventures
4)
Location of Headquarters
3. Expropriation Rule:
The Taking Rule
(Compensates for expropriation, even lost or unrealized profits.)
4. Suing Government:
- "Investor-State
Mechanism," to sue government directly for any violation of
the expropriation rule; two options: i. Sue in U.S. COURTS, or
ii. Sue in an
International arbitration panel (WTO).
- No
reciprocal right for government to sue corporation.
5. Reverse Discrimination (Subsidies Code):
Discriminates against
domestic companies, by forbidding subsidies and incentives.
6. Policy Handcuffs:
Restrictions
on what government can and cannot do.
7. Rollback Legislation:
Can strike down any
law, policy, or program that violates a WTO rule.
8. Lock-In Provisions:
Applicable
for it least 20 years.
9. Sub-National Governments:
All
rules apply to all levels of government.
THE SOLUTION:
We call for a new Bretton Woods Meeting, an
international convention with all segments of society at the table,
to work Out ways to reform the WTO and its trade treaties so that it
and they reflect a radically different hierarchy of values that
places democracy, social equity, ecological sustainability, cultural
and biological diversity, and national and regional economic and
food safety above the welfare of global corporations.
Any trade treaties produced in the future must contain:
- Trade-linked
enforcement of worker rights and workplace standards;
- Trade-linked
enforcement of environmental, agricultural, health, and safety
laws and regulations;
- Tough
rules of origin;
- Continuation
of preferential procurement rights;
- Guarantees
that national, state, and
local governments may establish more stringent standards
that international standards;
- Guarantees
that national, state, and local governments may condition market
access on the meeting of process and production standards;
- Guarantees
that national, state, and local governments may adopt and
maintain natural resources, energy, and agricultural policies
which prescribe conditions of trade in order to promote resource
conservation and sustainable development;
- Strict
limitations on the "temporary entry" of persons to
provide services and the prohibition of entry to affect a labor
dispute;
- Public
access and open dispute resolution mechanisms;
- Broad
designation of the superiority of international environmental,
health, and safety agreements, and international labor and human
rights agreements over any trade treaty terms.

Derived from:
- International
Forum on Globalization, The Free Trade Area of the
Americas, Maude Barlow, (2001).
- Maude
Barlow and Tony Clarke, MAI and the Threat to American
Freedom, 1998

Activities of Interest to Greens