News

10.04.2022

Downloadable Factsheet: How to Vote in Illinois for the Nov. 8 General Election

Get ready to vote in the November 8 General Election!

If you are already registered to vote, visit https://ova.elections.il.gov/RegistrationLookup.aspx to verify your information is correct.

Not registered? After October 23rd, you can still register in-person at an early voting location or on Election Day at your precinct polling place. To register at an early voting location or on Election Day at your precinct polling place, you must show two forms of ID, at least one ID must list your current residential address. 

Available in English, Vietnamese, Korean, Tagalog, Chinese, and Hindi translations.

Download English PDF Here

Download Vietnamese PDF Here

Download Korean PDF Here

Download Tagalog PDF Here

Download Chinese PDF Here

Download Hindi PDF Here

 Asian Americans Advancing Justice | Chicago builds power through collective advocacy and organizing to achieve racial equity. Learn more at advancingjustice-chicago.org 

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09.19.2022

Are You #VoteReady? September 20, 2022 is National Voter Registration Day

September 20 is National Voter Registration Day. The midterm election is less than 50 days away. Now is a great time to check if you, your friends, and family members are registered to vote. For Illinois, the statewide deadline for online voter registration is October 23, 2022. Illinoisans can also mail in their voter registration form, but make sure it’s postmarked by October 11, 2022. For Chicago and suburban Cook County residents, you can visit the Chicago Board of Election Commissioners’ website and the Cook County Clerk’s website to download a printable version of the registration forms, which are available in Chinese, Hindi, Korean, Tagalog and Spanish, in addition to English.

 Asian Americans Advancing Justice | Chicago builds power through collective advocacy and organizing to achieve racial equity. Learn more at advancingjustice-chicago.org 

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09.01.2022

Advancing Justice | Chicago Announces New Board Members

For Immediate Release

Contacts:

Sangini Brahmbhatt, Asian Americans Advancing Justice | Chicago

sbrahmbhatt@advancingjustice-chicago.org

Kevin Hsia, Asian Americans Advancing Justice | Chicago

khsia@advancingjustice-chicago.org; 224-289-5486

CHICAGO, IL — September 1, 2022 – Asian Americans Advancing Justice | Chicago is proud to announce two new board members, Mary “Mimi” Mam and Maria Odiamar Racho.

“Together, Mimi and Maria bring their impressive talents and passion to the board of Advancing Justice | Chicago.  I’m excited to work with them and add their networks and influence to scale the organization’s impact,” said Board President Khai Yang.

Mary “Mimi” Mam – (LinkedIn) 

Mimi is mother of two, a supply chain professional, ERG leader, LGBTQ+ ally, and mental health advocate. She currently works as a vendor performance manager at US Foods and leads a team of Asian Americans and allies with the development of an ERG strategy focused on cultural preservation and development. Mimi’s intention is to push social and cultural progress in the workplace, enact purpose in others to help them connect with their true selves, and promote wellness in individuals and communities. She draws from her experiences as a Southeast Asian woman and daughter of Cambodian refugees overcoming PTSD and assimilation difficulties.

“Immigration and racial advocacy have been a passion of mine since childhood and I have a deep understanding of the need for funding to help these programs support their respective communities,” said Mimi. She spent her childhood helping her parents sponsor and support refugees and immigrants’ resettlement, adjustment, and integration phases into the United States.  Her passion for inclusion originates from her personal story with the Cambodian Association of Illinois (CAI) and she deeply understands the needs of community advocacy and development.

“My father was a refugee case manager and co-founded CAI and Cambodian Network Council. I spent many years at the CAI office helping the underserved find pathways to citizenship while bringing awareness and preservation of culture to the Cambodian and Southeast Asian Communities,” Mimi shared.

Mimi hopes that in joining the Advancing Justice | Chicago board she will build a deeper connection to her identity as a child of Cambodian refugees, advocate for marginalized AAPI and BIPOC communities, and be part of change.

Mimi graduated from Roosevelt University in Business and attended Lewis University’s graduate organizational and leadership development program.

Maria Odiamar Racho – (LinkedIn) 

Maria is an intrapreneur, C-suite advisor, and community builder turned investor with experience in large scale business transformations, building over a dozen Asian American and Filipino networks, and founding a 700 person corporate incubator called Intrapreneurs@Allstate (i@a).

Maria is co-founder and Managing Partner of FilKor Capital, whose mission is to empower resilient Asian Americans to build enduring companies. Its initial focus is on underserved parts of the community, particularly Asian American women.

Maria shared, “My introduction to Advancing Justice | Chicago was almost two decades ago when it was still called the Asian American Institute. I helped co-found 3AN, the Allstate Asian American Network, and even at that time, AAI was creating community, making Asian Americans visible, and building leadership. We sponsored AAI/Advancing Justice | Chicago and through my research on Asian American Leadership, I took an active role leading one of the tracks of the AALF (Asian American Leadership Forum), an annual cross-organizational effort Advancing Justice | Chicago led.”

Maria hopes that by joining the board, she will be part of a passionate, talented, driven team pushing boundaries and creating systemic change for the AAPI community.

“The systemic impact that Advancing Justice | Chicago has made through the years is what stands out most for me and what I desire to contribute to as a board member. The Illinois TEAACH Act is one example of that, not only influencing change locally, but setting a precedence nationally,” shared Maria.

Maria has an Executive Master of Science in Organization Development from Pepperdine University, where she is also an adjunct faculty member. Maria currently serves as a board member of the Organization Development Network – Chicago, a mentor in the 2022 Global Insurance Accelerator, and published researcher and speaker on Asian American leadership.

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Founded in 1992, Asian Americans Advancing Justice | Chicago’s mission is to build power through collective advocacy and organizing to achieve racial equity. We have achieved landmark wins in racial equity and policy by advocating for immigrant rights, education equity, language access, voting rights, and criminal justice reform the past 30 years. As an organization with an unshakeable commitment to the advocacy and reinvestment of the Asian American community, the induction of new board members enriches our work and continues a rewarding collaboration with our staff and community.

advancingjustice-chicago.org

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08.26.2022

Volunteer Opportunity: Poll Watching – General Election (November 8, 2022) 

Be a part of Advancing Justice | Chicago’s long-running poll watching program. Help protect democracy and language access at the polls!  

When: Tuesday, November 8, 2022  

Where: Polling places in Chicago, Suburban Cook County  

Volunteer poll watchers are dispatched to polling places on election day to monitor  for fair and equitable access to the polls.  No prior experience is needed. Volunteers will be trained on the legal requirements governing language and disability access, and will be equipped with the tools necessary to resolve a variety of potential election-day issues. 

 Note that this is an in-person volunteer opportunity. You will be asked to enter indoor voting locations where you will encounter poll workers and voters who are not required to wear masks. Please take this into consideration when deciding whether you would like to participate in our program.  

Volunteer Requirements:  

  • Poll watchers must be registered Illinois voters, pursuant to State law  
  • No prior experience necessary  
  • Legal and non-legal backgrounds welcome
  • Must be fully vaccinated
  • Basic English skills (limited English fluency is completely fine)
  • No language skills beyond English are required. However, background in any of the following languages are a plus: Cantonese, Mandarin, Korean, Vietnamese, Hindi, Urdu, Gujarati and Filipino/Tagalog.   

Time Commitment: Advancing Justice | Chicago values our volunteers. We do our best to accommodate our volunteers’ schedules.  In addition to volunteering on election day, new volunteers are expected to attend a 90-minute virtual training. Volunteers are also expected to travel to their assigned polling places. Transportation costs will be compensated.  

Deadline to sign-up is October 25

Sign Up To Volunteer  

Questions regarding Advancing Justice | Chicago’s Poll Monitoring Program can be directed to Kim Leung at kleung@advancingjustice-chicago.org  

 Asian Americans Advancing Justice | Chicago builds power through collective advocacy and organizing to achieve racial equity. Learn more at advancingjustice-chicago.org 

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08.22.2022

Asian American History Requirement Starts in Illinois Public Schools

By Eunice Alpasan 

Starting this school year, every public elementary school and high school in Illinois must include a unit of instruction on Asian American history.

Illinois became the first state to implement the requirement when Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed the Teaching Equitable Asian American Community History Act, or TEAACH, into law last summer.

“We need to teach students the honest history of the United States and show all the ways that Asian Americans both have been victimized and also have been champions of justice in their own communities and in solidarity with other communities,” says Grace Pai, executive director of Asian Americans Advancing Justice Chicago.

The organization is hosting free development workshops for Illinois educators to prepare them to teach lessons on Asian American history.

The Illinois State Board of Education will enforce the mandate by surveying all schools and including the mandate in the first three years of its annual survey, Pai said.

Because of the state board’s limited scope, she hopes students, parents, teachers and community members will ask their schools and districts about how they will implement the TEAACH Act.

Mueze Bawany, an English teacher at North-Grand High School in Chicago, said some of the ways he plans on incorporating Asian American history in his class is through a graphic novel unit and a poetry unit.

“I often thought about my experiences and not being able to understand my story and my history, and it kind of felt like looking into the mirror and not seeing anything back,” Bawany said.

“The opportunity for Asian American students in our district to be able to learn, to learn their stories and also for others from so many different backgrounds to learn the stories of Asian Americans in this country, it’s just beautiful,” Bawany added. “This is what education is about, right?”

Click here to read the story and watch the video

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