ALL for ONE, ONE for ALL!
Educational Reconstructive Freedom
Ms. Flowers believes that Education is the foundation for everything that involves the well-being of all people. The test scores reveal the instability of the education system. Several things need to take place: (WE WANT TO BE FREE TO TEACH OUR CHILDREN ALL of Our History)
Healthcare Reconstructive Freedom
Alabama ranks high for many health risks. Alabama’s new “Reconstructed Healthcare Plan Options" will help poor working-class citizens, the elderly, and small businesses to be able to obtain the health premiums and healthcare services they deserve.
Economical Reconstructive Freedom
Alabama's economy can be so much better if the right person is in office. Yolanda will fight for funding and an economy that works for everyone.
Justice Reconstructive Freedom
Criminal Justice is unequal throughout the state of Alabama. This reconstruction is to lower the number of prisoners in the justice system through litigation, advocacy, and equity.
Prison Reconstructive Freedom
Recent analyses shows that the state had just over 27,000 state inmates in 28 facilities African Americans account for disproportionate amount of Alabama’s prison population of the state’s incarcerated individuals, while only comprising about 26%-28% of the total state population. This significant disparity indicates Black people are incarcerated in Alabama’s prisons at rates much higher than their counterparts in the population. With there being 56% of African Descents incarcerated in the Alabama prisons out of 28% of the Black population, that leaves 0.1565 %, approximately 5,589 people, including women and children.
Poverty Reconstructive Relief Freedom
Many Alabamians are poor, and it is ranked the nation’s poorest state. The poverty rate was 15.6% in 2023 according to the U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey, a slight decrease from 16.2% in 2022, which is above the nation’s average. The poverty rate for children (ages 0-17) in Alabama was 21.3% in 2023, according to the Federal Reserve Bank (FRED) of St. Louise. They are poor precisely because of such present-day orientation, and life’s changes and challenges. In Alabama, the poverty wage for a single adult is considered $7.52 per hour. That’s above the state’s rate of $7.25 per hour, according to the MIT Living Wage Calculator, a tool that calculates the income required to meet basic needs for different household sizes.
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