News
Since 1996, the Korean Resource Center (KRC) has coordinated a multi-faceted program providing a seamless path to full civic participation from voter registration, education, and assistance to GOTV, voter research, and voting rights advocacy.
For Immediate Release
June 4, 2008
Contacts:
Hee Joo Yoon, KRC, 323-937-3718
HyunJoo Lee, NAKASEC, 323-937-3703
Korean Americans say NO to Prop 98!
Rent Control, Affordable Housing and Tenant Rights Upheld!
June 4, 2008
For Immediate Release
Contacts:
Jung Hee Lee, KRC, 323-937-3718
HyunJoo Lee, NAKASEC, 323-937-3703
Community Unites to Educate and Empower Undocumented Students and Their Right to Public Higher Education
Media Advisory
For Immediate Release: June 2, 2008
Contact:
Caroline Lee 323-937-3718
Ju Yeon Ryu 323-937-3718
Governor Schwarzenegger’s May Revise Proposal Directly Targets Immigrant Communities
What: A press conference highlighting the massive increases to the already deep cuts in public benefit programs like Medi-Cal, Healthy Families, Cash Assistance for Permanent Residents (CAPI), In Home Supportive Services (IHSS) and the Naturalization Services Program (NSP).
When: Wednesday, June 4, 2008 11:00 AM
May 29, 2008
LOS ANGELES – Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa and the LA City Council have united with seniors, tenant rights groups, unions and civil rights advocates to oppose Proposition 98, which aims to eliminate rent control, eviscerate local land use rules, gut environmental protections and undermine public water projects. Prop. 98 holds out the false promise of “eminent domain” reform, but instead obliterates Californian’s rights to fair housing.
The First Ever Asian American Pacific Islander Presidential Town Hall
HyunJoo Lee, NAKASEC National Organizing Coordinator
We do not participate in the movement for Korea's democracy and reunification merely out of patriotic longing or a burst of nationalism. We are immigrants in the United States, the epicenter of capitalism, seeking to lay our roots here for generations to come. A society built on individualistic values may lead us to into forgetting about our own identity as Korean Americans, dismiss our neighbors and society in general - even our parents and siblings. We may be drawn to worry solely for our own well being and personal success. To do so will weaken our human spirit and prevent us from laying our roots in this land and passing on a prosperous future for our children.