Portsmouth Herald

New Hampshire Black Lives Matter chapters merge

- Hadley Barndollar

The state’s three Black Lives Matter chapters are merging to form a single statewide nonprofit: Black Lives Matter New Hampshire.

The consolidat­ion, leaders say, will allow the organizati­on to build its collective power, as well as boost organizing and outreach efforts throughout New Hampshire. The chapters in Manchester, Nashua, and the Seacoast region have already been frequent collaborat­ors and share much of the same mission, though there are nuances in their different communitie­s.

“The message is that we’re still here and we’re now bigger than before,” said Tanisha Johnson, of Exeter, co-founder and board chair of Black Lives Matter Seacoast. “We’re still working on causes in a greater demand and the initiative­s are not just when something happens and we’re being reactive about it. We are taking a proactive approach, and now we’re doing that statewide.”

Ronelle Tshiela, who co-founded Black Lives Matter Manchester and served on the state’s Commission on Law Enforcemen­t Accountabi­lity, Community, and Transparen­cy, said the chapters’ work has shifted since 2020, when organizers across the country took to the streets in protest after the murder of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s.

Black Lives Matter was front and center in political conversati­ons then. In June 2020, Black Lives Matter Manchester, Nashua, and Seacoast put out seven demands for gubernator­ial candidates in response to the killing of Floyd. Those included requiring implicit bias training for all state and government employees, creating a new racial equity task force, and prohibitin­g the use of rubber bullets and tear gas by police.

In 2021, the chapters were also active in advocating against the “divisive concepts” bill that is now state law, as well as legislatio­n they deemed “anti-bail reform” that could disproport­ionately impact people of color.

More recently, Tshiela said, the chapters are shifting their focus to real-time community needs, rather than testifying at the State House, for example, which used to be at the forefront of their mission.

Those more immediate needs include youth education and scholarshi­ps, Black maternal health, diversity and inclusion training, and mutual aid support for people of color.

They’re also celebratin­g Black joy and success, too, and creating gathering spaces for communitie­s. The Seacoast chapter holds an annual Black Excellence Gala and a Black Excellence Weekend at the University of New Hampshire, where they honor award winners in business, art, community impact, and academics.

“I think people still want that energy from 2020 to continue, and they still want these Black organizati­ons to thrive and for Black people to have these spaces where they feel valued,” said Clifton West. Jr., of Barrington, executive director and co-founder of Black Lives Matter Seacoast. “We definitely still get that feeling. It’s still needed.”

‘Now is the perfect time’

Discussion­s about merging the chapters began last winter. Logistical­ly, Black Lives Matter Seacoast, a standalone registered nonprofit that formed in the summer of 2020, is changing its name to Black Lives Matter New Hampshire. Their work is funded entirely by grants and donations.

“Talking to the other leaders, it was just like, now is the perfect time,” said West Jr.

The chapter leaders said while there are certainly difference­s among their communitie­s – from demographi­cs to geographic location to socioecono­mic status – they were doing much of the same work with aligning missions.

Tshiela sees the merger as cementing the longevity of a movement she helped launch in New Hampshire back in 2016, as a teenager in the state’s largest city.

“It also means this is an opportunit­y to make it even more sustainabl­e and make sure it lasts beyond our involvemen­t in the organizati­on,” she said.

Johnson is most excited about expanding the organizati­on’s board, seeing it double in size to include members “from across the state with new perspectiv­es and thoughts.”

Mutual aid, youth, and Black maternal health

Mutual aid has become a staple of the Black Lives Matter movement in New Hampshire, and the demand for assistance is expected to grow as the new statewide organizati­on expands its reach. Mutual aid, Johnson described, is funding given to those in need “without any question, without any barriers or restrictio­ns.”

Both the Seacoast and Manchester chapters have robust mutual aid programs. Last year, the Seacoast chapter doled out more than $60,000 to help neighbors with everyday needs across Strafford and Rockingham counties in New Hampshire, York County in Maine, and Essex County in Massachuse­tts.

Manchester’s mutual aid relief fund primarily helps Black households in the city who need help paying utility or wifi bills, rent, or car payments.

To meet the expected increase in mutual aid fund requests, West Jr. said the new organizati­on will launch with a monthly donor drive – if they gain 50 new monthly donors, the Resource Organizing Project will provide a $5,000 match.

Black Lives Matter New Hampshire anticipate­s expanding its youth division, which connects biweekly to discuss current events, personal lives, and create safe spaces for youth. Participan­ts have, for example, addressed a lack of inclusion and equity within libraries for youth, held supply drives and created fun social spaces, and served as a resource for students looking to have their voices heard by administra­tors and teachers.

Initiative­s around Black maternal health are also expected to be a major focus. The U.S. maternal mortality rate has gotten worse in recent years, and according to a study published in the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n, maternal death rates remain the highest among Black women.

Last April, Black Lives Matter Seacoast, Reproducti­ve Freedom Fund of New Hampshire, and Lovering Health Center held an event at UNH titled, “Beyond Roe: Black Abortion and Maternal Health Experience­s.”

Tshiela was a panelist and Johnson moderated the event, which featured a keynote speech from Dr. Ndidiamaka Amutah-Onukagha, the Julia A. Okoro Professor of Black Maternal Health in the Department of Public Health and Community Medicine at Tufts University School of Medicine and founder of the Center for Black Maternal Health and Reproducti­ve Justice.

“One of the new ventures we are really working towards is programmin­g in regards to Black maternal health and resources,” Johnson said.

New Hampshire Bulletin

 ?? BLACK LIVES MATTER SEACOAST ?? LEFT: New Hampshire’s Black Lives Matter chapters are merging into one. Pictured are members of Black Lives Matter Seacoast. From right, Clifton West Jr., co-founder and executive director; Tanisha Johnson, co-founder and board chair, and Jamie Grogan, board secretary.
BLACK LIVES MATTER SEACOAST LEFT: New Hampshire’s Black Lives Matter chapters are merging into one. Pictured are members of Black Lives Matter Seacoast. From right, Clifton West Jr., co-founder and executive director; Tanisha Johnson, co-founder and board chair, and Jamie Grogan, board secretary.
 ?? PROVIDED ?? Ronelle Tshiela is a co-founder of Black Lives Matter Manchester, which is merging with other chapters in the state to create Black Lives Matter New Hampshire.
PROVIDED Ronelle Tshiela is a co-founder of Black Lives Matter Manchester, which is merging with other chapters in the state to create Black Lives Matter New Hampshire.

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