Power Station

The narrative is that Black people are not able to self-determine and self-govern

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Sinopsis

  Niciah Mujahid wants you know that your city’s budget is 100% your business. As the dynamic executive director of Fair Budget Coalition, she leads a cohort of community-based nonprofits in advocating for a budget that invests in human needs and advances racial justice. Every aspect of this complex process, from analyzing budget proposals to engaging residents in testifying at budget hearings to building relationships with and posing solutions to the mayor and city council members is rooted in a racial equity lens. As Niciah explains, the budget, a quantifiable plan for how to acquire and spend a city’s resources, is also a moral document reflecting the priorities of elected decision-makers. This work is particularly consequential in Washington DC, whose residents have been denied statehood and lack full voting representation in Congress. And DC’s elected leadership, who develop and negotiate the budget, cannot enact it without a sign-off from Congress. But a conversation with Niciah is the opposite of bleak