Kim Bobo

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Kim Bobo
Kim Bobo.jpg
Bobo in 2009
Born
Kimberly Ann Bobo

1954 (age 66–67)
Cincinnati, Ohio, US
Alma mater
OccupationLabor activist
Known forFounding Interfaith Worker Justice
Spouse(s)
  • Stephen Coats (died 2013)
  • (m. 2017)

Kimberly Ann Bobo (born 1954) is an American religious and workers' rights activist, and current executive director of the Virginia Interfaith Center for Public Policy (VICPP), a non-partisan advocacy coalition of members of all faiths based in Richmond, Virginia. Bobo is a nationally known promoter of social justice who leads VICPP’s advocacy, outreach, and development work. She literally wrote the book on faith-based organizing (Lives Matter: A Handbook for Christian Organizing).

Bobo moved to Virginia from Chicago, where she founded and served as executive director of Interfaith Worker Justice, the nation’s largest network of people of faith engaging in local and national actions to improve wages, benefits, and conditions for workers. Prior to that, Bobo was national organizing director for Bread for the World and an instructor at the . In 1991 she founded the Chicago Interfaith Committee on Worker Issues. Leading efforts for a living wage, she is widely quoted in national newspapers and broadcast media as an expert on worker justice issues. She has also written books and articles on wage issues and community organizing.[1]

Personal life[]

Born in Cincinnati, Ohio, and raised a conservative evangelical, Bobo graduated from Barnard College in New York City with a bachelor's degree in religion. She later received a master's degree in economics from the New School for Social Research in New York.[2]

Bobo is married to David Orr, a long-time Chicago reform politician. She has twin sons from her previous marriage to Stephen Coats, who passed away in 2013.[3]

Bobo is a member of Wesley United Methodist Church in Richmond, where she sings in the choir. She served as the choir director at Good News Community Church (UCC) for 27 years.

Career[]

In 1976, Bobo became director of organizing for Bread for the World, a Christian organization that works to relieve and combat hunger. During this time, she wrote her first book, Lives Matter: A Handbook for Christian Organizing.[2]

Bobo left Bread for the World in 1986 and became an instructor at the , a community organizing training institute in Chicago, Illinois. She focused on low-income housing organizations and other social change organizations. While at the Midwest Academy, Bobo and her colleagues co-authored Organizing for Social Change, a fundamental text in community-based organizing.[2]

In 1989, Bobo became involved with the Pittston Coal strike by coal miners at Pittston Coal. Attempting to organize religious leaders to support the workers, she was startled to find that almost no religious organizations had labor liaisons. She started an informal network of religious leaders to share information about campaigns for worker justice that year.[2][4]

In 1991, Bobo founded the Chicago Interfaith Committee on Worker Issues. It was an all-volunteer group led by Bobo and four influential Chicago religious leaders.[4]

In 1996, using a $5,000 inheritance from her grandmother, Bobo launched the National Interfaith Committee for Worker Justice. The organization initially was run out of her home. By 1998, the organization had 29 affiliates throughout the country. The group changed its name to Interfaith Worker Justice in 2005, by which time it had grown to 59 local affiliates and a full-time staff of 10.[4]

IWJ has been active on a number of workers' rights and worker justice issues.[4] It has developed 20 workers centers around the country, and programs such as “Labor in the Pulpits” and “Seminary Summer,” which "places seminary and rabbinical students with unions for summer internships."[5] In 2012, when Walmart was celebrating its 50th anniversary, she called on the corporation to ensure a living wage for its employees.[5]

In 2017, Bobo became Executive Director for the Virginia Interfaith Center for Public Policy (VICPP), in Richmond, Virginia where she has led many economic, racial, social, and environmental justice legislative victories. She mobilized a historic faith advocacy campaign and played a leadership role in the statewide Healthcare for All Virginians coalition advocating Medicaid expansion, which passed in 2018. During the 2019 Virginia General Assembly, Bobo led VICPP's efforts to win two wage theft reform bills: one to remove the Jim Crow exemptions from the Virginia Minimum Wage, and the other to require employers to provide a paystub to workers explaining how they are paid.[6] VICPP was also involved in numerous other legislation, including tuition equity, environmental justice, tenants' rights, and criminal justice reform.[7] Bobo publicized the findings of "The High Cost of Being Poor in Virginia," a report released in October 2016 by the Virginia Interfaith Center for Public Policy and the Coalition on Human Needs.[8] With the help of Rev. David Gortner, of the Virginia Theological Seminary she co-founded a private living wage program in Alexandria, Virginia. The program offers certification and recognition to businesses that pay their workers a wage in line with living costs of the city.[9][10][11]

Awards and honors[]

Bobo was named one of 14 “Faith Leaders to Watch” in 2014 by the Center for American Progress, and one of Utne Reader’s “50 Visionaries Who Are Changing Your World” in 2009.

Bobo was selected for the 2012 Pacem in Terris Peace and Freedom Award. The award commemorates Pope John XXIII's 1963 encyclical letter, Pacem in terris, which means "Peace on Earth". Bobo joins previous award recipients including Dorothy Day, Martin Luther King Jr., Mother Teresa, and Archbishop Desmond Tutu.[5]

Selected publications[]

Books[]

  • Wage Theft in America: Why Millions of Working Americans Are Not Getting Paid – And What We Can Do About It. The New Press. 2008. Available at www.iwj.org or www.wagetheft.org
  • Lives Matter: A Handbook for Christian Organizing. Lanham, Md.: Sheed and Ward, 1986. ISBN 0-934134-87-1

Co-authored books[]

  • Bobo, Kim, et al. Organizing for Social Change. 2d ed. Washington: Seven Locks Press, 2001. ISBN 0-929765-41-9

Articles[]

  • "Do Catholics Still Care About Labor?" America. August 29, 2005.
  • "Laboring for Justice: What's Happening in the Religion-and-Labor Movement?" Sojourners. July 30, 2005.
  • "Religion-Labor Partnerships: Alive and Growing in the New Millennium," WorkingUSA. 6:4 (March 2003).
  • "Legislators must act to protect workers and families as a global pandemic looms," Virginia Mercury. March 2, 2020.[12]
  • "Kim Bobo column: Virginia's workers and employers need emergency regulations," Richmond Times-Dispatch. June 21, 2020.[13]

References[]

  1. ^ "Virginia Interfaith Center for Public Policy selects new Executive Director". Virginia Interfaith Center. 2016-02-04. Retrieved 2020-08-10.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b c d Jones, "Religion, Labor Tap New Energy as Allies," National Catholic Reporter, June 4, 1999.
  3. ^ "Stephen R. Coats Obituary (2013) Chicago Tribune".
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b c d "Interfaith Worker Justice: Organizational Profile," Marguerite Casey Foundation, 2005.
  5. ^ Jump up to: a b c Barb Arland-Fye, "Workers’ rights advocate will receive Pacem in Terris Award" Archived 2015-01-02 at the Wayback Machine, Catholic Messenger, 31 May 2012, accessed 29 August 2013. Quote: "Bobo, a 57-year-old Ohio native..." also: "That led to the creation in 1996 of the National Interfaith Committee on Worker Justice. Through the organization’s efforts, a network of more than 50 religion-labor groups and 20 workers centers around the country has been developed. Programs have been launched, such as “Labor in the Pulpits” and “Seminary Summer,” the latter of which places seminary and rabbinical students with unions for summer internships."
  6. ^ "Living wage program launches in Alexandria". Alexandria Times. July 19, 2018. Retrieved 13 September 2018.
  7. ^ "General Assembly 2019". Virginia Interfaith Center. Retrieved 2020-07-29.
  8. ^ "Anti-poverty programs help alleviate costs: More must be done to reduce burdens". Augusta Free Press. Waynesboro, VA. 2016-10-11. Retrieved 2016-10-16.
  9. ^ "General Assembly 2019". Virginia Interfaith Center. Retrieved 2020-08-10.
  10. ^ Eshleman, Susan Winiecki, Nicole Cohen, Rodrigo Arriaza, Cole Smith, Jessica Ronky Haddad, Harry Kollatz Jr , Stephanie Breijo, Leah Small, Tharon Giddens, Mark Robinson, Tina (2016-12-26). "People & Places to Watch in 2017". richmondmagazine.com. Retrieved 2020-08-10.
  11. ^ Pope, Michael (8 April 2019). "Paystub Protections Are Now Law in Virginia, With One Notable Exception". www.wvtf.org. Retrieved 2020-08-10.
  12. ^ Column, Guest (2020-03-02). "Legislators must act to protect workers and families as a global pandemic looms". Virginia Mercury. Retrieved 2020-07-29.
  13. ^ Bobo, Kim. "Kim Bobo column: Virginia's workers and employers need emergency regulations". Richmond Times-Dispatch. Retrieved 2020-07-29.

External links[]

Awards
Preceded by
Álvaro Leonel Ramazzini Imeri
Pacem in Terris Award
2012
Succeeded by
Jean Vanier
Retrieved from ""