In 1990 Sister Joan Brown left the position of Executive Director
and assumed the position of AfJ editor until April, 1991. In reflecting
upon her 6 years with the J & P, she said “I have seen the
Commission move toward being an organization that tries to involve more
people than just those who are already convinced about the need to be
involved in peace and justice issues.” In May of 1991, Geoff Parker,
who had been office manager for 3 years, and Sister Barbara Huber
became the new Co-Directors. They recognized that great strides had
been made over the past several years: significant increase in the
quality of AfJ; improved and broadened relationships with local
churches; and the consistent quality of the Commission’s educational
events. Geoff’s goal was “to create an atmosphere of hospitality, to
make the office a J & P center where people feel welcome to visit,
to learn and dialogue about issues.”
In 1990-91 the Board evaluated its current structure and governance
of the J & P. A new Mission Statement was adopted at the February
19, 1991 Annual Meeting and appeared for the first time in the May
issue of Active for Justice. It reads: The Pikes Peak Justice and Peace
Commission is composed of people who, while looking to other traditions
for inspiration and welcoming the participation and membership of all
people, are grounded in the principles of justice and peace which are
integral to the teachings of Jesus Christ: Reverence for all creation,
The power of nonviolence, Solidarity with the poor and oppressed, The
transforming qualities of relationship, reconciliation and community.
Our task is to facilitate growth toward justice and peace in ourselves
and in our sisters and brothers of the Pikes Peak community by
providing alternative sources of information, facilitating formative
experiences, and encouraging prophetic witness.
Note: The word “Christ” was deleted from the Mission Statement in January, 1995.
At this same February 19, 1991 Annual Meeting, the Board was
restructured to include the staff as well as Commission members as
Board members. The Board consisted of three officers who were
Commission members, four additional Commission members and four staff
members.
In July of 1990, the Commission office moved from the Sacred Heart
parish educational center to 29 East Bijou Street in the upstairs of
the SAK’s building.
Much of the Commission’s work during the 1990’s was shaped by the
Iraqi invasion of Kuwait and the subsequent Gulf War leading to
economic sanctions on Iraq. Much time and energy was devoted to
exposing the effect of the sanctions on the Iraqi civilian population,
especially women and children. The Commission’s strong stance against
the sanctions motivated four PPJPC members to travel to Iraq in 1999 as
a statement of conscience in opposition to the sanctions.
Out of a stance of compassion for humanity and the earth, and in
opposition to consumerism and militarism, some Commission members made
a personal commitment to use alternative means of
transportation—basically walking, biking, and use of public transport.
Peter Sprunger-Froese publicly burned his driver’s license on March 2,
1991 as a commitment to alternative transportation. His reasons
encompassed theology, consumerism, militarism, and compassion for
humanity and the earth. In celebration of alternative energy and
personal creativity, the Commission supported a nationwide effort to
reduce fossil fuel dependency. In 1991 and ’92 the Commission entered
the city’s Festival of Lights Parade with a bike-powered float. Bikes
were used to pull the float as well as to generate electricity for the
Christmas lights on the float. The theme in ’92 was the 12 Rays of
Christmas: 12 generators humming, 11 solar ovens, 10 organic gardens, 9
fluorescent light bulbs, 8 low flush toilets, 7 recycled papers, 6 bus
passes, Yes, Solar Pays! 4 compost piles, 3 car pools, 2 bicycles and
renewable energy. They were not welcomed back for the 1993 parade!
PPJPC joined other voices in 1992 standing against Amendment 2, the
Constitutional change in Colorado that denied civil rights protection
to gays and lesbians. Amendment 2, which initially passed, was later
determined to be unconstitutional by the U.S. Supreme Court.
Work on prison reform and opposition to the death penalty gained
momentum in 1994 when Sister Helen Prejean, author of Dead Man Walking,
addressed the public in PPJPC’s annual speaker forum. In coalition with
a national movement, PPJPC lobbied and demonstrated against the
proliferation of “control unit” prisons, particularly in Florence and
Canon City. Members organized protests on behalf of political prisoners
and offered hospitality to family members visiting their loved ones in
Florence.
Work continued to expose environmental contamination by the Rocky
Flats nuclear weapons factory and the transport of nuclear waste.
Activists demonstrated against the Department of Energy’s Waste
Isolation Pilot Plant, known as WIPP, a plan to store nuclear waste in
underground salt caves in northern New Mexico and use I-25 as the
nuclear waste transport route.
In January 1994 the Rose and Thorn program was initiated; PPJPC
partnered with the Northwest Earth Institute in offering the Voluntary
Simplicity study course in April 1998 and by July five groups had
formed; and the Peace Scholarship program began in October 1998.
Workshops in Nonviolent Communication were also offered in 1998.
In March, 1994, the Commission moved back to 235 East Fountain Blvd.
In August ’95 Mary Bauer, SC assumed the position of Director. She
was succeeded by Gail Snyder in February ’98 who in turn was succeeded
by Jenny Finn in February ’99. In August 1999, Dorothy Schlaeger, osf
became Director of the Commission and served in this capacity until
August 2005.
In 1996 the Commission focused on “economic nonviolence”—maintaining
that the only way to peace is through addressing the systemic causes of
violence, and that violence typically emerges out of economic systems
that place relative value on life, class, nationality, sexual
preferences, beauty, athletic prowess, material possessions, and
similar designations.
Over the years since the restructuring of the Board in 1991 which
included the staff as Board members with a ratio of 4 staff to 7
non-staff Board members, the number of non-staff Board members declined
as members completed their terms or were lost through attrition. By
1999, the number of staff members on the Board outnumbered the
non-staff members.
Through the late 1980’s, the 1990’s and into the 2000’s, PPJPC
intermittently held an Annual Speaker’s Event. PPJPC invited many
prominent figures over the years including Bishop Thomas Gumbleton,
Brian Wilson, the Berrigans, Richard Rohr, Helen Prejean, Michael
Bremmer, Kathy Kelly, Phyllis Bennis, John Dear, and others.