How can the growing movement for People's Budgets promote participatory democracy and social justice?
Megan Castillo and Andrew Krinks joined us for a candid and insightful conversation about how they are using this innovative advocacy approach to advance a community-led agenda for their city or county’s entire budget.
People’s Budgets are having a moment in the United States. From Los Angeles to Nashville, this exciting approach to budget justice has been popping up in frontline communities across the country seeking to advance a care first agenda, divest from harm, policing, and prisons, and invest city resources in services and programs that benefit their communities such as affordable housing, education, public health, and non-police violence intervention.
PBP Communications Associate Robbie Barton sat down in conversation with Megan Castillo, Reimagine LA – Coalition Coordinator for Measure J and Policy and Advocacy Manager at La Defensa, and Andrew Krinks, an organizer with the Nashville People’s Budget Coalition and postdoctoral fellow at Vanderbilt University Divinity School, to unpack this approach and its potential to transform democracy.
Robbie got things started with a brief presentation about People’s Budgets before launching into some questions and discussion with our distinguished panelists about People’s Budgets in action and the challenges of pushing for budget justice in the conventional budgeting process.