Virginia Woman Builds Community-Centered Refugee Camp in GreeceTop of Mind with Julie Rose • Season 1, Episode 560, Segment 2
May 24, 2017 • 19m
Guest: Lisa Campbell, Co-founder of the nonprofit “Do Your Part” More than 1,700 refugees have died so far this year attempting to cross the Mediterranean Sea from Libya to Italy on boats that are overcrowded and barely seaworthy.  The span between Libya and Italy is now the deadliest sea passage in the world and attempts to cross it have increased since the EU and Turkey made a deal to shut down the shorter crossing option between Turkey and Greece. Meanwhile 62,000 refugees, more than half of which are women and children, remain stranded in Greece waiting for their asylum applications to be processed so they find a permanent place to resettle.  Out of this crisis of temporary shelter and great humanitarian need came Lisa Campbell from Virginia. She’s the co-founder of a disaster-relief nonprofit called “Do Your Part” and she’s more than doing hers. She opened a camp for refugees in Greece and has been there managing it for about a year. doyourpart.org

Merciful JudgeMay 24, 201717mGuest: Douglas Hedger, JD, Chief Municipal Judge, Henderson Municipal Court Courtrooms in cities and counties across the country are full of offenders who have problems with addiction or mental illness that drive a cycle of crime. Over and over again, judges will see the same faces standing before them, the penalties and jail time getting tougher with each offense. The cost to taxpayers only goes up, with little hope the offender will manage to get clean and stay out of trouble. At a certain point, Henderson Municipal Court Judge Douglas Hedger had seen enough. In 2008, he created a special program designed to help certain repeat offenders who are mired in addiction, mental illness and joblessness. It’s called the Assistance in Breaking the Cycle—or ABC Court.
Guest: Douglas Hedger, JD, Chief Municipal Judge, Henderson Municipal Court Courtrooms in cities and counties across the country are full of offenders who have problems with addiction or mental illness that drive a cycle of crime. Over and over again, judges will see the same faces standing before them, the penalties and jail time getting tougher with each offense. The cost to taxpayers only goes up, with little hope the offender will manage to get clean and stay out of trouble. At a certain point, Henderson Municipal Court Judge Douglas Hedger had seen enough. In 2008, he created a special program designed to help certain repeat offenders who are mired in addiction, mental illness and joblessness. It’s called the Assistance in Breaking the Cycle—or ABC Court.