What Is Zoning?

Envisioning Development

What Is Zoning?

In the Streets!

Urban Investigations

In the Streets!

What's On Your Plate?

City Studies

What's On Your Plate?

What Do Incarcerated Parents Need to Know About ACS?

Technical Assistance

What Do Incarcerated Parents Need to Know About ACS?

We Are Public Housing

Making Policy Public

We Are Public Housing

Is Your Landlord Using Construction to Harass You?

Technical Assistance

Is Your Landlord Using Construction to Harass You?

Help CUP build the democracy we need

Help CUP build the democracy we need

Ten years ago, we launched our Making Policy Public program with the simple idea that good visuals and clear language could make policy — something so ubiquitous in our lives and yet so hard to understand — more accessible to all.

We found out there was so much more to it.

Our first project, Cargo Chain, helped over 9,000 longshoremen get a $10/hour increase in pay.

Street Vendor Project used Vendor Power!, our second project, to get the City Council to reduce vendor fines, and vendors still use it to navigate city rules today.

We Care! helped domestic workers across the country know and act on their rights.

Our project with CAAAV on rent-stabilized tenants’ rights led to major victories in Chinatown where landlords were required to make renovations for tenants. That project went on to be used by the Department of Housing Preservation and Development in their own work citywide.

Will you make a donation now to support more of this work?

Through Making Policy Public, we learned that the process we created — working directly with organizers and members of their communities on issues they’ve identified as critical — could lead to real impacts in people’s livelihoods, safety, and well-being.

We also learned that the core of our collaborations, the commitment to creating materials with real input from real people, reflecting their own experiences, is what builds the trust that makes this work effective.

When a nail salon worker, a migrant farmer, a tenant, an asylum seeker, an uninsured person in need of medical care receives one of our projects it makes sense to them. They know the person who gave it to them, recognize the people it depicts, relate to the story it tells, and understand the information it contains and the words it uses.

And they trust it. They trust it to guide them through a confusing process. To help them assert their rights or access services. And to fight for social change.

Because of your support over the last decade, we’ve worked with 40 organizations and 48 designers, and helped over 150,000 people get information they needed and could act on in moments meaningful to them. 

But that’s not enough. Because right now we need all these tools and more to uphold our democracy. If there has ever been a time when marginalized communities need to know their rights, need the tools to force a seat at the table, and need allies with whom to deploy power, it is now.

As many of our partners have told us “This project never would have happened without CUP. No one else is doing this work.”

Your partnership is critical in making sure the work continues, and that the right tools can be created and can get into the hands of those who need them now.

Please join us to build the democracy we need in 2019. Together, we will continue to make policy more public, more accessible, and more equitable.

Click here to donate today!

 

The Newtown Creek BOA

Technical Assistance

The Newtown Creek BOA

Power Trip

Urban Investigations

Power Trip

What Is Affordable Housing?

Envisioning Development

What Is Affordable Housing?

Store Stories

City Studies

Store Stories

Rent Regulation Rights

Making Policy Public

Rent Regulation Rights

What's in the Water?

Making Policy Public

What's in the Water?

The Good, Bad, & Unknown

Urban Investigations

The Good, Bad, & Unknown

The Wait

Urban Investigations

The Wait