ACLU of Northern California Appoints New Executive Director to Lead Largest ACLU Affiliate in the Country (10/23/2006)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@aclu.org
 | | Maya Harris, Executive Director, ACLU of Northern California
| SAN FRANCISCO - The Board of Directors of the American Civil Liberties Union
of Northern California is proud to announce its unanimous decision to appoint
Maya Harris as the new Executive Director to lead the largest ACLU affiliate in
the nation. Harris, the former ACLU of Northern California Associate
Director, assumes her new position today.
"We are thrilled to have Maya Harris assume the leadership of the ACLU of
Northern California," said Quinn Delaney, Chair of the ACLU of Northern
California's Board of Directors. "With a staff of 50 and a membership of
nearly 55,000, we know that Maya will set a high standard of
leadership. She has the full backing of the Board and the
staff. Her unique experience as a civil litigator, law school professor
and dean, and policy analyst made her the obvious choice to provide the dynamic
leadership our affiliate needs at this important time in our nation."
Harris succeeds Dorothy M. Ehrlich, who was the executive director of the
ACLU of Northern California for more than 25 years. Ehrlich has been
appointed the Deputy Executive Director of the national ACLU.
"I am honored to take on the leadership of this organization at a time when
the strength and steadfastness of the ACLU is more important than ever," said
Maya Harris. "I have had the great fortune to work alongside Dorothy, who
has built an extraordinary affiliate and been a great role model to
follow. I look forward to collaborating with our dedicated Board, staff,
and chapters as we take our affiliate to new heights."
Harris joined the staff of the ACLU of Northern California in 2003 as
Director of the affiliate's Racial Justice Project, working on educational
equity and criminal justice issues and leading affiliate campaign efforts to
oppose Propositions 54 ("racial privacy") and 69 (DNA) and pass Proposition 66
(Three Strikes reform). In 2005, she became the Associate Director,
developing and implementing the ACLU's priority campaigns and overseeing the
Policy Department, including work in the areas of racial justice, police
practices, and the death penalty. Harris is the first African American to
lead the ACLU of Northern California and the first South Asian executive
director of an ACLU affiliate.
"Maya Harris is an extraordinary leader with a deep commitment to the
critical work of the ACLU," said Dorothy Ehrlich, the ACLU of Northern
California's former Executive Director. "I cannot imagine a more capable
advocate to lead the ACLU of Northern California at a time when we are
confronting the most serious assault on civil liberties of our
generation."
Harris is a contributing author to the recently published book,
The Covenant with Black America, a collection of essays by leading African
American intellectuals that climbed to #1 on the New York Times Book Review.
Before joining the ACLU, Harris was a Senior Associate at PolicyLink, where
she specialized in policing issues. While at PolicyLink, she authored the
national publications "Community-Centered Policing: A Force for Change" and
"Organized for Change: The Activist's Guide to Police Reform."
Prior to her work at PolicyLink, Harris served as Dean of Lincoln Law School
of San Jose. Her work in academia was preceded by her work as a civil
litigator at the San Francisco law firm of Jackson Tufts Cole & Black,
LLP.
A graduate of Stanford Law School, Harris has also taught as an adjunct law
professor at several Bay Area law schools. She is the recipient of the
Junius W. Williams Young Lawyer of the Year Award from the National Bar
Association, and was named one of California's Top 20 under 40 lawyers by
California's leading legal newspaper, the Daily Journal.
Harris grew up in Oakland, California.
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