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WOMEN'S HISTORY …

 

Friday, March 12:  Girl Talk: Narratives by Eight Women curated by Deborah Wiggins and M. Liz Andrews opens today, 6p-9p, and will be on view through April 10 at the Renaissance Fine Art Gallery in Harlem, 2075 Adam Clayton Powell Blvd. @ 124th St.  Among the artists
Artist Micaela Anaya

represented are: Ifetayo Abdus Salaam, Micaela Anaya, Delphine Fawundu-Buford, Anna Maria Horsford, Letitia Huckaby, Melvina Lathan, Kathe Sandler and Carla Williams. Details: 212-866-1660.

 Saturday, March 13: Legacy of a Woman Celebration at the Dudley Vaccianna Studio Suite. Joan Vaccianna Fashion Show, Book Signing with Dahlma Llanos-Figueroa, author of Daughters of the Stone. Starts 6:00p-until.  Details:  718-781-6793, 347-787-5759.

Sunday, March 14 @ 5:00pm: Ollie McLean’s Sankofa Academy Fundraiser Features Performances by Rome Neal and Friends at   Rustik’s 

Sunday, March 14, 2010, from 5:00 pm to 8:00 pm at: RUSTIK TAVERN 471 Dekalb Avenue (near Kent Avenue), Brooklyn, NYSaturday, March 20, 1p-4p: 2nd Women of Distinction Scholarship Luncheon at Boys & Girls H.S.  The luncheon salutes distinguished women for their unwavering support of and service to the community and Boys & Girls High School and supports a great scholarship- creation opportunity for some of New York’s best and brightest graduating students. Money raised through ticket sales, a Silent Auction and donations at the event go to the scholarships.  As we see it, the Women of Distinction Awards refers to both the students and the distinguished honorees, who include Pamela Green, Weeksville Heritage Center; Crystal Bobb-Semple, founder and owner, Brownstone Books; educator Dr. Renee Young; guidance counselor Dorothy Harper (celebrating 43 years in the education field); Miss Kelly Roberts, school safety agent; Dr. Sheila Evans-Tranumn, retired associate commissioner for the NYS Education Department; and Ms. Nebert Jackson, retired educator who taught for some 30 years at Boys & Girls H.S.  The Boys & Girls H.S. graduating seniors who worked hard throughout the school year to raise funds for college needs include:  Alicia Rogers, Areya Cortes, Shatiqua Watson, Brittany George, Adana David, Melissa DeVore, Amandla McMillan, Shardei Lewis and Deborah Akinbowale. The event is the culminating activity of the year-long campaign and anyone wanting to support the effort can donate items or services for the silent auction; food for the March 20 luncheon;and/or contributions to the students’ scholarship fund. Contact:  Miss Andrea Toussaint of The Sisterhood.Tickets: $25. 718-467-1700.

 Join Jazz Vocalist/Award Winning Actor, Rome Neal

 If you cannot attend you can still make a donation, payable to: Sankofa International Academy, Post Office Box 330-505, Brooklyn, NY 11233
For further information call Sankofa at 347-365-6819
or Ollie McClean, Administrator, at 646-220-3207
Sankofa International Academy is a 501(C)3 tax deductible school.

Friday, March 26-31: Opening of MUSLIM VOICES: THE FEMALE PERSPECTIVE at BAM. Seven feature films that explore women’s lives in Muslim countries including Afghanistan, Algeria, Iran and Lebanon.  For details visit: www.BAM.org or call 718-636-4100.  

Sunday, March 28: Harriet’s Place: Underground Railroad and Beyond. New exhibition of photographs capturing the essence of Harriet Tubman, the woman, by educator/artist/historian/preservationist Dr. Olivia Cousins, opens today at Magnolia Tree Earth Center of Bedford-Stuyvesant.  Details to be announced. Contact: Andrea Brathwaite at 718-387-2116 or Bernice Green at 718-599-6828.
 
  Monday, March 29: Herbert Von King Park’s Third Phenomenal Women Awards Brunch: Culinary and Drama Teens at the Park, and Parks Administrator Lemuel Mial with volunteer instructor-wife Charlotte Mial, with community friends DBG Media and Legacy Ventures, at a closed, invitation-only event, will honor media women, the communicators, whose ongoing good works keep positive stories and information about our communities at the forefront. Among the honorees:  Mrs. Esther Jackson, Founder and Publisher, Freedomways; Nayaba Arinde, Editor, NY Amsterdam News; Freelance Journalist and Media Consultants Victoria Horsford and Fern Gillespie; Dr. Brenda Greene, Founder, National Black Writers Conference; Medgar Evers College, CUNY; Aminisha Black, columnist, Our Time Press; author-entrepreneur Monique Greenwood, now celebrating her  popular Akwaaba Inns’ 15th year; writer Susan McHenry; Janel Gross, The Challenge Group; Marcia Pendelton, Wall Tall Girl Productions; Joanne Cheatham, Founder and Publisher, Pure Jazz Magazine; Stacy-Ann Gooden, Reporter, News12; Rosalind McLymont, The Network Journal; Faybiene Miranda, Co-Hos, Global Health Review, WBAI; Jeanne Parnell, anchor, WHCR; Dr. Teresa Taylor-Williams, Publisher, Trend Newspaper; and Gayle DeWees of the NY Daily News, also the former employer of the late Joyce Shelby, the adored journalist to whom this event is dedicated. Mrs. Jackson and Tupper Thomas, head of the Prospect Park Alliance, will receive the Hattie Carthan Awards. 
    -Bernice Elizabeth Green

"Conversations: Embracing Our African Roots…."

Why is it that in the 21st Century conflicts in African countries are still often portrayed as “tribal wars” in Western media and in some cases Africans are still referred to as “tribesmen”? Why do major media see no need to balance coverage of turmoil in African countries with some of the success stories that have also emerged?
How many in the general public, for example, are aware that African economies are set to grow by more than 4% this year, one of the highest rates in the world, according to an article in The Wall Street Journal (March 8, 2010 issue)?
Do editors and reporters in some Western media believe the stereotypical images of Africa –backward, uncivilized, disease and conflict-prone– are so deeply ingrained in the Western psyche that they don’t even think it’s worth offering more balanced coverage of Africa? Are some of the past and contemporary misrepresentations so fixed that editors/reporters believe they would owe their readers too much explanation if they were to use pejorative language in their coverage of events in Africa? Do most Western editors/reporters view Africa from a well-established –and distorted– journalistic template?
Do African countries deserve the negative coverage due to the exploits of some corrupt dictators? Some of the most vocal critics of corruption and tyranny have been Africans –Chinua Achebe, Wole Soyinka, Okot p’Bitek, Ngugi wa Thiong’o– yet these writers don’t use any of the pejorative terms –“tribesmen” “savage wars” “dirt poor Africans” — favored by some Western writers.
What are some of the consequences of decades –indeed centuries– of negative coverage of Africa in Western literature and journalism? Inferiority complexes? Racist attitude towards Africans and people of African descent? Manufactured enmity amongst Diaspora Africans –after all, not many people would want to be associated with an “uncivilized” and “backward” continent. Some of the stereotypical representations –of Africans/people of African descent– have also generated negative perceptions and even created hostility among Diaspora Africans.
Yet, as Malcolm X once said “You can’t hate the roots of a tree without hating the tree.”
These are some of the questions and issues that will be FRANKLY explored during a gathering of Diaspora Africans (African Americans, African immigrants, Afro-Latinos, and Caribbean immigrants) at The Brecht Forum on Saturday, March 13 from 4 PM to 7PM for “Conversations: Embracing Our African Roots….”
The “Conversation…” which will be taped by CNN will be moderated by Milton Allimadi, Publisher The Black Star News (www.blackstarnews.com) and author of “The Hearts of Darkness ”  http://www.theheartsofdarkness.com/
Invited Panelists for the “Conversation…” include: Les Payne (Former Editor, New York Newsday); David Lamb (Playwright: “Plantanos and Collard Greens” www.platanosandcollardgreens.com); Chika Onyeani (Publisher, The African Sun Times www.africansuntimes.com); and Joyce Adewumi (Exec Director, New York African Chorus Ensemble).
After brief presentations by the panelists most of the time will be devoted to Q & A and discussions with members of the public.
The Brecht Forum: 451 West Street (between Bank & Bethune Streets, New York, NY 10014 Phone: (212) 242-4201
The Brecht Forum welcomes modest donations at the door BUT NO ONE WILL BE TURNED AWAY: ALL ARE WELCOME
Please see attachment:
http://www.wnyc.org/shows/bl/episodes/2009/11/16/segments/144390

Gov. Paterson Impresses Diverse Audience at Brooklyn Town Hall Meeting: Commands Moment, Impactful on State Budget Crisis

A confident Governor Paterson was well-received at a Town Hall meeting about the New York State budget at Brooklyn’s Borough Hall on Monday and no one can accuse him of sugar-coating the economic message.   Paterson began with a brief historical analysis of how governments have changed the names of financial problems from Poland’s Crisis of 1899 to the Great Depression of the 1930s to what is today called a “recession.”  The point of his lesson was that whatever it’s called, the pain is the same.  “A recession is next door,” said the governor.  “When you’re the one who’s lost a home or a job, that starts to feel like a depression.”    
Paterson says New York State can be looking at a Depression if action is not taken now.   And the action he has taken, he frankly detailed.  “In my administration we have cut $4.5 billion from health care, we’ve cut $1.1 billion from education, we’ve cut our administration, our agencies, by $1.5 billion  and in this year’s budget we’re going to cut it some more.  We’re going to have to cut health care another billion, education a 5% reduction of $1.1 billion and another billion from our agencies, including $250 million from workforce reduction.”
Governor Paterson was quite clear in his warning when he said, “I came here to tell you that today we’re Crossing the Rubicon in terms of moving from recession to something else far worse if my colleagues and I can’t close a $9.2 billion deficit.”  They had successfully closed an  $18 billion deficit last year, said the governor,  “but we had more options.  We’ve used them up.  We’ve depleted our resources.”
The governor then asked for suggestions but reminded the assembled that wherever a program is to be saved, “we also have to know how we’re going to pay for it,” because the state may run out of money by May or June. 
Suggestions ran from borrowing from other countries; “most are in the same boat we are,” said Governor Paterson, although he added he has suggested that the Treasury could lend to highly rated governments at a favorable rate of return.  Queen Mother Blakely’s suggestion that it would be cheaper if state institutions purchased Queen Mother’s Organic Coffee from her women-owned enterprise and queried as to how she should proceed.  The governor acknowledged that, “There is a lot of purchasing the state does and we’ll have someone speak to you about that.” 
Dave Taylor said the governor may not remember him, but he was from the Upper West Side of Manhattan, and came representing the Council of Senior Services to say that senior citizen centers throughout the five boroughs are currently under review by the NYC Department of the Aging to determine which should be closed.  “Seniors are terrified.  We are faced with the possibility of 75 centers being closed throughout the city.  Will you take Title 20 off the table and stop the closing of senior centers?”   “Dave Taylor, I remember you well from the Upper West Side,” responded the governor.  “And if I remember correctly, I think you ran for City Council in 1989.”
Mr. Taylor’s question was an opportunity for Governor Paterson to show the dilemmas his administration is faced with.  “A kind of triage,” is how he puts it.  Two of the deficit culprits are the surge in Medicaid costs – “about $400 million” – and the Wall Street bonuses that were paid in stock, not in cash and therefore couldn’t be taxed. 
“When the bonuses are not paid, they don’t go back to the public, they go to the firms,” explained the governor.  “And the firms have very favorable tax benefits and ways in which when the money goes back to the firms, we can’t tax it at the same rate as if it was paid in bonuses.  This cost us another half a billion dollars.” As the governor put it, “This was the public relations way that Wall Street is adjusting to the attacks on the high bonuses.”
Describing the economic environment he is in, Paterson said, “It is hard to take things off the table when actually we still have to come up with another billion dollars.”
He insisted that his administration is “particularly careful and scrupulous of those who live on the edge:  Seniors. Homeless people with disabilities and people who don’t have many options.”  And yet while still being mindful of the very real pain these cuts cause, New York State has to move forward and “the only reason it’s on the table is because of the dire state that we’re in.”
Councilman Charles Barron spoke in favor of looking for money where money is: wealthy folk. He called for a Stock Transfer Tax as a way to recapture some of that Wall Street money and congratulated the governor for blazing the path of taxing the wealthy. “I think you were bold.  You were one of the few governors who had the heart and the spine to raise the PIT, Personal Income Tax surcharge, on those earning $250,000 or more and we got about  $4 billion out of that.  Let’s go up further, those making $500,000, charge 2.5%  Those making a million, 7.5%.    You cannot have a budget process and say that raising taxes on the rich is off the table.  If you want to be fiscally prudent, then everything stays on the table: cutting us, taxing the rich and selling state assets.  Tax the rich and put some of our stuff back in the budget.”
Describing an imposition of a Stock Transfer Tax as “tantalizing” Paterson said, “The Stock Transfer Tax began in 1905, and in 1966 it was shifted and the Transfer Tax benefited New York City.  It was reduced between 1978 and 1981 and here’s why.  We’re not living in the kind of world as in 1905.  We’re living in an electronic environment.  If you want to move Wall Street to Downtown Newark or Greenwich, Connecticut, impose a Stock Transfer Tax.  They don’t need the geographic location of
Wall Street to operate any more.”
The governor then offered a suggestion of his own on retrieving some of the Wall Street bonus money.   “What I think we should do is talk to Wall Street, which is the engine of our economy, about the way they are shifting resources that just denied New York State half a billion dollars this year and half a billion next year.  I do think there is a discussion that we have to have with the major firms on Wall Street about how to support New York State, which is supporting them.” 
On the issue of taxes the governor agreed that he had enacted one of the most stringent taxes on the wealthy, over 9%,  “for which we got a lot of criticism,”  but his administration has found that this approach has diminishing returns.  As proof, he offered that they had projected over $4 billion in revenue but actually got in only $3.6 billion.  Apparently, people’s loyalty to New York does not extend to paying more in taxes.  “The problem is people will say they moved to Florida, and stay there one more day a year than they do here in New York, and for that, they don’t pay any taxes at all.”
To a question regarding the Atlantic Yards project, Paterson said he had waited for the Court of Appeals to make a decision regarding the use of Eminent Domain in the taking of private property for private use and was surprised that it allowed the taking to move forward.  “And now the Supreme Court has made a decision.  There was a process, I did not want to impose my own judgment where there has already been a court decision in the matter.”
Councilwoman Letitia James said there could be savings in closing empty upstate prisons and merging redundant agencies.  Paterson responded that they have already begun the merging of agencies, but said the savings are “only in the tens of millions of dollars,” and they’re looking at a multibillion-dollar hole to fill.
Councilwoman James had also brought up the subject of the proposed Sugar Tax, which she said was a regressive tax.  Perhaps because the governor’s schedule showed his next stop was a Sugared Beverage Tax Symposiumÿ in the Blue Room of the Capitol he took to the question like a bear to honey.
“In the end it may be regressive, but it’s a different kind of tax,” the governor insisted, “because all of the tax collected is designated for health care services.   We are losing $8 billion a year from people smoking and almost as much, $7.5 billion a year, treating diabetes, heart disease and other ailments coming from obesity, largely caused by sugar.  Companies have freely sold these products in our communities and put them in serious, serious physical condition and we’ve never taken a look at that.” Paterson spoke of the proliferation of hospital units around the country treating childhood stroke and heart attack victims. 
“We assessed how much money we would get from a Sugar Tax but we also assessed that there would be a 15% drop-off in the market.  This will drop the amount of money the taxpayer is paying for health care.  60% of adults in the state are obese,  25% of children and 33% of minority children are obese.  80% of African-American women are obese.  Well, okay, 79%.  I’m speaking for a class of people who don’t have a vote.  And that’s the children of this state. And when their parents come down here and shaking the wall  about their children having heart attacks, it’s not going to be on my conscience.”
Also speaking for the children was Ms. Jackson of AARP Chapter 2197 who asked, “Why are we cutting Kin Care when it saves the state money.   We have over 400,000 children in Kin Care.  Keeping those children out of the foster care actually saves money.  We need that $2 million for those children,  keeping them with their families, the Kin Care program builds family bonds as well as saves the state money.”   Paterson said he would go back and take a look at the Kin Care program.   “But,” he said, “If the premise of your question is that we have made cuts that otherwise brought revenues into the state, what I want to tell you is that’s how dire our situation is.”  He gave the example of the Parks System where he said every dollar the state spends generates $5 in revenue.  “The problem is we don’t have the dollar to open the parks.” 
The governor describes a scene much like a family at the kitchen table holding back on paying the cable bill in order to pay the rent.  “We have to make payments to local governments at the end of March and payments on Medicaid.  We are $2 billion short on those payments and nobody knows where we’re going to come up with the money.  That’s why we discussed holding back the tax returns for two weeks.  That would bring about $500 million into the $2 billion we have to pay.  These are not choices.  These are necessities.”

Giving Incarcerated Parents A Fighting Chance To Reunite With Their Children

Sen.Montgomery,Assemblyman Aubry & Children and Families Commissioner join together to protect families from being separated.
Lawmakers and criminal justice reform advocates joined together at the State Capitol last week to garner support for legislation (S.2233/A.5462-A) that will allow foster care agencies the discretion to delay filing papers to terminate the parental rights of parents who are incarcerated or enrolled in a substance abuse treatment program.

Making the Right Connections: Brandon, 13, (center), at State Sen. Velmanette Montgomery’s right, stated at a recent press conference: ‘I’m glad my mom is by my side right now helping other children get their moms back and passing this bill. I just want to say that I’m glad that I have her and I love her.”

The bill’s sponsors, Senator Velmanette Montgomery (D-Brooklyn) and Assemblyman Jeffrion Aubry (D-Queens), were joined in discussing their legislation by New York State Children and Families Commissioner Cladys Carrion, Correctional Association representatives, and formerly incarcerated women and their children.
The Adoption and Safe Families Act (ASFA) Expanded Discretion bill gives incarcerated parents and their children a greater opportunity to work towards reunification and safe permanency options that do not involve severing family bonds.
“The time is now to pass my bill, which will go a long way toward helping families develop and maintain healthy, lasting connections,” said Senator  Montgomery, who is the Chairperson of the Senate Committee on Children and Families. “For too long, we’ve failed to protect the best interests of children in foster care with parents in prison and treatment programs.  I sponsored this bill to give families separated by the criminal justice and child welfare systems the fighting chance they deserve to rebuild and stay whole.”
Almost always, ASFA requires a foster care agency to file a termination of parental rights petition if a child has been in foster care for 15 of the last 22 months. However, the median sentence length for women in New York’s prison system is 36 months and most incarcerated parents are limited to family visiting opportunities, telephone and mail service and unable to participate in foster care planning meetings, making it difficult to fulfill child welfare responsibilities.
More than 100,000 children have parents in a New York State prison or jail, including nearly 10,000 children with an incarcerated mother.
Terminating their parental rights will not necessarily find equal permanency for a child and many continue to stay in foster care. “This legislation will allow parents in prison and residential treatment, who are working towards rehabilitation, an opportunity to maintain and develop loving, supportive relationships with their children and to find permanent placements that do not involve severing important family bonds forever,” said Assemblyman Jeffrion Aubry, Chair of the Committee on Correction.  “Giving these families the chance to stay connected is the right thing to do – it is also a crucial component of curbing recidivism and enhancing public safety.”
“For over a decade, New York’s ASFA laws have devastated parents caught up in the criminal justice system and their children,” said Tamar Kraft-Stolar, Director of the Women in Prison Project at the Correctional Association of New York.  “This bill takes critical steps toward balancing the playing field for families separated by prison and treatment programs struggling to stay connected.  Its provisions will help ensure that ASFA’s timeline does not trump permanency decisions that are best for the child and the family.”
Susan Jacobs, Executive Director, Center for Family Representation, stated: “Our organization represents hundreds of parents, including parents in prison, in child protective and termination of parental rights proceedings. We know from years of experience that having the time to facilitate meaningful visits and communication can mean the difference between a family staying together and losing ties forever.
In addition, termination hearings are among the most time-intensive and expensive proceedings in Family Court.  When additional time is provided to work on solutions, it is possible to create workable and safe placements for children, and savings for state and local governments.”
The ASFA bill passed the Assembly on January 26, 2010 and now awaits consideration by the full Senate.

Coalition Campaigns to End Prison-Based Gerrymandering

Senator Eric T. Schneiderman and Assemblyman Hakeem Jeffries joined forces with a statewide coalition today to announce a new organizing campaign plan to end prison-based gerrymandering in New York State before the 2010 Census.
The coalition’s goal is to organize across the state to pass Senator Schneiderman’s bill that would require New York State to count incarcerated persons in their home communities-rather than in the districts where they are incarcerated-for purposes of drawing legislative district lines. If passed, it would be the first law in the nation to count prisoners in their home communities for districting purposes.
“It’s an absolute injustice that New York currently counts people in the districts where they are incarcerated, rather than in their home communities. I am proud to be here to join forces with Sen. Schneiderman, Assm. Jeffries and this coalition to end this unconstitutional practice. If we do not act soon, it will be 10 long years for another opportunity to right this wrong. We cannot afford to wait,” said Rev. Al Sharpton.
“Equal representation under the law benefits everyone,” said Senator Eric T. Schneiderman, the lead sponsor of the bill to end prison-based gerrymandering. “The practice of counting people where they are incarcerated undermines the fundamental principle of ‘one person, one vote’ – it’s undemocratic and reflects a broken system. This legislation is as simple as it is fair: it requires that legislative districts at every level of government contain an equal numbers of residents. The time to act is now.”
Assemblyman Jeffries is the bill’s lead sponsor in the Assembly.
“This bill is necessary to break the back of the prison industrial complex where certain communities benefit from the criminalization of young people who disproportionately come from low-income neighborhoods across the state. Prison-based gerrymandering is unfair, unethical and unconstitutional, and we will not rest until the process is changed,” said Assemblyman. Jeffries.
 “Prison-based gerrymandering continues to cheat needy communities of fair and equitable representation across the state of New York. This archaic formula perpetuates traditional electoral disparities by insuring that many men and women of color be counted by the U.S. Census in counties where they are incarcerated as opposed to where they resided at the time of their arrest. This practice cheats neighborhoods of much needed resources as well as a fair share of political representation,” said Assemblyman Adriano Espaillat, a co-sponsor of the bill.
The new coalition was represented by Citizen Action of New York, The Public Policy and Education Fund, The Prison Policy Initiative, New York Civil Liberties Union, Demos, Common Cause, the Brennan Center for Justice, Fortune Society, Bronx Defenders, Praxis Project, Correctional Association of New York, Community Service Society, New York City AIDS Housing Network (NYCAHN), Malcolm X Grassroots Movement, Center for Law & Social Justice, Nu Leadership Policy Group, Prison Families of New York and Exponents. The announcement was followed by a statewide organizing meeting that included more than 50 community-based organizations focused on passing this legislation.
Eddie Ellis, executive director, Center for NuLeadership on Urban Solutions, Medgar Evers College, CUNY, said, “This critical piece of legislation speaks to the fundamental principle of a participatory democracy, namely: ‘one man/woman, one vote.’ In additional to violating the constitution of the state of New York regarding residency, the current census counting process for incarcerated people also violates the ‘one man/woman, one vote’ principle in as much as it assigns disproportionate representation to certain counties to the detriment of others. As such, this process must be changed.”
“When the Census tallies incarcerated people at prison locations far from home, the picture of the American civic community is distorted, with profound ramifications for our democracy,” says Erika Wood of the Brennan Center for Justice. “The policy gives public officials in prison districts an incentive to build their districts on the backs of ‘ghost voters,’ packing in prisoners who count toward the district size but who are not permitted to vote.”
“New York State is undermining the core American principles of fairness and equal representation by pretending that inmates are legitimate constituents of the districts where they are incarcerated,” said New York Civil Liberties Union Executive Director Donna Lieberman. “Our state must end this corruption of the political process and count all New Yorkers as members of their home communities.”
“Common Cause/NY applauds Senator Schneiderman and Assembly Member Jeffries for their leadership in righting an obvious wrong,” said Susan Lerner, Executive Director of Common Cause/NY. She added, “In order to achieve fairly drawn legislative and congressional districts and insure the efficient use of scarce government resources, it is essential that the census miscount of incarcerated New Yorkers not be the basis for redistricting and distribution of resources. Article II, Sec. 4 of our state constitution demands no less.”