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Evangeline Byars Makes History as First Woman to Run for TWU Local 100 President

By Mary Alice Miller
Anyone familiar with student activism at Medgar Evers College more than a decade ago would recognize Evangeline Byars. She launched her career in organizing when she worked with students to form the student newspaper Adafi and led the Concerned Students of Medgar Evers College Movement to advocate for institutional reform, particularly around student financial aid. She also interned at SEIU 32BJ which gave her insight into labor issues.

Since then she joined the MTA and served an executive role at TWU Local 100 as a board member. She is Senior Officer of Women Uplifting Women, a sisterhood that empowers working women. Byars was the former Senior Advisor to the Amazon Labor Union and Senior Advisor to the Associate Worker Labor Union AWLU.

Byars has stepped forward as the first woman to run for president of Transit Workers Union of America (TWU) Local 100 in its 90 year history.


Seeking to center the union around pay parity and worker safety, Byars said Tier 6 workers now having a pension that would make them officially the first civil servants tier to retire in poverty. “I am running to ensure that we once again have access to the middle class, because we are losing everything,” she said.

“They are privatizing our work at the MTA. They have farmed out our work in the tracks department. They are basically undoing all of those agreements that were made distinctly under the Roger Toussaint era where you saw the gains and improvements coming under the contract.”

Byars says her candidacy prioritizes Safety Over Service. “We have been having derailments and members injured, including severe injuries,” said Byars. “There was a time in labor when someone was injured or severely injured or killed on the job that all work stopped. We didn’t just go on with business as usual.

Now there is this idea that when people are injured or severely injured on the job that there is no oversight anymore, no shut down of the shop or the job to make sure that we are more focused on the preservation of life than delivering services.”

Citing the March 2020 death of MTA motorman Garrett Goble who died after assisting passengers off a train when a shopping cart was set afire, Byars said, “No member should come to work and not make it home to their family.”

Byars is calling for all MTA workers to be issued Self Contained Breathing Apparatus (SCBA) used for entry into and escape from environments considered immediately dangerous to life and health, just like those issued to the fire department. She said SCBA masks would give transit worker 5 minutes of air that could save lives.


“Our job title is safety sensitive,” said Byars. “We are injured at an alarming rate. People jump in front of trains and bus operators get injured in the performance of their duties. Assaults are very high. We work on live tracks with equipment that can injure you.

Our workers get injured a lot: falling off trains, fingers getting caught in chairs because it is old equipment. A lot of injuries occur especially on stairs due to slip and fall. There are a lot of issues inside the infrastructure of transit that causes injuries.”

Byars said when workers are injured on the job often their documentation disappears. She said the MTA fight their worker’s compensation cases even when a doctor has already certified that this is a job related injury.

As a result workers are forced to fight their claims in court, which they cannot afford to do so they come back to work injured and usually wind up being more severely injured due to the fact they were not given time to heal.

Worse, Byars stated that there is a type of ‘profit sharing’ agreement where MTA management and the union benefit from injured workers showing up for work. Byars says the problem is so systemic even the NYS Comptroller’s office issued a report on the matter. “All of this has been documented that transit workers compensation cases are not being handled properly,” said Byars.

When Byars father became ill, she found that MTA was not honoring the state’s Family Paid Leave Law. Even pregnant transit workers were compelled to come back to work after 2 weeks maternity leave. Byars filed a grievance against the MTA in 2022 which led to the Union negotiating an increase in paternity/maternity leave of 4 weeks for men and 12 weeks for women, which she said still discriminates against men.

One of Byars chief peeves is the lack of pay parity with Long Island Railroad and Metro North, whose employees got a 17% pay raise while MTA workers did not. Byars is also calling for the restoration of retiree medical benefits away from Medicare Advantage Plans.
The election for President of TWU LOCAL 100 is scheduled to take place in November 2024.

Mo’Nique: Hollywood Legend Who’s Sounding The Alarm About The Big Pay Gap!

By Lisa Durden
Hey my sweet babies, it’s your girl Lisa Durden, back again to keep that Women’s History Month energy alive with a spotlight on the queens who aren’t just making movies, but making money moves! Today, let’s talk about another Hollywood legend shaking things up – Mo’Nique! Everybody knows, I love that Bitch Mo’Nique, cause she’s always got receipts! So, buckle up butter cups, because we’re about to spill the strong, hot Lipton tea, on how she’s been sounding the alarm about ‘The Big Pay Gap’ in Hollyweird!


I’ve heard it time and time again – “Mo is a real one.” Years ago, shortly after the movie “Precious” premiered, I met her behind the scenes of the Dr. Oz Show and her warmth and generosity were unforgettable. She greeted all of us with the biggest hugs and words of encouragement. Her authentic kindness brought women to tears. Mo’s bold generosity and respect wasn’t a surprise, however, she gives as much respect as she expects to get!

So, did Hollywood think they were gonna just play in her face and silence her?? Let’s get into it. Mo’Nique’s journey to stardom hasn’t been all glitz and glamour. She’s been slaying the game for decades, from her role on The Queens Of Comedy, to her unforgettable, powerhouse performance on the big screen in the film “Precious,” Mo’Nique has been a force to be reckoned with.

Unfortunately, despite her tremendous talents, Mo has had to fight tooth and nail to get the recognition and respect she deserves. And sadly, one of the biggest battles she’s faced? You guessed it, ‘The Big Pay Gap!’


MoNique has been fighting very publicly on several financial fronts for nearly a decade! She’s been unapologetically sounding the alarm loud and proud about ‘The Big Pay Gap,’ long before it was popular or acceptable.

In fact, Mo got “whiteballed” and canceled for speaking her truth! For those of you who have selective amnesia, it all started in circa 2017 when MoNique was on the Apollo stage during her Mother’s Day stand up show, where she shocked audiences saying, ‘Mr. Lee Daniels, Mr. Tyler Perry, and Ms. Oprah Winfrey could suck my d@ck if I had one.”

Chiiiile..That clip went ultra viral! I learned later that they had all allegedly asked her to attend the Cannes Film Festival to promote ‘Precious’ for ZERO pay for the distributor Lionsgate, although she was not contractually obligated to do so…which is what sparked the drama.

Mo also called for a Netflix boycott and in 2019, she sued them for racial and gender bias, claiming that an executive at Netflix only offered her $500,000 dollars for her comedy special, while paying her white counterpart Amy Schumer $13 million dollars. But what was most disappointing to me, was that the Black community swooped down in support of the oppressor. I wasn’t surprised at prominent Black folks like Steve Harvey who gaslit MoNique, helping to orchestrate her being summarily canceled.

However, I was super disappointed in Whoopi Goldberg, because she too is a Black woman who definitely struggled to be treated fairly in Hollywood. But be real clear, I am throwing ZERO SHADE! I love love love love, Ms. Goldberg. She deserves all of the flowers, but I would be remiss if I didn’t address Mo’s 2018 appearance on The View, where the legendary Whoopi told her, “I could have called you and schooled you on what was expected.”

I was thinking…naw sis, why would you advise MoNique to take the same low pay from back in the day?? I was taught that our elders should encourage us to do better than them. So, Aunty Whoop was a little out of pocket for trying to discourage Mo, in my humble opinion. #OMGIsItOnlyMe??


In 1962, MalcolmX said, “The most disrespected person in America is the Black woman. The most unprotected person in America is the Black woman. The most neglected person in America is the Black woman.”

Fast forward, it’s 2024 and unfortunately, not much has changed. Now CBS is in the hot seat! Mrs. Hicks and her former co-star Countess Vaugh are suing the media conglomerate for fair pay for “The Parkers,” alleging that the sitcom costed under $70 million dollars to produce it’s 5 year run, which ended in 2004, but by 2009, her “husbanger” Sidney Hicks proclaimed, “we see profit participation statements that shows the program made over $700 million dollars.” Well dayum!

My Spidey sense tells me they are gonna have to run them their money, just like Netflix did when the streaming giant settled their lawsuit with Mo for an undisclosed amount and probably had to make her whole by giving her a comedy special, which she appropriately titled: “My Name Is MoNique.” And y’all know I was in the house front and center with my VIP PRESS PASS! YAAAASSS!


Mo is still keeping the block hot with her recent viral appearance on Shannon Sharpe’s Club Shay Shay Podcast, where she continued to sound the alarm about ‘The Big Pay Gap!’ Mo’Nique isn’t just a fighter; she’s a trailblazer.

So as we celebrate Mo’Nique’s legacy, let’s remember her as a warrior, a champion, and a sista who paved the way for generations to come. But her fight isn’t over, and she’s not alone.

She’s standing on the shoulders of giants like Hattie McDaniel and Eartha Kitt…paving the way for actresses like Viola Davis and Taraji P. Henson, who are not backing down either! They are STANDING ON BUSINESS! Stay tuned for their stories in this four-part series, because we’re not done yet! #ClapForThat!

Lisa Durden is a prominent National Media Contributor and TV Personality, renowned for her appearances on prestigious platforms such as ABC 20/20 as an ABC News Contributor, Revolt TV’s ‘Revolt Black News,’ and Fox Soul’s ‘Being Black With Tammi Mac.’ Her contributions extend to CBS News, The Dr. Oz Show, and as an #APlusPanel Contributor on #TheOpinionZone for the former ‘Chasing News Series’ on the My9 Network. Her distinctive voice and activism echoes through her storytelling, establishing her as a vocal Social Justice Journalist and thought leader, recognized by media outlets like Newsweek, Ark Republic and Our Time Press. #ClapForThat!

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Speakeasy Jazz Club is a family affair in sync with Harlem’s Renaissance traditions

ROOM 623, Harlem’s Speakeasy Jazz Club, located at 271 W. 119th Street, celebrated a much-needed gift – a brand new Yamaha U1 PE upright piano. Donated by Harlemite and arts patron Stuart Holland, the piano was officially unveiled on February 28 at a performance and reception attended by area residents, musicians, members of the press and other special guests. In addition to remarks by the club owner, manager and the Holland family, the evening also showcased performances by three great pianists, including Bertha Hope, Danny Mixon and Luther S. Allison.


The club, located underneath Brunch Harlem (formerly B Squared/Billie’s Black), is owned & founded by Harlem-born restaurateur Adriane Ferguson and now co-owned by Joseph Bailey.
Holland was inspired by legacy to give the piano to the club on behalf of his proud musical family: The Greenes, The Hollands, The Jacksons & The Teasdales.

“My mother attended the High School of Music & Art when it was affiliated with City College of New York in Hamilton Heights,” Holland proudly recalls.

“My Uncle Richard was heavily influenced by classical music. His daughters played violin when they were young. He compiled a list of Black classical composers and supported their careers in classical music. He was also an avid jazz fan and introduced me to some well-known artists.

My great Aunt Thelma was a music teacher and piano instructor, and my cousin William Moore Jr. was an arranger for Tommy Dorsey in the 1940s and later wrote songs for The Peters Sisters from 1953-1960.”


“Every night we’re open, we’re representing that history,” Room 623 club manager Marcus Goldhaber said, “and paying homage, while staying current and looking ahead. For more information visit www.room623.com.

No Limits to Making History

For Brooklyn Kingsborough College teen, the sky is not the limit…
Kamora Freeland, 17, is now the youngest pilot in New York State

Kyra Alessandrini,
yahoo.com


Kamora Freeland has become one of the youngest pilots in the country. The 17-year-old obtained her private pilot license On Tuesday.
“Today I’m taking my check ride, so that’s the test to get my private pilot’s license,” she told ABC 7 NY on Monday.


Freeland flew for around an hour with a designated pilot examiner as part of the test. Her family was in attendance to support her.

“I live in Atlanta, and I came to see it,” Freeland’s sister Mariama Toe-Freeland said. “I wouldn’t miss it for the world.”

“To see her doing this, it’s just amazing,” her cousin Aaron Rice added. “To be so young and mature at that age to even want to do it, is just amazing.”

The 17-year-old’s grandfather said he was excited to be present for the exam.
“I couldn’t even hardly walk but I knew I had to be here,” Richard Greene said.
Her mother said she was “grateful” to be able to see her daughter take the test. Freeland took her on a flight to Martha’s Vineyard last summer.


“She flew me, and I enjoyed it, and she really did it, and I couldn’t believe that she was the pilot of the plane that I was sitting in the back of,” Freeland’s mother said.
The pilot had passed solo and cross-country flight exams prior to this week’s test. She has been learning how to fly since she was 15.

“She’s focused and she’s still just a kid,” her instructor told the news outlet.
Freeland said flying is her passion. She will be enrolling at Spelman College next fall and hopes to eventually obtain her commercial pilot license.

“It’s definitely amazing,” Freeland said about officially becoming a pilot. “I’m a part of the change that’s definitely needed and I want other little Black girls to do the same.”

Troy Gill’s Mom: “He Was a Great Boy…”

By Nayaba Arinde
Editor-at-Large


Somebody shot a 13-year-old.
Troy Gill was on his way home from a Nets game at the Barclays Center. It was a little while before 11 o’clock at night. Reportedly, the teen was approached by an individual who shot him four times in Crown Heights.

Bergen Street neighbors spoke of a barrage of gunshots; although fatally hit in the chest, back, and arm, Troy was still able to make it about a block to St. Marks Avenue, not far from his apartment. There, he collapsed.

“Anyone who knows of a crime and does not speak out when there is an innocent victim; whether it be a woman, a senior citizen, or children – then you are a traitor to your community,” Rev. W. Taharka Robinson, organizer of a rally in support of the Gill family, told Our Time Press.


“Heartbroken, this is a nightmare,” Troy’s stepfather, Joseph Ward, said on News12. “He was a good kid…He was tiny and mighty.”

“Our young men need guidance,” said NYC Gun Czar A.T. Mitchell. While police told Our Time Press that Gill’s killer has yet to be apprehended, Mitchell suggested that there is a public health crisis of gun proliferation and “Babies that are killing babies.

They are killing for likes on social media. They are children; they learn in hindsight. Or in prison.”

On Thursday, February 29, 2024, at 10.40 pm, police arrived on the scene at Brooklyn Avenue and St. Marks Avenue; there, they told the paper that they found the teen, who had sustained “multiple gunshot wounds to the body. EMS responded and transported the male to NYC Health+Hospitals/Kings County where he was subsequently pronounced deceased.”


ABC 7 reported, “Gill had FaceTimed his mother several times that night, from the Barclays Center at 9 p.m. and from an Uber at 10:09 p.m. before he was shot soon after around 10:35 p.m.

They say he was running home, FaceTiming his mother again, when he collapsed. Family members were frantically searching for him when they met police at the scene.”

Impassioned community members, Troy’s parents, and clergy, including Rev. Robinson, later rallied where Troy was shot, condemning the murder of the young boy.

News reports have linked Troy to an alleged association with the Bed Stuy Drench Crew, an alleged Brooklyn street gang.


Troy’s grieving mother Mary Culbertson, maintains that “He was not in a gang. He was a great boy…He was a baby. That should never happen to him or anybody else’s baby.”
“There are no arrests, and the investigation remains ongoing,” a DCPI spokesperson told Our Time Press.


“This fake tough guy code of not snitching only leads to more reckless behavior from someone with a reckless mindset,” Rev. Robinson told Our Time Press. “People in that life have a street code of honor, and things that happen in the streets – stay in the streets.

If there is beef, it is settled in the street, including drugs, guns, or any criminal activity – whatever transpires in the street stays in the street,” said the Chaplain from the 77th Precinct Community Council.

“When there are innocent mothers, senior citizens, innocent children, and innocent men going about their day-to-day activity – if something happens to them, then that street code of honor should be abandoned, and someone should come forward.’’


The same week on Monday afternoon, February 26th, in a Franklin Avenue deli, Nazim Berry, 37, was shot dead. Danette Hollie, his devastated mother, told the press that her son refused to give a man a Black & Mild cigar free of charge. The suspect returned to the Crown Heights deli and “pointed the gun right to the back of his head and shot him.”

Two days later, on Wednesday 28th, February, Guinean immigrant Lamine Bah, 33, was also shot in the head on McKeever Place outside his Ebbets Field apartment in Crown Heights. Reportedly an innocent bystander, the father of 3 young children worked as a cook and a Doordash delivery man.


Mitchell, Founder and CEO of Man Up Inc., the East New York-based community advocacy group, told Our Time Press, “They have not been apprehended yet, but I wouldn’t be surprised if it wasn’t babies killing babies because the shooters are becoming much younger than previously – and the victims are becoming much younger.

When I say babies, I am talking about adolescents whose brains have not developed or matured. Their decision-making processes haven’t developed like that of an adult. They are living their lives based on the internet.


“The internet is the driver of the crime, the beef. That’s where the conflicts that they have between one another can thrive. Sometimes through music. Sometimes through other means, reasons, and neighborhoods.

But it exacerbates whatever the conflict is, because they have onlookers who are mostly majority children, young people as well. And they are playing out this conflict in front of the world really. They are doing things for the likes, to be popular online.”


Mitchell added, “Yes, even killing for likes. They really do not understand the consequences. They are children. And so they learn in hindsight about how severe a crime they committed after they turn a certain age in prison or being shot and killed themselves. It’s a vicious cycle of babies killing babies.”

The solution he said is altering the approach of how to reach the young people at a much earlier age, to be counseled, and mentored to “train their pathways.”

We are up against social media, which is a huge mountain that we have to climb; a huge industry that is making billions of dollars off of the backs and lives of our young people. So we have to reach them where they are.”

That could be the internet spaces in which they reside or the music that they listen to, the decades-long youth advocate said. The schools too, said the father of six. “It used to be the high schools, now we have to go into the elementary and middle schools.

That’s my new target age – 7, 8, 9, 10-years-old and older. We’ve got to get to them before they make a poor decision because, in this city, this state, and this country, Black and brown boys are detained, prosecuted, and held against their will – as early as seven years old. We can’t wait until they reach 12, 13, or 14.”


The proliferation of marijuana stores is not lessening the problems, said Mitchell. “This is not even weed,” he said. “This new age marijuana is filled with all kinds of substances, and no one knows what it is actually doing to their brains, and how it is impacting their behavior.”

“The young men need to see more positive male representation,” Kwaku Ofori Payton told Our Time Press. “These young boys are surrounded by negative images of themselves, whether it be on TV, social media, movies, or just everyday life.


The women have worldwide movements, but the young Black men have what? They need to have support systems which speak to their needs, and gives them the resources so that they can build healthy and productive development.”


Playing and teaching African drumming in schools for decades, the Brooklyn native and founder of DrumLove, Payton said, “We have to use ‘Culture as a Weapon,’ to create the change. I see how our young people respond to the arts, and how the drumming brings something great out of them.”