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What’s Going On

The Asheville, North Carolina unanimously passed a resolution on July 14 which supports reparations for its Black residents, encouraging the state to follow suit.
The resolution officially apologized for slavery and segregation; however there will not be any direct monies paid to local Blacks.

The City Council will invest in and allocate monies to address local Black disparities in health care, education, employment, salaries and the criminal justice system under this reparations initiative.
Asheville’s population is close to 94,000, which is 83% white and 12% Black.

SUMMERTIME IN AMERICA
As the nation battles COVID19, the decades-long Black-on-Black violence is re-emerging. The July 4th gun violence afflicting Black America from coast to coast, continues in NYC: during the July 11/12 weekend, fifteen people were shot. The following Monday (13), seventeen people were shot in the city, ten of them in Brooklyn where there were seven fatalities, including a one-year-old boy. The USA is a nation with many moving parts and subcultures – education, business, rich and poor, unions, and race/ethnicities – who, ipso facto, must comingle. In June/July, the US Supreme Court ruled in favor of the rights and protections for: DACA (Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals or DREAMers); Native Americans, and for abortions. It confirmed that the President was not above the law, denying Congress access to his tax files, but allowing the Manhattan DA to move forward with its request for same.

Add to the above, the “WHO-WOULD-HAVE-THOUGHT” matters unfolding in America since the George Floyd assassination, the COVID19 July surge in the Sunbelt states and beyond; American businesses revisiting and revoking their re-opening practices and viewing Corporate responsibility through a new lens; Kanye West running in the 2020 Presidential race; The National Football Association’s plan to present TWO songs, the National Anthem and “Lift Every Voice and Sing” — the Black Anthem — before each game; The NFL Washington Redskins franchise acknowledging an imminent name change. And so much more.

Most people understand now that defunding the police is not akin to the elimination of police departments. In Minneapolis, scene of the George Floyd murder, the City Council will disband the Police Department and replace it with a community-based public safety program. Perhaps something akin to the Camden, NJ police reform model.
America’s new mantra is race equality. Will that race agitator POTUS 45 get the message before surrendering his office – and the US Senate – to Democrats?

But is this new Black Lives Matter consciousness all-pervasive – and fully embraced – in America? The DEMOCRACY NOW interview (www.democracynow.com) with — and YouTube video of – African American Vauhxx Rush Booker who was almost lynched by a mob of white men near Lake Monroe in Indiana, during the July 4, 2020 weekend are reality checks.

COVID19 UPDATES
NYC: While the COVID19 curve has flattened, problems like hunger, unemployment, rent and evictions, persist in underserved communities. Rent arrears and evictions are new NYC epidemics. Food pantry stations are set up weekly at NYCHA buildings and local churches. The $600 weekly unemployment bonus by the Feds expires 7/31. A new Stimulus Program is inevitable … with a reduced weekly bonus of $200-$400.

NYPD CULTURE
Judith Harrison, 52, is the first woman to run the NYPD’s Brooklyn North Command, which encompasses 10 precincts that run from East NY to Brooklyn Heights, and which includes some of the city’s “most violence-prone neighborhoods.” She is one of four Black women to ascend to the NYPD’s chief rank. A 23-year NYPD veteran, Harrison holds a MS degree from John Jay and headed the NYPD Special Victims Division.
Read Maya Wiley’s NY Daily News OpEd “Dermot Shea’s Time is Up.” Shea is NYPD Commissioner. She is referencing standoff between Shea and Hizzoner in the post George Floyd protest era. MSNBC legal consultant Wiley, currently teaches at the New School University. She served as NYC Civilian Complaint Review Board Chair and Counsel to Mayor de Blasio. Rumors persist about her interest in the 2021 NYC mayoral race.
The 7/13 NY TFimes editorial, “NYPD Has Rejected Reform for Decades. It Can’t Anymore,” is a good Wiley companion piece.

ECO DEVELOPMENT
Note some new movements towards Black community-based economic empowerment. NETFLIX, the worldwide streaming giant, plans to move $100 million or two percent of its $5.2 billion cash assets to Black banks and related institutions that directly support Black communities. The Netflix film production portfolio includes “When They See Us,” about the Central Park 5; “13th,” the documentary about the amendment which abolished US slavery, which later ushered in a long period of racial inequality, Jim Crow and mass incarceration; and “SELF MADE”, a biopic about Black millionaire entrepreneur Madame C. J. Walker.
Billionaire George Soros’ Open Society Foundation will invest $220 million into efforts towards racial equality in America. The initiative has supported Black Lives Matter and will support other Black-led racial justice groups, including a $150 million investment in 5-year grants for organizations such as the Equal Justice Initiative, Black Voters Matter Fund and Repairers of the Breach, founded by Rev. Dr. William Barber II of the Poor Peoples Campaign.

NEWSMAKERS
Gregg Bishop, NYC Commissioner of Small Business Services, during the de Blasio Administration, was recently named Interim Executive Director of Coro New York, a civic leadership organization purposed with achieving change through collaboration and identifying creative solutions to strengthen American democracy. Bishop’s CV includes senior management stints at NPower, Oxygen Media, and TheStreet.com.
RIP: Zindziswa Mandela, 59, youngest daughter of South Africa’s most prominent anti-Apartheid advocates, Winnie and Nelson Mandela, died on Monday, July 13.

EDUCATION UPDATES
Michael V. Drake, 70, was named the 21st President of the University of California, the sprawling 10- campus public university which includes UCLA, Berkeley, Irvine, Davis and boasts a 285,000 student body, five medical centers and three nationally affiliated labs. UC is the world’s leading public research university system. Dr. Drake is UC’s first African- American president in its 152-year history. A UC medical school graduate, Drake led Ohio State University and the UC Irvine campus.
While COVID19 is spreading all over America, the US President has threatened to cut off funds to K-12 school systems which do not have in-school classroom settings this fall. That is not his jurisdiction. California Governor Newsom announced that Los Angeles and San Diego will hold remote classes in September. NY Governor Cuomo said that schools can open that have met stage 4 criteria. He will confirm school policy by 7/31.
Trump also planned to deport all international college students who are not taking on-campus classes in September. He quickly changed his mind after Harvard and MIT threatened lawsuits and perhaps after learning more about the 1 million foreign students he was poised to push out of the class; they are major revenue sources for nation’s economy.
As a related footnote, The Center for World University Rankings is an annual list of the 100 top schools based on quality of education, alum employment, quality of faculty and research performance. The top universities this year include Harvard, which ranked #1 for first 9 years, MIT, Stanford, University of Cambridge, University of Oxford, Columbia, Princeton, University of Pennsylvania, University of Chicago and Yale.

The get-back-to-school threats to the states come on the heels of his America-back-to-business “vision”. That outcome… a nationwide surge of COVID19 infections.
So why does Trump politicize everything? Hasn’t he figured out: Economic recovery requires a healthy workforce, and by extension, healthy students, the “future” of America?

A Harlem –based media/branding specialist, Victoria is reachable at Victoria.horsford@gmail.com

The View From Here

I spent about 2 hours watching fox & Friends this morning and it is obvious why it’s Trump’s favorite show. The coronavirus pandemic not only did not lead the news, it was mentioned only with one emergency room doctor in a Houston interview. Not mentioned were any statistics on the spiking of deaths in Texas, Florida or Arizona, or the extent of the spread.
What did lead was Black on Black gun violence. And the greatest concern for them, as it should have been, was the horrible shooting death of one-year-old Davell Gardner Jr, at Madison Street and Marcus Garvey Blvd. in Bedford Stuyvesant on Monday. But there was the between-the-lines suggestion of a natural depravity as the root cause of the violence. They coupled that story with a loop of a surveillance video of gun violence and stories about police being attacked.

Big emphasis was placed on how the Defund the Police initiatives would lead to more deaths and criminals running unleashed on the street. It is no wonder that gun sales have almost doubled between April and June according to a report in the Wall Street Journal on Tuesday.
If all you watched was Fox News, it’s easy to understand people thinking the pandemic was not all that bad and the real danger is of armed Blacks and White protestors coming to wreak havoc and death on a town near you.

This is speaking directly to Donald Trump’s base, keeping them frightened and keeping them in line by confirming their worst thoughts and fears.
2 hours was as much as I could take before returning to MSNBC and CNN coverage of Davell and where the extent of the pandemic is in your face and the mantra is to wear masks, stay 6-feet apart and how, if and when are we going to be able to safely send our children back to school.

We are already rightfully fearful about the school environment, and that’s before the second wave hits along with the sniffles and parents not knowing if their child brought home the flu or Covid 19. Wondering if their children can be near the grandparents or even the parents themselves.

It did not have to be this way. In a sane society, Republican governors in Georgia, Texas and Arizona would be looking at how New York handled the worst of it, bite the bullet and take charge. Do a hard 3-week shutdown, gather an army of contact tracers, and open slowly. However, at this point, this is much easier said than done. It would be possible if the federal government sent everyone a check a week for the shutdown and through the Phase One re-openings. If they paid for the tracers and put enough money into the schools to pay for what needs to be done. Unfortunately, we are being led into the abyss by a sociopath of a president who has no caring for humans other than himself and maybe Ivanka.

Trump is his name and he told them to open the economy, they did, and now the citizens of their states are paying the price in sickness and deaths. He is now telling them to open the schools, saying in effect, to ignore what happened when they opened the bars and restaurants and to pay no attention to science. As hard as it is to believe, He does not care about the lives of children, teachers, school staff or parents.

In his delusion the virus will “suddenly disappear,” and people should ignore the deaths, over 136,000 at this moment, and get back to work so that he can say it’s all over folks, vote for me.
But Covid19 is a fact of biology and it doesn’t care about his delusion, it just takes every opportunity to spread. And to anthropomorphize it, if Covid 19 had any emotion at all, it would be giddiness and joy at the thought of people not wearing masks and getting together in groups to have a good time.

Donald Trump is Covd19’s best enabler ever, and together they have already killed tens of thousands of Americans and thousands more will die in the coming months. The experts tell us there is an even more terrible viral storm coming in the fall.
Right around the presidential election when Trump will lie, cheat, and use any foreign help he can get to stay in power. We are in for a very rough time to come.

Supreme Court Ruling Reaffirms Boundaries for Oklahoma Tribe

WASHINGTON — In a decision being hailed as a win for tribal sovereignty, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled July 9 that a large portion of eastern Oklahoma remains a reservation.
In the 5-4 decision, the nation’s highest court said Congress never explicitly disestablished the 1866 boundaries of the Muscogee (Creek) Nation.


“Today we are asked whether the land these treaties promised remains an Indian reservation for purposes of federal criminal law. Because Congress has not said otherwise, we hold the government to its word,” according to the majority opinion written by Justice Neil Gorsuch.
Gorsuch was joined in the majority by Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Stephen Breyer, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan.

Jonodev Chaudhuri, an ambassador with the Muscogee Nation, said the decision is a huge win for Indian country and a profoundly impactful day for the tribe.
“Many folks are in tears,” Chaudhuri said. “Despite a history of many broken promises, as is true with many tribal nations, the citizens feel uplifted that for once the United States is being held to its promises.”

According to Chaudhuri, the decision provides jurisdictional clarity and the tribe will continue to work to improve the health, safety and welfare of tribal members and non-tribal members alike.
“(The) Creek Nation has a long history of working with its local, state and federal partners to protect the interests of all people in its boundaries and the clarity brought by today’s positions will only enhance that,” he said.

In a joint statement, the Oklahoma congressional delegation said they are reviewing the decision and are ready to work with tribal and state officials. The group of legislators want to ensure consistency and stability in the application of law and bringing criminals to justice.
“Indeed, no criminal is ever exempt or immune from facing justice, and we remain committed to working together to both affirm tribal sovereignty and ensure safety and justice for all Oklahomans,” the delegation said.

Fawn Sharp, Quinault and president of the National Congress of American Indians (NCAI), joined much of Indian Country in voicing support and congratulations to the tribe for their historic win.
“This morning, NCAI joins the rest of Indian Country in congratulating the Muscogee (Creek) Nation and proudly asserting that its lands remain, and will forever be considered, Indian country – as guaranteed in their treaty relationship with the United States,” Sharp stated.
Democratic U.S. Rep. Deb Haaland, Laguna and Jemez Pueblo, of New Mexico noted that decision sets an important precedent and affirms the federal government’s obligation to uphold and honor treaties.

“As we move forward addressing longstanding broken promises, this decision will serve as a marker to ensure the federal government honors its promises to Native Nations,” Haaland said.

Breakthrough … Asheville, NC approves reparations for its Black residents in historic vote

Nicole Lyn Pesce, 
MarketWatch.com

The Asheville City Council approved of the reparations resolution in a unanimous 7-0 vote on Tuesday night, the Asheville Citizen-Times reported. The reparations won’t come as direct payments to individuals, however. Instead, the City Council plans to invest in areas where the Black community has long suffered disparities, such as: increasing access to affordable housing and minority home ownership; supporting minority business ownership and career opportunities; funding strategies to grow equity and generational wealth; as well as closing the race gap in income, employment, education, health care, criminal justice and neighborhood safety

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Arva Rice, Pres/CEO NY Urban League Statement at Mayor’s Digital Divide Press Conference

The city will expand broadband internet access to another 600,000 New Yorkers as a part of Mayor Bill de Blasio’s plan to speed up an existing “Internet Master Plan” and close the digital divide in low-income communities of color.
They’ll get internet service for $15 a month over the course of the next 1.5 years, de Blasio announced. The city said it would work with minority- and women-owned businesses to train people to install and operate the broadband infrastructure to create jobs in local communities. Neighborhoods included Brownsville and East New York would be targeted for expanded internet access.

Arva Rice, President and CEO of the New York Urban League, was invited to speak as part of the televised press conference held by Mayor Bill de Blasio and the Taskforce on Racial Inclusion and Equity to announce the accelerated Internet Master Plan to support communities hardest-hit by COVID-19.
“The pandemic is exacerbating the digital divide,” said Arva Rice, President and CEO of the New York Urban League. “I am pleased to be part of the Mayor’s announcement that the City listened to our issue and has developed a bold response that will not only lead to better computer access but will also provide opportunities for minority owned businesses.” 
During his press conference on July 7, 2020, Mayor de Blasio announced the New York City Internet Master Plan, a “bold vision for affordable, high-speed, reliable broadband service that offers seamless connectivity at home and on the go and that will address gaps in the market, close the digital divide and deliver universal broadband to all New Yorkers.”
According to the statement, “The City will accelerate broadband deployment in all five boroughs, prioritizing public housing communities, which have suffered disproportionately during the COVID-19 pandemic. The City will make a historic $157 million investment in ending digital redlining and providing high-speed internet, including $87 million redirected from the NYPD budget. This investment will extend new internet service options to 600,000 underserved New Yorkers, including 200,000 NYCHA residents over the next 18 months.“

Statement by Arva Rice, Pres/CEO NY Urban League Statement
“Good Morning. I am Arva Rice President and CEO of the New York Urban League.  When the Mayor established the Taskforce for Racial Inclusion and Equity they were tasked with contacting community leaders to hear about our pressing issues and ways that COVID had impacted our communities and business operations. At that time, I was being asked to participate in a lot of surveys, but I took special care in completing this one because when activated correctly government policies and practices can positively change people’s lives. The Mayor had appointed the First Lady and Deputy Mayor Phil Thompson to lead this effort. So I believed that the leadership was in place with the political will to address one of the issues I was compelled to address in my survey. COVID has exacerbated the digital divide that we already knew existed. The divide was keeping our 1.1 million public school children from being able to complete school work that went from in classroom to 100% virtual studies over the course of a weekend. The divide kept families from being able to look for employment options and complete job applications.  The divide kept families from being able to be counted in the census. The divide kept nonprofit organizations from being able to easily pivot to virtual offerings and track their community members information digitally.    
1.5 million people in the City, mainly low-income people of color, lack both home and wireless broadband service. This makes it harder for the City’s most vulnerable people to access work, education, telehealth, mental health supports, and the kind of training that might enable them to obtain a living wage. Community members across the city told the Taskforce that the pandemic is exacerbating the digital divide. Today I am pleased to be part of the Mayor’s announcement that the City listened to our issue and has developed a bold response that will not only lead to better computer access but will also provide opportunities for minority owned businesses.  

Thank you for reinvesting money that was previously in NYPD capital budget for 600,000 NYCHA and low-income residents to get the tools they need as we recover from COVID.  I am told that by the end of this year, tens of thousands of NYCHA households will have access to new, low-cost broadband options; over the next 18 months, that number will grow to 600,000 people by end of 2021. All provided with new lower-cost high-speed internet of $15/month or less – which is indeed good news.

Lastly I am excited at the opportunities that this creates for small business development.  We all know that small businesses have been hit hard by COVID-19 and it is predicted that over 40% of African-American owned businesses may never open their doors again.   The Mayor has promised to work in collaboration with the State to end sweetheart deals for big companies and start generating revenue to fund digital equity, investing in infrastructure and digital inclusion resources. The City will also work to amend century old legislation that could pave the way for smaller companies and MWBEs to enter the market.
In this time of uncertainty, economic challenge and social unrest, New Yorkers need no nonsense solutions that will have big results. Thank you Mayor DeBlasio and the Task Force for Racial Inclusion and Equity for this commitment. “

The New York Urban League, an affiliate of the National Urban League, is a 501 (c)(3) civil rights organization enabling African-Americans and other underserved ethnic communities to secure a first-class education, economic self-reliance, and equal respect of their civil rights through programs, services, and advocacy in this highly diversified city. 
The New York Urban League has established a Covid-19 Family Relief Fund for African American children and families which will provide direct cash grants to assist with rent, utilities and other bill payment during the pandemic. NYUL’s Relief Fund will provide cash grants of up to $1000 to families and college students affected by COVID-19. Grants will be made available to NYUL education and employment clients and Whitney M. Young, Jr. college scholarship recipients. These rapid response grants will be administered on a rolling basis.

By cultivating curiosity and developing a rigorous work ethic within our underserved youth through STEM/STEAM programs at a younger age, The New York Urban League can provide the children of our communities with fruitful educational careers that will set them up for success throughout their lives. A few ways we do so:
Code Next, a Google program offered in collaboration with Harlem Boys & Girls Club and ELiTE, is a computer science education program for Black and Latino high school students. Every Saturday, participants learn programming languages and create projects that develop them into the next generation of tech leaders
STEAM Summer Academy is a fun and interactive program that allows students to explore the intersections of all the STEAM subjects.

Parent’s Guide to STEAM – Together with our partners, we have developed and distributed 100,000 copies of the Parent’s Guide to STEAM and provide an accompanying workshop. Parents that help connect STEM learning in school to the home, will lead to STEM fluency for students.

Learn more about The New York Urban League’s educational programs at  https://www.nyul.org/education