Month: February 2018

  • Newswire : Teen survivors of Florida shooting to march on Washington for gun law reform

    By Hayley Miller, Huffpost

     

    Florida High School students
    Florida high school students speak out against guns

    A group of students who survived the Wednesday mass shooting at a Florida high school is organizing a nationwide march to demand lawmakers make ending gun violence a priority.
    The “March For Our Lives” is planned for March 24 in Washington, D.C., with sister marches expected to break out in other major cities across the country, five students from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School announced on Sunday during several TV appearances.
    “People are saying that it’s not time to talk about gun control, and we can respect that,” Cameron Kasky, a junior at the high school, said on ABC’s “This Week.”
    “Here’s the time: March 24,” Kasky continued. “In every single city, we are going to be marching together as students begging for our lives. This isn’t about the GOP. This isn’t about the Democrats. This is about the adults. We feel neglected. At this point, you’re either with us or you’re against us.”

    A 19-year-old former student has confessed to using an assault-style rifle to open fire Wednesday at the high school in Parkland, killing 17 people and injuring over a dozen others. Many students at the school, located roughly 40 miles north of Miami, have spoken out since the massacre, pleading with politicians to take action on gun violence.
    “We are losing our lives while the adults are playing around,” Kasky said Sunday on CNN. “We have our lives on the line here. At the end day, that is what is going to be bringing us to victory and to making some sort of right out of this tragedy. This is about us begging for our lives.”

    “The future of our country are those children that are currently dying because politicians refuse to take action,” said David Hogg, senior at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School

    Four other classmates joined Kasky on Sunday: David Hogg, Alex Wind, Jaclyn Corin, and Emma Gonzalez, who delivered a powerful speech Saturday at a rally for gun control in Fort Lauderdale.
    Gonzalez begged Congress to “please stop allowing us to be gunned down in our hallways” during an appearance with her fellow students on “Fox News Sunday.”
    “We want students to be at that march and to be with us,” Gonzalez said. “We want to be with those students who we didn’t understand their pain before and it’s all too tragic that we all have to understand the same pain now.”

  • Morton-Jones seeks Circuit Clerk position

    Morton

    I am, Court Specialist Veronica Morton-Jones, and I am announcing my candidacy for Greene County Circuit Clerk. I am a 1997 graduate of Eutaw High School, and I studied 3 years at the University of West Alabama. I am a member of St. Paul United Methodist Church in Eutaw, AL. I am the eldest child of the late David J. Lewis, Sr, and Theresa and Charles Crawford, all of Eutaw, AL. My husband, Lataursa Jones, Sr. and I have three children all being educated in the Greene County School System. I was raised to give “all praises” to God the head of my life. “Give it your best and nothing less,” is the work ethics my parents taught me. Both are hard working individuals being employed 30 or more years on the same job; my father at Eutaw Hardwood and my mother at Edgar’s Foodland. Their loyalty and dedication are rooted in me.

    Hard work is no stranger to me since I have been employed in Upper Management at Church’s Chicken of Eutaw for over 10 years, and that has given me the managing, training, and temperament to serve the public. Working and helping others is my passion, as I serve as Chair-Lady on the Eutaw Housing Authority Board of Commissioners, that experience has also given me the skills to work with others setting policies and ensuring that procedures are followed.
    I have been employed in the Clerk’s office for the past 9 years. State testing and various state trainings have prepared me to be a highly qualified, experienced, and very knowledgeable Circuit Clerk.
    The Clerk’s Office is an essential part of the Judicial process which makes it possible for the District Attorney’s Office, the Circuit and District Judge’s Offices, and the Sheriff Department to perform their duties. A vote for me will allow a continued flow of the daily operations of these offices.
    Every Citizen of Greene County life will not be touched by the Court System, but for those who do; I am that Public Servant here to help you with the right attitude and information. I am a Public Servant, not a Politician, and I intend to be a continued leader, serving the citizens of Greene County. With your support, the Clerk’s office will have a highly qualified and experienced person, one who already knows the day to day operations of the office.
    A vote for me is a vote for a highly experienced, very dedicated, and passionate candidate here to serve YOU the citizens of Greene County.
    Greene County let’s stop hoping for the Best, and start voting for the Best!
    Veronica Morton-Jones the “Best” Candidate for Greene County Circuit Clerk.

  • County Commission extends date for solid waste fee exemption

    At its regular meeting held Monday, February 12, 2018, the Greene County Commission extended the date for residents to apply for exemption of payment for solid waste pick-up services. The application period is extended for one month through March 12 for eligible county residents. According to County Engineer, Willie Branch, to be considered for exemption, social security must be the only income in the household. Branch noted that the applicant must also have a zero balance regarding county solid waste services.
    The commission approved the revised resource officers contract which assigns four officers to various schools in the county. The contract only allows for the officers to be retained when schools are in session with students. The resource officers are secured through the sheriff’s office but their compensation is provided by the Greene County Board of Education.
    In other business, the commission approved the following:
    * Levy of taxes for 2018.
    * Levy of ABC license fees for 2018.
    * E911’s request to name a new road off Plum Lane as Rattle Snake Bend.

    * Allowing EMA to accept equipment for the state agency.
    * Agreement between DHR and EMA to provide Mass Care Operation during times of natural disaster.
    * Ratified travel of jail administrator and assistant regarding Trade Show in Biloxi, MS, Feb. 6-7.
    Travel request for various conferences, workshops and training.
    In the financial report, CFO Paula Bird stated the following bank balances as of January 18: Citizen Trust $3,173,791.41; Merchant & Farmers $2,068,452.09; Bank of New York $619,178.37; total CD investments $801,989.79.
    Regarding budget amendments, Bird noted that Sheriff Benison has provided additional funds to the county for his department’s overtime.
    The commission tabled two agenda items: consideration of a resolution renaming U.S. Highway 43 in honor of Thomas Gilmore; appointment to the Water Authority.

     

  • The Greene County Democratic Executive Committee announces candidates

    The Greene County Democratic Executive Committee announced the list of candidates that have qualified to run in the June 5, 2018 primary for county and state positions. The qualifying period ended on Friday, February 9, 2018 at 5:00 PM.
    The following persons qualified for county offices, which will be on the ballot for the 2018 June Primary and November General Elections:

    Probate Judge:  John Kennard, Grace Belton-Stanford, Rashon Smith, Jeremy Rancher, Rolanda M. Wedgeworth and James Carter
    Greene County Sheriff: Jonathan “Joe” Benison, Jimmie Benison, Lorenzo French and Beverly Spencer.
    Coroner: Ronald “Kent” Smith and Finest Gandy, Jr. .
    Circuit Clerk: Veronica Morton-Jones and Debra Blackmon

    Greene County Commission, all seats to be involved:

    District 1: Lester “Bop” Brown and James Gaines, Jr.

    District 2: Tennyson Smith, no opposition.

    District 3: Corey Cockrell and Elzora C. Fluker.

    District 4: Allen Turner, Jr. and John Vester.

    District 5: Michael Williams, Marvin Childs, Grace Atkins Lavender, Roshanda  Summerville and Marvin K. Walton.

    Democratic Executive Committee:
    Barbara Ann Collin -District 1, Lester Cotton -District 3, Teresa M. Atkins  -District 3, Spiver W. Gordon- District 3, Mary Morrow Carter -District 3, Frank “Pinto ‘ Smith -District 3, Hattie Barnett Edwards- District 3, Amy Billups Wiggins -District 2 and Linda R. Spencer -District 1

    State Democratic Executive Committee: Bettye Maye – SDEC 71, Nick Underwood SDEC 71
    Johnnie Mae Scott – SDEC 72, Arthur Crawford, Sr. – SDEC 72, John Zippert – SDEC 72
    All candidates may announce their candidacy, with a photo, at no cost in the Greene County Democrat. Please bring your announcement to the newspaper office. Special rates are also available for political advertisements after the free announcement.

  • Newswire : Portraits of President Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama unveiled

    Portraits of Barack and Michelle Obama.jpg

    Portraits of Barack and Michelle Obama

    The Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery in Washington D.C. on Tuesday unveiled the portraits of former President Barack Obama and former First Lady Michelle Obama painted by black artists.
    Kehinde Wiley of Brooklyn, N.Y., painted President Obama and Amy Sherald of Baltimore painted Michelle Obama.
    Wiley and Sherald are the first black artists commissioned by the Smithsonian to paint the portraits of a former President and First Lady.
    At the unveiling, both the former President and First Lady commented on the process of having their portraits made. President Obama said, “I tried to get artist to make my ears smaller and show less gray hair, but he refused.”
    There will be two sets of official portraits. One set will hang in the White House and these will hang in the Smithsonian. The portraits will be on display in the newly renovated America’s Presidents Gallery.

  • Newswire : Black AIDS Institute launches bold vision for the future: Announces retirement of President and CEO Phill Wilson,

    By: Freddie Allen, NNPA

    phillwilson_CF039590_blackaids_web120.jpg

     Phil Wilson
    As part of a new strategic plan to prepare for the next generation of Black HIV/AIDS response, the Black AIDS Institute announced several organizational changes, including the retirement of long-time president and CEO, Phill Wilson.
    Wilson launched the Black AIDS Institute in 1999 with a clear mantra (“Our People, Our Problem, Our Solution”) and mission, “to stop the AIDS pandemic in Black communities by engaging and mobilizing Black leaders, institutions and individuals in efforts to confront HIV from a uniquely and unapologetically Black point of view.
    “In order for a movement to endure, there must be a plan for the future,” said Wilson, in a statement. “Stepping down as the President and CEO of the Institute, where I have had the privilege of serving for the last 19 years, is bittersweet for me. I have been involved in this fight for almost my entire adult life.”
    The statement continued: “In 1983, when I started doing this work, none of us could have imagined this mysterious new disease, first identified at U.C.L.A. Medical Center, would become the defining health issue of our generation. We are at a turning point. Are we are going to build on the remarkable advances we have made over the last decade and continue to push forward and finally end of the HIV/AIDS epidemic or are we going to go back to the dark days of despair and death?”

    In the statement Wilson said that the Institute is committed to doing everything in its power to end the HIV/AIDS epidemic, especially in Black communities.
    “The time is right. The organization has the infrastructure and capacity to do the changes set forth by the Board to prepare for a new generation of capacity building, advocacy, mobilization and service delivery,” said Wilson. “I am very proud of the work we have done over the last 19 years and of the organization’s commitment to new leadership. That commitment is more important now than ever before.”
    Pursuing new executive leadership is a part of a larger effort on the part of the Institute to prepare for the next generation of HIV/AIDS response in Black communities.
    Ahead of the Curve
    From the African American HIV University (AAHU) and Black Treatment Advocates Network, to the ground-breaking State of AIDS in Black America reports and acknowledgements of Black excellence at the annual Heroes in The Struggle Awards Gala, the Institute has been relentless in its focus on Black communities.
    The organization enlisted Traditional Black Institutions, such as the NAACP, Black fraternities and sororities, Black journalists in mainstream media and Black-owned publications, and others, to commit to raising awareness, fighting stigma, increasing HIV/AIDS literacy and mobilizing Black people. It launched the Black Hollywood Task Force on HIV, currently co-chaired by Jussie Smollett, star of the FOX musical drama “Empire,” and veteran actress and humanitarian Vanessa Williams, to leverage the power of celebrity to amplify messages about prevention, testing, treatment and ending stigma.
    “We have always been ahead of the curve in understanding HIV/AIDS and how it relates to the Black community,” says Institute Board Chair, Grazell Howard. “This change is a continuation of that legacy. The search for new executive leadership is a part of a new strategic plan. We have brought on new Board members like Representative Donna M. Christensen (retired), Dr. David Cook, David Munar and Gina Brown to help us with expand our policy work, our clinical services and add Black-women programs, respectively. We’ve also re-energized our Black Hollywood Task Force on AIDS with new ambassadors and supporters like Ledisi, Karamo Brown, Taraji P. Henson, Alfre Woodard and Van Jones.”
    Board member David Munar, the president and CEO of the Howard Brown Health Center in Chicago, says “almost every milestone in the fight against AIDS domestically, and in some cases internationally, has been paved by the Black AIDS Institute, and that’s a credit to the Institution and its many supporters and affiliates across the country.”
    Codifying Wilson’s Vision
    Wilson leaves the Institute well positioned to take on the challenges of future. The organization is staffed by the next generation of HIV/AIDS activists and organizers, whose work embodies the Institute’s commitment to helping Black communities save themselves through their lived experience.
    “Every day is Black AIDS Awareness day at the Black AIDS Institute’” says Raniyah Copeland, the Institute’s Director of Programs. “Our staff are of the communities we serve. We are Black men and women. We are Black people living with HIV/AIDS or at high risk of infection. We live, work, pray and play in the communities we serve. We don’t need to do ‘outreach’ because we are there 24/7.”
    The Institute has recently brought on new staff to strengthen their capacity, like Maxx Boykin (previously with AIDS Foundation of Chicago) to work on a new advocacy and policy initiative, Maya Merriweather to work on mobilization, and Saron Selassie to strengthen the Institute’s monitoring and evaluation work. On World AIDS Day, the Institute launched a new website and a redesigned Black AIDS Weekly, the organization’s electronic newsletter, to more effectively reach people who use smartphones to access health information.

    Jesse Milan, president and CEO of AIDS United and chair emeritus of the Institute’s Board, notes that the Institute has also been developing programs to help end the epidemic through its Los Angeles-based direct service efforts. On this February 7, National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day, the Institute, in partnership with St. John’s Well Child & Family Center, a federally-qualified, community health center in Los Angeles, will launch the first Black PrEP clinic in Los Angeles. Later this spring, the partnership will open a Black men’s primary care clinic in the Leimert Park area of L.A. A Black gay men’s drop-in center will launch in Compton during the fall. “The PrEP clinic, the men’s primary care clinic and the Black gay men’s drop-in center will help us achieve a new dimension of our mission,” Milan says.
    “We are proud to build on Phill’s bold and unapologetic legacy through direct service, new policy, initiatives to address Black women and HIV, and other efforts that will codify Phill’s vision of ending AIDS,” says Copeland.
    Rather than resting on past successes, the Black AIDS Institute is “going where the epidemic’s trajectory is calling it to go,” says Munar, who calls the new initiatives “excellent examples” of how the organization is transforming in ways that will allow it to thrive without Wilson at the helm. “It’s exactly what every community needs to be doing. BAI wants to do it first in its own backyard, then help others across the country replicate similar strategies.”
    “Such approaches are particularly important in the South,” National Capacity Building manager Leisha McKinley-Beach says. “The Institute has become one of the driving forces for ending the AIDS epidemic in America due in part to its work in southern states, where most Blacks live, and awareness-raising about what’s happening there. We have been on the frontline of training and capacity building in the South. I am particularly excited that we are going to be housing our policy and advocacy work in the South and looking forward to having Maxx join me in Atlanta.”
    “We can’t achieve our goals in the HIV/AIDS epidemic nationally unless we work harder in the South to reduce new infections, bring more people into care and eliminate stigma and discrimination,” said Milan. “The statistics and reality in the South are dire, especially for African Americans and we must focus on them now.”

  • Newswire : Cape Town, South Africa, in survival mode as water supplies near zero

     

    • Capetown, S. A. water shortage
      Community leader Myolisi Magibisela with dry water pump in Khayelitsha neighborhood

      Feb. 5, 2018 (GIN) – Only days remain in Cape Town, South Africa, before a jewel of natural beauty and one of the wealthiest destinations in Africa becomes the first major city in the world to run out of water.

      Rationing has already begun with some 200 collection points around the city. Security guards stand watch as anxious residents fill up plastic jugs.

      Cape Town is in the middle of an unprecedented drought, with some researchers estimating the dry spell to be a once-in-a-millennium event.

      After three years of far below normal rains, Cape Town’s main water source stands at about 27 percent, but the final 10 percent is considered unusable because of mud, weeds and debris at the bottom. Silt in the tap water makes it undrinkable, many complain.

      Municipal water will continue to reach hospitals and large low-income developments, but sanitation and public health conditions could deteriorate further.

      A stark wealth gap and social inequalities have only worsened the crisis with lawns and pools of the wealthy diverting water from poor neighborhoods with limited access to water.

      Kirsty Carden with the Future Water Institute at the University of Cape Town pointed to the city’s leafy suburbs. People who have gardens and swimming pools, she said, are much more extravagant in the way that they use water. They’re used to the water just coming out of the taps. In the more affluent areas, people say ‘We’ll pay for it,’ she told the Associated Press.

      For the quarter of Cape Town’s population living in unplanned settlements, water comes from communal taps rather than individual taps at home. Scolding fingers point at leaking taps and broken fixtures. “But the reality is that those one million people out of a population of four (million) only use 4.5 percent of the water,” Carden said.

      Meanwhile, the region’s two major industries– tourism and agriculture, including the lucrative wine industry, are suffering. Analysts estimate between 30,000 and 70,000 seasonal workers could lose their jobs.

      While extreme droughts are difficult to predict, researchers fault the city council for failing to adapt the local water supply to the demands of a growing metropolis.

      Two strategies seem to be having an impact: South Africa’s biggest artists have remixed their top selling songs into two minute shower songs (all you’re allotted under water rations). They can be heard on https://2minuteshowersongs.com Also, a map showing excessive use of water is online and can be seen at https://mg.co.za/2018-01/18-cape-towns-map-of-water-usage-has-residents-seeing-red

  • Eutaw police seize unlawfully possessed guns

    GUNS.jpg

    Shown above Eutaw Police officer Sergeant Rodriquez Jones and Assistant Chief Walter Beck displaying half of the guns seized over a period of 3 months.

    The Eutaw Police Department reported a rise in the number of guns seized through various instances. Officer Beck explained that most weapons are seized at traffic stops, domestic violence calls and pat downs. He noted that more and more guns are being found on youth. Oftentimes these are weapons that have been reported stolen.“It is important that you know the serial numbers of your weapons. We may have recovered your lost or stolen weapon but without the serial numbers to identify your weapons, returns are impossible,” Officer Beck stated.
    Deputy Rodriquez Jones cautioned the community to be aware of what your children are posting on facebook. He has seen youth riding around with hand guns loading and unloading clips.

    “It important to be aware of your surroundings. Be cautious if you see someone walking around late at night. Also remember to kept your cars and doors lock at all time,” he stated.

  • John Kennard seeks Probate Judge office

    John Kennard

     

    I am today announcing my candidacy for the Office of Probate Judge of Greene County. I think the first duty of any elected official is to do the job that the people elected him to do. With God’s help, I will do just that.
    I believe that there is a second component to holding an elected office, that is, don’t do as so many in the past have done. Don’t forget the very people that put you where you are.
    I am a lifelong resident of Greene County and I have held public office before.
    This is our county, and it is our duty to make it the best that it can be. Our children and our grandchildren deserve the same opportunities in this county as the children in Tuscaloosa and Marengo Counties.

    I am married to the former Ms. Pamela Freeman; we have four sons, Cedric, Benjamin, Dr. Dewayne Stallworth and Marine Sergeant Alfred Lamar. I am looking forward to serving the people of Greene county. Thanks in advance for your vote, your support and your prayer. Let’s work together and make Greene County a place we all can be proud of.

  • Debra Blackmon qualifies for Circuit Clerk

    Blackmonjpg

    It is with much excitement that I announce my candidacy for the office of Circuit Clerk of Greene County. I would be forever grateful for the opportunity to give back to the people of Greene County and serve the community that has been so good to me for the last several decades. I have been a resident of Greene County the majority of my life and have raised my family here. I am the mother of two wonderful children, Tanika S. Duncan and Tevin M. Blackmon. I am also the proud grandmother of three magnificent grandchildren, Tiya, India, and Tylon.
    I am no stranger to the Greene County Clerk’s Office as I have served the State of Alabama as a Court Specialist in the past.

    This position required that I fulfill many duties within the clerk’s office such as answering a multi-line telephone, inputting and maintaining traffic tickets, collecting data to update criminal and district court case files, collecting money paid on accounts, and preparing warrants as the magistrate.
    I am currently employed by the District Attorney’s Office of the 17th Judicial Circuit as the Child Support Coordinator, Drug Court Liaison, certified operator of the National Crime Information Center which includes LETS and FBI databases.
    I graduated from Greene County High School in 1985. I attended Shelton State Community College in Tuscaloosa and East Mississippi Community College in Scuba with an emphasis in Business Administration.
    On June 5, 2018 I am asking that you go to the polls and vote Debra Blackmon as your next Circuit Court Clerk of Greene County, Alabama.