Month: January 2022

  • COVID-19

    As of January 26, 2022, at 10:00 AM
    (according to Alabama Political Reporter)

    Alabama had 1,172,660 confirmed cases of coronavirus,
    (84,790) more than last week with 16,948 deaths (192) more
    than last week)

    Greene County had 1,665 confirmed cases, (72 more cases than last week), with 47 deaths

    Sumter Co. had 2,117 cases with 42 deaths

    Hale Co. had 4,226 cases with 94 deaths

    Note: Greene County Physicians Clinic has testing and vaccination for COVID-19; Call for appointments at 205/372-3388, Ext. 142; ages 5 and up.

  • Million Dollar Lawsuit Filed Against DA Michael Jackson of Selma

    For Immediate Release: Friday, January 21, 2022

    Selma, AL – Attorney Hank Sanders announced today that a million dollar-plus lawsuit had been filed against Michael Jackson in his individual capacity. Jackson is the district attorney for the five-county Fourth Judicial Circuit.

    The lawsuit springs from slanderous and libelous statements maliciously made by Jackson in 2021. Jackson falsely accused Attorney Faya Rose Toure of theft, fraud, being crooked, and stealing more money than Jesse James.

    Sanders said that a letter was sent in September of 2021 to Jackson demanding he retract the statements. Jackson did not retract the statements and did not respond to the letter. “It makes no sense for someone who is supposed to enforce the law to intentionally and maliciously break the law,” Sanders said.

    The situation occurred when Jackson sent a letter to Faya Rose Toure threatening her with criminal action concerning a $200 ad for his wife, Maya Jackson, who was a candidate for Mayor of Selma. Jackson alleged that the ad was not run in the Jubilee newsletter when in fact it had. Faya Rose had not solicited the ad and was no longer the director of the Jubilee as she had retired from her volunteer position as coordinator of the Jubilee. However, the ad had in fact run.

    When given a copy of the newspaper with the ad in it, Jackson continued making malicious false statements. He specifically said Faya Rose Toure was a fraud, was crooked, was stealing money, and had stolen more money than Jesse James, all of which are false. He also accused her of forgery and stated that she had created a new newspaper, which she had not. The ad ran in every copy of the Jubilee newspaper.

    Jaskson’s statements were on multiple television stations, in the local newspaper, on radio stations, and online. Sanders said, “Elected officials must be held accountable even if they are making malicious statements in their individual capacity rather than their official capacity. Jackson has refused every opportunity to retract his malicious lies. When presented with the truth, he compounded his previous lies with new lies.”

    The lawsuit was filed today in Dallas County Circuit Court. The press conference was held at 11:00 a.m. today in the conference room of Chestnut, Sanders & Sanders at 1 Union Street in Selma.

    CONTACT: Hank Sanders, (334) 782-1651 and hank23sanders@gmail.com

  • COVID-19

    As of January 19, 2022, at 10:00 AM
    (according to Alabama Political Reporter)

    Alabama had 1,088,370 confirmed cases of coronavirus,
    (83,748) more than last week with 16,756 deaths (115) more
    than last week)

    Greene County had 1,593 confirmed cases, (100 more cases than last week), with 47 deaths

    Sumter Co. had 1,862 cases with 42 deaths

    Hale Co. had 4,032 cases with 93 deaths

    Note: Greene County Physicians Clinic has testing and vaccination for COVID-19; Call for appointments at 205/372-3388, Ext. 142; ages 5 and up.

  • Greene Co. commemorates Dr. King’s Birthday with march, rallies and church programs

    Some of the participants at the MLK Birthday commemoration marched seven
    times around the Old Courthouse Square.
    Naomi Goodson Cyrus representing Valation Radio in Tuscaloosa presents award to Spiver Gordon for his lifetime
    of service and civil rights
    Spiver Gordon presents certificate to Rev. Kendrick Howell speaker at First Baptist Church, joined on podium by Rev. Joe Webb, Lester Cotton and Rev. Lynn Finch
    Spiver Gordon joined by Carol Zippert presents certificate to
    Sister Marta Tonon of the Guadalupan Multicultural Sisters
    Spiver Gordon and Lester Cotton (R) present certificate to Fred Stanton
    (L) of Panola, AL
    Spiver Gordon and Whitney Spencer

    Despite cold and rainy weather, Greene County citizens commemorated Dr. King’s Birthday with a weekend of programs, a march and rallies. The three days of activities starting on Saturday, January 15, 2022 were coordinated by Spiver W. Gordon, President of the Alabama Civil Rights Museum Movement, Inc., which has two locations in the county packed with photographs, documents and other memorabilia of the Civil Rights Movement in Greene County and west Alabama.

    Saturday’s program, on Dr. King’s actual birthday was held at Sandra Walker’s headquarters on Tuscaloosa Street downtown. After a spirited devotion, Commissioner Lester Brown of District 1spoke about the importance of grassroots peoples’ contributions to the movement. “Ms. Bessie Webb walked me to integrate Eutaw Primary School everyday when I was in second grade. Somebody made a way for me, so we have to make a way for the young people coming after us,” said Brown.

    Carol P. Zippert, Chair of the Greene County School Board, said we must select people to public office that have our children at heart. “Hold your public officials accountable; Dr. King joined the sanitation workers in Memphis, in his last days to help them win respect and better working conditions. He was always working with people and communities to advance their needs and goals,” she said.

    Spiver Gordon said, “My daddy died without the vote; I went to jail for helping people to vote absentee, what are we doing now to involve young folks in the struggle.” Lorenzo French, Chair of the Democratic Executive Committee reported on candidates qualifying for the May 24 primary.

    Sister Marta Tonon of the Guadalupan Multicultural Sisters, who have a mission to aid the poor in Greene County, gave some remarks on her work with people in the area to combat poverty and help people improve their conditions. Gordon presented her with an award for the group’s work.

    On Sunday, there was a program at First Baptist Church where Dr. King himself spoke during the 1960’s Civil Rights Movement in Greene County. The program consisted of singing and preaching. Rev. Kendrick Howell, Pastor of Little Zion Baptist Church gave a ringing sermon on the topic, “We all love Dr. King – But we do not support his agenda!”

    Howell, who also serves as Assistant Police Chief of Eutaw, said “We have gaming in our county, millions of dollars flow through, but we have no YMCA, with a real gym and swimming pool; we have no technology center to train our children to use computers.”

    He continued, “Do not remember Dr. King just one day a year. We must do more to stand with the poor and pursue his agenda for all of us.”

    On Monday, the program moved to the William M. Branch Courthouse, for a rally in the courtroom, which has a picture of Dr. King on permanent display above the judge’s seat. Spiver Gordon said, “ I live my life guided by these seven words – peace, freedom, justice, equality, unity, love and hope – which were also a part of Dr. King’s philosophy of life.”

    After more singing and personal testimonies from people who participated in the movement, the group walked around the old Courthouse Square, now named for Sheriff Thomas Gilmore, seven times to honor Dr. King and for the biblical significance of God’s people walking around the walls of Jericho, seven times, until they fell.

     

  • Curtis Travis is candidate for Alabama House District 72


    I am Curtis Travis, and I am pleased to announce that after much prayer, encouragement and careful consideration, I have made the decision to run for the Alabama House District 72 seat. Having spent most of my life in House District 72, I sincerely believe that it is a special place with incredibly special people.
    Born and raised in the Sawyerville community, I am a graduate of Akron High School in the Hale County School System. I earned a BS in Petroleum Engineering from the University of Alabama, and I completed work towards a MS in Environmental Engineering.
    I was married to the late Dr. Jimmie Clark, and we have two beautiful children, Ava and Justin. Ava is a 2021 graduate of the University of Alabama in Huntsville in Elementary Education, employed by the Huntsville City School System. Justin is currently a sophomore at Jacksonville State University.
    As a father, an active member of the community, an assistant pastor, a homebuilder, a retired field representative and manager, and a volunteer member of numerous boards and organizations, I have demonstrated my commitment to service and my desire to truly make a difference.
    Understanding the value of service, I firmly believe helping people through representation in state government is one of the most impactful ways that I can continue to serve and make a significant difference.
    My pursuit of District 72 is not about status, salary, or spotlight. It’s all about service – service that is sincere, genuine, and intentional. Service that focuses on creating a better District 72 for all, not just for some.
    As a candidate, I am competence, determined and have the skills to serve and move all of House District 72 ahead.
    I have had the pleasure to work in Bibb, Greene and Hale Counties for more than 17 years as a field representative, developing relationships with many community members, and I am aware of the issues and challenges of the district
    The great people of District 72 deserve a representative who knows them, who will advocate for what’s best for our community and serve as a strong voice for them in Montgomery. I will meet with them and be that voice. I will work with municipal and county officials as well as other state representatives and senators to gain the most benefits and provide effective representation for House District 72.
    I believe that there are advantages and opportunities in District 72 that can be utilized to bring significant and substantial changes for a better community going forward. And with your help and with your support – together – we can do it.
    Thank you for your encouragement and prayers, and I look forward to seeing you out on the campaign trail.

     

  • Jimmie Benison announces candidacy for Greene County Sheriff

    Hello fellow citizens. My name is Jimmie L. Benison, Sr. and I’m announcing my candidacy for Sheriff of Greene County. As many of you may know, this is my third time running for Greene County Sheriff, and you may wonder, why do I keep running. Well, I keep running because I keep caring. I’ve lived in Greene County all of my life and have worked in law enforcement for many years right here in Greene County and surrounding areas. I care that there are so many changes needed in our community.
    I care that our schools need attention; our hospital needs help. We need care invested in our young children and so much more. As a father in law enforcement, I would rather see our young people in an after school facility than jail. I’m sure that we all share the same vision for our community. Better schools, more job opportunities, more industries, and better use of the resources that we do have.
    We also need more transparency. As your Sheriff I can assure you that the county affairs under my jurisdiction will be an open book. My goal would be to form oversight committees to assure the proper use of our resources.
    It is time for a change in our county, and I believe that the citizens are ready for a change. Together we can bring that about. So join me in making that change and vote Jimmie L. Benison, Sr., Sheriff of Greene County.

     

  • Bingo facilities distribute $497,549.58 for December, with $55,668.58 for sheriff’s supplemental fund

    On Friday, January 14, 2022, Greene County Sheriff Department issued a listing of the bingo distributions for December, totaling $497,549.58 from four of the five licensed bingo gaming facilities. The December distribution reported by the sheriff does not include the additional $71,000 from Greenetrack, Inc. distributed to the same recipients, independent of the sheriff.
    The bingo facilities distributing through the sheriff include Frontier, River’s Edge, Palace and Bama Bingo. The recipients of the December distributions from bingo gaming include Greene County Sheriff’s Department, the cities of Eutaw, Forkland, Union, and Boligee, the Greene County Board of Education and the Greene County Hospital (Health System).
    Sub charities include Children’s Policy Council, Guadalupan Multicultural Services, Greene County Golf Course, Housing Authority of Greene County (Branch Heights), Department of Human Resources, the Greene County Library, Eutaw Housing Authority. Newly added sub charities include the Historical Society, REACH, Inc., Headstart Community Service and This Belong To US.
    Bama Bingo gave a total of $114,995.03 to the following: Greene County Sheriff’s Department, $48,070; City of Eutaw, $9,250; and the Towns of Forkland, Union and Boligee each, $3,875; Greene County Board of Education, $10,500, and the Greene County Health System, $12,500. Sub Charities, each received $1,026.89, including REACH; Community Service received and $466.77 and This Belong to Us received $93.35.
    Frontier (Dream, Inc.) gave a total of $114,995.03 to the following: Greene County Sheriff’s Department, $8,070; City of Eutaw, $9,250; and the Towns of Forkland, Union and Boligee each, $3,875; Greene County Board of Education, $10,500; Greene County Health System, $12,500. Sub Charities each, $1,027, including the Historical Society and REACH. Community Service received $466.77and This Belong to Us $92.
    River’s Edge (Next Level Leaders and Tishabee Community Center Tutorial Program) gave a total of $118,288 to the following: Greene County Sheriff’s Department, $48,070; City of Eutaw, $9,250; and the Towns of Forkland, Union and Boligee each, $3,875; Greene County Board of Education, $10,500; Greene County Health System, $12,500. Sub Charities each, $1,027, including the Historical Society and REACH. Community Service received $467 and This Belong to Us received $92.
    Palace (TS Police Support League) gave a total of $149,271.52 to the following: Greene County Sheriff’s Department, $65,182.92; City of Eutaw, $12,543; and the Towns of Forkland, Union and Boligee each, $5,254.50; Greene County Board of Education, $14,238 and the Greene County Health System, $14,238; Sub Charities received $1, 375, including the Historical Society and REACH $1375. Community Service received $625 and This Belong to Us received $125.
    In the Sheriff’s December distribution report, supplemental funds, totaling $55,668.68, were provided by the four licensed facilities. Bama Bingo contributed $14,274.79; Frontier contributed $14,274.79; River’s Edge contributed $14,275 and Palace contributed $12,844.10 as sheriff’s supplemental funds.

     

  • Newswire: Calls grow for investigation into Bronx fire that took over a dozen African Lives

    Grieving families at the Islamic Center of the Bronx PHOTO: Dean Moses




    (TriceEdneyWire.com/Global Information Network) – A smoky building fire that raced through a 19 story building on an early Sunday this month took 17 lives – adults and children, many from the African nation of The Gambia – is raising questions about the building’s reported insufficient heat and automatic doors that should have been shut but weren’t working.

    The Jan. 9 fire was the city’s deadliest since 1990, when arson at an unlicensed Bronx nightclub killed 87 people, mostly Honduran and Central American immigrants.

    “I live 2 blocks from where it happen and let me tell you it’s heart breaking!” Michael C wrote on social media. “ I blame the NYC Dept of Building because when it’s cold the people are forced to buy space heaters! … Right now it’s 18F outside and my room is 50F freezing my hands off! I feel for those people! It’s a truly tragedy!”

    “The law, that is building and fire code, is insufficient as well as often poorly enforced, and this is the case today in the Bronx and it was as well in the Triangle Shirtwaist factory,” said Elissa Sampson, a lecturer in Jewish studies at Cornell University.

    “They were our aunts and uncles and others who were coming to our food pantry since the pandemic,” said Ajifanta Marenah, secretary of the Gambian Youth Organization, just blocks from the site of last Sunday’s fire. “This is a community of people who have to work two or three jobs to make ends meet.”

    The dead included Haji Dukary, 49, his wife, Haja Dukureh, 37, and their three young children. Fatoumata Tunkara, 43, and her 6-year-old son, Omar Jambang. Fatoumata Drammeh, 50, and three of her children. There was Seydou Toure, 12, and 5-year-old sister Haouwa Mahamadou. The youngest victim was 2-year-old Ousmane Konteh.

    All 17 victims died of smoke inhalation, according to the city medical examiner. A communal funeral was held at the Islamic Cultural Center of the Bronx on Sunday morning, according to a board member.

    “There’s a lesson to be learned about the neglect of government … and there’s a lesson to be learned about why this continues to happen in this corner of the Bronx,” said New York Attorney General Leticia James.

    Tenants and relatives of the victims in Sunday’s fire have filed a class-action lawsuit against the current and previous owners of the building, which was built in 1972, according to court documents. They are seeking $2 billion in damages, according to the documents.
    The city and various agencies were also given notice of a separate class-action lawsuit seeking $1 billion in damages for alleged negligence in enforcing building codes. The storefront Gambian Youth Organization filled up last week with donated clothes, boxes of baby formula, toys and other items for the displaced.

    The fire started when one of several space heaters that had been running for days malfunctioned in a third-floor duplex, a fire official told CNN.

    The self-closing front door of the unit failed to close, according to fire officials. The fire-fueled smoke spread upward to the 15th floor, where another door failed to close automatically. Victims were found in stairwells on every floor, many in cardiac and respiratory arrest.

    Coincidentally, in The Gambia, media this week was covering a local fire that burned a compound with 8 houses in Faraba, Niani District, Central River Region North.

    Mamadou Wague, father of eight, said the sound of his children screaming jolted him awake Sunday morning. Wague, an Uber driver who emigrated to the U.S. from Mali in 2000, said the fire burned all his family’s belongings. They are staying with friends in the Bronx.

    “Poor people’s fire tragedies they’re big news for a very short time and then they fade away Ray Bromley, a professor emeritus of geography and planning at the State University of New York at Albany,. “By the time we get to the Super Bowl, this will be gone.”

    Jaha Dukureh, who campaigned to have female genital mutilation banned in her home country, said that support from the Gambian community – both in the US and abroad – has been profound. But she added that the families affected by the blaze would need much more help. A GoFundMe page has been set up for donations.

  • Newswire: Maya Angelou first Black woman on U.S. coin

    Maya Angelou quarter

    By Stacy M. Brown, NNPA Newswire Senior National Correspondent

     

    Famous author and noted civil rights leader Maya Angelou became the first African American woman featured on the 25-cent coin.

    The U.S. Mint began shipping the quarters on January 10.

    Reportedly, the Angelou coin is the first in a series designed to celebrate the accomplishments of American women.

    “Each time we redesign our currency, we have the chance to say something about our country — what we value, and how we’ve progressed as a society,” U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet L. Yellen said in a statement. “I’m very proud that these coins celebrate the contributions of some of America’s most remarkable women, including Maya Angelou.”
    Angelou, whose works include such classics as “I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings,” “And Still I Rise,” and “The Heart of a Woman,” died in 2014.

    She received the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honor, from President Barack Obama.

    The commemorative new coin features Angelou with her arms uplifted like a bird in flight and a rising sun behind her.

    “They are images inspired by her poetry and symbolic of the way she lived,” officials at the U.S. Mint said in the statement.

    To the right are the words “e pluribus Unum,” Latin for “out of many, one,” a phrase also on the national seal.

    The flip side features a portrait of George Washington.

    “Excited to announce that Maya Angelou becomes the first Black woman to appear on a U.S. quarter,” California Democratic Rep. Barbara Lee wrote on Twitter.

    “The phenomenal women who shaped American history have gone unrecognized for too long – especially women of color,” Rep. Lee wrote.

    “Proud to have led this bill to honor their legacies.”

  • Newswire: Remembering Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr: A tireless champion for economic justice

     DR. ML King at 1968 rally

     

    By Charlene Crowell

    (TriceEdneyWire.com) – On Monday, January 17, the nation will pause to honor the life of the late Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. The only Black American to be honored with a national holiday, many will recall his historic civil rights achievements.

    But Dr. King also stood as a tireless champion for economic justice. His last public speech, delivered a day before his 1968 assassination, was before a Memphis audience in support of a lengthy strike for fair wages among its largely Black sanitation workers. That prophetic oration, often referred to as his “Mountaintop” speech, also noted the city’s economic disparities..

    “It’s all right to talk about “long white robes over yonder,” in all of its symbolism,” said Dr. King. “But ultimately people want some suits and dresses and shoes to wear down here! It’s all right to talk about “streets flowing with milk and honey,” but God has commanded us to be concerned about the slums down here, and his children who can’t eat three square meals a day.”

    When Dr. King moved his family into the city’s Lawndale neighborhood, he described it as “an island of poverty in the midst of an ocean of plenty”. “Chicago boasted the highest per capita income of any city in the world, but you would never believe it looking out of the windows of my apartment in the slum of Lawndale,” said Dr. King.

    “My neighbors paid more rent in the substandard slums of Lawndale than the whites paid for modern apartments in the suburbs. The situation was much the same for consumer goods, purchase prices of homes, and a variety of other services.”

    For example, the King family paid $94 per month for four rundown, shabby rooms. During the campaign’s open housing marches on Gage Park and other predominantly white places, new and larger apartment dwellers paid only $78 a month for five rooms[.

    Fast forward to today and the cost of rental housing remains a challenge for millions of families[RP6] . The average fair market price for a two-bedroom apartment is $1,295 per month. Yet the highest rent affordable to an average full-time worker is $977, according to the National Low Income Housing Coalition (NLHIC). Its recent report entitled Out of Reach exposes the mismatch between wages people earn and the price of decent rental housing in every state, metropolitan area, and county in the U.S.

    Over 7.5 million extremely low-income renters are severely housing cost-burdened, finds the report, spending more than half of their incomes on housing. On average, someone who works 40 hours per week all year round must earn $24.90 per hour to afford a modest two-bedroom home without becoming housing cost-burdened. The average renter’s hourly wage is just $18.78 per hour, however, and minimum-wage workers earn even less.

    Additionally, ample research documents how consumers seeking to transition from renters to homeowners face even steeper financial barriers to building family wealth.

    In 2019, prospective buyers of a median-priced home of $321,500 needed to save 11 years to accumulate a 5 percent down payment of $26,000 on that home, found the Center for Responsible Lending (CRL) in its independent and recent report . But buyers seeking the least costly loans, conventional mortgages, needed a 20 percent down payment of $64,300 plus another $9,663 for closing costs.

    “There is a huge disconnect between our collective view of America as the land of opportunity and this data, which show renters face a steep climb in saving for homeownership,” said CRL researcher and report author Christelle Bamona. “This climb is especially steep for Black and Latino Americans, essential workers, and people weighed down by student debt.”

    The National Association of Real Estate Brokers (NAREB) underscores CRL’s findings. Its 2021 research, the State of Housing in Black America: Emerging from the Pandemic Recession (SHIBA) found that although homeownership generates the largest part of building household wealth, fewer than 45 percent of Black households own their homes, compared to nearly 75% of whites. Further, Black homeowners captured only $198 million in savings from the Federal Reserve’s lowering of interest rates during COVID. Nationwide, the savings due to this policy change totaled $5.8 billion.

    “Blacks have made little, if any, strides at closing the disparate homeownership gap between those of our White counterparts,” noted NAREB President Lydia Pope in the report’s foreword. “Systemic discriminatory regulations and policies continue to thwart any meaningful effort at closing the homeownership gap.”

    For example, mortgage pricing, and under-appraisal of home values are examples of how the growth of Black homeownership and, in turn, wealth is systematically suppressed. Since 2019, the rate of mortgage loan denials to Blacks (16 percent) has consistently been double that of whites (7 percent).

    While access to mortgage credit remains a central housing issue, housing affordability has worsened for a record 117 months of year-over-year increases, according.to the National Association of Realtors (NAR). The November 2021 median price of existing-homes was $353,900, up 13.9 percent from November 2020 ($310,800).

    Today the quest for economic injustice continues. Just a few weeks before Dr. King’s assassination, his prophetic voice remains as timely as it is timeless:

    “Do you know that most of the poor people in our country are working every day? They are making wages so low that they cannot begin to function in the mainstream of the economic life of our nation. These are facts which must be seen. And it is criminal to have people working on a full-time basis and a full-time job getting part-time income.”

    Charlene Crowell is a senior fellow with the Center for Responsible Lending. She can be reached at Charlene.crowell@responsiblelending.org.