Author: greenecodemocratcom

  • Black families would need 228 years to amass wealth of white families

    By Kate Davidson, Wall Street Journal

    Two hundred and twenty-eight years: That’s how long it would take for African-Americans to accumulate the same amount of wealth whites have now if current policies remain in place, according to a new analysis from the Corporation for Enterprise Development and Institute for Policy Studies.

    The stunning estimate is part of a study the two groups released this week on the racial wealth divide in the U.S., highlighting the growing disparity between Americans of color and everyone else, the policies that contributed to a widening divide and proposals to help reverse the trend.

    CFED and IPS looked at 30 years of data from the Federal Reserve’s Survey of Consumer Finances, which includes information on Americans’ balance sheets, income, pensions and demographic characteristics.

    Over the past 30 years, they found the average wealth of white families has grown by 84%, three times as fast as the rate for African-American families and 1.2 times the growth rate for Latino families.

    To put that in dollar terms, if the past 30 years were to repeat, whites would see their wealth increase by about $18,000 a year on average, while Latino household wealth would increase an average $2,250 a year and wealth for African-Americans would grow by just $750 annually.

    At the current rate, it would take until the year 2241 for the average black family to accumulate wealth equal to what white families have today. And it would take Latinos until 2097 to reach parity with whites, the report said, assuming the average wealth of white families holds steady at today’s levels.

  • 1. Federation holds 49th Annual Meeting – August 18-20, 2016

     FSC

    The Federation of Southern Cooperatives/Land Assistance Fund will hold its 49th. Annual Meeting next week, from August 18 to 20, 2016. The Federation is the primary organization working with Black farmers and landowners in rural communities across the South. The Federation operates a Rural Training and Research Center near Epes, Alabama, in Sumter County.

    The theme of the meeting is “ A Legacy of Hope, Vision and Collective Wealth Building”. According to Cornelius Blanding, Federation Executive Director, “Our theme speaks to almost half a century of work and progress in developing cooperatives and credit unions in economically distressed communities, assisting Black farmers and landowners to retain and utilize their land, and advocating for progressive public policies to improve the lives of our membership in rural communities.”

    The Annual Meeting begins on Thursday, August 18, 2016 at the Sheraton Civic Center Hotel in Birmingham, Alabama with a Board of Directors meeting, roundtables of supporters and the 15th annual Estelle Witherspoon Lifetime Achievement Award Banquet.

    “This award is named for a founding member of the Federation, who was Manager of the Freedom Quilting Bee in Wilcox County, Alabama. This year we are honoring three veteran civil rights workers:

    Robert “Bob” Moses, Hollis Watkins and David “Dave” J. Dennis, Sr. These three played an instrumental role in organizing, guiding and implementing the ‘1964 Freedom Summer Project’ in Mississippi. They also helped to develop local Black community leaders who formed some of the cooperatives that were part of organizing the Federation in 1967,” said Blanding.

    Robert “Bob” Parris Moses was the leader of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) who established SNCC Mississippi Project in 1961. He was a Co-Director of COFO, which developed the 1964 Mississippi Summer Project and helped to form the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party, which challenged the all-white Mississippi Delegation to the 1964 Democratic Convention. More recently Bob Moses developed the nationwide Algebra Project to enhance teaching of mathematics to minority students based on broad based community organizing and collaboration with parents, teachers and students.

    Hollis Watkins is also a SNCC activist in Mississippi. He was involved with the 1964 Freedom Summer and Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party activities. He was a founder of Southern Echo, which shared office space with the Mississippi Association of Co-ops in Jackson, MS. He is also the founder and President of Mississippi Veterans of the Civil Rights Movement.

    David “Dave” J. Dennis, Sr. from Louisiana was the Director of the Mississippi Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) and Co-Director with Bob Moses of COFO and the Mississippi Summer Project.

    After working in the civil rights movement in Mississippi and Louisiana, he received a law degree from the University of Michigan Law School. He opened a law office in Lafayette, Louisiana. Father A. J. McKnight and the Southern Cooperative Development Fund were among his clients. At a SNCC reunion in 1989, he reunited with Bob Moses and set up the Southern Office of the Algebra Project.

    On Friday and Saturday, August 19 and 20, the Annual Meeting shifts to the Federation’s Rural Training and Research Center near Epes, Alabama.

    On Friday there will be a series of workshops on agriculture, forestry and cooperative development, including participation by representatives of USDA agencies explaining their programs and services. The Friday sessions will end with a fish fry, auction and entertainment.

    Saturday’s program begins with a Prayer Breakfast and continues with board reports, the Executive Directors report, state caucuses and a membership business meeting to chart the future directions for the organization.

    Blanding said, “As we complete this meeting, we will begin planning for the Federation’s Fiftieth (50th) Annual Meeting in August 2017. This will be a great milestone for our organization and we welcome suggestions from the membership, supporters and the public on how to make it memorable and successful.”

    For more information about the meeting and registration details or the events, go to the Federation’s website at www.federation.coop or contact our offices in Epes (205/652-9676) or Atlanta (404/765-0273).

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Greene County Freedom Day Celebration held Saturday at William M. Branch Courthouse

    Spiver Gordan

    Shown L To R: Eutaw Mayor Hattie Edwards, School Board President, Leo Branch, Spiver Gordon, Sheriff Jonathan Benison, School Board Vice President, Dr. Carol P. Zippert and Rev. Randy Johnson at the 2016 Freedom Day Program.

    The 47th anniversary of Greene County Freedom Day (July 29, 1969) was celebrated Saturday at the William M. Branch Courthouse in Eutaw. The Alabama Civil Rights Museum, headed by Spiver W. Gordon, sponsored the program commemorating the special election in 1969, which led to Black control of the Greene County Commission, School Board, Probate Judge and Sheriff’s Departments. Greene County was one of the first counties in Alabama and the nation to realize the full benefits of the 1965 Voting Rights Act. The county was organized precinct-by-precinct at the community level by grassroots leaders organized and assisted by the civil rights movement. The local efforts were spearheaded by students from Carver High School, Greene County Training School, Eatman Jr. High School, Judge William M. Branch and Rev. Thomas Gilmore, backed up by a cadre of grassroots leaders.
    In the 1968 primary election, local Black leaders were nominated for various offices on the County Commission, School Board, Probate Judge and Sheriff. The white controlled Democratic Party left the names of all the Black candidates off the ballot.
    The Black candidates joined the National Democratic Party of Alabama (NDPA), headed by Dr. John Cashin of Huntsville, and sued in Federal court for a new election. The Supreme Court of the United States ordered a special election for July 29, 1969 with the names of the Black candidates restored to the ballot, under the Eagle Eye symbol of the NDPA. The white candidates ran under the Democratic Party with a rooster as their symbol and ‘Segregation for the Right!’ as their slogan.
    In that historic 1969 election, four Black men: Harry Means, Vassie Knott, Levi Morrow, Sr., and Frenchie Burton were elected to the County Commission, which gave control of this important political entity to Black people. Robert Hines and Rev. James Posey were elected to the Greene County Board of Education, to join Rev. Peter Kirksey, who was already on the Board, giving Black people a majority on this board as well. In the 1970 elections, Judge William M. Branch was elected the first Black Probate Judge in Alabama; Thomas Gilmore was elected the second Black Sheriff in Alabama.
    The celebration on Saturday was to commemorate these events and look for lessons in the five decades of electoral control by Black people of the Greene County government.
    Spiver Gordon and the Alabama Civil Rights Museum have compiled a list of more than 300 grassroots community leaders that were involved in the struggle, including those who ran for office, were precinct leaders, were student marchers, were evicted from their homes on whitefolks property when they registered or organized politically, raised funds to support the work and those who baked a cake or cooked a dinner to help feed civil rights workers. Gordon said he hoped that the Museum would have photos and a written story on each person who played a part – big or small – in the Greene County voting and civil rights movement.
    Many of the speakers at the event lamented the fact that young people in Greene County do not know about the struggles for voting rights and democracy in the county. Several speakers said that ‘Greene County History’ should be part of the curriculum and taught in the schools.
    Sheriff Benison gave greetings and said that the late Sheriff Thomas Gilmore had directly motivated him to pursue a career in law enforcement. Three mayors – Hattie Edwards of Eutaw, Louis Harper of Boligee and James Gaines of Union spoke about the inspiration they derived from the voting rights struggle in Greene County.
    Leo Branch, Chair and Dr. Carol P. Zippert, Vice Chair of the Greene County Board of Education also spoke. They announced that the new Middle School consolidating the fourth to eighth grades at the old Eutaw High School will be named for Dr. Robert Brown, the first Black Superintendent of Schools, who built the new high school in the 1970’s.
    Jerry Brown thanked the Greene County School Board for recognizing his father by naming the school. He recalled that Sheriff Bill Lee called his father, who was a principal of Jameswood School in Tishabee, at the time, into his office and told him that he could not protect him anymore, after the elder Brown started participating with Branch and Gilmore in the voting rights struggle. This was the kind of threat that Black people had to endure during this period to win rights for everyone.
    Jerry Brown went on to talk about his experiences as one of seven young people, who integrated the formerly all-white Eutaw High School in the mid 1960’s. “ We were tortured and tormented by the white students for four years but we were successful and paved the way for others in Greene County,” said Brown.
    The Saturday meeting took place in the William M. Branch Courthouse named for the late Probate Judge, in a courtroom that has photographs of Martin Luther King, Judge Branch and Andrew Young on the wall behind the judge’s chair.

  • Back to School Rally and NNO draws large crowd

    Mayor SupJudge

    policesdorischildsGreenesboro

     

    Despite the cloudy weather the Old Courthouse lawn in Eutaw was filled with parents, students, family members, police officers and teachers as the community came together to celebrate the 10th National Night Out and Back-to-School Rally, held on Tuesday, August 2, 2016.
    The local National Night Out was organized to promote community awareness to strengthen the relationship between law enforcement and local communities. Officer Rev. Kendrick Howell served as guest speaker. Siegfried Williams served as Master of Order. Greensboro Praise Team graced the audience with a performances. On hand to greet the audience were: Greene County Superintendent, Dr. James Carter; Mayor of Eutaw Hattie Edwards; Judge Lillie Osborne, Children’s Policy Council President; Juvenile Officer, Deshayla Steele and Parent Involvement Facilitator, Debra Waiters. Rev. Joe Webb, Supervisor of Transportation, stated that if parents had any question regarding their child’s bus or route, they should contact him.
    Numerous booths were in place to distribute back to school supplies, food and safety literature. The Children’s Policy Council provided book bags with school supplies for the children, The CPC also provided free snacks of hotdogs, chips and water. The City of Eutaw staff also provided hot dogs to the gathering.
    The popcorn giveaway booth provided a space for parents to sign up for their children’s school PTA.
    Parents were asked to pickup back packs at the courthouse at the end of the event. These were distributed by the Children’s Policy Council.
    The Thomas Summerville Foundation, a bingo charity with Rivers Edge Bingo, donated $1,000 to the Eutaw Police Department.
    The dual event was presented by the City of Eutaw Police Department and the Greene County Children’s Policy Council (CPC).

  • Federation announces new director of Training Center in Alabama Dr. Marcus Bernard

    M Bernard

    The Federation of Southern Cooperatives/Land Assistance Fund has hired Dr. Marcus Bernard as the new Director of its Rural Training & Research Center in Epes, Alabama. He will officially begin on August 1, 2016 and will work closely with John Zippert during his orientation and transition. John Zippert, who has been our director of the Training Center for decades, will still be very much engaged in the work of the Federation, but will start to decrease his time toward a part time position and focus more on resource development and documentation of the organization.
    “I look forward to working with Marcus and continuing to move the organization forward,” said Cornelius Blanding, Executive Director.
    A native of Supply, North Carolina, Marcus grew up working in his family’s produce operation located in southeastern North Carolina, where he came to value and understand the importance of family as well as the strong sense of pride and independence associated with living in a tightly woven rural community. During his eduational career, he has worked with numerous rural-based organizations such as the Concerned Citizens of Tillery, Cedar Grove Improvement Association, Operation Spring Plant, the Black Farmers and Agriculturalist Association, the North Carolina Black Farmers Association and the Black Belt Justice Center.
    Additionally, Marcus has worked with the Black Male Working academy on numerous urban agriculture and community gardening projects in Lexington, Kentucky. His professional experience includes working as a Cooperative Development Officer in the International Trade Center at North Carolina A&T State University and a Produce Sales Officer for Glory Foods. He earned his Bachelor of Science and Master of Science degrees in Agricultural Economics from North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University. He earned a Doctor of Philosophy degree in Rural Sociology from the University of Kentucky where his dissertation research gives immediate voice to the story and struggle of Black farmers in North Carolina by focusing on ideas of family, manhood, farm wives, building community, and the far reaching consequences of the politics of farming. As the new Director of the Rural Training and Research Center (RTRC), his goal is to build onto the standing legacy of the RTRC and contribute holistically to the growth of the Federation of Southern Cooperatives/Land Assistance Fund.

  • Lewis seeks Eutaw City Council Seat

    James Lewis

    Eutaw native James Kenneth (Truck) Lewis is announcing his candidacy for the Eutaw City Council, District One seat. Lewis attended the public school system in Greene County. He is a graduate of Alabama A & M University, where he earned a Bachelor of Science Degree in Business Finance and a Master’s of Business Administration (MBA) Degree. He was a member of Big Cove Ebenezer M. B. Church in Owens Cross Roads, Alabama where he served as a trustee. He currently attends First Baptist Church of Eutaw.
    Lewis has a strong background in the financial industry with experience as a Chief Operating Officer, a Chief Financial Officer and Chief Administrative Officer as well as other high ranking positions during his career. He most recently served as Financial Relations Manager with Citizens Trust Bank in Eutaw from March of 2014 until June of 2016. The young executive is a member of two national honor societies. He is a former member of the Greater Huntsville Rotary Club of Huntsville, AL; the Sunshine Morning Rotary Club of Tuscaloosa, AL; Cobblestone Condominium Board of Directors in Huntsville, AL.
    Lewis was honored by the College Fund/UNCF at Stillman College with a “Distinguished Leadership Award.” He was awarded the Alabama A&M University Alumni Association Class 89 Outstanding Achieving Award at Alabama A&M University’s Financial Management Association for “Outstanding Leadership as President” of the Association.
    Lewis asks for your vote on Tuesday, August 23, 2016 for City Council District One. He feels with his leadership and experiences, we can work for the betterment of your neighborhoods and our city. He will ensure that your voices are heard. His platform will be financial solvency within the city municipality with accuracy and accountability. Lewis stated, “I would like to see some long term financial planning within the city, because we don’t plan to fail, we fail to plan,” He feels he can be a great asset to the City of Eutaw with his experience with finance, grant writing, project management, business development, human resources, compliance and strategic management. “We can all work together as a T.E.A.M. because ‘Together Everyone Achieves More,’” Lewis concluded.

  • The ugly truth about the White House and its history of slavery

    By Peter Holley , Washington Post

    White HouseMichelle Obama

    Michelle Obama’s speech during the first day of the Democratic National Convention was generally lauded. One sentence in particular garnered more attention, and controversy, than the rest:

    That is the story of this country, the story that has brought me to this stage tonight, the story of generations of people who felt the lash of bondage, the shame of servitude, the sting of segregation, but who kept on striving and hoping and doing what needed to be done so that today I wake up every morning in a house that was built by slaves.

    The mention of slavery was a stark reminder for those who may have forgotten the White House’s disturbing history or for those whose associate the iconic home with freedom and not the misery created in its absence.

    Clarence Lusane, author of “The Black History of the White House,” isn’t one of those people. The chair of Howard University’s Political Science Department, Lusane has done extensive research on the enslaved people who built the structure and later lived among 10 of the United States’ first 12 presidents.

    He called the first lady’s comment a “pivotal moment” in U.S. history.

    “I’m glad that she mentioned the role of enslaved Americans at the White House, because she presented a larger audience with a history that most people are not being taught in our schools,” Lusane, also a professor emeritus at American University, told The Washington Post. “I certainly wasn’t taught that not only were many of our presidents slave owners, but that the most renowned building in our nation was, in part, built by slave labor.”

    Unlike at the U.S. Capitol Building and the site of the Liberty Bell in Philadelphia, “there’s nothing at the White House that acknowledges its slave history, and perhaps a million each year visit the site,” Lusane added.

    While the history of slavery at the White House isn’t widely known, historians say there’s no debate about the accuracy of the first lady’s comments.

    Even Fox News host Bill O’Reilly partially agreed with Obama, acknowledging on “The O’Reilly Factor” Tuesday that her statement about slave labor at the White House was “essentially correct,” according to Media Matters. But O’Reilly disagreed with the first lady’s framing, telling his viewers that enslaved peoples at the site were “were well-fed and had decent lodgings provided by the government, which stopped hiring slave labor in 1802.”

    He also noted that there were white laborers “working” on the site as well.

    O’Reilly also failed to cite and historical records to bolster his claims about the humane treatment of people whose very existence was by definition inhumane.

    The White House Historical Association’s website says that when planners struggled to recruit European labor, they “turned to African Americans — enslaved and free — to provide the bulk of labor that built the White House, the United States Capitol, and other early government buildings.”

    Construction on the president’s home, the site notes, began in 1792. The precise number of enslaved people forced to work during the multiyear construction is unknown, but Lusane told The Post that his research shows enslaved workers were extensively involved in the effort to develop Washington at the end of the 18th century.”We know quite a bit, including the names of a number of the people who were enslaved. Some of them were skilled laborers, such as those who worked in carpentry or masonry,” he told The Post. “We have the payment records from the people who owned them.”

    The White House Historical Association said slaves were trained at the government’s quarry in Aquia, Va., to cut the stone that was later laid by Scottish masons to create the “walls of the president’s house.” The construction force included white laborers from Maryland and Virginia and immigrants from Ireland and Scotland, the association added.

    The construction process forced enslaved people to endure backbreaking labor, Lusane said, such as cutting down trees, dredging swamps, removing dirt and rocks and bringing materials to the site from distant rock quarries. “There would have been a sizable number of enslaved people involved,” Lusane added. “They were building the city as a whole. It took 10 years, and you can be pretty sure that given the work — and the possibility of injuries, diseases, and accidents — that people died.”

    In 2005, PolitiFact noted, a congressional task force issued a report, entitled “History of Slave Laborers in the Construction of the United States Capitol,” that found “plenty of evidence of slave involvement in the Capitol’s construction.”

    “Perhaps the most compelling evidence were records of payments from the commissioners for the District of Columbia — the three men appointed by George Washington to oversee the construction of the capitol and the rest of the city of Washington — to slave owners for the rental of slaves to work on the capitol,” PolitiFact reported. “The records reflect 385 payments between 1795 and 1801 for ‘Negro hire,’ a euphemism for the yearly rental of slaves.”

    The task force concluded that nobody will ever know the precise number of slaves used in the construction process, but it found that the brutal labor closely resembled the kind used in the construction of the White House. From PolitiFact:

    “Slaves were likely involved in all aspects of construction, including carpentry, masonry, carting, rafting, plastering, glazing and painting, the task force reported. And slaves appear to have shouldered alone the grueling work of sawing logs and stones.

    “Slave crews also toiled at the marble and sandstone quarries that provided the stone to face the structure — lonely, grueling work with bleak living conditions in rural Virginia and elsewhere. ‘Keep the yearly hirelings at work from sunrise to sunset — particularly the Negroes,’ the commissioners wrote to quarry operator William O’Neale in 1794.”

     

  • Slavery reparations sought in first Black Lives Matter agenda

    By Eric M. Johnson

    Black Lives Matter

    (Reuters) – A coalition affiliated with the anti-racism Black Lives Matter movement called for criminal justice reforms and reparations for slavery in the United States among other demands in its first policy platform released on Monday.

    The six demands and roughly 40 policy recommendations touch on topics ranging from reducing U.S. military spending to safe drinking water. The groups aim to halt the “increasingly visible violence against Black communities,” the Movement for Black Lives said in a statement.

    The agenda was released days before the second anniversary of the slaying of unarmed black teen Michael        Brown by a white police officer in Ferguson, Missouri. Brown’s death, along with other fatal police shootings of unarmed black men over the past two years, fueled a national debate about racial discrimination in the U.S. criminal justice system.

    Issues related to race and violence took center stage at the Democratic National Convention last week, though the coalition did not endorse the party’s platform or White House candidate, Hillary Clinton.

    “We seek radical transformation, not reactionary reform,” Michaela Brown, a spokeswoman for Baltimore Bloc, one of the organizations that worked on the platform, said in a statement.

    “As the 2016 election continues, this platform provides us with a way to intervene with an agenda that resists state and corporate power, an opportunity to implement policies that truly value the safety and humanity of black lives, and an overall means to hold elected leaders accountable,” Brown said.

    Baltimore Bloc is among more than 50 organizations that developed the platform over the past year, including Black Alliance for Just Immigration, the Black Youth Project 100 and the Black Leadership Organizing Collaborative.

    This is the first time these black-led organizations linked to the decentralized Black Lives Matter movement have banded together to write a comprehensive foundational policy platform.

    The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, the nation’s oldest and largest civil rights organization, was not listed among them.

    The agenda calls for an end to the death penalty, decriminalization of drug-related offenses and prostitution, and the “demilitarization” of police departments. It seeks reparations for lasting harms caused to African-Americans of slavery and investment in education and jobs.

    The Movement for Black Lives said in a statement that “neither mainstream political party has our interests at heart.”

    “By every metric – from the hue of its prison population to its investment choices – the U.S. is a country that does not support, protect or preserve Black life,” the statement said.

     

  • Obama says Trump ‘unfit’ for presidency

    By Kevin Liptak, CNN White House Producer

    President Obama

    Washington (CNN) President Barack Obama offered one of his sharpest denunciations of Donald Trump to date Tuesday, declaring the Republican nominee entirely unfit to serve as president and lambasting Republicans for sticking by their nominee.

    The strong rebuke in the White House East Room came after Trump’s criticism of the family of a slain Muslim US soldier, along with comments that displayed apparent confusion related to the Russian incursion into Ukraine.

    “The Republican nominee is unfit to serve as president,” Obama said at a White House news conference with the Prime Minister of Singapore. “He keeps on proving it.”

    The Trump campaign responded by going after the Democratic nominee as well as the President. “Hillary Clinton has proven herself unfit to serve in any government office,” a Trump statement said, listing a number of policy concerns. “Obama-Clinton have single-handedly destabilized the Middle East, handed Iraq, Libya and Syria to ISIS, and allowed our personnel to be slaughtered at Benghazi.”

    Later Trump in an interview with WJLA said of Obama: “He’s a terrible president. He’ll probably go down as the worst president in the history of our country. He’s been a total disaster.”

    Obama on Tuesday described his feelings about Trump as unprecedented, recalling disagreements with previous GOP presidential nominees Sen. John McCain and Mitt Romney — but never an outright sense they were unfit to serve.

    “The notion that he would attack a Gold Star family that made such extraordinary sacrifices on behalf of our country, the fact that he doesn’t appear to have basic knowledge of critical issues in Europe, the Middle East, in Asia, means that he’s woefully unprepared to do this job,” Obama said.

    Speaking alongside Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong in the White House East Room, Obama said there are now weekly episodes in which even Republican party leaders distance themselves from Trump. “There has to be a point at which you say, ‘Enough,’ ” Obama said.

     

    Obama goes after Trump’s party

     

    Obama placed responsibility for Trump’s statements squarely on his fellow Republicans, many of whom denounced his statements on the slain soldier’s family but didn’t withdraw their support.

    “What does this say about your party that this is your standard-bearer?” Obama asked of GOP leaders. “This isn’t a situation where you have an episodic gaffe. This is daily and weekly where they are distancing themselves from statements he’s making. There has to be a point at which you say, ‘This is not somebody I can support for president of the United States, even if he purports to be a member of my party.’ ”

    Obama said that denunciations from Republicans of Trump’s remarks “ring hollow” without an accompanying withdrawal of support. “I don’t doubt their sincerity. I don’t doubt they were outraged by some of the statements that Mr. Trump and his supporters made about the Khan family,” Obama said. “But there has to come a point in which you say, ‘Somebody who makes those kinds of statements doesn’t have the judgment, the temperament, the understanding to occupy the most powerful position in the world.’ ”

    Trump and the family of the slain soldier have been locked in an increasingly bitter dispute over Muslims in America and the nature of patriotic sacrifice.

    After Khizir Khan, who lost his son in a suicide bombing in Iraq, declared at last week’s Democratic National Convention that Trump had “sacrificed nothing,” the Republican nominee claimed he’d been “viciously attacked” and questioned why Khan’s wife, Ghazala, didn’t make her own remarks.

    Criticism from Trump’s own party came swiftly, including in a lengthy statement from McCain, whom Trump previously derided for having been taken captive in the Vietnam War. But he and other top GOP leaders, including Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and House Speaker Paul Ryan, made little indication they would withdraw support for the Republican candidate.

    Trump has also taken flak for appearing unaware that Russian forces had annexed Crimea in early 2014, saying on ABC’s “This Week” Sunday that President Vladimir Putin is “not going into Ukraine.” Later, he argued that the people of Crimea “would rather be with Russia than where they were” — an argument that Putin himself has made in justifying his annexation of the disputed Ukrainian territory.

  • Greene County School System Official Dress Code

    The Greene County Board of Education hereby adopts the following guidelines for all elementary, middle, and high schools to participate in a mandatory standardized school uniform dress program.

    1.    Students shall dress in proper uniform attire.  It will be the parents’ responsibility to ensure compliance with the uniform dress policy.
    2.    Students shall wear the adopted school attire.  The clothing may not be altered by slits, cuts, holes, shredded hems, slashes, etc.
    3.    A belt must be worn with pants and shorts that have belt loops.
    4.    Shoes may be casual black, brown, or navy, or tan.
    5.    There are no restrictions on athletics shoes
    6.    Boots are prohibited.
    7.    The School Uniform Policy must accommodate students whose religious beliefs are substantially burdened by the requirements.
    8.    The uniform policy may not prohibit students from wearing or displaying expression items for example a button showing support for a political candidate so long as such items does not independently contribute to disruption by substantially interfering with discipline or with the rights of others.
    9.    Students unable to afford uniforms will give notification in writing to Greene County Board of Education immediately.  Means of acquiring uniforms due to said special extenuating circumstances will be channeled through other charitable institutions or organizations for assistance.
    10.    No student shall be considered non-compliance with the policy in the following instances:
    a.    When noncompliance derives from demonstrated financial hardships.
    b.    When noncompliance derives from a documented disability.
    c.    When wearing a uniform violates a student’s sincerely held religious belief.
    d.    When wearing approved attire for clubs and organizations

    The following shall be considered inappropriate dress for students:

    •    Hoodies
    •    Boots
    •    Shirts outside slacks
    •    Strapless dresses
    •    Sunglasses inside building (except for medical reasons)
    •    Spaghetti straps
    •    Picks, combs in hair
    •    Hair brushes and curlers in hair
    •    Tank tops, muscle shirt, or see-through clothing
    •    Belts unfastened, slacks and shorts below the waist (sag), overalls with snaps unfastened
    •    Halter, short-shorts, skin tight biking shorts, boxer shorts, and mini-skirts
    •    Hats or other head covering (except for safety reasons) shall not be worn inside the building
    •    Clothing with decals or slogans of unacceptable groups of language that contains and/or refers to suggestive or immoral behavior or profanity, gang activity, alcohol or tobacco advertisement
    •             Sweat suits
    •         Clothing or insignia that could insight ill feelings and racial problems
    •        Earrings or studs for boys are not allowed

    GREENE COUNTY BOARD OF EDUCATION
    Prescribed Student Dress Code
    Grades K-12 Standard Dress Code

    Girls:    Navy or khaki knee length skirts, jumpers, or shorts and
    slacks.

    NO JEANS    Long or short sleeves navy or white
    polo  knit shirt or buttoned blouse (shirt or blouse with
    collar).     Shirts in school colors bearing school logo
    T-shirt is NOT PERMITTED
    Navy or white undershirt if visible

    Boys:               Navy or khaki slack or knee length shorts.
    NO JEANS    Long or short sleeves navy or white
    polo or oxford  buttoned front) with   collar.
    T-shirt is NOT PERMITTED
    Navy or white undershirt if visible

    Boys and Girls Shoes      Navy, brown, tan, or black leather
    low-top or deck shoes.  No restrictions
    on  Athletic shoes.

     Belts    Web or leather belt in brown, black, or navy must be
    worn with all items of clothing that have belt loops.

     Outer wear (coats, jackets)      Students are  encouraged to
    purchase adopted outer wear
    in school colors.  If not purchased
    adopted outer wear jackets should
    be navy, black, khaki, or brown.
    Students  will  not be allowed to
    wear embellished jackets; i.e.
    Racing, Pennzoil, M&M, etc.
    jackets

    Book Bags             Mesh (navy, black, or brown) or clear.

    If parents are unable to ensure that students comply with Greene County Board of Education’s Dress Code Policy, the student’s parents or guardians must file an exemption form with their child’s school, which establishes special extenuating circumstances.  Approval for the exemption must be granted by the Superintendent according to the guidelines set forth in the exemption action of the Greene County Board of Education Uniform Dress Policy and in accordance with the information requested on the Exemption Form.

    SANCTIONS
    Students not in compliance with the DRESS CODE will not be allowed to attend school.      
    These sanctions are based on the STATEWIDE ZERO TOLERANCE POLICY on
    SCHOOL DISRUPTION. (File:  6-23)

    Greene County High School  
    Freshman Academy
    Dress Code

    BOYS
    Blue Blazer
    White
    Button Down Shirt
    (Long or Short Sleeve)
    Burgundy and Honey Gold Tie
    Black or Brown Belt
    Khaki Pants / Khaki Knee Length Shorts
    SOLID Black, White or Brown Shoes

    GIRLS
    Blue Blazer
    White Button Down Shirt
    (Long or Short Sleeve)
    Tie Optional
    Black or Brown Belt
    Khaki Pants / Khaki Knee Length Skirts /
    Khaki Knee Length Shorts
    SOLID Black, White or Brown Shoes

    Students must wear shirts and ties with Khaki pants or skirts with opening of school.
    Students are not required to wear
    Blazer Jackets until after Labor Day.