Author: greenecodemocratcom

  • Jimmy Carter, seeing resurgence of racism in Trump campaign , plans Baptist Conference for Unity

    By LAURIE GOODSTEIN, New York Times

     Jimmy Carter

    Former President Jimmy Carter, who has long put religion and racial reconciliation at the center of his life, is on a mission to heal a racial divide among Baptists and help the country soothe rifts that he believes are getting worse.

    In an interview on Monday, Mr. Carter spoke of a resurgence of open racism, saying, “I don’t feel good, except for one thing: I think the country has been reawakened the last two or three years to the fact that we haven’t resolved the race issue adequately.”

    He said that Republican animosity toward President Obama had “a heavy racial overtone” and that Donald J. Trump’s surprisingly successful campaign for president had “tapped a waiting reservoir there of inherent racism.”

    Mr. Carter conducted telephone interviews to call attention to a summit meeting he plans to hold in Atlanta this fall to bring together white, black, Hispanic and Asian Baptists to work on issues of race and social inequality. Mr. Carter began the effort, called the New Baptist Covenant, in 2007, but it has taken root in only a few cities. The initiative is expanding to enlist Baptist congregations across the country to unite across racial lines.

    Mr. Carter, 91, began treatment last year for cancer that had started in his liver and spread to his brain. He announced in December that doctors had found him free of cancer but that he was still receiving treatments for metastatic melanoma. On Monday, he said he was feeling well.

    Mr. Carter, a Democrat who was the 39th president, grew up on a farm in Plains, Ga., where many of his friends were the black children of neighboring farmhands. He was raised a Southern Baptist and was the first United States president to call himself a born-again Christian, bringing national attention to the evangelical movement.

    Mr. Carter said the election of Mr. Obama was a hopeful sign, but he added, “I think there’s a heavy reaction among some of the racially conscious Republicans against an African-American being president.”

    He said recent reports showing high unemployment and incarceration rates among black people, “combined with the white police attacks on innocent blacks,” had “reawakened” the country to the realization that racism was not resolved in the 1960s and ’70s.

    He said Mr. Trump had violated “basic human rights” when he referred to Mexican immigrants as criminals and called for a ban on Muslims’ entering the country.

    “When you single out any particular group of people for secondary citizenship status, that’s a violation of basic human rights,” said Mr. Carter, who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2002 for his work with the Carter Center in promoting human rights and democracy in many countries.

    Asked why polls showed high support among evangelical Christians for Mr. Trump’s candidacy, Mr. Carter said: “The use of the word evangelical is a misnomer. I consider myself an evangelical as well. And obviously, what most of the news reporters thought were evangelicals are conservative Republicans.”

    “They have a heavy orientation to right-wing political philosophy, and he obviously is a proponent of that concept,” Mr. Carter said, referring to Mr. Trump.

    He pointed out that the evangelicals in the Southern Baptist Convention had aligned themselves with the Republican Party and organized the Moral Majority, a conservative Christian political group, only in the late 1970s, while he was president. Mr. Carter announced that he was leaving the Southern Baptist Convention in 2000, after the denomination solidified its turn to the right and declared that it would not accept women as pastors.

    Mr. Carter founded the New Baptist Covenant by reaching out to black and white Baptist associations, many of which had split many years ago over slavery. Nearly 15,000 people from 30 Baptist associations attended the founding meeting in 2008.

    Hannah McMahan, the executive director of the New Baptist Covenant, said the group had been in a “pilot phase” for the last two years. She said black and white churches had formed partnerships, called covenants, in Dallas; Macon, Ga.; St. Louis; Birmingham, Ala.; and Atlanta. But the process is painstaking, Ms. McMahan said, adding, “What this has given me an appreciation for is how deep the divides are, and that this kind of work will not happen overnight.”

    The work is especially challenging in this climate, said the Rev. Raphael G. Warnock, the senior pastor of Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, the church where the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. was once a pastor. Ebenezer Baptist is participating in the New Baptist Covenant.

    “This is a dark moment in our national conversation,” Pastor Warnock said. “Those of us who understand that we are better together had better raise our voices, because there are others who are trafficking in theater, in paranoia, and they ply the trade of fear as part of their political craft.”

    However, he said, “I’m much more fired up than discouraged, because the ugliness of the rhetoric we’re seeing in this election cycle really just brings into sharp focus the ugly underbelly of bigotry that has always been there.”

     

     

  • Board approves consolidation of Paramount Jr. High and Carver Middle School

    At its May 16, 2016 regular meeting, the Greene County Board of Education approved the superintendent’s recommendation to consolidate Paramount Jr. High School and Carver Middle School, effective with the 2016-2017 school year. The consolidation will combine the 4th through 8th grades from Paramount and Carver at the former Greene County High School on Mesopotamia Street in Eutaw. The K-3 grades from Paramount will relocate to Eutaw Primary School.
    According to Superintendent Dr. James H. Carter, this decision was not taken lightly. “When schools face declining enrollment and/or declining finances, one of the options that may be considered in solving the problem is consolidating schools within the district,” he stated.
    Prior to making the decision to consolidate, the school board authorized a facilities study to determine the physical conditions of Paramount Jr. High School, Carver Middle School and the former Greene County High School and what it would take financially to bring each facility up to state standards. This assessment was conducted by Ward & Scott Architecture. The Former Greene County High School is the newest facility of the three and would require considerably less in financial investment to bring to state codes.
    The superintendent and board members also conducted four community meetings in the county to discuss the system’s situation of declining enrollment and finances and the various benefits of consolidation. The community meetings, held in Union, Forkland, Eutaw and Boligee, gave the community an opportunity to give their input on the consolation proposal. In all of these gatherings, Superintendent Carter and board members assured the community that consolidation of the middle school programs would better insure the safety of students, school personnel and others. “Consolidation could provide a better education for our children with a greater range of academic courses, more extracurricular programs, access to an on site Career Tech Center and continue to move the system toward educational excellence,” Dr. Carter said.
    Consolidation will also provide for greater cost efficiency, especially regarding operational expenses such as utilities.
    Dr. Cater stated that work will begin immediately to prepared the former high school facility to accommodate the new middle school program.
    In other business, the school board approved the following personnel items as recommended by superintendent Carter.
    * Greene County High School Non – Renewal: Linda Little, (Social Studies); Chereme Gaines, Long-term Sub (Science).
    * Carver Middle School Non – Renewal: Levi Wright, (Assistant Principal/Teacher); Krystal Lockett Miller, (5th Grade); Shekitha Crowell, (5th Grade); Joseph Polk, Long-term Sub (Science); Romanda Askew – CNP Worker.
    * Paramount Jr. High School Non-Renewal: Lonia Dancy-Brown, Long–term Sub (Math); Jerome Frank, (Physical Education).
    * Greene County Career Center Non-Renewal: Terrance Mobley, (Agri-Construction – Instructor); LaSonya Richardson, (Health Science Instructor).
    Eutaw Primary School Non-Renewal: Eric Hendricks, (Physical Education).
    Eutaw Primary School Non-Renewal: Dencer Hall, (Janitor).
    * Greene County Learning Academy Non-Renewal (Tutors): Vassie Brown, Nancy Cole; Leola Jones; Willie Wright; Angel Cordona; Cilla Morrow; Cordarrin Wilson; Mary Wilder.
    * Sending Letters of termination for “Additional Service” contracts to the following employees: (Separate Contract):Rodney Wesley; Halven Carodine; Kendra Payne; Linda Little; Gentrell Eatman; Eric Hendricks; Janice Jeames; Frederick Holmes; Ruby Bell; Jerome Franks; Jacob Sullivan; Corey Cockrell; Dorris Robinson; Drenda Blackman; Jeffrey Wesley; Charles Carter;
    Vanessa Bryant; Walter Taylor; Su’kova Hicks.
    * Retirement Paramount Jr. High School: Charles Carter, (Elementary); Dorothy Branch, (Reading Coach/teacher); Billie J. Wallace, (CNP Manager).
    *Assignment of Ms. Charlayna Jordan to Curriculum & Instruction Program for K-12 in addition to current duties;
    *Assignment of Mrs. Shayla McCray to Curriculum & Instruction Program for K-12 in addition to current duties.
    * Employment of the following for the Summer Feeding Program beginning June 6, 2016 and ending June 30, 2016 at Carver Middle School and Eutaw Primary: Linda Underwood, (Manager); Sandy Underwood, (Manager); Jacqueline Pickens, (Cook); Youlonda Coleman, (Cook); Rosie Davis, (Cook); Mary Hill, (Cook); Frances McGhee, (Cook); Jessica Lake, (Cook); Melinda Alexander, (Cook).
    * Employment of the following teachers and bus drivers for Summer School June 6 – June 17, 2016. (Funding Source – Federal Funds). Carver Middle School: Teachers – Vanessa Bryant, Marjorie Duncan, Katoya Quarles, Shunetta Kirkman, Sandra Gordon, Wanda Blakely, Cassandra Allen, Joseph Polk, Corey Cockrell, Shekita Crowell.
    Eutaw Primary: Teachers – Gennetta Bishop, Pamela Pasteur, Walter Taylor, Keisha Williams.
    Paramount Jr. High: Teachers – Tamecisha Abrams, Danielle Edison, Tiffany Linebarger, Su’kova Hicks, Drenda Morton, Pinkie Travis, Felecia Smith, Jacob Sullivan, Lonia Dancy-Brown, Jerome Franks.
    Bus Drivers – William Mack, Felicia Davis, Jada Goree, Teresa Hill, Brenden Gaines, Christine Carter, Ayanna Crawford, James Powell (Sub), Jerdine Gray (Sub).
    The board approved the following administrative services items:
    * Four day work week (Monday-Thursday) from June 1, 2016 -July 29, 2016.
    * Increase of Visiting Student Price from $2.25 to $3.25 for the Child Nutrition Program.
    Payment of all bills, claims and payroll.

    Superintendent’s Report:
    * Parent Visitation Day at Summer School is June 10, 2016.
    * Report cards deadline is May 26, 2016.
    * Summer school will be offered for students who have failed a course or would like more enrichment in reading and math skills.
    * Committee has been appointed to develop a vision and mission statement for the school district.
    * Committee appointed to revisit and develop a new strategic plan.
    * Commencing with 2016-2017, course in computer science will be offered for grades 4-12.
    * Plan to close career information gap.
    * Plan to implement a mentoring program at all Greene County Schools commencing with 2016-2017 school year.
    * Plan to organize a competitive Chess Club at Greene County High School commencing with 2016-2017 school year.
    * Plan to teach “soft skills” for the work place.
    * Freshman Academy will open on August 8, 2016 at GCHS.
    * Greene County High will graduate approximately 70 students.
    *Congratulatory breakfast will be held for graduating seniors, Tuesday, May 17.
    * Seniors will visit their earlier schools wearing their cap and gowns to inspire young students to strive for excellence.High School

    Former Greene County High School

  • Carver Middle School inducts 16 students into Isaac N. Atkins Chapter of the National Junior Honor Society

    On Thursday, April 28, 2016, Carver Middle School inducted 16 students into the Isaac N. Atkins Chapter of National Junior Honor Society. The inductees included: Karyn Atmore, J’nya Brown, Jarius Cockrell, Ja’Myas Davis, Taina Edwards, Makayla Farrow, Carmen Gibson, Jameria Hardy, Keontaye Levingston, Haley Noland, Jalia Noland, Lataursa Jones, Whitney Spencer, Ra’Niyah Taylor, Alex Williams, Destinee Wilson. Also shown above are Mrs. Isaac Atkins, Principal Barbara Martin, and Superintendent Dr. James H. Carter. School advisors included Andrea Perry, Chapter Advisor and Levi Wright, Assistant Principal.

  • Chief Coleman urges observance of juvenile curfew schedule

    Derick

    Chief Derick Coleman

     

     

    With classes in the county schools ending Tuesday, May 24, 2016, Eutaw Police Chief Derick Coleman expressed a concern that parents need to get more involved with their children. “Now that schools are closing for the summer, all parents should be mindful of their child /children’s whereabouts,” he said. Chief Coleman explained that curfew laws will be strictly enforced. Juvenile curfew laws are local ordinances that prohibit people of a certain age (usually under 18) from being in public or in a business establishment during certain hours (such as between 11:00 p.m. and 6:00 a.m.). Juvenile Curfew Laws and Exempted Activities Almost all juvenile curfew laws identify exempted activities or exceptions under which juveniles may lawfully be out after curfew. These exceptions will vary by jurisdiction, but typically include the following: * Minors accompanied by a parent or guardian *Minors traveling to or from work. *Minors attending official school or religious events * Minors running errands under an adult’s instruction *Emergencies Punishment for Juvenile Curfew Violations Punishment for juvenile curfew law violations also varies among jurisdictions, but can often include one or more of the following options: * Fines (usually increasing for subsequent violations) * Imposition of community service or required enrollment in after-school programs * Restriction of driver’s license privileges * Possible detention in jail or juvenile hall. * Parents who knowingly allow their children to violate curfew laws may also be subject to fines and other punishment.

  • Sheriff distributes $251,360 to governmental entities; no bingo funds to the hospital

    Bingo Check jpg L to R: Boligee Mayor Louis Harper, Bingo Clerk Minnie Byrd, Louise Harkness Union Councilperson, Forkland Mayor Ollie Vester, Sheriff Benison, Emma Jackson, Bingo Clerk, Brenda Burke representing the County Commission, Barbara Collins representing the City of Eutaw and Sharon Washington representing Greene County Board of Education.

    file://localhost/Public/May%202016/Bingo,%20Vester%20and%20Sheriff/IMG_7251.JPG

    In various public gatherings, representatives from the Greene County Health System have sought financial assistance from Sheriff Jonathan Benison’s bingo receipts, to no avail. On Wednesday, May 18, 2016, Greene County Sheriff Department distributed $251,360 in monthly bingo allocations from the four licensed gaming operations in the county. None of these funds were allocated to the hospital, nursing home, physicians clinic or Home Health Care Services. The Greene County Health System has never been a regular recipient of Greene County bingo allocations since Sheriff Benison has been in office. The recipients of the monthly distributions from bingo gaming designated by Sheriff Jonathan Benison in his Bingo Rules and Regulations include the Greene County Commission, the Greene County Sheriff’s Department, the cities of Eutaw, Forkland, Union and Boligee and the Greene County Board of Education. The assessments reported at this time are for the month of April 2016. Green Charity (Center for Rural Family Development) gave a total of $60,000 to the following: Greene County Commission, $24,000; Greene County Sheriff’s Department, $9,000; City of Eutaw, $4,500; and the Towns of Forkland, Union and Boligee each, $3,000; Greene County Board of Education, $13,500. Greenetrack, Inc gave a total of $71,360 to the following: Greene County Commission, $28,544; Greene County Sheriff’s Department, $10,704; City of Eutaw, $5,352; Towns of Forkland, Union and Boligee each, $3,658 Greene County Board of Education, $16,056. Frontier (Dream, Inc.) gave a total of $60,000 to the following: Greene County Commission, $24,000; Greene County Sheriff’s Department, $9,000; City of Eutaw, $4,500; and the Towns of Forkland, Union and Boligee each, $3,000; Greene County Board of Education, $13,500. River’s Edge (Young People Alliance Association) gave a total of $60,000 to the following: Greene County Commission, $24,000; Greene County Sheriff’s Department, $9,000; City of Eutaw, $4,500; and the Towns of Forkland, Union and Boligee each, $3,000; Greene County Board of Education, $13,500.

  • Local DST Alumnae Chapter awards 11 scholarships

    DSC_0212Scholarship Recipients – Bottom Row L to R: Teneshia Portis, Greensboro High; Tyra Hutton, Greene County High; Ollivera Hutton, Greene County High; Ashley Taylor, Greene County High; Top Row L to R: DeQuandra Lyles, Greensboro High; Rakeila Anderson, Greensboro High; Denzel Davis, Greene County High; Yahaira Davis, Greensboro High. Recipients not shown include: Amber French, Tukiya Cunningham, and Raven Gilliam of Greene County High. (photo by Marva Smith)

    The Greene County Alumnae Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. awarded 11 scholarships to graduates of Greene County High, Eutaw, AL and Greensboro High, Greensboro, AL. Greene and Hale Counties are within the Chapter’s service area. Each recipient will receive a $500 award once he or she has confirmed enrollment in a postsecondary institution. The Sorority Chapter held a reception for the recipients and their guests on Monday, May 23, 2016 at Ruby’s in Eutaw. Ms. Johnni Morning, Chaplain, shared an inspirational meditation. Mrs. Isaac Atkins, the Chapter’s 2nd Vice President, brought special words of guidance and encouragement. Chapter President Andrea Perry greeted the assembly and Mrs. Carolyn Young introduced the DST Chapter members present. Mrs. Nancy Cole served as Mistress of Ceremony. Refreshments were served.

     

  • The Obama family will live in a 9 bedroom, $5.3 million D.C. mansion after presidency ends

    BY LINDSAY KIMBLE           obama's house in Washington, D. C.-800.jpg

    Home Obama family will lease in Washington, D. C. 

    The Obama family will be served a White House eviction notice come January, but luckily, they’ve already found new digs to lay down roots.

    President Barack Obama, wife Michelle Obama and daughters Malia and Sasha, will lease the Kalorama, D.C., mansion of Joe Lockhart and Giovanna Gray, according to Politico. The home, which is 8,200 square feet, was built in 1928 and has nine bedrooms, in addition to eight and a half baths.
    White House officials, contacted by PEOPLE, had no immediate comment on the story.

    According to public record, Lockhart bought the mansion in 2014 for $5,295,000. Lockhart, the former White House Press Secretary for President Bill Clinton and current EVP of communications for the NFL, and wife Gray, a Glamour editor, have relocated to Manhattan, Politico reported.
    The president announced his plans to stay in D.C. after his term ends earlier this year. The family will stay at least until daughter Sasha, who is a sophomore, finishes high school, Obama said.

    Before moving into the White House in 2009, the family lived in Chicago, where Obama was an Illinois state senator and where the family still owns a home.

     

     

  • GCHS Greene Team honors  volunteers at luncheon

    GCHS Greene Team honors volunteers at luncheon

    Greene Coats

     

    The Greene Team, local volunteers who devote time and treasure to the Greene County Health System, recognized their members’ contributions at an Annual Volunteers Luncheon held Tuesday, May 31, 2016 at Ruby’s in Eutaw. The luncheon featured presentations on Domestic Violence Awareness by Sheriff Jonathan Benison and Deputy Sheriff Lt. Jeremy Rancher.
    The Greene Team was organized in 2010 and currently has 39 active members who contributed 2,766.5 volunteer hours to the GCHS from October 2015 to date.In addition to serving as receptionists and advocates for positive community relations, the Greene Team also raises funds for special projects to benefit the Greene County Health Systems, including purchasing visitors’ sleeping cots and TV’s for hospital rooms, personal items for residents of the nursing home and more. The Greene Team volunteers are local individuals, mainly retirees, who choose to give more to their community through the GCHS.
    Mrs. Jeanetta Hall serves as president and Mrs. Melruth Carter as secretary. Mrs. Geraldine Walton was mistress of ceremony at the luncheon

  • Black Belt Folk Roots Festival – August 27-28 in Eutaw Annual festival strengthens community bonds

    By: Carol Prejean Zippert

     

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    Months before the tent goes up on the old courthouse square in the center of town, inquiries have steadily poured in seeking confirmation that the annual Black Belt Folk Roots Festival will fill those grounds again on the fourth Saturday and Sunday of August.
    The calls about the festival are a reminder of how the community has taken ownership of this special event. The festival dates are an automatic imprint on the minds and hearts of so many. Local groups plan class reunions, family reunions, vacation time and other summer events on the week end of the festival. The Black Belt Folk Roots Festival itself has become a grand reunion.
    In is 41st year one may ask what is still so attractive about this festival; what is so compelling about this festival?IMG_7373.JPG Is it the array of handmade crafts such as theme designed quilts, baskets of pine needles, bullrush grass and corn shucks, hand-bottomed chairs, wood carvings, leather works and uniquely deigned jewelry? Is it the aroma of the foodways expressed on the grounds calling attention to the soul food dinners, fried fish, chicken, and pork skins, a range of barbeque meats, Polish sausage and bear burgers? The attraction may also be the homemade sweet treats including cakes, pies, funnel cakes, preserved fruits, sno’ cones and homemade ice cream churned on the spot.
    Perhaps the festival crowd returns to be once more enthralled by the ole timey blues music that dominates the sounds of the festival on Saturday. The musicians sing and strum stories of struggle, hardship, loss, pain and perseverance. The ole timey gospel stage that follows at Sunday’s festival brings reassurance that a people’s strong faith, commitment and sacrifice defines how we made it over. The spirit of the gospel music brings out the church in the crowd.
    Most significant, the festival brings together people to see people, to hear people, to touch people and strengthen a community bond they already share.
    The folk artists featured at the festival include craftspersons such as Odessa Rice, Mary Hicks, Martha Kimbrough, Eloise Jeter and Meloneal Hobson.
    Blues artists who return each year include Clarence Davis, The Liberators, Little Jimmie Reed (Leon Atkins), Russell Gulley, Davey Williams and Lemon Harper and others. Sunday’s gospel music is shared by The Echo Singers, the Echo Juniors, The Webb Gospel Singers, The Golden Gates, The Mississippi Traveling Stars, Son of Zion Gospel Duo, New Generation Male Chorus, Mrs. Eddie Mae Brown and more.The two day festival, held on the old courthouse square in the center of town in Eutaw, AL, is open to the public free of charge, The 2016 schedule is Saturday, August 27 from 11:00 a.m to 6:00 p.m.; Sunday August 28 from 2:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m.
    The festival is produced by the Society of Folk Arts & Culture. It was started in 1975 by Jane and Hubert Sapp who were part of the Miles College Eutaw Extension Program in an effort to document, preserve and celebrate the history, culture and traditions of the region. For more information contact Carol P. Zippert at 205-372-0525; carolxzippert@aol.com

  • Eutaw City Council approves election qualifying fees and other resolutions

    At their regular meeting on May 24, 2016, the Eutaw City Council approved a schedule of qualifying fees for the municipal elections to be held in August. The qualifying fee for the Mayor’s office will be $50 and the fee to qualify to run for City Council will be $25.
    The elections will be held on August 23, 2016 and the first official date to qualify will be after July 5, 2016.
    The Eutaw City Council had a second reading of a Resolution on Demolition of Condemned Buildings. This resolution provides for the City to invoice property holders for the demolition costs of abandoned, burned or otherwise uninhabitable buildings in the city. A resolution listing three properties that were recently demolished: 1. 152 Vera Vista Street ($2,000); 2. 104 Elm Street ($2,500); and 3. 304 Kirksey Avenue ($3,000) was approved by the City Council. If these properties are sold, the City expects to recover its funds.
    Council members said there were several other buildings in the city that also need to go through this process since their owners have abandoned them and they are a health risk to the neighboring dwellings and residents.
    The Council also agreed that they would not go on private property to cut grass. They will cut grass and remove trash on city right-of-ways but not go on private property. Property owners will be informed of the need to care for their own lots and areas. Ken Aycock, City Attorney, was asked to draft a resolution clarifying this issue for passage at the next Council meeting.
    In other business, the Eutaw City Council:
    • approved submission of the Municipal Water Pollution Prevention (MWPP) annual report to State of Alabama Department of Environmental Management;
    • approved the first reading of a Sub-Division Purchasing Agreement for housing lots to be sold by the City;
    • approved a resolution to ALDOT in support of a state project to replace the traffic lights on all four corners of the Courthouse Square in Eutaw.
    Mayor Hattie Edwards reported that she was still working on the major projects with USDA for improving the water system and fire protection and with ALDOT to repave Prairie Avenue.
    City Inspector Torris Babb reported that the Prairie Avenue project was moving toward bids. He also reported that as he traveled around the city, he found a number of construction and repair projects that had not secured the proper building permits from the City for work that was underway. He urged the contractors to secure the proper permits and meet city regulations.
    Council members reported on various street and drainage problems in their districts in need of attention and care by city staff.