Category: Politics

  • Greene County Commissioners recognized for completing training program

     

    Shown L To R: Greene Co. Commissioner Lester Brown, with Ray Long, ACC President and on the right Greene Co. Commissioner Michael Williams and Corey Cockrell

    Greene County Commissioners Lester “Bop” Brown and Michael Williams recently completed the most rigorous training program available to county officials in Alabama, which includes 120 hours of training from the Alabama Local Government Training Institute (ALGTI). The commissioners were recognized for this achievement at the Association of County Commissions of Alabama (ACCA) 88th Annual Convention held late last month.
    “The Level II training program that Lester Brown and Michael Williams completed is a set of advanced, ‘issue-oriented’ courses that many county commissioners participate in so they can perform their duties as efficiently as possible,” said ACCA Executive Director Sonny Brasfield. “When Alabama’s county officials share new ideas and information with one another, they learn how to improve the services offered in their own counties. This sort of communication ultimately helps county leaders contribute to a better quality of life for their constituents.”
    Greene County Commissioner Corey Cockrell recently completed 50 hours of training also from the ALGTI on the basic responsibilities of the county commission. Commissioner Cockrell was also recognized for this achievement at the ACCA 88th Annual Convention held last month.

    The ALGTI program emphasizes budgeting, personnel matters, planning, and road and bridge responsibilities. This unique educational program began in 1994 as a mandatory program for first-time county commissioners by act of the Alabama Legislature. Classes are supervised by the ALGTI board of directors, composed of county officials with ACCA, educators and members of the Alabama Legislature.
    “Continuing education for our county officials will always remain one of the Association’s priorities for our membership,” said ACCA Executive Director Sonny Brasfield. “As with any organization, the sharing of new ideas and information is the best way to grow and prosper. The involvement of county employees and officials only enhances our efforts to improve county government and the services it provides at the local level.”

  • Georgetown University to make amends for slavery history

     By: Ian Simpson, Reuters News Service

     

    student-at-georgetown
    WASHINGTON, DC – MARCH 28: Georgetown University freshman, Darryl Robinson, 19, poses for a photograph on campus on Wednesday March 28, 2012 in Washington, DC. Robinson said he was unprepared and had terrible study habits when he arrived as a student at Georgetown University. Healy Hall is seen in the background. (Photo by Matt McClain for The Washington Post via Getty Images)

     

    WASHINGTON, Sept 1 (Reuters) – Georgetown University apologized on Thursday for its historical links to slavery, saying it would give an admissions edge to descendants of slaves whose sale in the 19th century helped pay off the U.S. school’s debts.

    The 1838 sale, worth about $3.3 million in today’s dollars, was organized by two of Georgetown’s early presidents, both Jesuits. A portion of the profit, about $500,000, was used to help pay off Georgetown’s debts at a time when the college was struggling financially. The slaves were uprooted from the Maryland plantations and shipped to estates in Louisiana.

    The Washington-based university, run by the Roman Catholic Jesuit order, will create an institute to study the history of slavery at the school. It will also rename two buildings that had honored presidents who oversaw the 1838 sale of the 272 slaves, who had worked on church-affiliated plantations in Maryland.

    “The most appropriate ways for us to redress the participation of our predecessors in the institution of slavery is to address the manifestations of the legacy of slavery in our time,” Georgetown President John DeGioia said in a statement.

    The school’s steps go further than those taken by other U.S. universities that are confronting their past association with slavery, including Harvard, Brown, Princeton and the University of North Carolina.

    But some criticized as inadequate the decision to give the descendants of the sold slaves the same admissions preference as the children of faculty, staff and alumni.

    “We remain hopeful that we can forge a relationship with Georgetown that will lead to ‘real’ atonement,” Karran Harper Royal, an organizer of a group of descendants, said in an email.

    She added that the school should have offered scholarships to descendants of the slaves and included them on a panel that made the recommendations.

    The steps follow recommendations by a committee DeGioia appointed in September 2015 on how to recognize Georgetown’s links to slavery.

    The 18,000-student university will also create a memorial for slaves whose work benefited the school, including those sold to plantations in Louisiana to pay off Georgetown’s debts. Descendants of the slaves will be included in a group advising on the memorial.

    The two buildings being renamed by university officials originally paid tribute to the Rev. Thomas F. Mulledy and the Rev. William McSherry, the college presidents involved in the 1838 sale. Now one will be called Isaac Hall to commemorate the life of Isaac Hawkins, one of the slaves shipped to Louisiana in 1838, and the other Anne Marie Becraft Hall, in honor of a 19th-century educator who founded a school for black girls in Washington.

    Students at dozens of U.S. universities staged protests last fall over the legacy of racism on campus. The protests led to the resignation of the president of the University of Missouri and prompted many schools to review their diversity commitments.

    Dr. DeGioia said he planned to apologize for the wrongs of the past “within the framework of the Catholic tradition,” by offering what he described as a Mass of reconciliation in partnership with the Jesuit leadership in the United States and the Archdiocese of Washington.

    “This community participated in the institution of slavery,’’ Dr. DeGioia said, addressing a crowd of hundreds of students, faculty members and descendants at Georgetown’s Gaston Hall. “This original evil that shaped the early years of the Republic was present here. We have been able to hide from this truth, bury this truth, ignore and deny this truth.”

    “As a community and as individuals, we cannot do our best work if we refuse to take ownership of such a critical part of our history,’’ he said. “We must acknowledge it.”

    When Dr. DeGioia invited questions from the audience, a man in a gray suit took the microphone. “My name is Joe Stewart,’’ he said, “and I am a descendant of the 272.”

    Mr. Stewart, a retired corporate executive and an organizer of a group of more than 300 descendants, expressed gratitude to the university’s working group on slavery and to Dr. DeGioia for their efforts. But he said that descendants, who had not been included as members of the committee, must be involved in decision making on these initiatives moving forward.

    “Our attitude is nothing about us, without us,’’ said Mr. Stewart, who was flanked by five other descendants.

     

     

     

  • President Obama defends Colin Kaepernick’s right not to stand for National Anthem at NFL games

    By: Roland Martin NewsOne

     

    colin-kaepernick-takes-a-knee
    SAN DIEGO, CA – SEPTEMBER 1: Eric Reid #35 and Colin Kaepernick #7 of the San Francisco 49ers kneel on the sideline during the anthem, as free agent Nate Boyer stands, prior to the game against the San Diego Chargers at Qualcomm Stadium on September 1, 2016 in San Diego, California. The 49ers defeated the Chargers 31-21. (Photo by Michael Zagaris/San Francisco 49ers/Getty Images)

    Colin Kaepernick joined by teammate Eric Reed take a knee during playing of National Anthem before NFL pre-season game

    President Barack Obama has weighed in on the Colin Kaepernick National Anthem protest controversy and backed the NFL quarterback’s right to protest as being covered under the First Amendment of the United States Constitution.

    San Francisco 49ers quarterback, Colin Kaepernick, is vowing to sit during the national anthem in protest over police killings of African-Americans. Is he being anti-American by expressing his right to protest which is covered under the First Amendment of the Constitution?

    Despite the endorsement, Kaepernick’s detractors continue to harbor animosity against him.

    During Monday’s edition of NewsOne Now, Roland Martin and his panel of guests discussed the ongoing Kaepernick saga and the protest action that seems to be slowly picking up momentum amongst other pro-athletes after U.S. Women’s Soccer star Megan Rapinoe, who is a lesbian, also took a knee during the National Anthem before a recent soccer match.

    To add to the support, Kaepernick’s football jersey is the top-selling jersey on the NFL’s www.nflshop.com website.

    Martin said Kaepernick’s protest is resonating with many Americans because “he is making a point that is critically important and he’s not some guy who is clueless” on the issues of racism and police brutality.

    Michelle Bernard, President and CEO of the Bernard Center for Women, Politics & Public Policy, said she was disgusted by many of the comments posted on social media by those who do not agree with Kaepernick’s chosen method of protest.             She explained there is a contingent of Americans who have expressed outrage by saying, “How dare you? You make so much money in the NFL, this is not a problem, you shouldn’t be speaking out on this. Take your money, be happy, and this is so unpatriotic.”

    Bernard then refuted those claims: “We live in a country where you are able to speak your mind and if you’re White … not get shot because you’ve done it.”

    Ralph Chittams, Senior Vice Chairman of the Washington, D.C. Republican Party, said Kaepernick is “well within his Constitutional rights. “He has the right to stand, sit, kneel [or] not even come out of the locker room for the National Anthem,” Chittams said. “We’ve gotten to a point in this country where we don’t value dissenting opinions; we demand agreement and uniformity.”

    Bernard added: “The nation pretends that Black men don’t have minds of their own, that they can’t speak and that if you speak on an issue that is important to you, it means that you’re not patriotic and you don’t like the country.”

    Martin reminded viewers Kaepernick is “ticking folks off” because “America never wants to discuss the why of the protest; they only want to discuss the protest.”

    Before delving into the controversy surrounding the football star, Dr. Jason Johnson gave the NewsOne Now audience a little historical context about the Star-Spangled Banner that many may not know.

    In The Root, Dr. Johnson said: The Star-Spangled Banner, written by Francis Scott Key, because he was bitter about the fact that he had lost to a group of Black soldiers and then those same Black soldiers were coming in and trashing Baltimore on behalf of the British.”

    Johnson continued, “The British had offered runaway slaves — if you come and fight for us against the country that enslaved and oppressed you, we will give you your freedom.”

    The whole song, in essence, according to Johnson, “is basically a diss track about a bitter, rich, pro-slavery White man saying ‘I don’t like that Black people are coming for freedom.’”

  • SOS holds rally at State House to demand that Governor Bentley and Alabama Legislature expand Medicaid to serve the working poor

    The Save Our Selves (SOS) Movement for Justice and Democracy came again to the steps of the Alabama State House in Montgomery on Wednesday, August 24th. According to State Senator Hank Sanders, more than 100 SOS members came from all over the state and held a mock funeral for as many as 1,700 Alabamians who died over the last three years because the Governor has refused to expand Medicaid.
    The SOS members came to lift the deceased by demanding expansion of the state’s Medicaid program for more than 250,000 residents of our state who fall in the gap between Medicaid coverage for children and the very poor and working people who are ineligible for subsidized medical insurance coverage under the Affordable Care Act (ACA).
    This group of people, who need health care the most, are being excluded from a benefit of the ACA because the state of Alabama has refused to extend Medicaid coverage to those whose income is below 138 percent of the poverty level income (approximately $17,000 annual income). Most of these low-income people are working at minimum wage or part time jobs and deserve access to the full benefits of the health care system.

    The State of Alabama has refused to extend Medicaid for three years since 2013 when this national benefit became available. The Federal government agreed to pay 100% of this new Medicaid program for the first three years. The state share beginning in the fourth year of the program would have increased over the next four years to ten per cent of the cost.
    A study in 2013 by medical experts, funded by the Kaiser Family
    Foundation showed that in Alabama – 235,084 more people would have been insured for health care if the State of Alabama had expanded Medicaid. The same study showed, based on a complex review of medical conditions in the state that 215 (at the lowest estimate) and 572 (at the highest estimate) would die because of the lack of medical coverage.
    “This is an average of one person a day, for over three years – more than 1,000 fellow human beings – who have died because the State of Alabama has not extended Medicaid to the working poor in our state!” said Shelley Fearson, a spokesperson for the SOS.
    Another more recent study by the Urban Institute and Robert Wood Johnson Foundation shows that in the 24 states that have not expanded Medicaid, 6.7 million residents are projected to remain uninsured in 2016 as a result. These states are foregoing $423.6 billion in federal Medicaid funds from 2013 to 2022, which will lessen economic activity and job growth.
    Hospitals in these 24 states are also slated to lose a $167.8 billion (31 percent) boost in Medicaid funding that was originally intended to offset major cuts to their Medicare and Medicaid reimbursement. According to this study, for Alabama, this means this means 254,000 people who will not be eligible for Medicaid. The state lost $1.5 billion in Federal revenues for 2016 and $14.5 billion for the ten years (2013-2022).
    The impact on hospitals, especially small rural hospitals, is great. Hospitals in Alabama, lost $700 million in reimbursement revenues in 2016 and $7 billion for the ten year period 2013 –2022. The cost of expanding Medicaid to the working poor in the same study was calculated at $105 million a year for 2016 and a little over a billion for the ten year period (2013-2022).
    These hospitals have no way to replace this revenue and in fact must provide “uncompensated care” in emergency rooms and other facilities to these same people who do not have insurance.
    The decision of the state of Alabama not to expand Medicaid means that poor people in other states are receiving Federal funding for their health needs that also should be coming to Alabama. In addition, the cost of insurance to those who have it is higher in Alabama because the cost to hospitals and medical care providers for uncompensated costs are figured into the payment and premium calculations. Expanding Medicaid would be a net plus to the state in tax revenues, jobs and a healthier workforce.
    “We in SOS and our affiliate organizations, support the efforts of the Governor and Legislature to meet the immediate $85 million gap in the Medicaid budget. We implore you to consider closing the health care gap that leaves a quarter of a million of our fellow residents without care. Based on the studies cited above, if the Governor had extended Medicaid in 2013 or agrees to extend it now, the state would benefit economically and avoid the current health crisis that results in at least one unnecessary and untimely death of a fellow Alabamian, ever single day!” said Sanders on behalf of SOS.
    For more information, contact: Shelley Fearson, at 334.262.0932 and alabamanewsouth@aol.com or Senator Hank Sanders at hank23sanders@gmail.com.

     

  • Trump ally apologizes for Hillary Clinton Blackface Tweet as candidates battle for voters of color

    Another tweet showed her sporting blonde braids.

    Written By Charise Frazier, Newsone

    Tweet of Hillary in Blackface

    Mark Burns that shows Hillary Clinton in Blackface

    Pastor Mark Burns, a Black Trump surrogate, apologized for tweeting out two controversial photos of Hillary Clinton on Monday. One depicted her in Blackface, while the other showed her with blonde braids.

    The tweets accused Clinton of pandering to Black voters and set off a firestorm of reaction, only one month after Burns gave a bizarre benediction at the RNC, calling Clinton “the enemy.”

    The photo caption for the first tweet reads, “Black Americans, THANK YOU FOR YOUR VOTES and letting me use you again..See you again in 4 years.” Clinton is holding a sign that says “#@!** the police,” and is wearing a shirt that says “no hot sauce, no peace,” a reference to comments earlier this year during which the candidate confessed her love for the condiment. Many lashed out at Clinton after, saying she played into the tired stereotype that references Black people and their love for hot sauce. The tweet also played into Burns’ criticism that Clinton’s views don’t side with those who support police.

    Another tweet shows Clinton with blonde braids, with the caption, “When you need the Black vote.”

    Burns initially doubled down on his statements in a fiery interview on MSNBC with Kristen Welker, but then later in the day released an 11-minute Periscope post acknowledging his actions.

    “The last thing I want to do is to offend people. The tweet was not designed to anger or stir up the pot like it did. It was designed to bring how I feel a very real reality as to why the Democratic party and how I view it have been pandering and using black people just for their votes…,” he said on Periscope.

    The tweets come on the heels of Trump’s visit to Detroit on Saturday, where he plans to address the Great Faith Ministries Church and tape an interview with Bishop Wayne T. Jackson, according to a statement Jackson released Monday via The Detroit Free Press.

    Trump’s visit is part of his campaign’s new focus to reach out to Black voters. A recent NBC News poll shows Trump only has 8 percent of the Black vote. In the first few weeks of August, Trump has repeatedly made tone-deaf statements to Black voters at rallies with mostly White audiences, asking them, “What the hell do you have to lose?”

    Jackson also offered an invitation to Clinton in his statement. “The goal for this interview is to get real answers and Trump’s views and plans on policies that affect our community,” he said.

    Burns also weighed in on Trump’s visit, saying the candidate will “answer questions that are relevant to the African-American community, such as education, unemployment, making our streets safe and creating better opportunities for all. He will then give an address to outline policies that will impact minorities and the disenfranchised in our country.”

    Do you think these tactics are helping Trump win self-loathing Blacks and White moderate voters?

  • Teamsters Union endorses Clinton, slaps Trump as unworthy of working people’s support

    Hillary Clinton ( AP Photo/Carolyn KasterAP_16238726919175-744x466By : Bill Hoffmann

    Hillary Clinton on Friday received a pivotal endorsement as the International Brotherhood of Teamsters announced that the Democratic nominee should be the nation’s next president.

    The Teamsters General Executive Board says it unanimously voted to endorse the former senator and secretary of state.

    “We are proud to endorse Hillary Clinton for President of the United States. She is the right candidate for the middle class and working men and women across the country,” Teamsters General President James P. Hoffa said.

    “She will stand strong for the workers of America by fighting to reject job-killing trade deals, enforcing labor laws and working to provide retirement security for millions of people who have sacrificed so much for the chance to retire with dignity.”

    Hoffa said the commander-in-chief must be “a serious candidate who understands what it means to govern responsibly.

    “Donald Trump supports national right-to-work laws that are proven to weaken the middle class and has a long track record of shipping jobs out of the country as a businessman. He is no friend to working Americans.”

    The Teamsters, which represent 1.4 million workers throughout the United States, Canada and Puerto Rico, is the latest major union to endorse Clinton, following the AFL-CIO and SEIU.

  • North Carolina’s Voter ID Law struck down, but questions remain

    By Cash Michaels, Contributing Writer (Carolina Peacemaker, NNPA Member)

    ncvoterid_jdaniels_web120

    Democrats and activists who supported efforts by the N.C. NAACP and others to legally overturn parts of North Carolina’s “Monster Voting Law,” were certainly thrilled to hear that a three-judge federal appellate panel indeed struck down key elements of the 2013 measure, effective immediately.

    “The U.S. Fourth Circuit Court [of Appeals] ruling [Friday] is a people’s victory and a victory that sends a message to the nation,” said Rev. Dr. William J. Barber, II, president of the North Carolina State Conference of the NAACP. “The court found — under the sensitive inquiry required by law — that how the law was enacted and its impact made crystal clear that discriminatory intent impermissibly motivated this General Assembly.

    “Under our Constitution, and under the core principles and dictates of the Voting Rights Act…” Rev. Barber continued, “… these provisions have no legitimacy under the law.”

    In its ruling, the federal appellate court stated that the Republican-led N.C. General Assembly was racially-motivated with “discriminatory intent” in passing the 2013 voting restrictions, saying, that African Americans were targeted “…with almost surgical precision.”

    “The Court’s decision reinforces that race-based decision-making in the electoral system will not stand,” said Penda D. Hair, lead attorney for the N.C. NAACP. “We know that voters of color rely most heavily on these voting measures, and that, without this decision, they would have borne the brunt of the burden this November.”

    Unless a timely stay on the ruling is granted by the entire U.S. Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals before the November 8th General Elections (something Gov. Pat McCrory and Republican leaders have vowed to seek, but legal experts say isn’t likely), then voters will have their early voting period restored to 17 days prior to Election Day instead of the current 10 days; maintain same-day registration and out-of-precinct provisional balloting; reinstate voting pre-registration for 16 and 17 year-olds; and most importantly, will not have to show a government-issued photo ID in order to vote.

    This means Democrats no longer have to educate voters at rallies or by phone banks about making sure they have some form of official government-issued ID, or legal excuse for not having one. They can continue their door-to-door canvassing of neighborhoods for candidates to “Get Out To Vote” (GOTV). Now, not only should excessive long lines be eliminated during early voting and on Election Day, but voters will still have their ballots counted, even if they go to the wrong precinct.

    But there’s a holdup as to how grassroots activists and others proceed in the aftermath of the momentous ruling. Local Boards of Elections (BOEs) have not met yet to determine how to carry out the appellate court’s mandate.

    When asked about meeting, Gary Sims, director of the Wake County Board of Elections, said, “We need to, and are awaiting direction from the N.C. Board of Elections and the executive director because whatever action does or does not happen, needs to come from their guidance.”

    Ironically, all local BOEs were required to have their early voting sites locked in by July 29th, the same day the federal ruling came down. Sims added, that while the 17-day early voting period is reinstated, the longer hours of operation per early voting location currently in force could be relaxed since the period is being extended from 10 to 17 days. But, exactly what to do with that seven-day extension would be up to local county BOEs.

    One of the other challenges BOEs face is that they are already locked into budgets prior to the July 29th ruling. That reality will also constrain how quickly and adequately local BOE’s will be able to comply. Having only one early voting site open, namely the local BOE office itself and no satellite sites for the seven-day extension, is a possibility.

    Prior to the July 29th ruling, voting rights advocates had been distributing materials educating voters about the photo ID requirement, which went into effect this year during the March and June primaries.

    Now the community must also be clear that not all of the voter ID law was knocked down. They will still be faced with no straight-ticket balloting, meaning that instead of voting for all candidates of a single party with just one mark, voters will have to individually mark, race by race, which candidates they choose.

    Critics of the 2013 law have always said that voters may not be aware of all of the candidates, especially during a presidential election year, and thus, only vote for a few of the major offices, leaving judicial or local races blank.

    Another element of the 2013 “Monster Voting Law” left untouched is the provision that allows anyone from anywhere in the state, to confront any voter on line at a precinct, and challenge their right to vote. That means the challenged voter is required by law to leave the line, and report to the precinct judge’s table with the challenger to answer questions about their voting qualifications.

    Activists say they have to have a strong voter protection plan in place – observers making sure that people are educated, and that they are not intimidated at the polls.

    The Carolina Peacemaker is a member publication of the National Newspaper Publishers Association. Learn more about becoming a member at http://www.nnpa.org.

  • Steele and Edwards in Oct. 4 Run-off for Mayor of Eutaw

    In yesterday’s municipal elections in the Town of Eutaw there will be a run-off on October 4 between the incumbent Mayor Hattie Edwards and former three-term Mayor Raymond Steele.
    Unofficial results show a total of 1,233 votes with Steele carrying each of the six voting boxes, including the Absentee Box, with a vote of 569 (46.1%) and Mayor Edwards receiving 308 votes (25%). Two other candidates, Carl Davis received 199 votes (16.2%) and Reginald Spencer received 157 votes (12.7%). A detailed chart of the votes is shown on page 8.
    Latasha Johnson was elected to City Council District 1 by a vote of 204 (77.6%) to 59 for James Lewis. LaJeffrey Carpenter was re-elected to City Council District 2 by a vote of 171 (73.7%) to 61 for Stanley Lucious.
    In Forkland, there will be a run-off between the top two vote getters for Mayor, between Charlie McAlpine and Johnny Lovell Isaac.
    Based on unofficial results, the candidates for Mayor of Forkland received the following votes: Charlie McAlpine-87, Johnny Lovell Isaac – 77, Calvin Knott – 66, Michael Barton – 51 and Ollie Vester – 39.In the Forkland City Council races, in District 1: Joe Lewis Tuck was elected over Doris Robinson; in District 2: Christopher Armstead was chosen over Ridgeway (Pap) Gaines and Priscilla (Pat) Turner; in District 3, Preston Davis was elected over John Vester; in District 4, Samitria H. Gray was elected over Gertrude Parker; and District 5, there will be a run-off between Willie Sashington (18 votes) and either Samuel Isaac or Juanita Jackson who each polled 17 votes.
    In Boligee, the election was postponed until October 25, 2016 by Circuit Judge Eddie Hardaway after the printed ballots did not have the names of all candidates who qualified. Dates will be set for a new qualifying period and all interested candidates will have to re-qualify or qualify anew.
    In Union, the Mayor and all city council members were unopposed and reelected to their positions.
    In Eutaw, three City Council candidates: Shelia Smith, Joe Lee Powell and Bennie Abrams were running unopposed and were elected to the City Council. The Council will have three old members and two new members – Latasha Johnson and Bennie Abrams.

  • Federation holds 49th Annual Meeting

    FederationThe Federation of Southern Cooperatives/Land Assistance Fund held its 49th Annual Meeting this past weekend.
    On Thursday evening in Birmingham, the Federation held its 15th Estelle Witherspoon Lifetime Achievement Award Dinner. Three Mississippi civil rights veterans – Bob Moses, Dave Dennis and Hollis Watkins Muhammad – received the award name for a founder of the Federation, who served as General Manager of the Freedom Quilting Bee in Wilcox County, Alabama.
    Pictured at right, Dave Dennis and Hollis Watkins Muhammad receive award from Cornelius Blanding, Executive Director of the Federation. Bob Moses was unable to attend since he is recovering from hip surgery. More than three hundred supporters attended the dinner.
    The meeting continued at the Federation’s Rural Training and Research Center in Epes, Alabama on Friday and Saturday.
    More than 400 attended Friday’s panel and workshop discussions on USDA programs to benefit family farmers. Workshops on aquaponics, land retention and heir property, forestry, cooperative development, marketing and credit union development were held in the afternoon.
    A highlight of Friday’s program was the signing of a Memorandum of Agreement between the Federation and three USDA agencies – U. S. Forest Service, Natural Resource Conservation Service (NRCS) and the National Agroforestry Center which provides a framework for future work to benefit African-American farmers in the southern region in conjunction with the Federation’s Rural Training and Research Center in Epes.
    On Saturday, the Federation held a Prayer Breakfast, annual business meeting featuring reports from its Board of Directors and Executive Director, state caucuses of members and other business.

  • State issued voter ID available at Black Belt Folk Roots Festival

    The Black Belt Folk Roots Festival will host a booth to accommodate voter registration and free voter ids for the local community. In an effort to ensure that all eligible Alabama citizens are afforded the opportunity to vote, Alabama’s Secretary of State John H. Merrill has asked the state’s election team to participate in as many festivals within the state of Alabama this summer to provide online voter registration and free voter IDs to eligible attendees.
    The Secretary of State’s office will set up its Mobile Voter ID Unit at the Festival activities on Sunday, August 28, 2016. The Unit will be set up behind the Greene County Industrial Development Authority’s office on the old courthouse square.Since June 3, 2014, to participate in an Alabama election, a citizen must be registered to vote and present a valid form of photo ID. Forms of photo ID accepted at the polls include valid:
    driver’s license; * Alabama photo voter ID card; * state issued ID (any state); * federal issued ID; * US passport; * employee ID from Federal Government, State of Alabama, County, Municipality, Board, or other entity of this state; *student or employee ID from a public or private college or university in the State of Alabama (including postgraduate technical or professional schools); * Military ID; or Tribal ID. To receive a free Alabama photo voter ID card a citizen must be a registered voter and must not have one of the valid forms of photo ID listed above.
    When applying for the free Alabama photo voter ID, a voter must show: a photo ID document or a non-photo identity document that contains full legal name and date of birth; documentation showing the voter’s date of birth; documentation showing the person is a registered voter; and documentation showing the voter’s name and address as reflected in the voter registration record. A citizen’s name, address, and voter registration status can be verified by Secretary of State staff, using the statewide voter registration system.
    Examples of non-photo ID documents that can be used in applying for a free Alabama photo voter ID card include a birth certificate, marriage record, Social Security Administration document, hospital or nursing home record, Medicare or Medicaid document, or an official school record or transcript.
    For more information on the process on how to receive a free voter ID, voters can call 1-800-274-VOTE or go to http://www.alabamavoterid.com. The mobile site schedule is also posted there.