Category: World News

  • Newswire : Sierra Leone’s president uses UN Security Council presidency to urge more seats for Africa

    The UN Security Council holds a meeting on the Middle East Wednesday, Nov. 20, 2019 at United Nations headquarters. Canada is still vying for a seat on the United Nations Security Council, but it’s already warming up the chair with a plan to hire trainers for Canadian officials. THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP-Mary Altaffer

    By: AfricaNews and AP
    After decades of seeking a bigger voice in the United Nations ‘ most powerful body, Africa “cannot wait any longer,” Sierra Leone’s president told the Security Council on Monday.
    Chairing a meeting that his country convened, President Julius Maada Bio pressed a longstanding bid for African countries to get more council seats, including two permanent and potentially veto-wielding spots.
    “The time for half-measures and incremental progress is over. Africa must be heard, and its demands for justice and equity must be met,” Bio said, calling his continent the “unquestionable victim” of an imbalanced, outdated and unrepresentative Security Council structure.
    It wasn’t the first time the council has heard calls for expanding and reshaping its membership — and African countries aren’t the only ones that want more representation. While there’s a general sense that the council needs to change, discussions have bogged down over differences on how much to expand the group, what countries to include and what powers it should have.
    But Bio’s presence put an exclamation point on the issue ahead of a U.N. “Summit of the Future” and the annual General Assembly gathering of presidents, prime ministers and monarchs. Both gatherings are scheduled next month.
    Some countries are hoping for momentum from the summit, which is meant to generate a wide-ranging new vision of what international cooperation should look like in this century. The latest draft of the summit’s potential “Pact for the Future” terms Security Council reform a priority and pledges an “ambitious” result, with specific language still to come.
    “We are sure it is a matter of time. Because the gatekeepers will find it difficult to let us in,” Bio said at a news briefing Monday, but “we have a genuine and compelling case.”
    Set up in 1945 to try to maintain peace in the wake of World War II, the Security Council can levy sanctions, deploy peacekeeping missions and otherwise pass resolutions that are legally binding, if sometimes ignored.
    Its composition reflects the postwar power structure, and a time when most of Africa was under European control.
    The United States, Russia, China, Britain and France are permanent, veto-wielding members. Ten other seats — originally six, until a 1965 expansion — go to countries that get two-year council terms, without veto power. The broader General Assembly elects them by region, with three seats for Africa.
    African countries, and many others, have argued that the arrangement shorts the continent with the world’s fastest-growing population, now at 1.3 billion. The continent’s 54 countries make up 28% of the U.N.‘s member states. Five of the U.N.’s 11 current peacekeeping operations are in Africa, as are four of the top 10 countries in terms of sending troops.
    The African Union, a regional group, has called for two additional elected seats — yielding a total of five — and two permanent ones for countries on the continent.
    The permanent seats, in particular, must “be urgently addressed,” Namibia’s foreign minister, Peya Mushelenga, told the council Monday.
    Any changes to the council’s composition would be up to the General Assembly, which has held negotiations for years. Assembly President Dennis Francis said Monday that Africa is “manifestly underrepresented” on the council and that the status quo is “simply wrong.”
    But the U.N.’s member countries have floated many different ideas for changing the council, and any move to accommodate Africa would likely stir pressure to consider other proposals. The United States, for instance, backs adding permanent seats for countries in Africa, Latin America and the Caribbean, among others.
    “Let’s stop admiring the problem here. We need to move to solutions,” U.S. Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield, whose prior postings include multiple African countries, told the council.
    Bio, whose nation currently holds the council’s rotating presidency, urged the group to get behind giving his continent priority in any structural changes.
    “Africa cannot wait any longer,” he said.

     

  • Newswire : HUD announces significant policy changes to aid homeless veterans

    By Stacy M. Brown
    NNPA Newswire Senior National Correspondent

    The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) has announced significant policy changes to help veterans experiencing homelessness. The new regulations ensure that veterans receiving service-connected disability benefits are not ineligible for supportive housing projects supported by project-based rental assistance through the HUD-Department of Veteran Affairs (VA) Supportive Housing (HUD-VASH) program.
    Previously, VA benefits, provided for injuries or illnesses acquired or worsened during military service, were considered income when determining eligibility for housing assistance. The agency said this caused some veterans to exceed the income threshold for these programs. The updated policy will now exclude these benefits from income calculations, allowing more veterans to qualify for housing assistance. Alongside this change, HUD awarded $20 million to public housing agencies to further improve the HUD-VASH program.
    “No veteran should ever have to experience homelessness, but when they do, they should not face barriers to getting help they deserve,” said Acting Secretary Adrianne Todman. “This policy change will ensure that veterans who are receiving the disability benefits they earned through service and sacrifice can access the housing assistance and supportive services they need to resolve their homelessness.”
    The HUD-VASH program is a vital resource for housing veterans experiencing homelessness. It pairs rental assistance through housing vouchers from HUD with case management and other supportive services provided by the VA. The homeless program staff at local VA medical centers identify veterans experiencing homelessness and refer them to public housing agencies, which issue vouchers to eligible veterans and their families. Officials said VA staff provide case management and other supportive services to help veterans find and maintain housing, and connect them to healthcare, employment, and other support services.
    VA Secretary Denis McDonough emphasized the importance of the new policy, stating, “The days of a veteran having to choose between getting the VA benefits they deserve and the housing support they need are finally over. This is a critical step forward that will help veterans nationwide – and bring us one step closer to our ultimate goal of putting an end to veteran homelessness for good.”
    To expand access to HUD-VASH for veterans, HUD is:
    Requiring public housing agencies (PHAs) that administer HUD-VASH to set the initial income eligibility for veterans at 80% of Area Median Income, rather than 50%. This higher initial income eligibility threshold was previously optional but is now mandatory.

    Adopting an alternative definition of annual income for applicants and participants of the HUD-VASH program that excludes veterans’ service-connected disability benefits when determining eligibility.

    According to HUD officials, the agency has been collaborating with the U.S. Department of the Treasury to assess the impact of the alternative income definition for HUD-VASH participants looking to receive Low Income Housing Credits-subsidized housing. Treasury officials said that agency expects to issue guidance on this issue soon. HUD will also encourage state and local governments to make corresponding changes in their subsidy programs to ensure that all veterans experiencing homelessness have access to supportive housing.
    “Every veteran deserves a roof over their head, and the Biden-Harris Administration is doing everything we possibly can to end veteran homelessness,” said White House Domestic Policy Advisor Neera Tanden. “Today’s actions reflect President Biden and Vice President Harris’s commitment to breaking down barriers to housing so that every veteran gets the benefits they have earned.”
    HUD also awarded $20 million for additional administrative fee funding to 245 public housing agencies in 43 states currently administering HUD-VASH. With this funding, officials said they’re encouraging PHAs to expand their housing search assistance to support veterans, expand landlord recruitment for the program, offer incentives and retention payments, help veterans with security deposits, and provide landlord-tenant mediation activities.
    Since the program’s inception, HUD-VASH has assisted more than 200,000 veterans in exiting homelessness and obtaining permanent, affordable housing. The HUD-VASH program has been crucial in reducing the number of veterans experiencing homelessness by more than 50% since 2010. For more details on the revised HUD-VASH operating requirements, visit HUD’s website.

  • Federation of Southern Cooperatives/Land Assistance

    Federation of Southern Cooperatives/ Land Assistance Fund
    57th. Annual Meeting on August 15 to 17, 2024

    Thursday, August 15: 6:00 PM –
    Estelle Witherspoon Lifetime Achievement Award Dinner
    Sheraton Civic Center Hotel – Birmingham, Alabama

    Friday, August 16, 2024
    Rural Training and Research Center – near Epes, AL
    • 9:00 AM – Panel on USDA Programs
    • 1:00 PM – Special Session on DFAP
    • Afternoon of Workshops, Tours, and Fish Fry

    Saturday, August 17, 2024
    Rural Training and Research Center
    7:30 AM: Mattie Mack Pretty Hat Prayer Breakfast
    9:30 AM: Business Meeting with Reports from the
    Board of Directors and Executive Director
    11:30 AM ; State Caucus meetings

    To register go to website: http://www.federation.com

  • Shomari Figures headlines commemoration of 59th anniversary of signing the 1965 Voting Rights Act at the bridge in Selma

    Shomari Figures and Hank Sanders speaking in Selma

    By John Zippert, Co-Publisher

    Shomari Figures, the Democratic candidate for the new 2nd Congressional District in Alabama, was the headline speaker at yesterday’s rally and strategy session in Selma, at the foot of the Edmund Pettus Bridge, to commemorate the 59th anniversary of the signing by President Lyndon B. Johnson of the Voting Rights Act on August 6, 1965.

    Figures is the candidate selected by the Democratic Primary in April 2024 to run for the new Congressional District that stretches from Russell County at the Georgia line and goes to Pritchard, in Mobile County, almost at the Mississippi line. This district was created after a five-year legal battle between voters in the district and the Alabama Legislature to create a second Congressional district in the state that could elect a Black congressional representative.

    The U. S. Supreme Court ruled, using Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, that Alabama’s 27% Black population deserved two districts, out of the seven in Alabama, that could elect a Black congressperson. Figures won the Democratic primary and will face Caroleene Dobson, a white attorney from Troy, Alabama, who is well funded and supported by ALFA and other right-wing groups in Alabama.

    Figures is the son of Michael and Vivian Figures of Mobile County, both of whom served in the Alabama State Senate. Vivian being named to and later elected to the seat that Michael held until his untimely death from a brain aneurism.

    Alabama’s 7th district incumbent Congresswoman Terri Sewell sent a video tape to the meeting, since she was working in Washington, D. C., to commemorate the passage of the 1965 VRA and urging passage of the John Lewis Voter Advancement Act which would restore the full strength of the VRA.

    In his remarks in Selma, Shomari Figures said, “I have to come to Selma, even though it is not in the new 2nd. Congressional District, because all Black people in political office or running for political office, owe a debt to the courageous people of Selma and surrounding areas, that can never be repaid.” He also thanked Hank and Faya Rose Sanders for their continuing work on voting and civil rights and their friendship with his family.

    Figures said,” This is one of the most important Congressional races in the nation. We can take a district from the Republicans and put it in the Democratic Party’s column, which will affect the overall control of the House of Representatives. This will be important in determining what legislation gets through the next Congress.”

    “This is not a coronation. I know that just because we won the Democratic nomination, does not mean that we will win the General Election on November 5th. We have a lot of campaigning to do in the twelve counties of the new district. We are running against a rich candidate who is well funded with campaign contributions of her own and others. We did not get into this to cpme out in second place!” ,said Figures.

    Other speakers at the rally included Charles Steele of SCLC who explained that “Freedom ain’t free, and we have to continue fighting for it and things like the Voting Rights Act!”

    Joe Reed, long-time President of the Alabama Democratic Conference (ADC) said he has been working all of his life to place Blacks in every chamber of government from City Hall to the White House. Reed warned, “If you listen to Trump, he says he is going to abolish the Constitution and we will not have to vote anymore. Abolishing the Constitution means abolishing the 13th. Amendment, which freed the slaves. Does he intend to take us back into slavery. Listen closely to what he is saying.”

    Reed told the story of trying to get an old Black lady to vote. “In an election you have to vote. She told me that she would pray for me. I had to tell her in elections they do not count prayers – only votes!’

    Two youth speakers spoke, Micah Thomas and Azali Fortier, why made the point that young people must participate and vote. Rebecca Marion of the Bridge Crossing Jubilee also made clear that voting was a right that had been fought for at the cost of people’s lives and that everyone who is eligible must vote.

    Amin Badat of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, representatives of the Alabama Coalition for Immigrant Justice and John Zippert, speaking for the SaveOurselves Coalition for Justice and Democracy also spoke.
    Faya Rose Toure mentioned that Sam Walker of the National Voting Rights Museum had a stroke and was in the hospital trying to recover. A “Go Fund Me Account” has been set up to help with his medical expenses. Walker has always coordinated logistics for the Bridge Crossing Jubilee and other activities in Selma.

    Persons interested in supporting the campaign of Shomari Figures for Congress in District 2, may go to this website: figures4congress.com/27?t=JrG5Aj, to contribute.

  • School Board approves resignations, employments and service contracts

    The Greene County Board of Education held a called meeting, Thursday, August 1, 2024, to act on personnel and administrative items relative to the opening of the new school term. As a special called meeting, the board could only address the items intended for the agenda. Board members present were Mr. Leo Branch, President; Mrs. Veronica Richardson, Vice President; Mr. Robert Davis, Member.
    The board approved the following personnel items recommended by Superintendent Dr. Corey Jones.
    Resignation: Daphne Jones Richardson – Mental Health Services Coordinator/Truancy Officer and Cheer Sponsor at RBMS, effective July 18, 2024; Wennoa Peebles – Special need bus driver for the system, effective August 16, 2024:
    Employment for the 2024 – 2025 school year: Cedric Murry – Business Teacher – RBMS; Breshayla Hoskins – 5th grade teacher – RBMS; Dawn Cook – 6th grade teacher – RBMS; Xavier Askew – Long-term sub (In-School Suspension); Mitchell Davis – Custodian – EPS; Quentin Walton – Teaching Assistant/Computer Lab Facilitator – EPS; Veronica Williams – Bus Driver – GCSS; Canesha Ray – Long-term substitute (3rd grade); Shameria Jordan – Long-term substitute (2nd grade);
    Additional Service Contracts 2024 – 2025 for the following employee(s) at Greene County High School: (Separate Contract): Ms. Drenda Morton – Cheerleader Sponsor.
    Stipend in the amount of $850 for the following Future Teachers of Alabama sponsors:
    Dr. Aslean Jones – GCHS; LaMonica Little – GCCC.
    The board approved the following administrative items recommended by the superintendent. * * Job description for Reading Improvement Teacher.
    * Greene County Schools Wellness Plan 2024 – 2025.
    * Greene County Schools Procurement Plan for CNP.
    * Estimate from Yondr, Inc. to purchase the Yondr Pouch Education Package in the amount of $23,180.
    Addendum (two additional games) to original agreement between the Greene County Board of Education and Greene County Ambulance Service to provide ambulance services during home football games for the 2024 – 2025 season.
    Service contract between Greene County Board of Education and Zachary Rutledge to develop and provide a Dual Enrichment (Welding Level I Lab) program for students at Greene County Career Center August 7, 2024 to August 23, 2024.

  • Newswire : Bloomberg Philanthropies announces $600 million gift to Historically Black Medical Schools

    By : NNPA Newswire

     

    In a monumental move to address the underrepresentation of Black physicians in the United States, Bloomberg Philanthropies has announced a $600 million donation to the endowments of four historically Black medical schools. Officials said the donation is part of Bloomberg Philanthropies’ Greenwood Initiative, which aims to advance racial wealth equity and address systemic underinvestment in Black institutions and communities.
    Howard University College of Medicine, Meharry Medical College, and Morehouse School of Medicine will each receive $175 million, while Charles R. Drew University of Medicine & Science will receive $75 million. Additionally, Bloomberg said $5 million in seed funding will support creating a new historically Black medical school in New Orleans, the Xavier Ochsner College of Medicine.

    The historic investment will more than double the endowments of three medical schools, significantly boosting their financial stability and capacity to educate future Black physicians.

    A recent study highlighted the need for such support, revealing that only 5.7% of U.S. physicians identify as Black or African American. This is despite Black Americans comprising 13% of the population. According to research, treating black patients by black doctors results in better health outcomes and more frequent medical care. For instance, Black patients are 34% more likely to receive preventative care if they see Black doctors.
    The four historically Black medical schools receiving funding reportedly graduate around half of all Black doctors in the U.S. but have been traditionally underfunded due to systemic inequities, including lower federal and state support. Since the early 1900s, discriminatory practices and the impacts of the Flexner Report have led to the closure of 10 Black medical schools in the United States. The financial boost from Bloomberg Philanthropies should have a transformative impact.

    Michael Bloomberg, the former New York City mayor, Democratic presidential candidate, and founder of Bloomberg LP, will formally announce the donation at the National Medical Association’s annual convention. “This gift will empower new generations of Black doctors to create a healthier and more equitable future for our country,” Bloomberg said.

    In 2020, Bloomberg Philanthropies granted $100 million to these same medical schools to reduce the debt load of enrolled students facing severe financial burdens exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic. Valerie Montgomery Rice, president of Morehouse School of Medicine, noted that the 2020 gift relieved an average of $100,000 in debt for each student, significantly enhancing the school’s ability to fundraiser and support its students.
    Denise Smith, deputy director of higher education policy and senior fellow at The Century Foundation, emphasized the importance of such philanthropic gifts. She pointed to MacKenzie Scott’s donations to HBCUs in 2020 and 2021 as pivotal in sparking increased support from other large donors. “Donations that have followed are the type of momentum and support that institutions need in this moment,” Smith told the Associated Press.

    Dr. Yolanda Lawson, president of the National Medical Association, expressed relief upon hearing about Bloomberg’s gift, especially in light of the Supreme Court’s recent decision striking down affirmative action and attacks on programs promoting inclusion and equity.

    “This opportunity and this investment affect not only just those four institutions but our country’s health and future,” Lawson asserted.
     

     

  • Newswire : Federal Judge dismisses Trump’s claims of political targeting by Biden Administration

    Federal Judge Tanya Chutkan

    By Stacy M. Brown
 NNPA Newswire Senior National Correspondent

    Shutting down the destructive rhetoric of the 34-times convicted and twice-impeached former President Donald Trump’s legal defense, U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan ruled that the GOP presidential nominee presented “no meaningful evidence” of political targeting by the Biden administration. Chutkan dismissed Trump’s allegations that the White House or the Justice Department pursued him out of political animus or his refusal to accept the 2020 election results as “baseless.”
    In her comprehensive 16-page opinion, Judge Chutkan dismantled Trump’s attempt to dismiss his Washington, D.C., criminal case, which charges him with orchestrating conspiracies to subvert the 2020 election. Chutkan asserted that Trump’s claims of political pressure from President Joe Biden were “unsubstantiated” and relied on flimsy, inaccurately described evidence.
    “The charges describe a sweeping attempt to manipulate and deceive government authorities to undermine the lawful 2020 election results,” Chutkan wrote. She further determined that, based on anonymously sourced articles, Trump’s assertions failed to demonstrate any directive from Biden or the White House influencing the prosecution.
    Trump spokesperson Steven Cheung responded defiantly, stating, “The Crazy Kamala Harris — Crooked Joe Biden Witch Hunts against President Trump have imploded just like their failed campaign.” Cheung said that Trump’s team would continue to combat the charges vigorously.
    The ruling marks Chutkan’s first major decision since the case resumed in her courtroom following an eight-month hiatus to address disputes over presidential immunity. The judge has set deadlines for court filings next week and a hearing on August 16 to discuss the case’s timeline.
    Trump’s wildly inaccurate claims hinged on reports from The Washington Post and The New York Times about internal Justice Department deliberations and Biden’s frustration with the investigation’s pace. However, Chutkan found no evidence of politically motivated actions. “There is no indication that President Biden ever communicated any such directives to the Attorney General or the Justice Department,” Chutkan stated.
    Additionally, Chutkan rejected Trump’s argument that the prosecution in the election case was retaliatory after his not-guilty plea in a separate classified information case. She clarified that accepting such a claim would create a loophole for defendants to derail cases against them by merely pleading not guilty and publicly criticizing the prosecution.
    The ruling emerges amid the broader political context of the 2024 presidential race, where the Supreme Court has become a focal issue. Vice President Kamala Harris, now the Democratic nominee, has emphasized the conservative court’s impact on issues such as abortion and affirmative action.
    Biden’s three-prong proposal to reform the Supreme Court issued a week ago, which includes imposing term limits for justices and establishing a binding code of conduct, has gained Harris’s support. The proposal addresses the declining public confidence in the court, exacerbated by recent decisions, including granting Trump some criminal immunity for his efforts to subvert the 2020 election results.
    Harris’s stance on reproductive rights and Supreme Court reform is expected to be a central theme in the November election.
    Incidentally, prominent media personality Charlamagne Tha God has voiced severe concerns about the Supreme Court’s legitimacy, predicting a potential constitutional crisis if Trump loses and then challenges the election results. “The Supreme Court is no longer a legitimate institution,” he asserted. “When you look at the recent rulings — abolishing Roe v. Wade, granting presidential immunity for crimes, allowing elected officials to take bribes — it’s clear the Court is compromised.”
    Charlamagne continued: “To be 100 percent clear, I absolutely believe that come November, if he loses, Donald Trump is going to challenge the results of the election, and I think the Supreme Court would overturn the results. I don’t know why we would expect them to do the right thing.”

  • Newswire : Kamala Harris’ VP pick,Tim Walz, established a George Floyd Remembrance Day in Minnesota

    Democratic Presidential Nominee Kamala Harris and her Vice-presidential pick, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz

    By Hazel Trice Edney


    (TriceEdneyWire.com) – Vice President Kamala Harris, now the official Democratic nominee for President of the United States, has selected Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz as her vice-presidential running mate, establishing the full ticket to run against former President Donald Trump and Sen. J. D. Vance (R-Ohio) in the Nov. 5 election.
    Harris and Walz, president of the Democratic Governors Association, appeared together in the coveted battleground commonwealth of Pennsylvania Tuesday evening before a blitz through other swing states.
    Democrats will then head for a Chicago convention August 19-22, where they will be celebrated. Harris will become the first Black woman and first Indian American to win the presidential nomination of a major political party. She is the daughter of an Indian mother and a Jamaican father.
    This, no doubt, will begin a hard-fought race against Trump and Vance, both of whom have proven to be candidates willing to say just about anything – including attack Harris’ race and gender – with hopes to win far right voters and Trump’s base supporters. However, those tactics could easily backfire, given Walz’ background.
    Harris’ choice of Walz, elected governor of Minnesota in 2018, will no doubt resonate with Black and progressive voters across the nation largely due to his sensitivity to key issues. On May 25th this year, Walz issued a proclamation, declaring a George Floyd Remembrance Day. Floyd was murdered in Minneapolis on May 25, 2020, by police officer Derek Chauvin who callously knelt on his neck. 
    “George Floyd’s murder ignited a global movement, accentuating the systemic racism that Black, Indigenous, and other communities of color have endured for centuries,” Walz stated in the proclamation. “We must continue to do everything in our power to deconstruct systemic racism and inequities in our state ….”
    Until now, Walz, a former high school social studies teacher, football coach, and retired sergeant major in the Army National Guard, has been relatively unknown on a national stage. Recently his description of Trump-Vance as “weird” has caught hold on social media and beyond. Having run in a largely Republican district, Walz spent six terms in the U.S. House of Representatives before being elected Minnesota governor in 2018, largely due to votes from the suburbs of Minneapolis, according to the New York Times. He was re-elected in 2022.
    Walz, 60, has led on other issues important to the Black community, including a $15-an-hour minimum wage. the organizing of unions, workers’ rights and free breakfast and lunch for school children.
    The Walz selection was applauded by former President Barack Obama, said to have advised Harris as she decided between the vice-presidential candidates.
    “By selecting Tim Walz to be her vice president from a pool of outstanding Democrats, Kamala Harris has chosen an ideal partner – and made it clear exactly what she stands for,” said a statement from Barack and Michelle Obama. “Governor Walz doesn’t just have the experience to be vice president, he has the values and the integrity to make us proud. As governor, Tim helped families and businesses recover from the pandemic, established paid family leave, guaranteed the right to an abortion, and put common sense gun safety measures in place to keep communities safe.
    “Tim’s signature is his ability to talk like a human being and treat everyone with decency and respect – not all that surprising considering the fact that he served in the National Guard for 24 years and worked as a high school social studies teacher and football coach before being elected to Congress. Like Vice President Harris, Governor Walz believes that government works to serve us. Not just some of us, but all of us. That’s what makes him an outstanding governor, and that’s what will make him an even better vice president, ready on day one. Michelle and I couldn’t be happier for Tim and Gwen, their family, and our country.”
    The entry of Vice President Harris, a graduate of Howard University, an HBCU, into the race since President Joe Biden decided not to run, has – in just a few weeks – infused powerful new life and excitement into the race, initially between Biden and Trump. The choice of her vice-presidential running mate was her first major decision.
    The murder of George Floyd by now convicted and imprisoned former police officer Derek Chauvin at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic quickly became an iconic symbol of long-standing injustices by police in the Black community. In the Black community, much vetting will now take place of Tim Walz. But he is already getting wide applause that might help Harris’ election which will not happen without vast Black support. 
    “Gov. Walz shows what our communities can look like when we lead with empathy. He is a labor champion who will take pro-worker values with him to the White House. Together with Kamala Harris, they will defend our freedoms — to care for our families, to have a voice on the job, to thrive. We look forward mobilizing the full strength of our union to ensure that this dynamic ticket wins on November 5,” said Lee Saunders, president of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME), in a statement.
    “Tim Walz personifies what public service is all about: Doing for others and never leaving anyone behind. He learned these values while serving in the National Guard, and he lived them as a teacher and football coach in Mankato, Minnesota. He has always been the first to lend a helping hand in his community, and today, this is how he governs – empowering worker voices and defending those who have made public service a career,” Saunders continues. “As governor, he took on billion-dollar corporations to ban private prisons in Minnesota, keeping profit motives out of the justice system while protecting the jobs of AFSCME corrections officers. He went on to pass legislation guaranteeing free breakfast and lunch for young students statewide, giving AFSCME school employees the tools they need to keep kids energized and ready to learn. Walz did all this for Minnesota’s communities while getting state workers a historic contract with across-the-board raises.”

  • USDA issues 43,244 payments in the Discrimination Farmers Assistance Program (DFAP) under Section 22007 of the Inflation Reduction Act

    By: John Zippert, Co-Publisher

    At press time on Wednesday, July 31, 2024, Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack announced 43,244 farmers would receive payment for past discrimination by USDA farm credit agencies, under the $2.1 Billion allocated in Section 22007 of the Inflation Reduction Act.

    74% of the 58,000 applications submitted were adjudicated to receive funding between $5,000 and $500,000. About half of the applicants, attempted to farm by seeking a USDA loan, but were turned down or discouraged from receiving and filling out a loan application. After they were turned down, they were unable to farm. These applicants will receive between $3,500 and $6,000, as a consolation payment for their discrimination.

    The other half of the applicants, who have or had a farming or ranching operation, are receiving between $10,000 and $500,000 of assistance, with an average of nearly $82,000. The approval letters and checks will be mailed this week and should arrive by August 6, 2024.

    The official Biden-Harris Administration press release on the 22007 process, is posted on the website 22007apply.gov, which provides more information on the evaluation process. After August 6, 2024, the award information will also be on this website.

    On the zoom call on Wednesday, Secretary Vilsack noted that $1.99 Billion of the funds in Section 22007 had been spent to make the awards.
    Awards were made in all 50 states, Puerto Rico and territories. The most applications submitted and approved came from Mississippi and Alabama.
    Other states of the South, including Georgia, Florida, North and South Carolina, Arkansas, Louisiana and Texas were among the top ten states receiving approvals. The states of Oklahoma and California, rounded out the top ten states for participation in this program.

    Secretary Vilsack noted that these payments for past discrimination, prior to January 1, 2021, would be taxable events for the farmers receiving them. Federal and state income taxes will be owed on the discrimination payments provided.
    The Rural Coalition commended the Biden-Harris Administration for getting these decisions made and checks sent out, ahead of the timetable that they set for late August – early September.

    The Federation of Southern Cooperatives/LAF which was a cooperating organization, doing outreach and application assistance, said it was glad that the decisions had been made but reserved final judgement to see how many of its members were awarded payments and the size of those payments.

  • Greene County celebrates 55th ‘Freedom Day’ to commemorate Special Election of July 29, 1969, when Black people took control of the County Commission and School Board

    Mrs. Ida Bonner awarded the Coretta Scott King Freedom Award by Elder Spiver Gordon; Spiver Gordon presents plaque to Bill Edwards; Spiver Gordon presents plaque to Mr. Tony Clayton District Attorney of Port Allen, LA; Mr. Morris Hardy awarded the Dr. MLK Jr. Freedom Award by Elder Spiver Gordon.

    On Sunday evening, in the William M. Branch Courthouse, about 100 people from Greene County celebrated the 55th anniversary of the Special Election in 1969, when Black people were elected to control the County Commission and School Board in the county. Greene County was the first county in Alabama where Black people were able to control the county government.

    The U. S. Supreme Court ordered the 1969 Special Election, because local white officials had deliberately left the mostly Black candidates of the National Democratic Party of Alabama (NDPA) off the November 1968 ballot. The decision was made in US Supreme Court case no. 647, Hadnott vs. Amos, 394 US 358 (1969).

    In the election of November 1970, Judge William M. Branch was elected the first Black Probate Judge in Alabama and America. Thomas Gilmore was elected Sheriff and over the next few years, Blacks were elected to all political positions in the county.

    The program was sponsored by the Alabama Civil Rights Freedom Movement under the direction of Spiver W. Gordon, President. Gordon has been celebrating Freedom Day in Greene County for many years to remind people of the importance of using their voting rights to push for more justice, equity and progress in the county.

    The theme of the program was ‘Rejoicing about the Past – Causality in looking to the Future”. There were two main speakers: Bill Edwards, who now lives in Oregon, but was active with NDPA, Miles College, FOGCE Federal Credit Union and Community Service Programs of West Alabama in the 1965-1985; and Tony Clayton, District Attorney of West Baton Rouge, Iberville. and Pointe Coupee Parishes in Louisiana.

    After a spirited devotional, Mayor Latasha Johnson of Eutaw, Alabama, gave greetings and keys to the city to the two guest speakers. Lorenzo French, Chair of the Democratic Executive Committee, in his occasion for the meeting, lamented that most of the Black elected officials in Greene County were not present for Freedom Day. “Where are the Probate Judge, Circuit Clerk, Revenue Commissioner, Sheriff, Mayors and Council members of Union, Forkland and Boligee?” asked French.

    Several persons gave special commendations for Bill Edwards in his work as Director of Community Service Programs of West Alabama. District 1 Commissioner, Garria Spencer, who was chair of the CSP-WA Board lauded Bill’s work with the anti-poverty agency. Ms. Sandra Fair who worked with Bill thanked him. Judge John H. England thanked Bill for his work in building new houses and replacing the shotgun shacks in Belchers and Barr’s Quarters in Tuscaloosa.

    Rev. Wendell Paris spoke on the importance of voting in all elections, especially the election coming up on November 5, 2024. John Cashin, son of his namesake from Huntsville, Alabama, who headed the NDPA and was instrumental in the lawsuit that created the special election on July 29, 1969, spoke on the importance of the NDPA, as a grassroots response to the racist regular Democratic Party of Alabama, which was controlled by George Wallace.

    Three speakers commented on looking to the future, including Rev. Kenneth Popleon of Plaquemine, Louisiana; Arthur Crawford, Probate Judge of Hale County and Carol P. Zippert, former school board chair. Zippert asked, “Where are the youth leaders, people between 18 – 40 years old, today? We must reach out to them. Fifty-five years ago, Judge Branch, Gilmore and most of the other leaders were young people under 30. It is frightening that this whole generation is missing.”

    Spiver Gordon introduced Tony Clayton, the District Attorney of three parishes in Louisiana. Clayton said he owed his election to places like Greene County which rose up for Black people and electing Black people to office in the1960’s, when it wasn’t easy. He said Jesse Jackson, Obama and now Kamala Harris owe their political future to what Greene County people did fifty-five years ago.

    After the speaking, Spiver Gordon presented awards to many of the speakers, participants and ‘foot-soldiers’ of Greene County-who contributed their time, skills and money to the civil rights movement in the Alabama Black Belt.