Tuesday, April 26, 2011

THECASHSTUFF FOR APRIL 28, 2011

CUTLINE - TROUBLE? - The new high poverty school in Southeast Raleigh, Walnut Creek Elementary, sits right across from a new housing development. If the school doesn't perform well, could it impact property values in the area? [Cash Michaels photo]


WILL WAKE’S HIGH POVERTY SCHOOLS
HURT HOME PROPERTY VALUES
By Cash Michaels
editor

EDITOR - This is part 6 of a multi-part look at Walnut Creek Elementary School, and the other high poverty schools that the conservative-led Wake County School Board will be creating in Southeast Raleigh as it moves forward with its controversial neighborhood schools policy. Studies consistently show black and Hispanic students are relegated to poor instruction, a lack of resources and a second-rate education in high poverty, racially identifiable schools. The property values in neighborhoods with high poverty schools also suffer, as families move away.
            The Carolinian examines the question, “Will all or any of this happen in Wake County?”
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            When Corey A. Moore, the new principal of Walnut Creek Elementary School, formally opens the $25 million high poverty school in Southeast Raleigh this August, he’ll be responsible for a lot, the least of which is how to successfully lead a school where over 80 percent of its 700-plus students are on free-and-reduced lunch, and over 50 percent are officially considered “low-performing.”
            “I believe that my experiences and past have prepared me for this opportunity, and I’m standing prepared to lead in a direction that will take this school straight up,” Moore assured supporters in March after he was appointed.
            Indeed, regardless of how stacked a deck Moore’s challenge will be - a challenge created by the Republican-led Wake School Board to establish the first manifestation of their controversial neighborhood schools policy - its even steeper than he realizes.
            As goes the school, so may go the neighborhood that school is in.
            Across the street and down the road from the new high poverty challenge on Sunnybrook Road off of Rock Quarry Road, is the Quarry Pointe subdivision.
            With an average selling price of $144,410 per single-family unit, the clean, attractive, relatively new middle-class housing development where, according to city-data.com, the median income is $46,185; 69 percent of the homeowners are married couples that are both working; and over 25 percent of families there have children, 3 years-old and above, who are enrolled school K-12, the last thing this young community needs is anything that would drive down its collective property values.
            The bad economy is already having a staggering effect on home prices, though the Raleigh-Cary housing market was ranked Number One in Builder Magazine’s “Healthiest Markets for 2011” rankings last month.
            But experts say a bad school could definitely sprout “For Sale” signs in the immediate neighborhood.
            District 4 Wake School Board member Keith Sutton, Walnut Creek Elementary Principal Corey Moore, and others committed to the high poverty school’s success are working hard to prevent that, but at best, they’re running hard to catch up. Rarely does a new school open with the strikes against it that Walnut Creek has. If it can’t immediately show significant improvement in academic achievement, regardless of the student body’s high poverty level, experts say the schools reputation could begin to hurt surrounding housing market values.
            It’s something Quarry Pointe residents may have to watch, and a concern that has already been raised at a recent Wake School Board meeting two weeks ago.
            “In many other cities in the US, real estate agents will discourage you from buying [a home] in certain areas, do to the poor quality of schools in the area,” Stephanie Enders, a parent speaking during the public comment period, told the school board, noting that because of Wake’s previously successful socioeconomic student diversity policy, “...you have the ability to live anywhere in the county, and know that your child is going to get a good, solid public education.”
Wake experience bears Enders out. 
It was the Greater Raleigh Chamber of Commerce and local realty association that backed the Wake school system's move to socioeconomic diversity a decade ago in a drive to attract more businesses, and families, to the area from across the country. The resulting academic achievement resulted in Wake in being rated one of the top public school systems by Forbes Magazine, among others, with thousands of families buying homes in the area.
So it was no accident that those same concerns - namely the Raleigh Chamber and local realtors - were sweating bullets after the Republican-led Wake School Board began changing to neighborhood schools as a policy. The disruption forced the chamber to immediately find a compromise plan to submit - one that emphasized controlled parental choice - in order to placate the business and realty communities.
A final student assignment plan is expected by the end of spring, and realtors hope its one that allows them to comfortably sell the school system as an asset again.
            Warning that the proven byproduct of a neighborhood schools policy, “…are great divides of highly desirable and undesirable areas,” Ms. Enders told the school board,  “For the most part, Wake County doesn’t suffer this condition.”           
            But Charlotte does.
            Mary Lou Knox is a longtime realtor of 27 years in Mecklenburg County, where the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Public School System (CMS) has poured so much money into its plethora of failing high poverty schools, that it now has to close ten schools, and for the third year in a row, has to layoff as many as 1500 school employees, which could include 600 teachers.
As a result of almost a decade of the CMS neighborhood schools policy, the housing market has taken a beating.
            Last fall, Great Schools in Wake Coalition, a nonprofit diversity advocacy group, and The Carolinian, traveled to Charlotte to interview educators, parents and school officials about hat problems Wake Public Schools can expect based on the CMS experience. The project was for an online YouTube video titled, “Costs and Consequences: What’s at Stake for Wake.”
            Ms. Knox, the realtor, said that as Wake creates more high poverty schools through its neighborhood schools policy, it can expect to have a dramatic impact on the housing market surrounding those schools.
            “I have watched and seen how the different school assignments have affected our neighborhood and the neighborhoods in Charlotte,” Knox said.
            As in Wake, many who moved to Charlotte-Mecklenburg bought their homes in particular neighborhoods because of the good reputation of school that serviced their area.
            “Now when I speak with people about an area, school is a factor that is detrimental to the area,” Knox says. People in Charlotte can now go online to the CMS website and research which schools are rated low performing and have high F&R student populations.
            “When parents come to me and have given me the criteria [for a new home], they’ve already looked at test scores of elementary schools, and they tell me they want to be in one area, and do not want to be in another,” said Knox. “Sometimes they’re adamant that they want to be at one particular school. So I must look, and make that the particular criteria that I must search for them.”
            They immediately cross those schools, and those neighborhoods where they considered purchasing a home, off their lists.
Even if it means paying more than they originally planned for a home.
            “”They won’t even consider it, now,” Knox said, making it clear that depending on CMS student assignment policies, neighborhoods can decline, or prices for homes in higher income communities, can “accelerate.”
            The result in many cases, Knox says, has been panic buying, and selling in the neighborhoods. Many of the sellers really didn’t want to move, but because of a CMS student assignment decision affecting their area, felt they had no choice, Knox said.
            Depending on how CMS school boundary lines are drawn, two high schools in the same subdivision can be radically affected, said Knox, causing one to be high poverty, and the other upper-income.
            The result - homes near the high poverty school are much harder to sell than near the upper-income.
            Knox indicated that because of this, some realtors won’t put low-performing schools in the MLS (Multiple Listing System) for fear that it will lower the number of home showings they have in that neighborhood.
            The Carolinian tried to get comment from realtors in Wake County on this issue, but none returned calls by press time.


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OBAMA SAYS TIME FOR BIRTHER "SILLINESS" TO END


Editor's note - On Wednesday, April 27, 2011, in an extraordinary press briefing, President Barack Obama cam before the White House Press Corp and the nation, to formally explain why he, under tremendous pressure from Republicans like industrialist Donald Trump, released a copy of his original birth certificate. His White House counsel flew to Hawaii the day before to personally secure the document.

The following is a transcript of the president's remarks:





 THE PRESIDENT:  As many of you have been briefed, we provided additional information today about the site of my birth. Now, this issue has been going on for two, two and a half years now.  I think it started during the campaign.  And I have to say that over the last two and a half years I have watched with bemusement, I've been puzzled at the degree to which this thing just kept on going.  We've had every official in Hawaii, Democrat and Republican, every news outlet that has investigated this, confirm that, yes, in fact, I was born in Hawaii, August 4, 1961, in Kapiolani Hospital.

     We've posted the certification that is given by the state of Hawaii on the Internet for everybody to see.  People have provided affidavits that they, in fact, have seen this birth certificate.  And yet this thing just keeps on going. 

     Now, normally I would not comment on something like this, because obviously there’s a lot of stuff swirling in the press on at any given day and I've got other things to do.  But two weeks ago, when the Republican House had put forward a budget that will have huge consequences potentially to the country, and when I gave a speech about my budget and how I felt that we needed to invest in education and infrastructure and making sure that we had a strong safety net for our seniors even as we were closing the deficit, during that entire week the dominant news story wasn’t about these huge, monumental choices that we're going to have to make as a nation.  It was about my birth certificate.  And that was true on most of the news outlets that were represented here.

     And so I just want to make a larger point here.  We've got some enormous challenges out there.  There are a lot of folks out there who are still looking for work.  Everybody is still suffering under high gas prices.  We're going to have to make a series of very difficult decisions about how we invest in our future but also get a hold of our deficit and our debt -- how do we do that in a balanced way.

     And this is going to generate huge and serious debates, important debates.  And there are going to be some fierce disagreements -- and that’s good.  That’s how democracy is supposed to work.  And I am confident that the American people and America’s political leaders can come together in a bipartisan way and solve these problems.  We always have. 

     But we’re not going to be able to do it if we are distracted.  We’re not going to be able to do it if we spend time vilifying each other.  We’re not going to be able to do it if we just make stuff up and pretend that facts are not facts.  We’re not going to be able to solve our problems if we get distracted by sideshows and carnival barkers.

     We live in a serious time right now and we have the potential to deal with the issues that we confront in a way that will make our kids and our grandkids and our great grandkids proud.  And I have every confidence that America in the 21st century is going to be able to come out on top just like we always have.  But we’re going to have to get serious to do it. 

I know that there’s going to be a segment of people for which, no matter what we put out, this issue will not be put to rest.  But I’m speaking to the vast majority of the American people, as well as to the press.  We do not have time for this kind of silliness.  We’ve got better stuff to do.  I’ve got better stuff to do.  We’ve got big problems to solve.  And I’m confident we can solve them, but we’re going to have to focus on them -- not on this.

Thanks very much, everybody.



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SENATE BILL SEEKS TO LIMIT ONE STOP EARLY VOTING
By Cash Michaels
Editor

            A Republican-sponsored NC Senate bill, SB 657, has been introduced that, if enacted, would severely cripple the state’s One Stop Early Voting/Same-day Voter Registration law that helped President Barack Obama win North Carolina in 2008.
            Indeed, the bill would eliminate same-day registration, an important tool of voter empowerment for communities of color, proponents say.
            The goal, critics say, is to make the 2012 presidential election harder for Obama and the Democrats to win. Coupled with GOP control of redistricting, and the party’s legislative push for voter ID which critics like the NCNAACP charge is an attempt at voter suppression of black and Hispanic voters, attorney Irving Joyner, chair of the NCNAACP’s Legal Redress Committee, says SB 657 must be opposed.
            “The bill is a disguise, in a sense, to go after the minority community vote,” Joyner told The Carolinian last week.  “It is being presented as an effort to stop fraud in the election process.”
            “So it’s a thinly disguised effort to cut back on those progressive successes from a couple of years ago that expanded the opportunities for African-Americans, Hispanics and poor people…to get out here and participate in the political discourse,” Joyner added.
            According to Democracy NC, a Durham-based nonprofit voter advocacy group, SB 657, if passed, would also ban Sunday “Souls to the polls” one stop early voting in the state; eliminate early voter registration for 16-17-year-olds; cut the early voting period from 14 days before the primary and general election day, to just 8 or 9; and limit the available daytime hours of early voting locations.
Sponsored by state senators Jim Davis [R-Cherokee], Warren Daniel [R-Burke] and Ralph Hise [R-Avery], SB657 was introduced April 19. It was referred to the Senate Judiciary I Committee after it passed first reading the next day.
            According to Bob Hall, executive director of Democracy NC, both senators Hise and Davis, “…gained their election in large part because they ranked number 1 and 2 in receiving the most support from the Art Pope-funded outside electioneering groups and Pope family contributions - almost $600,000 between the two of them.”
            Pope, a Republican and former state House member from Wake County, is well-known for having arch-conservative ties to the national Tea Party movement; funding the right-wing Civitas Institute and John Locke Foundation; and contributing to the campaigns of the four Wake School Board members who took over that board in 2009.
            Attorney Joyner says even if SB 657 doesn’t pass or Gov. Beverly Perdue, a Democrat, vetoes it, the very fact that Republicans are trying to make it law will have a “chilling effect” on communities of color.
            “It will frighten so many people who will have questions in their minds about the system coming after them anyway. And if this [Republican] legislative effort is successful, it will significantly reduce the pool of people who will be in a position to come to the polls. This will allow the conservative right-wing elements in our society to challenge people at the poling place.”
            “So it’s a war on racial minorities and poor people, that class of people that made up the bulk of the Obama vote and a lot of the progressive Democratic Party candidates,” Joyner continued. “It’s designed to eliminate that body of support.”
            Joyner says SB 657 is part of a national Tea Party effort in states like Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio and North Carolina where Republicans dominate the state legislatures. A number of states, like Kansas and Florida, are even making it harder to register new voters. At least ten states are entertaining laws demanding birth certificates and other certified documents from presidential candidates in order to get on the state ballot.
            President Obama put the growing fringe questions about his US citizenship to rest Wednesday by producing a copy of his original “certificate of live birth.”
            Joyner says “The time is now” for communities of color to “organize and mobilize” on opposing SB 657. The community must first be educated about the extreme importance and danger the GOP-backed bill poses. Community groups must go door-to-door. State lawmakers pushing the bill must be confronted and held accountable during the next elections.
            Joyner says the Democratic Party must energize its base on this issue as well, and root out those conservative Dems who support the bill.
            “The local level is a prime battleground for these right-wing conservatives to take over,” Joyner says.
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CASH IN THE APPLE
By Cash Michaels

            REV. FRANKLIN GRAHAM - To say I have no respect for Rev. Franklin Graham, the son of the legendary preacher Rev. Billy Graham, is now certainly an understatement.
            While the man is certainly free and entitled to his own opinion, for him to get on television (ABC-TV’s “This Week” program Sunday) and endorse mad man Donald Trump’s racist foolishness about President Obama’s birth certificate, is astounding.
            After all, when you publicly back a fool, what does that make you?
            The wolves are coming out from all over folks, and they will do anything, or say anything, to stop the re-election of the president. You want to know what evil looks and sounds like?
            Keep watching!
TIME TO PAY ATTENTION - I know that this has been said before, and in fact, it has certainly been true before. But that doesn’t mean it isn’t true now.
            We are in serious times.
            In fact, I dare say that we are in very serious times, and it is going to take all right thinking people to get us all out of the political and social mess we’re all in.
            Just look at how crazy the Republican-led Congress is acting, willing to end Medicare and Medicaid, giving billions in tax credits to the mega-rich oil industry, and giving even more tax cuts to the wealthy.
            Did I say that in order to pull all of this off, the GOP is ready, willing and able to slash education and other key federal social safety net programs that help the poor and the elderly?
            And that’s why it’s so important that, if you haven’t been doing so already, you and yours of voting age MUST pay attention to all of the foolishness going on in the county, state and nation. The clock is literally, LITERALLY being turned back in front of all of us as truly Draconian laws are being introduced by the GOP as if this were 1920.
            Civil and voting rights legislation are at risk. Important programs are being gutted at the drop of a hat. Advocates of the people are being ignored.
            Both 2011 and 2012 are crucial election years, both locally and nationally.
            Let’s be honest, we all got fat and lazy after the thrilling 2008 presidential elections. But that was two long years ago, and it’s time to wake up now and pay attention to the world coming down around you.
            That’s what this black newspaper is here for, to open your eyes and your mind, in hopes that you’ll act positively on that information.
            It’s our only hope for our children. 
CORNEL AND REV. AL - By now you know about the big brohaha Rev. Al Sharpton and Dr. Cornel West of Princeton University had on MSNBC a few weeks ago about Pres. Obama and the job he’s done thus far for Black America.
West says Obama hasn’t done much.
Sharpton counters that Obama can’t do it all.
The fact of the matter is recent polls show black support for Pres. Obama softening at least five percentage points to 85 percent, and it could erode even more. One of the reasons has been the president’s inability to address the disproportionately high black unemployment rate, which hovers around 15 percent.
Because of the special circumstances surrounding black unemployment, many black leaders believe the Obama Administration needs to address it separately. But thus far, the president has taken an “all boats rise together” approach, and that has frustrated folks like Prof. West.
It was last fall when West, in an exclusive interview with my radio program, “Make it Happen” on Power 750 WAUG-AM/POWER 750.com told me how his problems with Obama really began after he campaigned for the president during the 2008 campaign, and then found himself and his mother stiffed for inauguration seats. When West publicly criticized Obama’s lack of effort at helping the poor, the next time the two were at the same event, the president got in his face and balled him out.
West told me that he “still loves my brother,” but feels he’s gone astray, especially now that half of his chief advisers are from Wall Street.
On Rev. Sharpton’s side of the ledger, he agrees that Pres. Obama should be held accountable to his most loyal base, the African-American community. But Rev. also believes that the president can’t do it all by himself, and that he’s getting woefully weak help from folks like the Congressional Black Caucus and others.
Keep in mind that one of the things that plays a factor in all of this is Dr. West has accused Rev. Sharpton of being used by the Obama Administration to counter criticism, a charge that set the Rev. off on MSNBC.
Now to add intrigue to the interesting - Donna Brazile, popular CNN/ABC News contributor, and currently the interim chairwoman of the Democratic National Committee, met with Dr. West at Princeton University last week, supposedly in an effort to calm the waters.
Brazile, as a loyal high-profile Democrat, is a staunch supporter and defender of the president. So it’s quite natural that she would want to seek peace between two of the African-American community’s most prominent leaders.
But while Brazile is not surprisingly on Sharpton’s side that the president can’t do it all by himself, she is also on Dr. West’s side that all that Obama is doing doesn’t exactly follow through with the “change” that he promised when he ran for office.
“Look, I haven’t always been pleased with the president of the United States,” the renowned Democratic Party strategist and interim DNC chair told “Make it Happen” last week on Power 750 WAUG-AM. “I’ve had times when I’ve had to differ with the president. Whether it’s been the housing policies or the firing of [former USDA official] Shirley Sherrod, or just recently, giving the Republicans the opportunity [during the recent 2011 budget negotiations] to write their own narrowly-based social agenda on the [Washington] D.C. budget where I live, I’m not always in the cheerleading section of the stadium.”
What’s funny about Brazile’s statement to us is that apparently she hasn’t said the same to anyone else in the press. Two days after she taped that “Make it Happen” interview, Brazile held a conference call with other black reporters, and as best as we can tell from repots of that session, said nothing like that. Clearly as interim Democratic Party chair, Brazile can’t go running around expressing that Obama has teed her off every now and then.
So this argument will continue, I imagine. I have no problem with it because as mush as we love and support the president, he, like any other president, must be held accountable by those who gave their votes to him.
I think it makes Obama a better president. It would be a crime if he took us for granted. But at the same time, it would also be a crime if we think that he, alone, can solve all of our problems.
SPIKE AND TYLER - By now you’ve also been following the war of words between popular black filmmakers Tyler Perry and Spike Lee. Lee, whose legendary work includes “Do the Right Thing,” “Malcolm X” and “Jungle Fever” has criticized Tyler Perry’s famous character “Madea” and some of his TBS black situation comedies like “Meet the Browns” and “House of Payne” as “coonery” and black stereotypical entertainment that black people today no longer care for.
Perry, who unlike Lee, owns his own studio, counters that Lee and other critics of his films like “For Colored Girls…,” “Diary of a Mad Black Woman,” and the recently released, “Madea’s Big Happy Family,” should “go straight to hell.” He says his characters, especially Madea, are modeled after family members or people he knows or have seen. They exist, and he sees know reason to hide that fact from his audiences.
By the way, apparently there is a hungry audience for Perry’s films and TV shows. His films have grossed well over $500 million, which is quite good given how low-cost they are. And his TV series on TBS are well watched, and are already in syndication.
            So choose your side. This argument is partly generational. So could easily criticize some of Spike Lee’s work when he was a young filmmaker. Indeed, some did, and he didn’t like it either, as I recall.
Make sure you tune in every Thursday afternoon at 4 p.m. for my talk radio show, ''Make It Happen'' on Power 750 WAUG-AM, or online at www.Power750.com. And read more about my thoughts and opinions exclusively at my new blog, ‘The Cash Roc” (http://thecashroc.blogspot.com/2011/01/cash-roc-begins.html). I promise it will be interesting.”
Cash in the Apple - honored as the Best Column Writing of 2006 by the National Newspaper Publishers Association, by Cash Michaels, honored this year as well by NNPA for Best Feature Story Journalist of 2009.
Until next week, keep a smile on your face, GOD in your heart, and The Carolinian your life. Bye, bye.
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 FEDERAL CIVIL RIGHTS HEARING ON WAKE SCHOOLS MAY 4
By Cash Michaels
Editor

            Federal authorities will be back in Raleigh next week not only to interview members of the Wake County Public School System as part of its ongoing racial bias probe, but to hear civil rights complaints from parents, students and members of the public about how the Republican-led Wake School Board has moved towards implementing its controversial neighborhood schools policy.
            A policy that many maintain will racially resegregate the 143,000-pupil Wake Public School System, and create more high poverty schools leaders will be ill-equipped to manage.
            Formally called, “a community meeting,” the hearing, to be held at Martin Street Baptist Church, 1001 East Martin Street in Raleigh, on Wednesday, May 4 from 7 to 9 p.m., is being conducted by the US Department of Education’s Office of Civil Rights (OCR).
            OCR is investigating allegations by the NCNAACP that the Republican majority of the Wake School Board has operated in a manner that has violated the civil rights of African-American students in the system. The school board, in its response several weeks ago, denies the NCNAACP’s allegations, contending instead that it was the school system’s previous socioeconomic diversity policy that inhibited black students from a worthy education.
            The board’s Republican majority even alleged in their response that the school bus rides over 5 miles for poor African-American students in the system hurt their academic achievement. That allegation, however, was not backed up by any other independent research, and was highly criticized by groups like Great Schools in Wake Coalition.
            Indeed, the school board’s attorney, Ann Majestic, the author of the system’s OCR response, had to admit that some of her statistical analysis was in error and had to be corrected, to the chagrin of school system leaders.
            OCR’s May 4th community hearing for parents, students and other concerned members of the public will be asked to talk about their experience as it relates to the change in the Wake School System’s student assignment policy and the system’s discipline policies and procedures.
            The NCNAACP’s federal complaint alleges racial bias in those policies as well.
            This is the second time in as many years that the OCR has held a community hearing related to an NCNAACP federal complaint to the US Education Dept. In 2010, the OCR listened to the complaints and concerns of parents and students in Wayne County following NCNAACP allegations that Goldsboro city schools were virtually 99 percent black, and Wayne County public schools were virtually all-white.
            For more information about the May 4 OCR community hearing at Martin Street Baptist Church, call 919 - 833-9756.
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STATE NEWS BRIEFS

CMS EMPLOYEES GET LAYOFF NOTICES
            [CHARLOTTE] Teachers and other employees of the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Public School System (CMS) began getting emailed notices from Supt. Peter Gorman this week that layoff letters will be sent soon, the third consecutive year the beleaguered system has had to let go part of its workforce due to budget cuts. An estimated 1500 jobs could be slashed, which would include at least 600 teachers, depending on how much the county and state allot to schools. Gorman said he’ll know for sure by June 30.

HOUSE COMMITTEE INCREASES FEES FOR GOVERNMENT SERVICES
            [RALEIGH] A Republican-led House Finance Committee has voted 17-14 to increase fees for various government services like the courts in order to raise revenue to help close the $3 billion budget gap. School systems would charge $75.00 for driver ed classes; current free ferry rides would begin charging tolls; and court costs for various types of filings and traffic court would also increase. Lawmakers say tens of millions of dollars in fee revenues can be raised not from taxpayers, but from only those using government services.

BRUNSWICK COUNTY DETECTIVE ARRESTED FOR INDECENT LIBERITES WITH A MINOR
            [BOLIVIA] A Brunswick County Sheriff’s Dept. detective was fired, then arrested and charged with having indecent liberties with a minor. Sergeant Henry Thomas Cole, 45, was being held in jail in lieu of $25,000 bond. He was arrested Sunday by the State Bureau of Investigation after Sheriff John Ingram had earlier requested an investigation. Cole had been with the department since March 2003. The SBI investigation is ongoing.
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TRIANGLE NEWS BRIEFS

END-OF-GRADE TEST PREP APRIL 30 AT GRACE AME CHURCH
            Parents who would like to get important information from WCPSS administrators about preparing students for end-of-grade/end-of-course testing are invited to the EOG/EOC Test Prep,” this Saturday, April 30, 10 a.m. to 12 noon at Grace AME Church, 1401 Boyer Street, Raleigh. Sponsored by the Coalition of Concerned Citizens for African-American Children, for more information call the CCCAAC at 919-231-9057. To register go to www.cccaac.com.

MEEKER WON’T SEEK SIXTH TERM AS RALEIGH MAYOR
            Saying that it was time for new leadership with fresh ideas, five-term Raleigh Mayor Charles Meeker announced Tuesday that he will not run for an historic sixth term this fall. Meeker was first elected in 2001 after serving several terms as a city councilman. Meeker said he will return to private life fulltime. During his ten-year tenure, downtown Raleigh has experienced extraordinary growth, particularly with the reopening of Fayetteville Street. Meeker ties the late Mayor Avery C. Upchurch with five terms in office.

EQUITY FIRM ANNOUNCES $3.6 MILLION GIFT TO JUMPSTART ENTREPRENEURSHIP
            The chairman of a prominent New York private equity firm announced a $3.6 million gift to Triangle universities to create a network of established entrepreneurs that would develop successful businesses.  Stephen Schwarzman, chairman/CEO of The Blackstone Group, said that the faculties at NC Central University, UNC-Chapel Hill, NC State and Duke University will all work with 30 startup teams of promising businesspeople each year for five years. The hope is that each company born will create $40 million in revenue and become profitable in ten years.
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Tuesday, April 19, 2011

CASH STUFF FOR APRIL 21, 2011

MEDIA
CASH IN THE APPLE
By Cash Michaels

            ONE-YEAR ANNIVERSARY - April 22 marks one year that I started my radio show, “Make it Happen” on Power 750 WAUG-AM in Raleigh, and Power 750.com online every Thursday afternoon at 4 p.m..
            Juggling two newspapers, video production, television and a new blog recently, a weekly radio program has allowed me to share other aspects of my journalism with the community that they can followup on in either The Carolinian or The Wilmington Journal, both of which I credit every week at the opening of the show.
            Doing the show also allows me to remain sharp in my radio skills, and reach a different audience weekly.
            It can be a bear putting the shows on each week, but for someone who has it in his blood to share the stories and insights that are most important to the community, it has also been a joy. So thanks to my audience in the Triangle, in Wilmington and elsewhere for supporting the show for the past year. This afternoon my special anniversary show guests are famed Democratic Party activist, CNN commentator and current Democratic National Committee Interim Chairwoman Donna Brazile; and Congressman G. K. Butterfield [D-1-NC], and, among others.
            Listen in this afternoon at 4 p.m.
            IN WILMINGTON - Next Tuesday evening, I’ll be back in Wilmington to moderate, “What Should Education Reform Look Like in New Hanover County?” a community forum sponsored by The Wilmington Journal and the Community Boys and Girls Club of Wilmington, 901 Nixon Street, from 6:30 p.m. to 8 p.m.. For more information contact Christal Reynolds at (919)871-1084.
            A MATTER OF DEGREES - It is stunning to think that on Saturday, April 16, 2011, ANY of us living in the torrent of tornadoes that swept through North Carolina could have died. The dangerous storms took particular paths, but those paths weren’t necessarily predetermined.
            There were some neighborhoods, like mine, that were hit with strong winds and truckloads of rain. A tree here, a limb there, scary, loud and it was basically all over. And yet, if the storm in my area had just shifted one degree, my house and my family would have been in peril.
            The same is perhaps true for you, if you think about it. Why did the house down the block get demolished, and yours didn’t?
            That’s the way it was for all of us on that day. Wherever you were, you had to wait and wonder, “How bad is this going to be?” Watching minute-by minute coverage on WRAL-TV and WTVD-TV, amazed at how the TV stations and their Doppler radar are able to track storms and tornados literally block by block, only added to the suspense.
            Our case was particularly interesting. Our eight-year-old daughter, KaLa, had been dropped off a birthday party while the weather was fine. But once the storms began, the wife and I found ourselves trapped at our home as the storm made its way through our neighborhood.
            That meant we couldn’t leave to go get her. As a father, being separated from my youngest during a time of danger is against everything I believe in. And since they weren’t answering the telephone at the birthday party, that only compounded my angst about her safety.
            So you can imagine, once the storm cleared, how quickly we jumped in the car and headed to the party to retrieve KaLa. Fortunately, all was well. In the midst of the storm, the children were all having fun, and were well looked after.
            My baby girl had no idea.
            But when we got home and turned on the TV, KaLa’s bliss was soon over.
            Slowly but surely the reports of extraordinary destruction were coming in. The Lowe’s Home Improvement store in Lee County where the roof was literally ripped off half the building as customers were rushed go safety in the back of the store.
            The Stonybrook Mobile Home Park in North Raleigh, where three children were crushed to death after a tree fell on the closet where they were hiding for safety. A fourth child died days later.
            The campuses of both Shaw University and St. Augustine’s College hit hard by the storm.
            And the many, many homes in poorer counties like Bertie, that were blown away by the winds and rain, taking many lives with them.
            Twenty-three lives in all.
            Watching the people who lost everything on television, tears in their eyes, but thankfulness in their souls as they all said to a person, “I’m just thankful to be alive.”
            That’s why it strikes me that those of who never really came close to having our roofs blown off, or a tree crash into our living room, or a giant limb crush our car, should be just as thankful to GOD.
            By just a matter of degrees, and by the golden grace of GOD Almighty, goes any one of us. The next time, it could be different.
            So for those of us who were spared, let us indeed be thankful. And let us do what we can to help those who weren’t. I went to the campus of Shaw University and saw the damage. Saw it in the neighborhood surrounding the campus too, where power was out, power lines were lines were down, and neighbor was helping neighbor.
            I also visited the neighborhood where St. Augustine’s College resides, which also suffered substantial tree damage and power outages.
            What both communities have in common is they’re older black communities, where many of our older citizens live. It may be many days before they get that tree limb off the roof, or power restored.
            Time for ALL of us to come together in our communities, and help the least of us pull through. Make sure they have enough food and personal products to stay healthy.
            We face a lot of issues as a community, but survival in the face life or death struggle must be priority one.
            Remember, it is just by degrees that I’m not writing about you, or me, or ours.
            Just by degrees, and that’s close enough.
            LAST WEEK - Last week was perhaps the very first time I’ve ever missed writing for an edition of this newspaper, but it was for good reason.
            I was suddenly stricken with a bout of “shingles,” a painful pre-chicken pox virus that attacked the left side of my face and eye, that slowly but surely got more gruesome and problematic. Imagine having your worse toothache on your face. Those of you who have had shingles know exactly what I’m talking about.
            The condition was so disorienting, I couldn’t think. And as for seeing, it was only with one eye as the left one was swollen “Rocky”-style. Add to that the high fever I was running as times (106 at one point), and immediate loss of appetite (I lost 10 lbs. when it was all over), and it was just all I could do to keep it all together.
            I’m told that in the old days, folks with shingles were so physically tormented that some even committed suicide. I understand.
            Luckily, I had two great doctors - Dr. Allen Mask and Dr. Edwin Swann
 - to guide me through the torment. I followed their instructions to the letter, and relief was in days, not weeks as is normally the case.
            But even with the direction of those two giants, my wife and daughter were the absolute champs in seeing me through. They realized just how sick I was, knew I wasn’t strong enough to work through it (as I normally do), and were there for me 24/7 through it all.
            That’s the value of family, folks, and I’m thankful that mine was there for me when I needed them.
            I’m not fully recovered yet, but unlike last week when I couldn’t function at all, I’m back in the saddle.
            It’s one thing feeling so sick you can’t work.
            It’s another thing feeling sick and useless.
            Thanks to both my bosses at the The Carolinian and Wilmington Journal for hanging in there with me. They knew when I said I couldn’t work that it had to be serious.
            SPECIAL NOTE - Next week I’ll be big time busy, not only traveling to Wilmington for a community forum on schools, but taking part in two more forums about education. On Thursday, April 28 from 7 - 9 p.m., the Franciscan Coalition for Justice is hosting the first of a three-part series called, “Conversations on the Common Good: Wake County Schools.”
            The theme that evening will be “Informing” and I will be sharing the stage with T. Keung Hui, education reporter for The News and Observer.
            The location is the Fellowship Hall, Catholic Community of St. Francis of Assisi, 11401 Leesville Road in Raleigh.
            Then on Friday, April 29 at 10 a.m., and again at 2 p.m. during the Sixth Annual NC Black Summit, I’ll be one of the panelists for a discussion on education at the Raleigh Sheraton Capital Center in downtown.
            Look forward to seeing you…somewhere?
            Make sure you tune in every Thursday afternoon at 4 p.m. for my talk radio show, ''Make It Happen'' on Power 750 WAUG-AM, or online at www.Power750.com. And read more about my thoughts and opinions exclusively at my new blog, ‘The Cash Roc” (http://thecashroc.blogspot.com/2011/01/cash-roc-begins.html). I promise it will be interesting.”
Cash in the Apple - honored as the Best Column Writing of 2006 by the National Newspaper Publishers Association, by Cash Michaels, honored this year as well by NNPA for Best Feature Story Journalist of 2009.
Until next week, keep a smile on your face, GOD in your heart, and The Carolinian your life. Bye, bye.
                                                       -30-

















Blacks Ponder Loss of Majority Status in District of Columbia

Posted April 17, 2011

[Editor’s Note: This article is not for use by member newspapers competing in the same market in which it was written.  NNPA will deny access to News Wire Service content to publications that ignore this probation.  Additionally, NNPA credit lines and “Special to…” member newspaper credit lines must be used on any articles downloaded.  NNPA will deny access to News Wire Service content, if editors consistently delete NNPA or newspaper credit lines.]

Blacks Ponder Loss of Majority Status in District of Columbia    
By James Wright 

Special to the NNPA from The Washington Informer


Blacks in Washington, D.C. are barely in the majority, according to 2010 U.S. Census Bureau figures.
 African Americans in the District of Columbia are concerned, but not alarmed about the likely loss of majority status in the city in a few years.


Statistics from the 2010 U.S. Census Bureau report reveal that Blacks comprise only 52 percent of the population of the District, which is a sharp decline from 71.5 percent reported in the 1975 census count.  However, Blacks in the District aren’t worried about the lower percentage.


“The economy is hurting everybody and people are looking for cheaper housing,” said Bonnie Barrett.  “People are moving out to Maryland with Section 8 vouchers and other programs because they will be able to find better housing there,” the Northwest resident said.


Barrett, 62, has identified one of the main reasons many Blacks have left the District.  The city’s housing costs have always been somewhat pricey compared to other major metropolitan areas in the country.


Today, the District’s population is 601,723, with the arrival of 29,600 residents since the 2000 census.  However, city officials and demographers note that the overwhelming majority of new residents are not African Americans.


David Hedgepeth, a Black resident of Ward 3 in Northwest who ran against D.C. Council member Mary Cheh in the Nov. 2, 2010 general election as a Republican said that Blacks have moved to other parts of the metropolitan area because of bad city policies.


“I think it shows the failure of Democratic policies,” Hedgepeth, 42, said.  “The Democrats have not delivered the city that Black people want to live in.  We are losing ground to Prince George’s County(,Maryland).”


Hedgepeth also noted that Blacks who live in the Atlanta metropolitan area are leaving in droves and moving to prosperous suburbs, such as DeKalb County.


Hedgepeth, an attorney, said that he moved to Washington because of its dominant Black population.


“I am originally from the Bronx in New York and I came to D.C. because it was a ‘Chocolate City’,” he said.  “I am disappointed that it is no longer a ‘Chocolate City.’  Our city leaders need to implement policies that African Americans might find attractive and come back into the city.”


Joseph L. Askew Jr., of Northwest D.C., said that many Blacks in the District do not feel as if the city government cares about them.


“We need affordable housing, workforce development and quality health care in this city,” said Askew, who serves as chairman of the University of the District of Columbia’s board of trustees.


“Our city leaders need to connect with people of all classes to create a solid structure in which people can live comfortably.”


The 2010 report showed that Ward 2, located in Northwest D.C., had the greatest population change from 2000 to 2010 with an addition of 11,046 residents.  Ward 6, which touches all four quadrants in the District and includes Capitol Hill, had the second largest gain with 8,563 people.


Predominantly Black Ward 8 in Southeast was the only ward to lose population.


The District’s White population had an increase of 55, 370 people from 2000 to 2010 and consist of 38.5 percent of the population according to the 2010 census.  Hispanics in the city grew by 9,796 and represent 9.1 percent of the population with 54,749 people.  The Asian population ballooned from 15,189 to 21,056 in the last decade.


D.C. Mayor Vincent Gray appeared satisfied with the city’s growth.


“The growth in the District’s overall population and the growth in diversity is good news for our city in a number of ways,” Gray, 68, said.


“On the other hand, these census numbers speak to the importance of developing more amenities east of the Anacostia River so that as we grow as One City, current residents will want to remain in the District even as others move in.  All residents -- new and old alike -- should enjoy an outstanding quality of life no matter which ward or neighborhood they call home.”


Barrett, who works for a fundraising company, said that cheaper housing is the key to getting Blacks to return to the District.


“Blacks are moving to Maryland to buy houses for 10 cents,” she said half-jokingly.  “Whites are tired of making long commutes, some as long as 70 miles a day to go to work and that is why they are moving to the city.  It seems that the city government is making it more convenient for Whites to come and live here.”

                                                          -30-


TRIANGLE NEWS BRIEFS


MANGUM INDICTED IN BOYFRIEND’S STABBING DEATH
            Life has just gotten more serious for Crystal Mangum, the woman at the center of the infamous Duke lacrosse alleged rape case. A Durham grand jury has indicted Mangum for the stabbing death of her boyfriend, Reginald Daye. Durham police were called to the couple’s apartment after reports of a domestic dispute to find Daye repeatedly stabbed. Mangum was arrested and charged with assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill. Daye died in Duke Hospital days later. Her current bail is set at $300,000.

NC APPELLATE COURT CONFIRMS THAT WAKE SCHOOL BOARD VIOLATED OPEN MEETINGS LAW
            In a unanimous ruling issued this week, the NC Court of Appeals agreed with a lower Wake Superior Court ruling that the Republican-led Wake School Board violated the state’s Open Meetings Law when it limited public access to its March 23rd, 2010 meeting. But the Appellate Court also agreed not to reinstate the lawsuit against the school board by supporters of the old socioeconomic diversity policy, saying that the violations have been since remedied. On that date, board leaders issued tickets to limit the public in attending the school board meeting, instead of moving to a larger available room.

RALEIGH GET TOUGH ON OVERDUE PARKING FINES
            If you’re parked legally in downtown Raleigh, but are overdue in paying a past parking ticket, don’t be surprised to find a boot around your tire until you pay up. That’s one of the new tougher rules the Raleigh City Council adopted Tuesday in order to make up for a $1.4 million shortfall in parking fine collections. The council also agreed to getting overdue fines out of state tax refunds if they’re $50.00 or more, and also put holds on vehicle registrations. Officials say the weak economy and an increase in debt service payments are just some of the reasons for the shortfall.
                                                                         -30-


SOUTHEAST RALEIGH HIT HARD BY TORNADO FORCE
By Cash Michaels
Editor

            Days after its extraordinary destruction, areas of downtown and Southeast Raleigh are still recovering from the force of the killer tornados that have left 24 dead across the state, and tens of millions of dollars in lost homes and properties.
            Among the dead, four Latino children who were severely injured at the Stony Brook North Mobile Home Park in North Raleigh when a tree fell on the trailer home they had huddled in for safety during the April 16 storm.
            The youngest was just six-months-old.
            Less than 4,000 people in Wake County - including Garner and Zebulon - remained without power as of late Tuesday, says Progress Energy.
            On Tuesday, President Barack Obama, as expected, declared the parts of North Carolina that had been hit federal disaster areas. Teams from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) had been in the state since Sunday assessing the damage.
            In Bertie County, one of the state’s poorest, twelve people are known to have been killed. Governor Beverly Perdue, who declared at least 22 counties affected disaster areas, urged all North Carolinians to help their affected neighbors with food, clothing, and even temporary shelter if need be. A NC Disaster Relief Fund has been setup to accept donations.
            Weather forecasters believe that at least 25 “super-cell” tornadoes were spawned that ravaged parts of the state.
            In the poorer, older neighborhoods bordering downtown Raleigh, large trees and tree limbs were blown down on almost every other block making many impassable. Many of the power lines were also down as a result of the limbs, and utility poles were snapped in two. Brick chimney tops were reduced to rumble. Steel fences were collapsed like playing cards. Pieces of roofs were ripped off.
            Not since Hurricane Fran of 1996 had the downtown and Southeast Raleigh areas seen so much damage.
            “[The tornado] took a very narrow path,” Raleigh Mayor Charles Meeker told The Carolinian Sunday, adding that though only one percent of the city was affected, it will take two to three weeks to get the damage cleaned up.
“Very destructive,” Meeker said.
On Sunday, the day after, neighbors were out in the streets, moving what tree limbs they could, and running extension cords to homes without power in a effort to keep refrigerators operating and lights operating where they could.
            The sound of buzz saws filled the air as workers cut heavy trees to get them off of crushed cars and out of roadways.
            In Southeast Raleigh, two of the African-American community’s anchor institutions, Shaw University and St. Augustine’s College, were hit hard by the Saturday storms, forcing officials at Shaw to close the crippled campus for the remainder of the spring semester, and send students home.
            Dormitories on campus had their windows blown out. Two one-hundred year-old trees were uprooted out of the ground by the James Cheek building. The roof of historic Estey Hall had been ruptured. The roof of the Willie E. Gary Student Center had been blasted open while students had been eating. Before it collapsed, the stunned students got out without injury.
On other parts of the campus, some Shaw students were injured, but not seriously. The night of the storm, school officials fed students at Golden Corral in Garner. Some used Southeast Raleigh High School as a shelter to sleep and be safe. Cleanup crews began operations that night sweeping up glass and boarding up windows, and were still working well into Sunday.
            “Major damage,” Shaw President Irma McLaurin told The Carolinian Sunday as various officials, including US Sen. Kay Hagan, Raleigh Mayor Charles Meeker and Wake County Commissioner James West, among others, surveyed the destruction.
            Insurance, federal aid and private donations are being counted to restore the campus. Shaw alums are already using social media like Facebook to raise funds and awareness ton help their school.
            As some students seemed shocked by the destruction of their campus, others were moving out of dorms with boarded up windows blown out by the storm. Seniors will return to town on May 7 for graduation, otherwise no final exams will be conducted.
            “We could not, in fact, have students around,” Dr. McLaurin said. “We still have hanging branches we’re afraid are going to fall. So the main thing is to get them out.”
            “I don’t think any of us had any idea of the extent of the devastation,” McLaurin added.
            The same could be said about St. Augustine’s College cross town in the Oakwood section, where large trees collapsed on buildings and cars across campus, causing extensive damage. Power was out for most of the campus until Tuesday when classes resumed. Some students were upset that, despite the disrepair, Dr. Dianne Boardley-Suber, president of St. Aug’s, decided to keep school open.
            She challenged St. Aug students to deal with the temporary difficulties brought about by the devastation to the campus, and vowed that they would learn from it.
                                                                     -30-


EXCLUSIVE
BRAZILE URGES BLACKS TO SUPPORT OBAMA, PROTECT GAINS
By Cash Michaels
Editor

            The interim chairman of the Democratic National Committee says the nation, and specifically the African-American community, has to stick with President Barack Obama and the Democrats during these tough times to “keep the country safe and secure.”
            But in an exclusive taped interview Tuesday with the weekly radio program “Make it Happen” on Power 750 WAUG-AM/Power 750.com for airing this afternoon, top Washington insider and CNN/ABC commentator Donna Brazile also admitted that there have been times over the past two years when she didn’t necessarily agree with some of the president’s policies.
            “Look, I haven’t always been pleased with the president of the United States,” the renowned Democratic Party strategist and interim DNC chair said. “I’ve had times when I’ve had to differ with the president. Whether it’s been the housing policies or the firing of [former USDA official] Shirley Sherrod, or just recently, giving the Republicans the opportunity [during the recent 2011 budget negotiations] to write their own narrowly-based social agenda on the [Washington] D.C. budget where I live, I’m not always in the cheerleading section.”
            “Sometimes I’m on the sidelines, sometimes I like to be right there on the field getting a little dirty with the rest of them. But the bottomline is I’m proud to be a Democrat, I’m proud to be an American, [but] more importantly I’m proud to say that Barack Obama is my choice for president in 2012,” Brazile said.
            It’s the kind of frank, pull-no-punches talk that Brazile, 51, is known for. The first African-American ever to run a major political party’s bid for president when she took the reins of then Vice President Al Gore’s 2000 campaign, the Louisiana native has earned the title of Washington powerbroker, serving as DNC vice chair; managing her own DC consulting firm, hitting the talk and keynoter’s circuit at colleges and universities across the nation; and now chairing the Democratic National Committee until Florida Rep. Debbie Wasserman-Schultz, is officially voted in, which is expected to happen shortly.
            But right now, Brazile’s passion is supporting the president, and making sure that both he and the Democrats are successful when Obama runs for re-election in 2012.
            “The country is still in the throes of a very critical economic downturn,” Brazile told WAUG-AM. “While we’ve seen 13 months of promising job growth, Pres. Obama is committed to see that every American who is looking for a job will be able to find work in his/her hometown.”
            Balancing spending cuts with “revenue attractions” in the midst of a slow economic recovery has to be a “balanced approach to getting our fiscal house in order,” Brazile maintains, countering the popular Republican mantra that America as “a spending problem, not a revenue problem.”
            The poor and middle-class have definitely been hurt during the recovery, so government must do all it can to make them whole, as much as possible, Brazile says, particularly through job growth.
            Brazile says the president “is committed to make sure that the federal government lives within its means,” and will make well thought-out cuts to the budget where needed.
But Republicans, per their plan to drastically cut the federal budget through Medicare/Medicaid, education, affordable housing and other vital programs, while simultaneously giving millionaires and billionaires generous tax cuts, threaten the government’s social safety net where its needed the most. The trend is already being seen in local and state governments across the nation, and Brazile says Americans must take note, and then take action.
Brazile also urges communities to support Pres. Obama’s insistence on “winning the future” through investing more in education, and for individuals to improve their own educational opportunities to better prepare themselves for upcoming challenges and opportunities.
“If you’re living on the margins; if you’re living without the means to dip into your savings account, then the recession we’ve just experienced will have a devastating impact on communities of color,” Brazile says, maintaining that communities should not be “pitted against each other” in times of great struggle.
Politically, recent polls show President Obama’s support in the African-American community softening to 85 percent from the high nineties, and white voter support dropping to the mid-30’s. Brazile believes if the economy and employment continue to improve going into 2012, Pres. Obama will win white voters back.
Don’t expect Republicans to help the cause, however. Real estate tycoon Donald Trump, star of NBC’s “Celebrity Apprentice,” has mounted a surprising strong pre-presidential campaign rooted in the highly-discredited, yet explosively divisive birther movement that President Obama isn’t an American citizen. Almost half of Republicans polled believe the “Where’s Obama’s birth certificate?” question has merit, and Trump has virtually to the top of the crowded 2012 GOP presidential potential candidate heap by pushing the cause everywhere and anywhere he can find a camera or microphone.
“Donald Trump is running for the Republican nomination by sing a divisive issue that most Republicans …believe is absolutely ludicrous,” Brazile said, adding that, for now, he should be taken seriously, given his resources and ability to garner the press. Still, if Democrats are on their game, and not distracted by Trump or anyone else, they’ll do well, she says.
Brazile urged black leaders throughout the community to either active, or get active to both educate and mobilize these during these difficult times. She also said that she’s looking forward to the 2012 Democratic National Convention coming to Charlotte in September 2012, and says that North Carolina is key towards Pres. Barack Obama reclaiming the White House.
But only if Democrats mobilize to vote in greater numbers than before.
“The United States of America is marching forward in the 21st Century,” Brazile declared. “We’re not going back”
“We’re not going back.”
                                                -30-
        W-ed-WE NEED TO WAKE UP NOW!

            Alright, the self-induced snooze since the 2008 presidential elections are now officially over. We actually wish it was over before last November’s disastrous (for Democrats) 2010 midterm elections, but precious little we can do about that now.
            The Republicans are slowly, but surely and literally, turning the clock back in this state and nation, to the point that if they’re successful, you’ll wake up one morning a year from now shocked to discover that you have less rights than you think you do right now.
            Let’s put all of the disgusting foolishness about the “Where’s Obama’s birth certificate?” movement to the side for a movement, shall we? That’s just a piece of the puzzle, a puzzle to disenfranchise our community and all right-thinking people somewhere in the neighborhood of …FOREVER!
            Case in point - you already know how the Republican-led majority in the NC General Assembly is working to make voter ID’s mandatory in the state of North Carolina. Their reason? Alleged voter fraud, something there’s very, very little of not just here, but across the nation.
            But one thing there is plenty of here, and that’s Hispanic voters, voters that are more likely to vote Democratic because of all of the anti-immigration legislation the GOP has been pushing of late. Best way to keep the Latinos from voting with African-Americans and liberal whites is to impose a voter ID law under the guise of preventing voter corruption that literally doesn’t exist.
            But hold on, that’s just the tip of the iceberg.
            Now we find that Republicans in the NC Senate have introduced SB657 - the “Voter Integrity” bill. If this little ditty is adopted, not only does it eliminate same-day voter registration, a key component to empowering all eligible North Carolinians to register and vote, but also:
        ** Ban Sunday or “Souls to the Polls” voting in North       
   Carolina
        ** Eliminate early voter registration for 16-17 year olds
        ** Limit the early voting period to 8-9 days.
        ** Limit the available day time hours of early voting locations.
           
            Just in case you weren’t aware, Barack Obama only won North Carolina in the 2008 presidential election because he was able to bank over 100,000 votes beyond Republican John McCain in the two weeks prior the Nov. 4, 2008 election.
            Obama won North Carolina by just 14,000.
            Now the GOP wants to severely early voting as best as they can.
            Then comes everybody’s favorite subject - birtherism.
            Thanks to real estate tycoon/TV star Donald Trump, this ignorant caldron of hate is alive and well as he continues to churn it in his drive for the 2012 Republican presidential nomination.
            But that’s a distraction.
            What’s more important to look at are the extraordinary number of states, Georgia and Louisiana being two them, that are pushing some sort of birther bill ultimately
directed at keeping President Obama’s name off their respective ballots. At least ten states are now entertaining birther bills. Arizona actually passed one, but that state’s Republican Gov. Jan Brewer vetoed it, saying that requiring presidential candidates to show their circumcision records was “a bridge too far.”
            So make no mistake, all of this activity, in addition to the union-busting efforts in states like Wisconsin and Ohio, wouldn’t be happening if the GOP weren’t determined not only to stop Barack Obama from being reelected, but shutting the Democratic Party down once-and-for-all, and they see their chance to do that in their drive to take back the White House and the US Senate in 2012, not to mention a few more governorships and state legislatures to complete their absolute majorities.
            We knew some of this was going to happen when the Republicans won the 2012 midterms.
            The challenge now is to make sure it doesn’t happen again in this fall’s 2011 local elections, and next year’s bigger-than-big 2012 presidential election, when Pres. Obama faces reelection.
            So the question remains, what are we going to do to stop this nonsense, this brazen attempt to limit our rights?
            We have to wake up first, and wake up NOW!
                                                -30-