NNPA -
http://nnpa.org/nnpa_newswire/the-truth-behind-the-black-exodus-at-the-rnc/
CASH IN THE APPLE FOR
6-2-16
http://nnpa.org/nnpa_newswire/the-truth-behind-the-black-exodus-at-the-rnc/
TRIANGLE NEWS BRIEFS 6-2-16
BUTTERFIELD MOURNS
DEATH OF HOWARD CLEMENT
First
District Congressman G.K. Butterfield issued a statement last week upon the
death of former Durham City Councilman A. J. Howard Clement, III: “It is with great sadness that I mourn
the passing of my dear friend for more than 40 years, A.J. Howard Clement, III.
Throughout his 30 years in elected office, Howard was able to relate to all
segments of the Durham community. Before serving on the City Council, Howard
Clement was a strong leader with Durham’s civil rights movement, often
mentoring North Carolina Central University students who were participants. I
was a beneficiary of his counsel. Durham is a better community because of the
life and work of A.J. Howard Clement, III. A.J. Howard Clement, III retired
from public service in 2013 as the longest-serving member of the Durham City
Council.
RALEIGH POLICE CHIEF’S SON
ARRESTED A SECOND TIME
The son of Raleigh Police Chief
Cassandra Deck – Brown has been arrested again. David Brown, 24, was reportedly
arrested last week on suspicion of possessing a stolen vehicle. Brown was
arrested last July, charged with leaving a bar without paying his tab. At the
time Brown said there ws a dispute about hat wa owed. He turned himself in after
he was accused.
SOME DURHAM VOTERS OFRERED TO
RECAST BALLOTS
Because of mistakes made by poll
workers during the March 15th primaries, hundreds of Durham voters
will get a chance to cast their ballots again on an upcoming date. The State
Board of Elections ordered the revote for roughly 1, 039 voters who originally cast ballots that were not
counted or misplaced. The State Board of Elections has contacted those voters
affected. The board assures that even with th revote, none of the March primary
results will change.
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STATE NEWS BRIEFS
6-2-16
NC VOTERS RETURN TO
THE POLLS FOR THE JUNE 7TH PRIMARIES
RALEIGH] Which congressional and NC
Supreme Court judicial candidates will appear on the November 8th
general election ballot this fall? Voters will decide during the special North
Carolina June 7th primary
election next week. The NC General Assembly voted to change the date of the
congressional and state High Court primaries from March 15th after a
federal appellate panel ruled last February that the First and Twelfth congressional
districts were racially gerrymandered, drawn unconstitutionally and needed to
be changed and approved. Beyond the congressional candidates, there are four
candidates for the state Supreme Court, the two highest votegetters of which
will go on to compete for the open High Court seat in November.
NEW $22 BILLION STATE SENATE
BUDGET PROPOSAL CUTS TAXES, GIVES TEACHERS RAISES
[RALEIGH]
If state Senate leaders have their way, North Carolnians will once again see
their income taxes cut, the average teacher will see their annual pay balloon
to $54,000 annually, and state law enforcement will also see fatter pay checks.
And the $500.00-a-semester bill, which if enacted, would cost five small UNC
schools, including Winston-Salem State University, Elizabeth City State University
and FayetteState University, an estimated $70 million, is alo in the Senate
proposal. The Senate is expected to pass its over $22 billion budget proposal Friday morning. The House
is expected to follow suit after it releases its budget for the coming fiscal
year.
NC HEALTH INSURERS
SEEK TO RAISE OBAMACARFE RATES FOR 2017
[CHARLOTTE]
Health insurers like Blue Cross – Blue Shield havge e indicated that they will
charge their customers under the Affordable Care Act (ACA or Obamacare) 18.8
percent more for coverage in 2017.Th Aetna Insurance Company seeks to charge
North Carolina policyholders 24.5 percent more next year. Cigna would also
offer coverage, but on limited scale in
North Carolina. If approved by the NC
Insurance Commissioner, the new rate s would go into effect Jan. 1st,
2017.
-30-
By Cash Michaels
I HAD CANCER – The last time I had
anything published by me to our readers was March 10th, 2016…thirteen
long weeks ago. Seems like a lifetime now, because Lord knows I’ve been through
a lot in the past three months.
You’ll recall that In November
2014, I had a massive stroke that temporarily disabled my left leg and slightly
impaired my left arm. Well, with GOD’s blessing and your prayers I worked my
way back from that debilitating episode and was able to rehab my self back 98
percent.
But as bad as that challenging health
episode was, this was worse. Much worse, and dangerous too.
After a very vigorous January and
February running around the state doing screenings of our documentary, “Pardons
of Innocence: The Wilmington Ten,” I began to feel quite rundown. My body felt
like it was breaking down, and it seemed like I was having a bad case of winter
bronchitis. Plus I was experiencing a very painful growth on my left leg that was turning red, with no
explanation, making it difficult to walk. To make matters worse, my eyesight
had become blurry. I was in such bad shape, I took the wife’s advice and went
to the local emergency room.
After a few hours of tests, the
emergency room attendant came back with a most unexpected diagnosis – I had
acute leukemia – a certain form of blood cancer better known as AML.
How did I contract this? No one
knows. As best we know no one gets it through smoking, eating meat, or any of
the other cancer-causing activities we’re familiar with. It just happens. That
was shock number one. Number two was I could not be treated there, and had to
be immediately rushed to UNC Cancer
Hospitals in Chapel Hill. It was there doctors determined that my bone marrow
was not creating white blood cells as it was supposed to, but rather deformed
blood cells that were cancerous in
nature and threatened to out number the white blood cells, which are normally
responsible for fighting off infection.
In other words, my immune system
was being seriously compromised, meaning that my ability to ward off attacking
bacteria and viruses put me in immediate peril. I had to undergo four weeks of
very intense chemotherapy, 12-hour sessions that saw me lose much of my facial
hair, upwards of thirty pounds and left me bedridden for a lot of that time.
I had to stop all of my work and
projects. It was perhaps one of the toughest experiences of my 60 years of
living. I was in a constant state of confusion and depression. Confusion
because my life had gone from zero to 60 in five seconds without any rhyme or
reason. Usually when something bad happens to me, I have sense enough to
connect the dots immediately afterwards and realize that I did it to myself.
Not eating properly, not enough rest, not paying strict attention to the health
warning signs, etc.
But acute leukemia doesn’t work
that way. For reasons that are still unknown to science, it just happens.
Luckily, the doctors and nurses at UNC Cancer Research know what they’re doing,
and are always searching for new answers. It took a while for m to understand
and appreciate that. And in the beginning I had no idea how dire my situation
was. All I knew, literally, was that I was being hit with a pile-driving truck of which I had no idea was coming my way. My
first thoughts were of my family, an how to explain all that I was feeling and
concerned about to my two daughters – Tiffany (my oldest who immediately
dropped everything in Washington, D.C. to spend time with me during my first
tortuous week in the hospital) and KaLa,
my 13-year-old who was seeing her father suffer like never before.
There’s no pretty way of telling
your kids that “I have cancer and I don’t know what the future holds,” but I
had to find a way through tears and prayers, in hopes that no matter what
happened, they could learn from my experience, and hopefully remember me fondly
through it.
I could not have asked for more
love and support from those two if I had begged for it. They made me such a
proud father, and gave me the strength and courage to hang in there come what
may.
And then there is my wife, Markita,
who has been a rock from the moment we were both told that I had the deadly
disease. I could not, and cannot ask more of her given how much love, time and
effort she has devoted to my welfare from the very beginning of all of this.
From my weakest moments to my very best, she has been my greatest cheerleader,
holding the torch high, and keeping our family together while I concentrated on
dealing with an unspeakable certainty. There can be never any doubt that if
ever the tables were turned, and GOD gave me the strength, I would completely
have the back of my wife and life-partner. I could simply do no less.
My experience at UNC was a very
dark period personally, because I truly didn’t know what I was dealing with or
what the future held. I literally felt like an old rug as I went through long
chemotherapy sessions, was asked thousands of questions, given countless pills
and medications, had to be helped with bathing and bathroom and just plain
walking an even talking. The few times I saw myself in a mirror, I was
horrified as to the ghastly physical change. The chemo had so changed my body
chemistry, I couldn’t eat food because the thrush that had formed in my mouth
and the glandular changes to my taste buds were so stark an dramatic. I was
literally a different, weaker human being.
Lots of things were happening in
the news – the presidential primary elections, the furor over HB2, the
emergence of Donald Trump – and yet I cared about none of it, in fact I didn’t
watch TV or read any news. All I cared about was the welfare of my family and
how long would they keep me in the hospital. And when would someone clearly
explain to me what was happening to me. To their credit, the UNC doctors –
young, bright, knowledgable – were coming in every morning to explain, and let
me know where they thought I should be, but I was having a hard time
understanding any of it because I was going through so, so much. This is where
I have to give the UNC nurses their props. I’ve never seen a such a
well-trained, disciplined group of caring professionals like the UNC nurses and
nursing assistants. Truth be told, beyond my family, with the UNC crew, I would
not have made it. They took over every need that I had, and made me trust them.
It wasn’t long before my initial
four weeks were up, and I was allowed to go home to my family. A bone marrow
biopsy afterwards showed that all of the suffering I experienced was worth it.
There was no sign of my cancer in my marrow. I now had to undergo a series of
comparatively short chemo treatments
until the end of July (three
weeks home/one week in-hospital each month) to ensure that I remain in
remission . My doctors tell me I have 60 percent of a permanent cure if I can
remain cancer-free for five years at least.
And so I eagerly return to work
this week after over three months away. I’m excited to be back, and am most
thankful, and grateful for the prayers, love and support I’ve received from my
friends, colleagues and community. All of the special cards and well-wishes I
received in the mail and through Facebook , you have no idea how much you
lifted my spirits.
I’m back at work now because once I
felt my physical strength and clarity of purpose return, plus I had mentality
and spiritually embraced this new challenge in a life full of them for me, I
realized that having too much time on my hands without something to do with it
was a dangerous thing. Though I will be on limited duty for a while, as long as
my brain and heart still work, I believe I can still be of some service to you,
our readers.
Again, I thank my family, the
medical staffs that worked on me, my publishers and colleagues, supportive
friends, and certainly my Lord and Savior to getting me through this latest
challenge, and preparing me for the next.
Cash in
the Apple - honored as the Best Column Writing of 2006 by the National
Newspaper Publishers Association. Columnist Cash Michaels was also honored by
the NNPA for Best Feature Story Journalist of 2009, and was the recipient of
the Raleigh-Apex NAACP’s President’s Award for Media Excellence in Sept. 2011.
Until next week, keep a smile on your
face, GOD in your heart, and The Carolinian in your life. Bye, bye.
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US HIGH COURT “ALL-WHITE
JURIES”
DECISION AFFECTS N.C.
By Cash Michaels
Contributing writer
A decisive
US Supreme Court ruling last week regarding the unconstitutional elimination of
black jurors by Georgia prosecutors from a capital case over 30 years ago has
clear implications for numerous cases currently being considered in the North
Carolina court system, say legal experts.
By a 7-1
decision (the dissenting vote coming from the High Court’s only black jurist,
Associate Justice Clarence Thomas), the Supreme Court determined in the case of
Timothy Tyrone Foster, a black defendant convicted by an all-white jury of
killing a white woman, that prosecutors’ notes confirmed four prospective black
jurors were deliberately kept off to ensure a conviction. Subsequent Georgia
courts would not rule that this was racially motivated despite the written
evidence.
Several recent North Carolina cases have shown
similar prosecutors’ notes in capital cases involving black defendants to
produce all-white juries , and observers believe the High Court ruling now
strengthens arguments for those defendants seeking new trials, if not having
their sentences commuted because of proven prosecutorial racial bias.
“In North Carolina, there has been a long
and sordid history of racial discrimination in the selection of jurors,” says
attorney Irving Joyner, law professor at North Carolina Central University
School of Law in Durham and chairman of the NC NAACP Legal Redress Committee.
“This discrimination has negatively impacted a large number of African American
defendants. The use of this discriminatory practice has been deeply
engrained within the prosecutorial culture and has ruled the jury selection
process. In the Foster decision, the U.S. Supreme Court loudly proclaimed
that this practice violates the constitution and must cease. The sad thing is
that Timothy Tyrone Foster spent 30 years in a Georgia prison before he
could establish that this discrimination likely impacted the outcome of his
trial.”
According
to Ken Rose, senior attorney at The Center for Death Penalty Litigation in
Durham, “Lawyers
who specialize in the death penalty say the ruling will give many
death-sentenced men and women new rights to bring forward evidence of racial
discrimination in jury selection at their own trials. Such evidence is usually
barred if it is not introduced during the initial trial.”
Attorney Rose continued, “The ruling will also compel North
Carolina courts to more vigorously enforce laws that prohibit race
discrimination in jury selection. The N.C. Supreme Court has heard more than
100 cases where prosecutors were accused of intentionally striking minority
jurors, but it has never found a prosecutor’s explanation for
striking a black juror to be a cover for race discrimination, despite compelling evidence
that the practice of excluding black jurors is prevalent.”
In
Georgia’s Foster case, prosecutors’ notes showed the letter “B” written next to
the four black prospective jurors’ names to ensure that they would be dismissed
during uncontested preemptory challenges.
In
North Carolina, there has been much worse.
In
Cumberland County, prosecutors wrote “blk wino” and “blk high drug
neighborhood” next to the names of some prospective jurors in one case.
In a Forsyth County case, all of the prospective
black jurors were kicked off a jury except one who had indicated he had
attended a “multi-racial church” and
went to “predominately white schools.”
In fact, ten pardons of innocence
were granted by then NC Gov. Beverly Perdue in December 2012 in the infamous Wilmington
Ten case because, similar to the Georgia injustice, prosecutors’ notes
ultimately revealed that several black jurors were purposely kept off the Ten’s
1972 jury.
These and many other examples of North
Carolina violations were cited in legal briefs contained in written arguments
used in the Foster case.
Both attorneys Rose and Joyner say last
week’s High Court decision strengthened the reason why North Carolina once
instituted the 2009 Racial Justice Act, a law which ferreted out racial bias
during jury selection in capital cases until the Republican-led NC General
Assembly repealed it in 2013.
“When these
practices have been challenged in the North Carolina Supreme Court, our
justices have refused to overturn these suspect convictions,” says Prof.
Joyner. “The Foster decision should now encourage attorneys in this state
to aggressively challenge prosecutors who discriminate against racial
minorities during jury selection and hopefully will result in our courts
becoming more respectful of the rights of racial minorities to serve on
juries.
Joyner added, “It
is also revolting that the only dissenting vote cast in the Foster case
belonged to [Justice] Clarence Thomas who felt that this decision will
encourage other people who were victims of this type discrimination to now
challenge their convictions.”
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NCNAACP APPEALS
FEDERAL VOTER ID RULING
By Cash Michaels
Contributing writer
The NCNAACP
and other plaintiffs have appealed to the US Court of Appeals for the Fourth
Circuit to stay a federal judge’s April 25 ruling dismissing their lawsuit
against Gov. McCrory and the NC General Assembly for their passage of the 2013
voter ID law, until all appeals have been exhausted.
A copy of
the appeal was obtained last week. Along with the NCNAACP, the League of Women
Voters of North Carolina, and Louis M. Duke are also listed as plaintiffs on
the case.
According
to the appeal, the stay “…would keep in place this Court’s prior injunction
forbidding Defendants from eliminating
same-day registration and refusing to
count out-of-precinct provisional ballots” in addition to keeping in place the
portion of the law that reduced the early voting period by a week.
The stay,
however, if granted, would not apply to the court’s April 25th decision
to allow voter photo identification.
“With
respect to photo ID, while Plaintiffs believe they have a likelihood of success
on the merits on this claim and that voters will be irreparably harmed if the
photo ID requirement is in effect in the November 2016 presidential election, plaintiffs
believe that if and when they prevail on the photo ID claim, implementation of
the Court’s order will be straightforward and simple: the requirement will
simply fall away and voters will no longer be asked to show photo ID at the
polls in order to vote, the NCNAACP appeal states.
Plaintiffs
also say they believe “they have a likelihood of success in the Court
reinstituting voter preregistration for 16 and 17 year-olds,” and thus, are not
asking the appellate court to grant an injunction of the judge’s order striking
that program as part of the voter ID law.
Same-day registration and counting
out-of-precinct provisional balloting will be in force now through June 4th
during the early voting period for the June 7th congressional and NC
Supreme Court primaries next week.
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COMMUNITY LEERY OF
NCGOP
$500.00 BLACK TUITION
OFFER
by Cash Michaels
editor
To
Republican Sen. Tom Apodaca [Hendersonville], his Senate Bill 873, also known
as the “Access to Affordable College Education Act” is the perfect prescription
for allowing worthy in-state students, beginning in the fall of 2018, to be enrolled
in five UNC System universities at a reduced $500.00 per semester.
N.C. A
& T University and North Carolina Central University would get special
state-supported merit scholarships to attract the brightest students, Apodaca adds.
To the
members of the NC Legislative Black Caucus, NC NAACP, and especially alums of
beloved smaller institutions like Winston-Salem State University, Elizabeth
City State University, Fayetteville State University, UNC – Pembroke and
Western Carolina University, Apodaca’s
bill is just another sneaky way Republican lawmakers are trying to either close
UNC schools with legacies of serving primarily communities of color, or at
least rewrite those legacies, and with them, their histories and traditions.
Apodaca
is an alum of predominantly-white Western Carolina University. The Charlotte Observer charged that WCU
“…is thrown in to disguise the bill’s racist intentions.”
“Sounds
good on the surface,” wrote State Senate Minority Leader Dan Blue [D-Wake] on his May 15th Facebook
page. “But read the fine print to realize that there are provisions in this
bill that target HBCUs, with the Legislature tasked with evaluating an
institution’s diversity standards.
Opponents
point to language in SB873 calling for “a study of the impact of each
university’s name on the institution’s academic strength, enrollment and
diversity.”
The bill would effectively legislate a
name change for most of the UNC system’s HCBUs unless they can attract a more
racially mixed student body,” charged Blue
NC, a progressive website. “GOP members of the legislature aren't looking
to improve academics or diversity in the UNC system, nor are they interested in
making college more affordable for students. They view the HCBUs as a political
threat - they are institutions that have historically played a large part in civil
rights actions, such as the lunch counter sit-ins of the sixties, and where
awareness of minority issues are a key part of their contribution today.”
If not closed, opponents of SB 873
see at least the three small black schools being turned into community
colleges.
The
Charlotte Observer called Apodaca’s bill “a wolf in sheep’s clothing.”
Many UNC System
HBCU supporters say there’s no way any of the HBCUs will be able to grow or
sustain with a severely reduced tuition base. Without revenue from other
reliable sources, like research grants, those schools will find themselves on
the constant brink of closing.
“This legislation would essentially convert the minority
campuses into inexpensive magnet schools for privileged and racial majority
populations, with the net effect of displacing African American and Native
American students, thereby fundamentally altering the traditional mission of
the four named minority schools,” stated a letter from the UNC Faculty Assembly
to UNC System President Margaret Spellings and several state lawmakers.
“We need to make sure we write, we call and
we email,” Patti Sanders Smith, president of the HBCU Coalition of Pitt County,
was quoted by The Daily Reflector
telling those attending a recent meeting last week.
“We don’t know when this bill is going to pass,” the WSSU alumna added.
You know how [state lawmakers] are; they like to pass stuff in the middle of
the night.”
So it was no surprise that opposing groups organized quickly, holding a
press conference at the state Legislature and rallying at the Halifax Mall in
Raleigh Wednesday to denounce the measure.
"This bill is classic underdevelopment. Once
again the extremists use a false label to cover up the truth. This bill is not
about making college more affordable," said Rev. Dr. William J. Barber II,
NC NAACP president. "Instead it is an attack on HBCUs and minority
universities that will drain millions of dollars from them with no replacement
revenue. Like the extremists' voucher and voter suppression schemes, this is
just another scheme to further the extremist agenda."
“This bill attacks
people of color directly,” Rev. Barber added. “The goal is clear. Disperse
these centers of cultural, intellectual and political power for our small --
but rapidly growing --leadership cadre. Disrupt the mission of HBCU's by
bankrupting them.”
Last week, the Senate Legislative Education and Appropriations committees
signed off on the proposed bill, but not before certain changes were made, like
the removal of the diversity provision that could change an institution’s name.
Sen. Apodaca reportedly “promised” during the education committee
hearing that the UNC System budget would see an extra $70 million -$80 million
to make up for the expected tuition shortfall.
He also stated that, “We have no desire to close any of our universities
in our system.”
Still, there are those who don’t trust Apodaca, and are leery of the
fact that this Legislature cannot not make promises that future NC General
Assemblies have to keep.
The NC Legislative Black Caucus went on record May 26th
opposing SB873, saying in a press release, “[NCLBC] members have heard many
concerns of residents from across the state… . We will strongly oppose the
closing of any HBCUs in the UNC System or any legislation which dilutes the
rich cultural experiences at these important institutions.”
The NCLBC statement continued, “We support the full and sustainable
funding of our HBCUs, remain skeptical, but willing to engage in discussion.”
Saying that he was getting a lot of concerned calls about the
measure, state Sen. Paul Lowe
Jr. [D – Winston-Salem] proposed that the $500.00 tuition feature of Apodaca’s
bill be tried out as a pilot program first, but the Hendersonville Republican
refused.
“I have a lot of apprehension about this bill,” Sen. Lowe replied. “It
has a lot of moving parts that make me uneasy at this point.”
Reportedly, Sen. Blue has already had discussions with key Senate and
House leaders about further changes needed for the bill to be acceptable to
Democrats, in addition to conversations with UNC President Spellings and
several UNC chancellors.
Some of those chancellors are expected to render their thoughts thi week
The overall bill, if passed, would guarantee no tuition hike for any
student attending a UNC System school if they finish in four years. It would
also lower tuition to $2500.00 for all out-of-state students at the five
designated schools.
-30-
*(PLEASE BOX WITH MAIN
STORY)*
BLACK SCHOOLS REMOVED FROM
$500 TUITION SENATE
BILL
The sponsor of the controversial
Senate bill 873 that would reduce college tuition to $500.00-per-semester at
five small UNC universities, removed Elizabeth City State University,
Fayetteville State University and Winston-Salem State University from that
list, leaving UNC – Pembroke and Western Carolina University. Critics, led by
the NC Legislative Black Caucus, the NC NAACP, and alums and students of HBCUs, blasted the bill’s sponsor, Sen. Tom Apodaca [R-
Hendersonville], for allegedly trying a “backdoor” way of closing the schools,
or at least turning them into community colleges. Apodaca denied the charge, saying that he
only wanted to increase enrollment at the UNC schools.
-30
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