Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ category

Book Signing at Jefferson High School Adult School

November 30th, 2011

I will be doing a Book Presentation/Signing at Jefferson High School Adult School on Thursday, December 1, 2011 at 8:00 p.m. Address: 1319 E. 41st Street, Los Angeles, CA 90011

Is the Occupy Movement Ethnically Diverse?

November 27th, 2011

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Why African Americans aren’t embracing Occupy Wall Street

By Stacey Patton, Published: November 25

Occupy Wall Street might seem like a movement that would resonate with black Americans. After all, unemployment among African Americans is at 15 percent, vs. almost 8 percent for whites. And between 2005 and 2009, black households lost just over half of their median net worth compared with white families, who lost 16 percent, according to the Pew Research Center.

However, these numbers have not translated into action. A few prominent African Americans, such as Cornel WestRussell SimmonsKanye West and Rep. John Lewis (D-Ga.), have made appearances at Occupy protests. “Occupy the Hood,” a recent offshoot, has tried to get more people of color involved. But the main movement remains overwhelmingly white: A Fast Company survey last month found that African Americans, who are 12.6 percent of the U.S. population, make up only 1.6 percent of Occupy Wall Street.

African Americans share white Americans’ anger about corporate greed and corruption, and blacks have a rich history of protesting injustice in United States. So why aren’t they Occupying?

“Occupy Wall Street was started by whites and is about their concern with their plight,” Nathalie Thandiwe, a radio host and producer for WBAI in New York, said in an interview. “Now that capitalism isn’t working for ‘everybody,’ some are protesting.”

From America’s birthing pains to the civil rights protests of the 1960s, blacks have never been afraid to fight for economic or social justice. Crispus Attucks, a former slave and the first person killed by British soldiers in the Boston Massacre of 1770, is considered the first martyr of the American Revolution. Frederick Douglass, a slave turned abolitionist, stressed in the 19th century that black and white laborers’ fortunes and freedom were intertwined, saying that white labor “was robbed” of fair wages so long as it competed with unpaid black slaves.

In 1969, James Forman, former executive secretary of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), a civil rights organization, called on blacks to not perpetuate capitalism or contribute to the exploitation of blacks in the United States and elsewhere. He urged black workers to take over America by sabotaging U.S. factories and ports “while the brothers fight guerrilla warfare in the street.” And Huey Newton and the Black Panther Party renounced the American Dream as defective and called for the destruction of the capitalist system.

Blacks have historically suffered the income inequality and job scarcity that the Wall Street protesters are now railing against. Perhaps black America’s absence is sending a message to the Occupiers: “We told you so! Nothing will change. We’ve been here already. It’s hopeless.”

While the black press and civil rights groups such as the NAACP and the National Urban League were critical to past protest movements, black churches were the organizational force behind the rhetoric. Church leaders mobilized famous names and unsung heroes to end segregation through meetings, marches, demonstrations, boycotts and sit-ins. But where is the church now?

Some argue that the black church is losing its relevance, especially among young people who have been turned off by the religious theater of celebrity preachers. Even after lenders were accused of targeting black churches and communities as fertile markets for subprime mortgages, these churches are not joining Occupy protests en masse.

And despite their inclusive mission statements, major civil rights organizations and leaders appear to be selling out black America for corporate money. Beginning in the 1980s, for example, the tobacco and alcohol industries meticulously cultivated relationships with leaders of black communities. Institutions such as the NAACP, the United Negro College Fund and the Congressional Black Caucus have counted those industries as major donors — at the expense of the health of the black community.

More recently, the Congressional Black Caucus and other civil rights groups have received strong financial backing from telecommunications companies such as AT&T and Comcast. These firms support regulations that would be barriers to the goal of universal Internet access, stifling economic opportunity for black communities. We can’t expect our civil rights organizations and political leaders to help blacks rage against the corporate machine when they are part of it.

And what about Jay-Z and other hip-hop stars? For all their influence on American culture, they haven’t tackled big challenges such as poverty, police brutality, voting disenfranchisement and the racist prison complex. Jay-Z hasn’t shown up at any Occupy gatherings, but his clothing company appears to be trying to capitalize on the protest wave. Rocawear is peddling “Occupy All Streets” T-shirts for $22 a pop — with no plans to donate profits to the movement.

Beyond a lack of leaders to inspire them to join the Occupy fold, blacks are not seeing anything new for themselves in the movement. Why should they ally with whites who are just now experiencing the hardships that blacks have known for generations? Perhaps white Americans are now paying the psychic price for not answering the basic questions that blacks have long raised about income inequality.

New Jersey comedian John “Alter Negro” Minus says he won’t participate in the Occupy protests because black people are being besieged by so many social injustices, he can’t get behind targeting just the 1 percent.

Banks’ bad behavior “just gets lost in the sauce, so to speak,” Minus said. “High joblessness and social disenfranchisement is new to most of the Wall Street protesters. It’s been a fact of life for African Americans since the beginning. I actually think black people are better served by staying out of the protests. Civil disobedience will only further the public perception that black people like to cause trouble.”

Is there a chance that the movement can become more diverse? Leslie Wilson, a professor of African American history at Montclair State University, is not optimistic.

“Occupy Wall Street cannot produce enough change to encourage certain types of black participation,” Wilson said in an interview. “The church cannot get enough blacks out on the streets. Some students will go, but not the masses. Black folks, particularly older ones, do not think that this is going to lead to change. . . . This generation has already been beaten down and is hurting. They are not willing to risk what little they have for change. Those who are wealthier are not willing to risk and lose.”

Black America’s fight for income equality is not on Wall Street, but is a matter of day-to-day survival. The more pressing battles are against tenant evictions, police brutality and street crime. This group doesn’t see a reason to join the amorphous Occupiers.

But if the Occupy movement does not grow in solidarity with other constituencies of exploited and oppressed people, and if black America does not devise new leadership strategies to deal with today’s problems, the truth of Frederick Douglass’s wisdom will hold — the powerful undertow of race and class in America will keep both blacks and whites from being free.

staceyppatton@yahoo.com

The New York Times – The Income Gap Grows in the United States

November 16th, 2011

November 15, 2011

Middle-Class Areas Shrink as Income Gap Grows, New Report Finds
By SABRINA TAVERNISE
WASHINGTON — The portion of American families living in middle-income neighborhoods has declined significantly since 1970, according to a new study, as rising income inequality left a growing share of families in neighborhoods that are mostly low-income or mostly affluent.

The study, conducted by Stanford University and scheduled for release on Wednesday by the Russell Sage Foundation and Brown University, uses census data to examine family income at the neighborhood level in the country’s 117 biggest metropolitan areas.

The findings show a changed map of prosperity in the United States over the past four decades, with larger patches of affluence and poverty and a shrinking middle.

In 2007, the last year captured by the data, 44 percent of families lived in neighborhoods the study defined as middle-income, down from 65 percent of families in 1970. At the same time, a third of American families lived in areas of either affluence or poverty, up from just 15 percent of families in 1970.

The study comes at a time of growing concern about inequality and an ever-louder partisan debate over whether it matters. It raises, but does not answer, the question of whether increased economic inequality, and the resulting income segregation, impedes social mobility.

Much of the shift is the result of changing income structure in the United States. Part of the country’s middle class has slipped to the lower rungs of the income ladder as manufacturing and other middle-class jobs have dwindled, while the wealthy receive a bigger portion of the income pie. Put simply, there are fewer people in the middle.

But the shift is more than just changes in income. The study also found that there is more residential sorting by income, with the rich flocking together in new exurbs and gentrifying pockets where lower- and middle-income families cannot afford to live.

The study — part of US2010, a research project financed by Russell Sage and Brown University — identified the pattern in about 90 percent of large and medium-size metropolitan areas for 2000 to 2007. Detroit; Oklahoma City; Toledo, Ohio; and Greensboro, N.C., experienced the biggest rises in income segregation in the decade, while 13 areas, including Atlanta, had declines. Philadelphia and its suburbs registered the sharpest rise since 1970.

Sean F. Reardon, an author of the study and a sociologist at Stanford, argued that the shifts had far-reaching implications for the next generation. Children in mostly poor neighborhoods tend to have less access to high-quality schools, child care and preschool, as well as to support networks or educated and economically stable neighbors who might serve as role models.

The isolation of the prosperous, he said, means less interaction with people from other income groups and a greater risk to their support for policies and investments that benefit the broader public — like schools, parks and public transportation systems. About 14 percent of families lived in affluent neighborhoods in 2007, up from 7 percent in 1970, the study found.

The study groups neighborhoods into six income categories. Poor neighborhoods have median family incomes that are 67 percent or less of those of a given metropolitan area. Rich neighborhoods have median incomes of 150 percent or more. Middle-income neighborhoods are those in which the median income is between 80 percent and 125 percent.

The map of that change for Philadelphia is a red stripe of wealthy suburbs curving around a poor, blue urban center, broken by a few red dots of gentrification. It is the picture of the economic change that slammed into Philadelphia decades ago as its industrial base declined and left a shrunken middle class and a poorer urban core.

The Germantown neighborhood, once solidly middle class, is now mostly low income. Chelten Avenue, one of its main thoroughfares, is a hard-luck strip of check-cashing stores and takeout restaurants. The stone homes on side streets speak to a more affluent past, one that William Wilson, 95, a longtime resident, remembers fondly.

“It was real nice,” he said, shuffling along Chelten Avenue on Monday. Theaters thrived on the avenue, he said, as did a fancy department store. Now a Walgreens stands in its place. “Everything started going down in the dumps,” he said.

Philadelphia’s more recent history is one of gentrifying neighborhoods, like the Northern Liberties area, where affluence has rushed in, in the form of espresso shops, glass-walled apartments and a fancy supermarket, and prosperous new suburbs that have mushroomed in the far north and south of the metro area.

Lawrence Katz, an economist at Harvard, said the evidence for the presumed adverse effects of economic segregation was inconclusive. In a recent study of low-income families randomly assigned the opportunity to move out of concentrated poverty into mixed-income neighborhoods, Professor Katz and his collaborators found large improvements in physical and mental health, but little change in the families’ economic and educational fortunes.

But there is evidence that income differences are having an effect, beyond the context of neighborhood. One example, Professor Reardon said, is a growing gap in standardized test scores between rich and poor children, now 40 percent bigger than it was in 1970. That is double the testing gap between black and white children, he said.

And the gap between rich and poor in college completion — one of the single most important predictors of economic success — has grown by more than 50 percent since the 1990s, said Martha J. Bailey, an economist at the University of Michigan. More than half of children from high-income families finish college, up from about a third 20 years ago. Fewer than 10 percent of low-income children finish, up from 5 percent.

William Julius Wilson, a sociologist at Harvard who has seen the study, argues that “rising inequality is beginning to produce a two-tiered society in America in which the more affluent citizens live lives fundamentally different from the middle- and lower-income groups. This divide decreases a sense of community.”

Pasadena Star-News

November 9th, 2011

Pasadena-Star News newspaper link:

http://www.pasadenastarnews.com/ci_19294276

Pasadena residents crowd PUSD chamber to demand equal treatment
Posted: 11/08/2011 09:29:01 PM PST
Pasadena Journal editor Joe Hopkins waits to speak to the Pasadena Unified School District board meeting Tuesday night, November 8, 2011 to ask what is being done for black students. Hopkins says there is a racial discrimination by having programs to close the achievement gap for latinos but not for black students. (SGVN/Staff Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz/SXCITY)
Photo gallery: PUSD March for equal treatment

PASADENA – President of the Pasadena-branch NAACP Joe Brown blasted Pasadena Unified School District officials Tuesday characterizing the district as a “pipeline” to prison.

“Black males are … disproportionately disciplined within this district,” Brown wrote in prepared remarks. “Suspension and expulsion rates are linked to incarceration rates. Couple their discipline records with their literacy rates and we have created a veritable school-to-prison pipeline for our black sons here at PUSD.”

Brown’s comments came during a rally by dozens of black Education Get the scoop on schools, teachers and students.

Nearly 200 residents Tuesday night crowded PUSD headquarters as part of a promised 100-man march on the district led by local attorney and newspaper publisher Joe Hopkins.

The purpose of the march was to air grievances against three members of the PUSD board Hopkins accused of promoting Latino issues at the expense of black students, as well as alleged meddling and micromanaging by Pasadena Unified School District school board members.

Hopkins touted the march for more than a week in his paper, the Pasadena Journal and on its website.

In his editorials, Hopkins equated the march with the grass-roots efforts led during the Civil Rights Movement.



Hopkins and many of the parents assembled challenged whether board members favored student achievement over politics.

“This board fails week after week to come together on issues that concern our students,” Hopkins said. “Instead we have three members who are busy micromanaging the various schools in the district, flexing their muscle and terrorizing principals instead of carrying out their mandate to make policy that keeps all of our kids on the path to success.”

Hopkins pointed much of his wrath at the board minority composed of members Ramon Miramontes, Scott Phelps and Kim Kenne.

Offering a prepared speech to reporters prior to addressing the board, Hopkins questioned ongoing PUSD programs geared toward Latino students. He said similar programs are not in place to help black students.

“The district has a policy that guarantees there are special programs for Latino students to bring their scores up,” Hopkins said.

“This march is to ask what is being done for black students at the Pasadena Unified School District,” Hopkins said. “We challenge the district to do the right thing as it relates to black students.”

Miramontes declined to comment.

“I’ve got nothing to say,” Miramontes said.

While the board minority didn’t fire back during Tuesday night’s meeting, Phelps counter-punched during a break in proceedings.

“I just hope what Hopkins had to say leads to something good,” Phelps said.

In an emailed statement issued Tuesday night Randy Ertll, head of El Centro De Accion Social agreed the PUSD board needs to address the needs of all students in the district.

“African American and Latino community members and leaders need to come together to discuss how the achievement gap for African American and Latino students need to be addressed immediately with a simple, straightforward, plan that can be effectively implemented across PUSD schools,” Ertll said.

Ertil said the board should directly address some key questions: “How are Title I funds being used? are they equitably distributed to help our most needy students?

“We need to come together – in a civil and constructive manner. Not destructive. We need to build up PUSD – together as one community.”

In an op-ed published Sunday in the Valley Sun, Phelps lauded the board minority’s efforts to keep budget cuts as far away from the classroom as possible, their fight to keep Norma Coombs Alternative and Jackson Elementary schools open and the creation of a dropout task force.

Former Muir High School student Marisol Salcedo, 23, a student at PCC, said she was saddened by divisions in the community.

“It looks like we’re divided,” Salcedo said. “It’s sad to see when I drive by John Muir High School police cars are there when instead they should be at Victory Park asking kids why the aren’t at school.”

In her remarks to the board Salcedo defended the district’s focus on Latino students.

It starts with parent involvement,” she said.

In recent days, Hopkins has also questioned Miramontes’ comments and involvement in the criminal investigation of John Muir High School football coach Ken Howard.

Howard was involved in a physical altercation with a student on Sept. 28.

The scuffle led to Howard’s indefinite suspension from his coaching duties and misdemeanor battery charges. Hopkins is Howard’s attorney.

Staff writer Brian Charles contributed to this story.

brian.charles@sgvn.com
626-962-8811, ext. 4494
Twitter.com/JBrianCharles

Guatemala Elects New President

November 7th, 2011

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR reports:

By Mike Allison, Guest blogger / November 7, 2011

Patriotic Party presidential candidate Otto Pérez Molina (left) and vice president candidate Roxana Baldetti celebrate their victory in Guatemala City on Monday. Mr. Pérez Molina won 55 percent of the vote, topping Manuel Baldizon, of the Democratic Freedom Revival party, who had 45 percent with 96 percent of the vote counted Sunday night, according to Guatemala’s Supreme Electoral Tribunal.


On Sunday, just over 50 percent of registered voters turned out to help former general Otto Pérez Molina of the Patriotic Party (PP) defeat Manuel Baldizón of the Renewed, Democratic, Liberty (LIDER), 54 percent to 46 percent with 98 percent of the vote counted.

This year’s election campaign was marred by violence (over 30 candidates and campaign-workers killed), the utter disregard of electoral laws (campaign spending and donor transparency, a failure to abide by the official start date) except when it suited them (Sandra Torres’ disqualification), outlandish proposals (Mr. Baldizón’s promise to lead Guatemala to the World Cup), and a one size fits all mano dura solution to crime and insecurity in Guatemala.

The president-elect does in fact confront a difficult situation (El Nuevo Herald, Telesur, NYT). Over 50 percent of the population lives in poverty. The percentage of the population living in poverty is much greater in the countryside and among the indigenous. Even though Honduras and El Salvador are now much more violent, statistically speaking, Guatemala remains one of the most violent countries in the world, especially for women. The country’s economy is expected to grow by less than 3 percent this year which is among the region’s lowest and that was before the most recent storm damaged infrastructure and crops.

Think you know Latin America? Test your geography knowledge.

On the other hand, President-elect Pérez Molina probably has more going for him than President Alvaro Colom did upon taking office. First, while the country’s murder rate remains alarmingly high, it is on a downwards trend. Guatemala is on pace to record 4,000-4,500 murders in 2011, down from 6,451 in 2009 and 5,960 in 2010.

Mr. Colom added about 6,000 police officers during his term. However, after removing over 2,000 or so corrupt police officers, it’s only a net of 4,000. To fulfill his promise of putting 10,000 more police on the streets and reaching 35,000, Pérez Molina will probably need to add 15,000 while continuing to remove those officers who are corrupt or are abusing their power (~5,000). Increasing the number of police should go a long way towards Pérez Molina’s goal of lowering the country’s murder rate by half during his four-year term.

Second, Pérez Molina has Claudia Paz y Paz and Helen Mack. Ms. Paz y Paz was appointed by President Colom as the country’s first female attorney general and Ms. Mack as police reform commissioner. Even though some Guatemalan elites have tried to sabotage their efforts to reform the judicial system and police force, from all indications they have done an exceptional job. While not completely eradicated, extrajudicial killings carried out by the police and security forces appear to have declined significantly.

President-elect Otto Pérez Molina inherits poverty, crime issues in Guatemala (video)
Guatemala has also made important steps to address its past. President Colom apologized on behalf of the Guatemalan state to former President Jacobo Arbenz’s family for its complicity in the 1954 CIA-led coup that removed him from office. Among other things, the state has promised to more accurately depict Arbenz’ accomplishments and faults in schools.

Four former military officials have also been sentenced to over 6,000 years in prison for one of the worst civil war massacres, the killing of over 200 men, women, and children at Dos Erres in December 1982. Authorities also arrested several high-ranking officials, including former General Hector Mario Lopez Fuentes, former intelligence chief José Mauricio Rodríguez, and former general and de facto president Oscar Mejia, for their responsibility in the execution of the government’s 1980s scorched earth program.

Finally, the International Commission Against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG) has had its mandate extended until 2013. While not perfect, CICIG and its commissioner, Francisco Dall’Anese, have taken important steps to provide the Guatemalan people and its institutions with the tools necessary to tackle impunity.

While these are some areas where Pérez Molina can continue the work of Colom, he also has to do more than Colom did to reform the country’s tax base, to promote transparency and the institutionalization of the government’s social programs, to tackle land inequality and respect for indigenous rights, and to provide long-term human security to the people of the Petén, Alta Verapaz, and the rest of Guatemala.

— Mike Allison is an associate professor in the Political Science Department and a member of the Latin American and Women’s Studies Department at the University of Scranton in Pennsylvania. You can follow his Central American Politics blog here.

Should Herman Cain quit while he is ahead?

October 31st, 2011
The Christian Science Monitor – CSMonitor.com

Herman Cain: To sexual harassment allegations, add financial ones

Possible campaign-finance impropriety simmers alongside a report of sexual harassment allegations dating from the 1990s. ‘I have never sexually harassed anyone,’ Herman Cain insisted. But he also gave new information about a settlement with one of the women.

Temp Headline Image
Republican presidential candidate, Herman Cain speaks at the National Press Club in Washington, Monday. Denying he sexually harassed anyone, Cain said Monday he was falsely accused in the 1990s while he was head of the National Restaurant Association, and called the story a ‘witch hunt.’
(Pablo Martinez Monsivais/AP)


By Linda Feldmann, Staff writer
posted October 31, 2011 at 7:16 pm EDT

WashingtonHerman Cain should know that his presidential campaign is in trouble when one brewing scandal is stealing attention from another one.

Most headlines are focused on the sexual harassment allegations that came to light Sunday in a report on Politico.com. Mr. Cain, leading for now in national and many statewide polls for the Republican presidential nomination, was alleged to have sexually harassed two former employees when he ran the National Restaurant Association in the 1990s. The group paid settlements to two women, Politico reported, citing multiple sources. Politico did not reveal the names of the women, in keeping with the terms off their settlements.

In public appearances Monday, Cain said he was “falsely accused,” and called the story a “witch hunt.” He also said he was unaware of any settlement, a point he reversed later in the day.

Election 101: Basics about Herman Cain 

But perhaps just as damaging to Cain is a report in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, also published Sunday, which asserts that two of his top campaign aides ran a private nonprofit group that may have improperly helped get Cain’s campaign started.

One of the aides at the heart of this inquiry is Mark Block, a Wisconsinite now famous for a Cain campaign Web ad in which he smokes a cigarette. Mr. Block and the campaign’s deputy chief of staff, Linda Hansen, founded the Wisconsin-based group Prosperity USA, now at the center of questions over whether it improperly paid for some early Cain campaign expenses.

The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel obtained internal financial documents showing that the Cain campaign owed Prosperity USA $37,372, mostly for travel expenses but also for the purchase of iPads. It wasn’t clear if the money had been reimbursed; such expenditures might be a violation of federal law, the paper said.

Block told the Washington Post in an e-mail Monday that the campaign has asked “outside counsel to investigate the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel’s suggestions and may comment, if appropriate, when that review is completed.”

In addition, Block was the subject of a Huffington Post piece published Friday that reported he was banned from running Wisconsin political campaigns for three years in the early 2000s after he was accused of illegally coordinating a state Supreme Court justice’s reelection campaign with a special-interest group that favored school vouchers.

Still, nothing grabs the public’s attention like a sex scandal. And Cain spent all day Monday trying to tamp down the explosive Politico article. Speaking at a National Press Club luncheon, Cain acknowledged that he had been accused of sexual harassment while working at the National Restaurant Association, but asserted he had been “falsely accused.”

“In all of my over 40 years of business experience … I have never sexually harassed anyone,” Cain said.

He continued: “When the charges were brought, as the leader of the [restaurant association], I recused myself and allowed my general counsel and my human resource officer to deal with the situation. And it was concluded after a thorough investigation that it had no basis.”

Cain said he was not aware of any settlements having been paid. But if there were, he added, “I hope it wasn’t for much.”

Later in the day, a report on a Cain interview with Greta van Susteren of Fox News – to be aired at 10 p.m. Eastern time Monday – showed that Cain did in fact remember a settlement.

Speaking of one woman who received a settlement, Cain said this, according to Byron York of the Washington Examiner: “My general counsel said this started out where she and her lawyer were demanding a huge financial settlement…. I don’t remember a number…. But then he said because there was no basis for this, we ended up settling for what would have been a termination settlement.”

When Cain was asked how much money that was, he said, “Maybe three months’ salary. I don’t remember. It might have been two months. I do remember my general counsel saying we didn’t pay all of the money they demanded.”

Cain also offered one recollection of something he had done that was in the sexual harassment charge of one woman: “She was in my office one day, and I made a gesture saying – and I was standing close to her – and I made a gesture saying you are the same height as my wife. And I brought my hand up to my chin saying, ‘My wife comes up to my chin.’

“And that was put in there [the complaint] as something that made her uncomfortable,” Cain said, “something that was in the sexual harassment charge.”

Cain’s evolving story, over the course of the day, raises questions about his – and his campaign’s – communications skills. The Cain campaign had more than a week’s advance warning that Politico was working on the story, and thus Cain had plenty of time to get his story straight. But clearly it’s still a work in progress.

 

Washington Post

October 24th, 2011

El Salvador to ask US gov’t to extend status allowing Salvadorans in US illegally to stay

By Associated Press, Published: October 21

SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador — El Salvador’s president says he will ask Washington to halt deportations of Salvadorans and extend a program that allows those who are in the U.S. illegally to stay.

President Mauricio Funes says he wants to be sure El Salvador’s “temporary protected status” doesn’t expire in March. 

That U.S. program benefits foreigners whose return to their home country may be dangerous because of a natural disaster or other reasons.

Funes said Friday that 10 days of heavy rains have destroyed crops and towns in El Salvador while killing 32 people. The storms have killed 105 across Central America.

The U.S. granted El Salvador temporary protected status in 2001 after earthquakes devastated the nation. It has been extended since.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

 

 

El Centro de Accion Social – Annual Fundraiser

October 12th, 2011

EL CENTRO DE ACCION SOCIAL, INC. – PASADENA

Honoring
 
Sue Mossman
Executive Director of Pasadena Heritage
 
Mauricio Cienfuegos
Former Major League Soccer Galaxy team player
and current coach of the Galaxy Youth Academy
 
Eddie Newman
Retired Principal of John Muir High School
and Pasadena Unified School District Administrator
 
Becky & Reyes Retana
Volunteers for St. Andrews Church and
Leaders of the Mutualistas
 
 
 
 
Thursday, October 13, 2011
6:00 p.m.-reception
7:00 p.m.-dinner
 
 
The Westin Pasadena Hotel
191 North Los Robles, Pasadena, CA 91101
 
 
KEYNOTE SPEAKER  David Hayes-Bautista
Professor of Medicine and Director of the Center for the
Study of Latino Health and Culture at the School of Medicine, UCLA
 
 
MASTER OF CEREMONIES  Salvador Duran
Univision Network West Coast Correspondent
 
For more information call 626-792-3148      end_of_the_skype_highlighting
You can purchase tickets online: www.elcentropasadena.org
Or make check payable to El Centro de Accion Social.
Tax ID # 51-0192257
 
 
 
 
El Centro de Acción Social
Is dedicated to providing opportunities for low-income individuals and families to become self-sufficient and to provide culturally sensitive programs to those in need of services, especially to Spanish-language speakers of Pasadena and the San Gabriel Valley area.
 
Proceeds from “Creating Opportunities” will benefit these programs including the Youth Education Programs, the El Centro Senior Citizen Program, and Summer School in the Park.
 
 
 
Creating Opportunities
Mariana Robles-Dalany, Event Co-chairs
Priscila Leon-Didion, Event Co-chairs
 
Honorary Dinner Committee
Co-Chairs
Congressman Adam Schiff, 29th Congressional District
Mayor Bill Bogaard, City of Pasadena
Vice Mayor Margaret McAustin, City of Pasadena
Jacque Robinson, City Councilmember, District 1 (Pasadena)
Chris Holden, City Councilmember, District 3 (Pasadena)
Steve Madison, City Councilmember, District 6 (Pasadena)
Kim Kenne, PUSD School Board Member
Mark W. Rocha, Superintendent of Pasadena City College
Renatta Cooper, PUSD School Board President
Ed Honowitz, PUSD School Board Vice-President
Ramon Miramontes, PUSD School Board Member
Scott Phelps, PUSD School Board Member
Elizabeth Pomeroy, PUSD School Board Member
 +
Dinner Committee
Joe Brown, NAACP Pasadena Branch President
Dr. Barbara Goldstein
Paul Little, President & CEO of Pasadena Chamber of Commerce
Kristi G. Lopez, Field Representative for Assembly Member Anthony Portantino, 44th Assembly District
Fernando de Necochea, Southern California Edison
Yuny Parada, Pasadena Latino Forum (PLF)
Angelica Salas, executive director of CHIRLA
Phillip L. Sanchez, Pasadena Chief of Police
Calvin E. Wells, Pasadena Fire Department Chief
 
El Centro’s Board of Directors
Mariana Robles-Dalany, President
Dave Cardenas, Vice President
Robert Monzon, Treasurer
Priscila Leon-Didion
Maria Betancourt
Rosa Gonzalez
Dr. Richard Gordon
Randy Jurado Ertll, executive director
 
 
WWW.ELCENTROPASADENA.ORG

Violence in El Salvador Continues

October 9th, 2011
The Christian Science Monitor – CSMonitor.com

Latin America Blog

As gang violence hits El Salvador, a new wave of disappearances

El Salvador is experiencing disappearances linked to the gang violence hitting the country, mostly of young people and teens, with a frequency not seen since the country’s civil war, which ended almost 20 years ago.


By Hannah StoneGuest blogger
posted October 7, 2011 at 12:09 pm EDT

El Salvador is suffering a new wave of disappearances, mostly of young people and teenagers, who go missing without explanation in a phenomenon linked to the gang violence hitting the country.

Thousands of El Salvadorans disappeared in the country’s civil war. Some were children who kidnapped and sent abroad for adoption, and some victims of death squads or the military who were buried in mass graves. Now, almost 20 years after the conflict ended, online newspaper El Faro says that disappearances are as much of an everyday phenomenon as they were during the war.

The police received more than 1,200 reports of disappearances between January 2007 and December 2008, and in the first four months of this year they registered 179 – double the number in the same period in 2010. This is likely an under-representation of the true number of disappeared, as many families will not report their relatives missing, for fear of reprisals. Many of these are young people, with the average age of the missing being between 15 and 25. There is no official body in El Salvador that keeps reliable and complete records of the disappeared, according to El Faro.

Some of the victims are likely to be found in the mass graves which are being found more and more frequently around the country, according to El Diario de Hoy. In August a mass grave containing more than 10 bodies was discovered in Sacacoyo, just outside San Salvador. While one government official said that these contain old corpses buried during the civil war, the Attorney General’s Office said that all of them had died since 2009. Forensic scientist Israel Ticas has been excavating the bodies, which are among more than 500 that he has been involved in removing from their clandestine burial grounds in the last five years.

Mr. Ticas attributes the killings to criminal groups, and notes the extreme cruelty of some of the killings, with one man appearing to have been buried alive. According to the scientist, some 95 percent of the bodies in these mass graves are aged under 17, and a majority are women.

El Faro has produced a photo essay which catalogues the spaces vacated by these missing people, many of them teenagers, and the stories told by their relatives point towards a gaping hole in knowledge about what happened to the victims. In some cases, relatives point to local branches of gangs like the Barrio 18 (M-18) and Marasalvatrucha 13 (MS-13), while in many they are at a loss to explain what happened to the victim, who simply left the house one day and did not return.

El Salvador had one of the highest murder rates in the world, at 64 per 100,000 according to some measures, and much of this is driven by gang violence.

The following are InSight Crime’s translations of a selection of the texts accompanying El Faro’s photo essay, selected for their mention of criminal gangs.

David’s family saw him for the last time when he was leaving his house to go to study. This was part of the route he took each day to get to class [see photo, top of three below]. One hypothesis is that he was taken when leaving school by some classmates who were gang members, who thought that he was a member of a rival gang because he lived in a community dominated by it. He had already been threatened. The police say they do not know the cause of his disappearance.

This is the room where Carlos slept on a matress. Now it has been converted into a dining room. “The house is so small,” explain his relatives. There is nothing certain about his disappearance other than the date when it occured. The police think that the gang that dominates the Montreal community disappeared him because he had only lived a short while in that area and it could have generated mistrust. This year, in this area, by August five people had been murdered for alleged links with a rival gang.

Ernesto Mendez’s passion was playing football. He spent his afternoons in the community field, in Jardines de Lourdes, Colon. The day he disappeared he was going to a pitch in El Botocillal, also in Lourdes. According to the police, Ernesto lived in a neighborhood controlled by MS-13, and on July 1 he went into one controlled by Barrio 18, and this fact could be an explanation for his disappearance.

See photos corresponding to these stories in the original post.

Hannah Stone is a writer for Insight – Organized Crime in the Americas, which provides research, analysis, and investigation of the criminal world throughout the region. Find all of her research here.

Join us this Saturday at the Duarte Festival of Authors

October 5th, 2011

Authors Lisa See, Jesse Katz, Denise Hamilton to Headline 9th Annual Festival of Authors

More than 50 Authors to Talk and Sign Books

DUARTE, CA, September 13, 2011  – New York Times Best-Selling Author, Lisa See, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, author, Jesse Katz, and award-winning crime writer Denise Hamilton will headline the 9th annual Duarte Festival of Authors on Saturday, Oct. 8, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. The festival will take place in the tree-shaded park at Westminster Gardens, 1420 Santo Domingo Ave.  Admission is free.

More than 50 authors in all will participate in the festival presented by the Friends of the Duarte Library, celebrating its 50th anniversary of community service this year. The Duarte Festival of Authors showcases a rich sampling of the diversity of literary talents who live and work in Southern California, with books to appeal to a wide variety of tastes: fiction and non-fiction, adventure, suspense, romance, travel, mystery, inspirational, spiritual, poetry, educational, historical, young adult and children’s titles.

In addition to talks, panel discussions and book signings all day long, Festival-goers are in for a host of other treats as well with an on-site book store and a choice of food and refreshments served up by some of Los Angeles’ most popular food trucks.

See’s best-selling novel “Snowflower and the Secret Fan” was made into a major motion picture released this year. See will discuss her latest book, “Dreams of Joy” at 3:30 p.m.  Katz, a former Los Angeles Times journalist and two-time Pulitzer Prize recipient for his reporting, will speak at 2 p.m. about his highly praised memoir, “The Opposite Field”.  Hamilton, whose latest thriller, “Damage Control” was released in September, is also the editor of the mystery anthologies, “Los Angeles Noir” and “Los Angeles Noir 2: The Classics,” named Best Mystery of the Year by the Southern California Independent Booksellers. She will lead a panel with fellow authors and “Noir” contributors Gary Phillips and Jim Pascoe at 12:30 p.m.

Other authors scheduled to appear include: Reyna Grande, a 2010 International Latino Book Award winner for her novel, “Dancing with Butterflies,” Louise Su Tang, “Cantonese Yankee,” whose historical novel opens a window on a forgotten moment of diplomacy between the U.S. and China; and Randy Ertll, “Hope in Times of Darkness – A Salvadoran American Experience”.

John Vorhaus takes his anti-hero, world class con artist, Radar Hoverlander on “The California Roll,” while Adam Chester, “S’Mother,” tells all in a hilarious memoir based on letters from his overprotective mom. Mystery writers appearing will include: Jeff Sherratt, “Detour to Murder;” Gayle Carline, “Hit or Missus;” Teresa Burrell, “The Advocate;” Jenny Hilborne, “Madness and Murder;” Pam Ripling “Cape Seduction;” and Joel Fox, “Lincoln’s Hand”.

Charlene Lewis and Viveca Pearson will appear with their cookbook, “In Honor of Sisterhood – Treasured Family Recipes,” while Dr. Donsha Robinson McClain, warns in her book, “Don’t Wait to Lose Weight! Love Yourself Today.”

Verena Somer, “The Eleven Percent Solution,” Bob Sharpe, “How to be a Network Marketing Millionaire,” and Evelyn Gray, “Simple Organizing Strategies for AD/HD and the Chronically Disorganized,” opine on how to get ahead, while Darlene Merkler offers “The Complete Resource Guide for Baby Boomers” and Ann Garrett and Nancy Goodall, provide parenting advice with “TLC for Frazzled Kids”.

Writers of children and young adult books set to appear include: Phil Drake, “Fat Chance;” Jason Silva, “The Tale of Edgar Trunk;”  Justin Ezzi, “Wingo;” Margo Sorenson, “Aloha for Carol Ann;” Candace Frazee, “Hey Aunt Bunny? I Have a Question;” and Chani Warnasuriya, “Peace Tales from Asia”. History and travel to places near and far is the subject of books by Elizabeth Pomeroy, “Pasadena, A Natural History;” Pierre Odier, Cambodia Angkor – A Lasting Legacy;” and Ken McAlpine, Islands Apart: A Year on the Edge of Civilization”.

Further examples of the diversity of authors and books to be represented are Comic book artist, Phillip Victor; James Aguirre, “The Barry Family Legacy,” a personal exploration into one family’s Irish immigrant and Native American roots;” and the inspirational story by Brian Biery, “Power of One”.

Major sponsors in support of the Friends of the Duarte Library for this year’s festival are Southern California Edison Co. and the Pasadena Star News.

For the latest information about the Duarte Festival of Authors, participants and activities, visit the Festival website: www.friendsoftheduartelibrary.com, or call (626) 359-6413.