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The Time for Action on Diversity Has Come by Jesse Jackson

Sept. 15, 2014

The Time for Action on Diversity Has Come
By Jesse Jackson

Jesse3

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Last week, in a highly choreographed, tightly organized presentation, Apple rolled out the new iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus. With the spotlights on and a global audience, Apple paraded a lineup of six white men to present its new products. Even the entertainment — U2 — was all White.

Women, American Americans and people of color are major consumers of Apple products: the iPhone, iTunes music, iPod music players, iPads and more. Apple had a huge opportunity to demonstrate to millions around the world that it is committed to be as diverse as its customers are. It clearly didn’t even think about it.

Last month, Apple joined with a growing number of Silicon Valley firms to release its work force diversity and inclusion data. Seventy percent of Apple’s global work force is male; 65 percent of its leadership is White. Apple has a more diverse “non-tech” work force than most of the rest of the Valley. Yet CEO Tim Cook announced: “As CEO, I’m not satisfied with the numbers on this page. They’re not new to us, and we’ve been working hard to improve them.”

After an appeal by the Rainbow Push Coalition, an increasing number of Silicon Valley firms have agreed to publish their diversity data. Some have yet to take this first, but important, step. There is no way to know how far we have to go without first knowing where we are.

As Apple and other companies who have published their information are quick to note, there is much work to be done. At its best, technology can be a tremendously positive change agent for the world; at its worst, it can repeat old patterns that exclude people of color and women from opportunity and advancement. Silicon Valley and the tech industry must transform itself to resemble the America it depends upon for talent and customers.

The ranks of African-American consumers are disproportionate to their representation in boardrooms, executive suites, business partners and work force.

Diversity and inclusion are good for business. African Americans, Latinos, and women represent money, market, talent and location. Inclusion is the key to growth, and when there is growth everybody wins.

Technology companies that are serious about moving the needle must put a real plan in place: set goals, targets and timetables regarding diversity and inclusion on their boards, their c-suite leadership and their general employee base. They should partner with people of color and women in mutually beneficial, reciprocal, fair trade. This includes not only the technical work force, but also the areas of financial and professional services, marketing and advertising, and procurement. Treat inclusion and diversity just as you would any serious, business line of a company, and measure it. Then create a plan to meet real goals.

Rainbow PUSH will be convening a public forum this fall to engage companies and communities to identify strategies and solutions to move the needle and truly “change the face of technology.”

The federal Employment Opportunity Commission and Office of Contract Compliance should be proactively investigating to ensure that the technology companies are in compliance with all equal opportunity and affirmative rules.

As Apple’s diversity information demonstrates, more and more technology companies are recognizing the importance of diversity — and of accountability in measuring progress toward greater equal opportunity. Diversity isn’t a default position. It takes action to break old patterns and open closed doors. And the time for action has come.

Will Ferguson Be a Tipping Point for National Black Youth Voter Turnout? by Khalil Abdullah

Sept. 15, 2014

Will Ferguson Be a Tipping Point for National Black Youth Voter Turnout?

By Khalil Abdullah

michael brown

Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from New America Media

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - A week before National Voter Registration Day Tuesday, September 23, civil rights leaders hope to increase African American youth voter turnout by citing the police shooting death of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo., a city where only 12 percent of registered voters turned out to vote in the last city council elections.

Community organizers in New Orleans and Houston -- two cities with a long history of confrontations between African-Americans and the police -- have mixed views on whether outrage over Ferguson will translate into voter participation.

Ferguson may be a rallying call in New Orleans, but it won’t be the dominant theme for staff and volunteers as they work voter registration tables around the city on Sept. 23, says Erica Buher of VAYLA-New Orleans, a multi-ethnic community organization focused on youth empowerment. Big Easy youth are attuned and empathetic to Brown's killing on August 9, but, according to Buher “what happened in Ferguson happens frequently in New Orleans.”  Young people have their own Michael Browns to focus on. Their names, Buher says, are virtually unknown outside the city.

Buher remembers when the police officer -- convicted of shooting Ronald Madison on Danziger Bridge in Hurricane Katrina's wake -- was freed after a court upheld his appeal in September of 2013. James Brissette, 17 years old, also died on the bridge from police gunfire. Henry Glover was killed in a separate Katrina incident. The police officer charged in his death was also acquitted on appeal last year in December. “The court’s reversal hit the community hard,” Buher says of the Glover case.

Just weeks ago, Armand Bennett, a 26-year-old African-American man, was shot twice in the head during a NOPD traffic stop by an officer who allegedly turned off her camera before the confrontation. The incident initially went unreported to the public by the police superintendent’s office. Buher says it reminds people all over again of the NOPD’s lack of transparency.

“We will work to register voters through National Voter Registration Day up until October 6 which is the last day for us,” Buher says. Some 23 sites include college and university campuses as well as organizations like Covenant House and Liberty's Kitchen, which offer services to the homeless and formerly incarcerated juveniles, respectively.

“We work hard to reach that 18 to 24-year-old transitional age group because they’re such a critical age and they’re the hardest to reach,” Buher explains, adding that In Louisiana, “you can actually register to vote when you’re 16. A lot of that under-18 age group is pushing back on the concept that voting is the only way you can be civically engaged.”

Yet, in Houston, Christina Sanders, the director of the Texas League of Young Voters Education Fund, is convinced that Ferguson has been an “aha moment” for some of her city’s youth and a catalyst that may yield an increase in voter registration rolls.

“This is a time when I’ve seen more young people connect to the power of the ballot,” Sanders said. She attributes increased interest to social media. “Social media, like Facebook, and the ability to connect with people around the country who are saying the same thing, feeling the same way, that changes the conservation.”

Sanders concurs with Buher that voter registration is not a panacea or silver bullet to foster change, but the Houston native sees voter registration as the gateway for young people to become more involved in determining how to define and address critical concerns within their communities.

“Youth should not expect everything to happen overnight, because things didn’t get the way they are overnight,” Sanders said. “Voter registration isn’t sexy, but if you connect with young people about Ferguson and how it affects people’s lives on so many different levels, you have the capacity to build on the fire in people’s bellies. You can build these small fires into a firestorm. What I say to young people is that voting is an opportunity, but your job is to constantly participate.”

Sanders maintains that Ferguson has brought out a higher level of interest among African American youth in Houston than any single recent incident, an observation about other cities that is shared by Hazel Trice Edney, former Editor-in-Chief of the National Newspaper Publishers Association and current president of the Capital Press Club in the District of Columbia.

After a visit to Ferguson before the funeral of Brown, Edney says she had intense discussions with the media writing class she occasionally teaches at Howard University as an adjunct professor.

“The students are extremely interested in what’s going on in Ferguson. They wanted to know about the disposition of the people, about the next steps the community plans to take. Even more than the Trayvon Martin shooting almost two years ago, Michael Brown’s death has been a wake-up call to many communities.”

Edney found the stories Ferguson residents told her about police abuse to be appalling, but Brown’s death seems to be a tipping point. “People are in a mood for action. They feel it’s time to do something.”

Another NBA Owner Fouls Out of League After Racial Comments by Frederick H. Lowe

Sept. 15, 2014

Another NBA Owner Fouls Out of League After Racial Comments
By Frederick H. Lowe
atlantahawks brucelevenson
Bruce Levenson

Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from TheNorthStarNews.com

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Bruce Levenson has fouled out of the owner's box and will sell his controlling share of the Atlanta Hawks of the National Basketball Association after admitting to writing an e-mail that said whites do not attend Hawks games because they are afraid of blacks.

"After much long and difficult contemplation, I have decided that it is in the best interests of the team, the Atlanta community and the NBA to sell my controlling interest in the Hawks franchise," Levenson wrote in a letter dated Sunday, August 7,  that was posted on Adam Silver's website. Silver is the NBA commissioner.

Although Levenson, at least on the surface, is voluntarily giving up his ownership in the Hawks' franchise, this is the second time Silver, in his short tenure, has had to deal with a team owner who has made racist comments about blacks in a league dominated by African-American men. Silver became NBA commissioner on February 1.

This summer Silver forced Los Angeles Clippers owner Donald Sterling to sell the team. Former Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer bought the team for $2 billion.. The deal was finalized September 2. Sterling, who had a African-American girlfriend, ordered her not to hang out with black people. The sport also banned Sterling from NBA games.

The NBA began an investigation into Levenson's comments on July 2.

In an e-mail posted to the NBA commissioner’s website this week, Levenson explains that he wrote the email in 2012 when he was trying to improve the Hawks' low attendance.

"Over the past several years, I've spent a lot of time grappling with low attendance at our games and the need for the Hawks to attract more season ticket holders and corporate sponsors," Levenson wrote.

"Over that time, I've talked with team executives about the need for the Hawks to build a more diverse fan base that includes more suburban whites, and I shared my thoughts on why our efforts to bridge Atlanta's racial sports divide seemed to be failing."

Levenson said that his 2012 email trivialized Hawks' fans by making clichéd assumptions about their interests (i.e., hip hop vs. country, white vs. black cheerleaders, etc.) and by stereotyping their perceptions of one another (i.e., that white fans might be afraid of our black fans).

"By focusing on race, I also sent the unintentional hurtful message that our white fans are more valuable than our black fans," Levenson. "I am truly embarrassed by my words in that email, and I apologize to the members of the Hawks family and all our fans."

NBA great Kareem Abul-Jabbar said Levenson was not a racist. "He's a businessman trying to grow his business," Abul-Jabbar wrote in Time magazine.

Hawks CEO Steve Koonin will oversee all team operations and take all organizational reports as we proceed with the sale process. It is not clear how much Levenson will receive for selling his share of the Hawks. The team moved to Atlanta in 1968 from St. Louis.

Former New Orleans Mayor Reports to Prison

Sept. 15, 2014

Former New Orleans Mayor Reports to Prison

nagin

Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from TheNorthStarNews.com

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - C. Ray Nagin, 58, former mayor of New Orleans, reported to a minimum-security federal prison in Texarkana, Texas, on Monday to begin serving a 10 year sentence after being convicted of public corruption, a spokesman for the U.S. Marshals Service told The NorthStar News & Analysis.

New Orleans U.S. District Court Judge Helen G. Berrigan in July sentenced Nagin who was convicted of 20 of 21 counts of public corruption.

A federal jury convicted him of one count of conspiracy, five counts of bribery, nine counts of wire fraud, one count of money laundering and four counts of filing false tax returns. The jury found Nagin guilty of accepting more than $160,000 in bribes and truckloads of granite for his family business, Stone Age, LLC. Nagin also was ordered to pay $84,264 in restitution to the IRS.

Federal prosecutors indicted Nagin in January 2013. He is the first New Orleans mayor to be convicted of crimes and sentenced to prison. Nagin was the voice of New Orleans during Hurricane Katrina, which flooded parts of the city in August 2005. Nagin served as mayor from 2002 to 2010.

Frederick Douglass Portrait: First Black Face to Grace Maryland Gov.'s Mansion By Zenitha Prince

 

Sept. 15, 2014


Frederick Douglass Portrait: First Black to Grace Maryland Gov.'s Mansion
By Zenitha Prince 

 

frederickdouglass

Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from the Afro American Newspaper

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Maryland history will be made Sept. 15 when a portrait of Frederick Douglass – the first likeness of an African American to grace the walls of the governor’s residence in Annapolis – is unveiled.

Gov. Martin O’Malley said it is fitting that a painting of one of Maryland’s most famous sons marks this momentous and groundbreaking occasion.

“It’s truly an honor to be a part of this celebration and commemorate the life of one of my boyhood heroes, Frederick Douglass – a Marylander who despite facing tremendous adversity, never lost hope and never stopped fighting for the better future he dreamed of,” said Gov. O’Malley in an e-mailed statement. “This beautiful portrait, the first portrait of an African American to ever grace the walls of Government House, will act as an inspiration for future generations and fitting tribute to his spirit of resilience, achievement and fortitude.”

That the painting of the renowned former slave-turned-abolitionist was commissioned by Eddie Brown, CEO of Brown Capital Management, and created by celebrated portraitist Simmie Knox is also fitting, officials said. The trifecta of Douglass, Brown and Knox symbolizes the state’s commitment to fostering diversity and opportunities for African Americans and honoring culture and history, officials said.

Brown Capital Management is the oldest African American-owned investment company in Maryland and the second-oldest such company in the United States. It is the poster company for the State’s “Choose Maryland” advertising campaign.

Knox became the first African-American artist to create an official portrait of a U.S. president in 2004, when he completed a painting of President Bill Clinton. Other notable portraits he’s painted include U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Oprah Winfrey, and late Maryland State Sen. Clarence Blount.  Knox’s first portrait of Frederick Douglass in 1976 is part of the Smithsonian Institute art collection and is now located in the Center for African American History and Culture, in Anacostia, Washington, D.C.

“It is quite an honor and a thrill,” Knox told the AFRO about the chance to paint this history-making portrait.

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