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Connecting the Dots by William Spriggs

August 18, 2013

Connecting the Dots
By William Spriggs

billspriggs

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder has issued new directives to his U.S. attorneys in the field to use prosecutorial discretion and stop pursuing low-level drug possession cases that carry high minimum mandatory prison sentences.

While state prison populations are finally slowly going down, the federal prison system continues to grow with non-violent drug convictions. Also Judge Shira Scheindlin, a federal district judge in New York, has ruled that New York City's controversial stop-and-frisk policy was clearly biased in stopping Black and Latino people out of proportion to the initial behaviors that made police instigate their searches. Thousands of innocent young Black and Latino men were being prejudged by the police, losing their Constitutional rights and liberties based more on their race than on evidence.

These two events will give extra meaning to the upcoming March on Washington, taking place to renew the national conversation sparked 50 years ago by the March for Jobs and Justice in 1963. There was already a renewed sense about the march because of the Supreme Court's ruling on the Voting Rights Act and by the Trayvon Martin case in Florida. Attorney General Holder and Judge Scheindlin are moving the country in the right direction to discuss the racial implications of policies. And, there are dots connecting Trayvon Martin to Holder's actions to Scheindlin's ruling.

There are real costs to any action. And, the implications of policies that are not rational have costs for everyone. The need to discuss race is not just one of justice-though justice is the fabric of any sustainable society. Scheindlin's ruling points to the cavalier attitude of New York City's leadership in a policy that was inefficient, and therefore costly. A stated purpose of the stop-and-frisk policy was to reduce violent crime and get guns off the streets of New York and out of the hand of criminals.

Yet, the data from the police searches clearly indicated that police were more likely to find weapons when they stopped and frisked Whites than Blacks or Latinos. So, all the thousands of times and hours police occupied themselves detaining young Black and Latino men were the thousands of hours the real criminals were free to go unnoticed. Yet, blinded by their own view of race and crime, the police ignored their own statistics and defiantly challenged the ruling of Scheindlin in a press conference; calling her ill-informed.

What most disturbed the Black community in the ruling of the Trayvon Martin case was a similar issue. A young Black man, walking alone, quietly talking on a cell phone, minding his own business and eating Skittles candy was profiled, followed and stalked by a civilian neighborhood watch volunteer. Though Martin was not engaged in any suspicious activity, other than he was "Black" and a young man walking through the neighborhood.

The decision to cavalierly excuse his murder reflects a value on Martin's life that underlies the defiance of Mayor Michael Bloomberg and the New York City police that black men do not have a value in society. Martin was disposable. And, the interrupted lives of the hundreds of thousands of innocent Black and Latino men stopped by the New York police have no value. In the big equation, Martin can be disposed and thousands of lives can be affected because society's sense of safety outweighs the logic of the evidence of innocence on the part of Black and Latino men.

So, Holder's step is in the right direction of reweighting the big equation. Locking up large numbers of people is not free. It is very costly. The dramatic rise in incarceration began in the late 1980s, blindly taking on costs and government resources was not free. At the state level, its clear manifestation was in the dramatic increase in the share of state budgets that had to go to building and maintaining prisons.

The costs rose so fast that many states were seduced into "privatizing" their systems, which increased the cost spent by states per prisoner. The National Association of State Budget Officers reported this year that the cost spent per prisoner rose from slightly more than $5,000 in 1985 to nearly $7,000 by 2008 (controlling for inflation), about equal to state expenditures per full-time college student. So, a state's decision to incarcerate someone literally is a choice between the resources to support one more college student or jail one more person.

At the federal level, rising costs of incarceration have to be balanced against other priorities of the Justice Department, like reducing violent crime, financial misconduct and fighting terrorism. Locking up non-violent drug offenders for long periods means fewer dollars to go after the Wall Street criminals that helped collapse our economic system. The recent news that the Justice Department is likely to file charges against some J.P. Morgan employees for financial fraud should underscore this connection.

There must be a cost benefit analysis done of public policies like high incarceration rates. To the millions of America's families struggling with college tuition costs, this is not a moot point. Ineffectual criminal justice policies cost families the support needed to keep public higher education quality high. The argument about tuition costs has ignored the quality issues. Gone is a conversation about keeping University of California at Berkeley and the University of Michigan competitive in quality with the Ivy League; we have reduced the issue to keeping them cheap-like Walmart.

In fact, the State Budget Officers, in their report, chastise the higher education community for seeking support of the college enterprise with all its bells and whistles of research, insisting that states should only bear the costs of operating budgets for basic instructional functions. Of course, a quality university is a place of research; the generation of new ideas and innovation, the very engine of economic growth. And, the challenge for America going forward is giving broad-based access to our children to the skills to innovate and invent prosperity for our nation. But, if the correction's budget for the state goes unchallenged and can grow and gobble-up more resources, we cannot have the deep discussion we need on real priorities.

This is where the question of race enters. As long as a low value is placed on the liberties and rights of Black men, we will not question the rationality of policies that are ineffectual. Despite evidence that the crime rate has fallen in the United States, we still insist on ever higher prison expenditures. And, we do not look at the evidence showing high incarceration rates increase recidivism in the system and does not account for the decline in the crime rate; ignoring a separate trend of declining crime is also taking place.

We also do not discuss the implications of locking up non-violent drug offenders, or the disparities in who gets stopped by the police and thus swept into the criminal punishment system. But, turning a blind eye to the evidence means Wall Street bandits who rob the economy of billions and destroy the jobs of thousands will go unpunished; and states will underinvest in our children's need for quality higher education; private prison companies will continue to profit; and instead of careful targeting of terrorists the federal government will instead pursue cheaper broad net collection of data on its citizens. Rational policies are not possible if we are irrational. And, too often, race makes America act irrational.

William Spriggs serves as Chief Economist to the AFL-CIO and is a professor in, and former chair of the Department of Economics at Howard University.  Bill is also former assistant secretary for the Office of Policy at the United States Department of Labor.

Follow Spriggs on Twitter: @WSpriggs.
Contact: Amaya Smith-Tune Acting Director, Media Outreach AFL-CIO 202-637-5142.

National Urban League to Mark 50th Anniversary of the March on Washington by Marc H. Morial

August 18, 2013

To Be Equal
National Urban League to Mark 50th Anniversary of the March on Washington
By Marc H. Morial

marcmorial

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - “The hour is late.  The gap is widening.  The rumbles of the drums of discontent resounding throughout this land are heard in all parts of the world.” Whitney M. Young, Jr. at the 1963 March on Washington

Fifty years ago, on August 28, 1963, more than 250,000 people gathered for the historic March on Washington to demand jobs and freedom.  The March was organized by a coalition of civil rights, social justice and labor movement leaders known as the “Big Six” – James Farmer of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE); Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC); John Lewis, of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC); A. Philip Randolph of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters; Roy Wilkins of the NAACP; and our own Whitney M. Young, Jr. as President of the National Urban League.

While that day is most remembered for Dr. King’s landmark  “I Have a Dream” speech, Whitney Young and a host of other speakers took the podium to call for the passage of long overdue civil rights legislation and to demand jobs, a living wage, decent housing and quality education for all.  As America prepares to mark the anniversary of this watershed moment and in the same spirit of unity and collaboration that Whitney Young brought to the 1963 March, the National Urban League will again join with other leading civil rights organizations to mobilize citizens across the nation to gather in Washington, DC to continue to press for economic empowerment and justice.

While much progress has been made in the last 50 years, in re-reading Whitney Young’s insightful 1963 speech, I was disappointed by the fact that many of the problems he so passionately challenged us to face back then, continue to plague us today -- growing income inequality, high unemployment, urban and rural poverty, separate and unequal schools, health and criminal justice disparities, even race-based barriers to the right to vote.  That is why this is not simply a time of commemoration, but more importantly, a time of continuation.  The National Urban League was there in 1963, and we are still there in 2013.  We are still determined to continue America’s unfinished march to freedom and to bring jobs, dignity, economic empowerment and justice to communities most in need.

A comprehensive schedule of activities, looking back and looking forward, has been planned by the National Urban League, Rev. Al Sharpton of the National Action Network, Benjamin Jealous of the NAACP, Melanie Campbell of the National Coalition on Black Civic Participation and others leading up to the August 24th 50th Anniversary March on Washington at the Lincoln Memorial.  Most notably, together with the Memorial Foundation led by Harry E. Johnson, we are hosting the Drum Majors for Justice Celebration on August 23, followed by an Urban League pre-March rally on August 24.

Our activities will kick-off on August 23 at 8:30am with a “Redeem the Dream Summit” at the Washington Grand Hyatt Hotel, featuring civil rights legends, contemporary leaders and members of the public in dialogues about the legacy of the March on Washington in the new era of civil rights and how to chart the way forward. A “Drum Majors for Justice Future Leaders Celebration” will follow from 2-4 pm at Washington’s Freedom Plaza.  On August 24th, Urban League leaders and supporters will gather at the Grand Hyatt at 5:30am for a brief program and rally before parading together to the Lincoln Memorial for the 50th Anniversary March on Washington.

We urge you to join us for this historic weekend of commemoration and continuation.  As Whitney Young reminded us 50 years ago, “We must support the strong.  We must give courage to the timid.  We must remind the indifferent, and we must warn the opposed. Civil rights which are God given and constitutionally guaranteed are not negotiable.”

For more information, visit http://drummajorsforjustice.com/ or www.nul.org.

A Feast of Black Theatre in Winston-Salem by A. Peter Bailey

August 18, 2013

Reality Check

A Feast of Black Theatre in Winston-Salem
By A. Peter Bailey

apeterbailey

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - There was an educational, compelling, entertaining, exciting, "marvtastic" and thought-provoking feast of Black Theatre recently in Winston-Salem, N.C. Produced by the North Carolina Black Repertory Company (NCBRC), the 24th Anniversary National Black Theatre Festival, July 26-August 3, 2013, featured more than 40 performances of new and classical works by 32 performing companies and individuals from New York, California, Georgia, Illinois, Missouri, Tennessee, Florida, Texas, Maryland, Bermuda, Canada, and, of course, North Carolina.

Besides performances, events included a Youth Talent Showcase, Readers’ Theatre. In which plays were read to an audience of theatre professionals, scholars and the general public, a National Black Film Fest, a Midnight Poetry Jam, and a gala whose honorees included brilliant artists such as Chapman Roberts (Living Legend Award) and Richard Wesley (August Wilson Playwright Award).

For numerous young people in attendance, there was a Youth/Celebrity Project during which they had an opportunity to interact with celebrities and theatre professionals. The latter included Dawn Lewis (A Different World), Vanessa Williams (Soul food), Debbi Morgan (All My Children), S. Epatha Merkerson (Law and Order), Ralph Carter (Good Times), Darien Wilson (The Parkers), Ted Lange (Love Boat) and Paulette Pearson Washington (The Wilma Rudolph Story).

For a near-fanatical history buff such as myself, the festival’s highlight was its presentation of at least nine plays focusing on prominent persons in Black cultural and political history.  This was a feast within a feast.  The plays were: Adam: The Story of Adam Clayton Powell, Jr., Barbara Jordan: A Rendezvous With Destiny, The Eve of Jackie: A Tribute to Jackie Wilson, Big Maybelle: Soul of the Blues, Speak of Me as I Am: Paul Robeson, The Ballad of Emmett Till, The Marvin Gaye Story (Don’t Talk About My Father Because God Is My Friend) and Lady Patriot, the story of Mary Elizabeth Bowser, of whom probably 99 percent of this country are totally unaware.  I found out about her when living in Richmond, Va. in the early 1990s. She spied for the United States during The Civil War from inside the Confederate White House. In 1995, the U.S. Government finally acknowledged her heroism and courage by inducting her into the U.S. Military Intelligence Hall of Fame.

A second highlight of the festival forum was seeing Black theatre chronicler, Mary B. Davis. Between the 1960s and 1990S, Mary B., as we called her, saw and photographed performers innearly every Black play presented in the New York City metropolitan area and many plays in other cities.  She probably has more Black Theatre photos than anyone else in the country.

A salute of thanks is due the North Carolina Black Repertory Company (NCBRC) led by Sylvia Sprinkle-Hamlin, widow of the festival’s legendary founder, Larry Leon Hamlin, Mabel P. Robinson, NCBRC’s artistic director, NCBRC staff, notably Lawrence Evans, who coordinated celebrities and travel, and  the 1000 volunteers who made things happen so brilliantly in 2013. The next festival is scheduled for August 3-8, 2015.  Save the Date!

A Feast of Black Theatre in Winston-Salem by A. Peter Bailey

August 18, 2013

Reality Check

A Feast of Black Theatre in Winston-Salem
By A. Peter Bailey

apeterbailey

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - There was an educational, compelling, entertaining, exciting, "marvtastic" and thought-provoking feast of Black Theatre recently in Winston-Salem, N.C. Produced by the North Carolina Black Repertory Company (NCBRC), the 24th Anniversary National Black Theatre Festival, July 26-August 3, 2013, featured more than 40 performances of new and classical works by 32 performing companies and individuals from New York, California, Georgia, Illinois, Missouri, Tennessee, Florida, Texas, Maryland, Bermuda, Canada, and, of course, North Carolina.

Besides performances, events included a Youth Talent Showcase, Readers’ Theatre. In which plays were read to an audience of theatre professionals, scholars and the general public, a National Black Film Fest, a Midnight Poetry Jam, and a gala whose honorees included brilliant artists such as Chapman Roberts (Living Legend Award) and Richard Wesley (August Wilson Playwright Award).

For numerous young people in attendance, there was a Youth/Celebrity Project during which they had an opportunity to interact with celebrities and theatre professionals. The latter included Dawn Lewis (A Different World), Vanessa Williams (Soul food), Debbi Morgan (All My Children), S. Epatha Merkerson (Law and Order), Ralph Carter (Good Times), Darien Wilson (The Parkers), Ted Lange (Love Boat) and Paulette Pearson Washington (The Wilma Rudolph Story).

For a near-fanatical history buff such as myself, the festival’s highlight was its presentation of at least nine plays focusing on prominent persons in Black cultural and political history.  This was a feast within a feast.  The plays were: Adam: The Story of Adam Clayton Powell, Jr., Barbara Jordan: A Rendezvous With Destiny, The Eve of Jackie: A Tribute to Jackie Wilson, Big Maybelle: Soul of the Blues, Speak of Me as I Am: Paul Robeson, The Ballad of Emmett Till, The Marvin Gaye Story (Don’t Talk About My Father Because God Is My Friend) and Lady Patriot, the story of Mary Elizabeth Bowser, of whom probably 99 percent of this country are totally unaware.  I found out about her when living in Richmond, Va. in the early 1990s. She spied for the United States during The Civil War from inside the Confederate White House. In 1995, the U.S. Government finally acknowledged her heroism and courage by inducting her into the U.S. Military Intelligence Hall of Fame.

A second highlight of the festival forum was seeing Black theatre chronicler, Mary B. Davis. Between the 1960s and 1990S, Mary B., as we called her, saw and photographed performers innearly every Black play presented in the New York City metropolitan area and many plays in other cities.  She probably has more Black Theatre photos than anyone else in the country.

A salute of thanks is due the North Carolina Black Repertory Company (NCBRC) led by Sylvia Sprinkle-Hamlin, widow of the festival’s legendary founder, Larry Leon Hamlin, Mabel P. Robinson, NCBRC’s artistic director, NCBRC staff, notably Lawrence Evans, who coordinated celebrities and travel, and  the 1000 volunteers who made things happen so brilliantly in 2013. The next festival is scheduled for August 3-8, 2015.  Save the Date!

Blackonomics by James Clingman

August 18, 2013

Blackonomics
 Hey, Chocolate City, Where Da Money At? -  Part One
By James Clingman   

clingman

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Some astute person once stated, “Politics is the art of turning public money into private money.”  Unless you have been hangin’ out on Mars, you certainly know that to be true.  Named by some as the “Wealthiest Area in the Nation,” Washington, D.C., called Chocolate City by Parliament Funkedelic, despite its wealth, has some serious issues that, as usual, have a disproportionately negative affect on Black folks.

As if the public school system troubles are not enough, a major part of DC languishes in poverty and the related crime thereof, and continues on its downward spiral to what Charles Dickens described in his famous book, Tale of Two Cities, “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity, it was the season of Light, it was the season of Darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair.”

From an up close and personal perspective, I have observed DC for the past three years, having made a least 30 two to four-day trips there.  (Of course, I have been going to Chocolate City since the 1970’s but didn’t pay the same attention to it as I do now.  Those of you in my age group, especially the men, know exactly what I am talking about.) Each time I drive or walk down U Street and see the Bohemian Cavern building, thinking about El Dee Young of the Ramsey Lewis Trio, (Remember that “record” album); I also think about ownership and the lack thereof among Black Washingtonians.

I think about the many brothers and sisters who sleep on the streets; I think about the crime, especially the murder of Howard University student, Omar Sykes, and the rape of two young women on Howard’s campus; I think about the recent convergence of thousands of Delta Sigma Theta sisters, whose sorority was founded 100 years ago at Howard, having very few choices near that campus to enjoy a meal at a Black owned restaurant or a Black owned hotel in which to stay; I think about the dearth of Black businesses, compared to the famed U Street days, and the millions that will be spent during the upcoming 50th Anniversary March on Washington, which in the process will also be a march to spend our dollars at businesses other than our own; and I think about the dichotomy and irony of yet another majority Black populated city, contiguous to what is called the richest Black county (Prince George) in the nation, having such disparate economic conditions.

DC is also home to another famous corridor, K Street, where former politicians who are now called lobbyists work and reside.  These and others in the collar counties of Virginia and Maryland comprise the wealth attributed to DC’s rise to the top of this nation’s money tree.  In a town that produces very little, other than hundreds of thousands of pages of regulations and hundreds of thousands of more pages to explain those regulations, and in a town that survives and thrives off the public till, the money is flowing and it’s the “best of times.” In contrast, in a town once known as Chocolate City, many Blacks are suffering in the “worst of times.”

One of the highest grossing McDonald’s restaurants in this country is located just across the street from one of the nation’s most revered HBCU’s, Howard University, whose students have very limited choices when it comes to getting a reasonably priced nutritious meal off-campus.  The few fast food restaurants near the campus pale in comparison to those adjacent to the University of Maryland or Georgetown, for instance.  One that comes to mind is a place named Howard China, or as Howard students call it, “Ho-Chi.”  The place is a real let down when you go inside and see the “décor;” but it has adopted, or co-opted, Howard’s name and attracts thousands of student-patrons each year for, of all things, chicken wings.

There are other places I could name as well, so please don’t think I am singling out just one. There is a Subway, a Potbelly, a Starbucks, a Frozen Yogurt store, and a Jamaican restaurant as well.  After hearing commercials about the family restaurant across the street from Howard Hospital, on Carl Nelson’s radio show (wolcnews.com.  WOL 1450 AM), I went there only to find it was closed during the weekday afternoon I tried to support it.  Hopward Hospital on Carl Nelson’s radio show (WTalk about food deserts; there is one in the “small city” called Howard University, which points out our dysfunctional behavior when it comes to economic empowerment.

In a town that boasts of Benjamin Banneker’s prowess, Black owned businesses of the past, statues and museums that depict icons and achievements by Blacks, and in the town where a Black family resides in the White House, you would think there would be a bit more than just politics as usual.  You would think there would be more economic empowerment.  Now that you know “where da money at,” in Chocolate City, look for answers and solutions in part two of this article next week.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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