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School of Social Work Scholarship Fundraiser gets Supporters Ready for Summ…

Community 05-22-2013 Hits:82 Michigan Chronicle Staff - avatar Michigan Chronicle Staff

School of Social Work Scholarship Fundraiser gets Supporters Ready for Summer Attire

  Sundresses and linen are the theme of the School of Social Work’s June 20 “Dinner with Dean,” an annual fundraiser hosted by the school’s Alumni Association to raise money for scholarships. The event, which will be held at the Detroit Yacht Club on Belle Isle, will offer supporters of the school an opportunity to meet, mingle and learn from Dean Cheryl Waites about exciting initiatives involving research, funding and faculty. As always, the event will boast a “strolling supper” and a silent auction with can’t-miss items such as gift certificates, original art, themed baskets, sports paraphernalia, food, clothing, jewelry and alumni apparel. “‘Dinner with the Dean’ is one of the most anticipated events of the year for alumni,” said the association’s president, Larmender Davis. “Between the great food, the music, the bidding and the chance to catch up with friends and professors, there’s something for everyone.” The social hour, cash bar and silent auction will begin at 5:30 p.m., followed by dinner and speakers at 6 p.m. Strolling food stations this year include a fruit, vegetables and cheese table, a mashed potato bar, carved turkey, and a variety of desserts. Tickets are $25 for current School of Social Work students and $30 for the general public. To contribute an item to the auction, to buy tickets, or for more information on the event, please email Julie Alter-Kay, special assistant to Dean Waites, at ae8440@wayne.edu

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Mark Hackel Advocates a More Regional Focus

Prime Politics 05-22-2013 Hits:356 Patrick Keating/Chronicle Staff - avatar Patrick Keating/Chronicle Staff

Mark Hackel Advocates a More Regional Focus

  If there is one issue Macomb County Executive Mark Hackel would like to see discussed at the Mackinac Policy Conference, it is regional focus. “In other words, how do we brand the region?” he asked, saying he deals with the same question at the county level. Macomb is comprised of 27 varying municipalities. Hackel’s job is to figure out how to brand the county — based upon the unique assets of the individual communities within it — so that people get a perspective of what the county is all about. He believes the same concept should be expanded to the region, because Southeast Michigan is competing with other regions throughout the world for resources, assets and attractions. “We have some unique things in this region that we don’t cross-promote as regional leaders,” Hackel said, adding that they need to figure out how to come together to get people to understand the importance of this region. He also noted that Macomb and the region are ignoring the recreational opportunities and quality of life assets that also are economic opportunities. “Lake St. Clair and the Clinton River,” he said. “It’s the mainstream main street.” Hackel’s eighth floor office overlooks the Clinton River, which he said ties into Oakland County. “How do we make that connectivity as regional partners?” he asked. He said the Clinton River runs through Mt. Clemens, and asked why there isn’t a vibrant downtown, with investment from the private sector building on that riverfront. “How come we don’t see canoe rentals?” he asked. He also said the Clinton River is greater in size than “little creeks” that have been developed by other states. Hackel said that near the mouth of the Clinton River, there are businesses, such as restaurants, where people on the river can stop. But these are far fewer than there once were. There used to be a great boating...

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Ficano Wants Municipal Finance Discussed at Mackinac

Prime Politics 05-22-2013 Hits:68 Patrick Keating/Chronicle Staff - avatar Patrick Keating/Chronicle Staff

Ficano Wants Municipal Finance Discussed at Mackinac

  According to Wayne County Executive Robert Ficano, municipal finance is the one issue attendees of the Mackinac Policy Conference need to discuss this year. He said Wayne County has lost $100 million since 2009 because it depends on property taxes. “The state’s revenues have gone up, and all of it has been because of action that helps themselves,” Ficano said. “For example, the auto industry really is the thing that has bolstered the state in the past couple of years because it has come back up.” He also said when there are increases in employment — such as 1,000 jobs at the Wayne Assembly Plant or 1,200 in Flat Rock — everyone pays income tax, but all that revenue goes to the state. “None of it is seen on the local level,” Ficano said. He also noted that when people are working, they buy more things, but the sales taxes from those purchases likewise go to the state. “On top of that, the state has increased its income tax rate from 3.9 to 4.25,” he said. “They’ve eliminated a number of deductions, and also tax pensions. So all that revenue goes to the state of Michigan, so if you had two charts, you would see the state of Michigan’s going up like that, and they never anticipated property values would drop like this. So we’re limited.” Ficano said that even if Wayne County bounced back to where it was in 2009 regarding property values, it would take until 2025 to get there because there is a 5 percent cap on each year it could increase. “Well, it’s not bouncing back at that rate,” he said. “So, that’s the dilemma we face in this.” Ficano pointed out that the state government increased its budget in every department except the Department of Corrections. “That’s their prerogative, but meanwhile revenue sharing and everything...

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Benghazi-IRS-Leaks-- What about jobs?

Prime Politics 05-21-2013 Hits:177 By Bob Weiner and Nakia Gladden - avatar By Bob Weiner and Nakia Gladden

Benghazi-IRS-Leaks-- What about jobs?

By Bob Weiner & Nakia GladdenThe nation's media are transfixed with obsessive coverage of Hillary Clinton's role (there was none) in the talking points on the Benghazi deaths, IRS investigation of Tea Party groups' tax deductions (the same way they earlier asked the same of the NAACP), the Justice Department's demand for AP's phone records concerning leaks on Yemeni terrorists (after Congress had demanded the investigation of the leaks); and the press properly wants to know what to do about Syria, and how to end sex abuse in the U.S. military.Meanwhile, WHAT ABOUT JOBS? That's the real problem that will define our future success as a country for the rest of this century, and it is a question Rep. John Conyers is asking. The silence has been deafening. At the President's news conferences, which we attended this week and last week, there was not a single question from the media about jobs.Despite the Dow reaching all-time highs, the number of jobs available has seen no such luck. "Are we in the midst of a jobless recovery?" asked MSNBC's Chuck Todd last week on "Andrea Mitchell Reports." According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, unemployment is at 7.5%. Though that is the lowest it has been in the last four years, the U.S.post-World War II norm is about 5% unemployment and has often been at 4% or under. . Michigan's unemployment rate is a staggering 8.5%. Michigan tops the list for African Americans who are unemployed at 18.7%.What are the major factors contributing to the slow recovery of jobs in the US? Outsourcing is at the top of the list. Shipping jobs overseas for cheaper labor hinders the opportunity for job growth. Moreover, based on recent tragic events in Bangladesh's and China's factories, lives would be saved because companies would be regulated...

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Va. GOP Candidate: Planned Parenthood Worse Than KKK, Civil Rights Leaders …

Prime Politics 05-21-2013 Hits:86 NewsOne Staff - avatar NewsOne Staff

Va. GOP Candidate: Planned Parenthood Worse Than KKK, Civil Rights Leaders Guilty Of Genocide

  Virginia Republican E.W. Jackson secured the nomination to run for Lt. Governor on Saturday, and, today RawStory.com unearthed a YouTube video in which he says that Planned Parenthood is more “lethal” to the Black community than the KKK, civil rights leaders are guilty of genocide and Christians must decide if they want to follow Jesus or be in the Democratic Party. Read more from Raw Story: E.W. Jackson, a pastor and Harvard graduate who previous sought Virginia’s senate seat, is the party’s first African-American candidate for statewide office since the 1980s. He’s also part of a trio of fringe conservatives leading the Virginia Republican Party’s statewide ticket, joined by state Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli running for governor and state Sen. Mark Obenshain running for attorney general. “The Democrat Party has created an unholy alliance between certain so-called civil rights leaders and Planned Parenthood, which has killed unborn black babies by the tens of millions,” he said in a video published to his official YouTube page. “Planned Parenthood has been far more lethal to black lives than the KKK ever was. “They can keep their homosexuality private,” he said. “You and I cannot hide being black. I need not recount to you the painful history of slavery, Jim Crow, lynchings and sterilizations, all because of skin color. Anyone who dares equate the so-called gay rights movement to the history of black Americans is exploiting the black community.” Click here to see video

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2 Mile Wide Tornado Hits: Death Toll Rising; 30 Children Feared Dead In Ele…

News Briefs 05-21-2013 Hits:116 Skyyhook, Contributing Editor/Urban Daily - avatar Skyyhook, Contributing Editor/Urban Daily

2 Mile Wide Tornado Hits: Death Toll Rising; 30 Children Feared Dead In Elementary School

  According to The New York Times, A tornado described by the National Weather Service as “large and deadly” touched down south of Oklahoma City Monday afternoon in the suburb of Moore, causing widespread destruction officials said.President Obama has been in touch with Oklahoma Governor Mary Fallin and alerted her that he’s directed the government and the Federal Emergency Management Agency to provide any assistance she needs. FEMA has sent a special team to Oklahoma’s emergency operations center to help out and dispatch resources.Obama also let Fallin know that she was to contact him directly if the federal government can provide additional help. The White House says Obama’s homeland security team is keeping him updated on the situation.Two elementary schools were badly damaged, Plaza Towers Elementary School and Briarwood Elementary School, according to reports from KFOR-TV. (Who is streaming live coverage online from Moore.) Lance West, a reporter and anchor for KFOR-TV, was tasked with giving the gut wrenching news to the audience that the search at Plaza Towers Elementary School, had changed from a “Search And Rescue” to a “Recovery Search” as word officially came down that they believed they had located the 24 children Kindergarden through 3rd graders, and that they feared all had perished. Lance West was understandably overcome with the news and had a hard time trying to deliver it live on air.Helicopter pilots from KFOR-TV in Oklahoma City flew over and filmed the horrific destruction. MSNBC is reporting that the Oklahoma State Medical Examiner is now saying there are 24 confirmed deaths thus far, but they are expecting that number to rise drastically as the severity of the storm simply made it impossible for some to survive. MSNBC is also calling this the worst Tornado in United States history. Meteorologist in Oklahoma City, knew that most people in the...

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The Perennial Underclass

Like me, if you were at the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History on Aug. 13 to hear Roland Fryer Jr., the youngest Black tenured professor in Harvard University history, speak candidly about public education, you would be incensed that the Detroit Public Schools (DPS) is in its current paralytic state.

We in Detroit are creating a permanent underclass, underserved generation of young people — because of our inept public educational system that prioritizes politics over curriculum — who will not be able to fend for themselves or become tomorrow’s city and state drivers.

And if the masses of our children growing up in this city do not know how to read and write because of a dysfunctional educational system that cheats them of their future, they will become the laughing stock of a demanding global education.

Fryer last week cautioned a standing-room-only crowd of some 400 people inside the museum’s multipurpose room, hosted by State Sen. Hansen Clarke, that we must take meaningful steps to address the disparity of our educational system that is currently manifested in a decaying urban crisis.

The 31-year-old Harvard professor, who was raised in the South by his grandmother while his father was in prison and whose mother left him at a young age, called our educational crisis “the civil rights battle of the 21st century.”

“I think this is it. This is the ball game. Everything else is a sideshow,” Fryer said. “I think if you look at the disparities that I care about: Blacks live six years less than Whites in terms of life expectancy; we are 10 percent of the population but 50 percent of the prison population — all things that we care about are correlated with education.”

Because of these mind-boggling statistics that have become the usual introduction to Black America’s problems, Fryer, an economics professor, said he decided to get into the business of reaching children in public schools at their most receptive level.

This is not rocket science and here is why it is important that DPS has strong kindergarten and elementary programs for our children. If Black children at a tender age can be guarded against other vices and be preoccupied with learning tools that help them build their potentials and nurture their skills, we can cut off the prison pipe line.

Because if they are products of a meaningful education they are less likely to be prone to nefarious activities that could lead directly to crime and jail time. A meaningful education that allows Black children to make use of their skills in an environment that enables them to find a sense of achievement and entrepreneurship can help stem the ravaging tide of poverty in our communities. It may not be the final antidote to poverty, but it can be effective because crime, like a former Detroit police chief said to me in a meeting, is tied to quality of life.

“Our children are being underserved,” Fryer said. “The average Black 17 year old reads at the proficiency level of the average White 13 year old. This is it. This is the background.”

So at Harvard Fryer runs the Harvard Ed Labs, which provides incentives to students with good grades. Partnering cities like New York, Washington, D.C. and Chicago have varying programs, all of which are geared to motivating
students to do better. Bank accounts are opened for students who perform through the scientifically designed program.

This economic theory will not necessarily work in every city and Fryer recognizes that. In fact, the results of his program are supposed to be out sometime this year when Fryer will measure the success against the grain of the reality on the ground.

Whatever we might think of Fryer and his economic theory to address the state of public education in schools, one thing is clear: he wants to do whatever it takes to get our children
on the path to a meaningful education that secures a better future for them.

“In (Washington) D.C. where I do a lot of my work, 12 percent of kids are doing math at grade level. That’s crazy,” Fryer said. “And frankly, few people have the heart to go to the schools and tell a fourth grader — look at him in the eye and say, ‘Look, you’ve got one in two shots of being in prison in 10 years.’ If we cannot educate our children, then we are in a lot of trouble.”

There are other fights to take on aside from education. That is why there is no straightjacket approach to battling the many problems confronting urban cities.

But Fryer said for now his ministry is education. That is where he is focusing his energy.

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