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Volume 121 No. 37
Hope Fades for Strict Gun Laws By Zenitha Prince Special to the AFRO
Hopes for robust new guncontrol laws are withering away. Though a bipartisan group of 67 senators voted
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April 20, 2013 - April 20, 2013, The Afro-American
APRIL 20, 2013 - APRIL 26, 2013
UM Police Trainee Struggles to Recover after Shooting City Cop Indicted in Incident By Massimo A. Delogu, Jr. Special to the AFRO
Wikimedia Commons/CC-BY-SA
The gun debate comes after the sixth anniversary of the Virginia Tech shooting. April 11 to break a filibuster, allowing a slate of proposals to reach the Senate floor for debate, support for the actual measures remains fragile. Efforts to garner the required 60 votes will be hard-fought, especially with
the extended medical absence of Sen. Frank R. Lautenberg (D-N.J.), a likely yes vote. And, even if the Senate passes a bill, the House seems poised to reject it. For advocates, such meager support just months Continued on A4
Two months after he was shot by a Baltimore police trainee during a training exercise, University of Maryland Police Officer Raymond Gray can’t hold his wife, play with two boys or work. After he was shot, he spent three weeks at the University of Maryland Shock Trauma, before he was transferred to Sinai Hospital, for rehabilitation. Any day now, he’ll be taken to a private facility, where, hopefully, he will improve. The officer who shot him, Baltimore Police Officer William S. Kern, 46, last month was indicted on one count of second
degree assault and one count of reckless endangerment, authorities said. He’s out on his own recognizance, but the department placed him on administrative leave, with pay, pending the outcome of the case. He faces a maximum of up to 15 years if convicted of both charges, authorities said. “The state attorney’s office took a safer route in terms of trying to get a conviction in relation to reckless endangerment,” said Baltimore attorney Dwight Petit, who is preparing a civil suit on behalf of Gray. “We would have preferred to see more serious charges in terms of first degree assault but we understand that there may have been concern as to whether the elements of first degree
Continued on A3
Community Coalition Marches for Safer Streets By Krishana Davis AFRO Staff Writer
Neither the heavy rain nor the cold that hovered over Baltimore could dampen the spirits of the community leaders, residents, politicians, clergy and police officers who marched through Fulton Heights on April 12 for a rally to make the streets safer. Billed the “Enough is Enough” rally, the event was part of a seven week police-citizen effort to address the recent spate in crime in West Baltimore. Participants included Baltimore Police Commissioner Anthony W. Batts, Lt. Col. Melvin Russell, Baltimore City
State’s Attorney Gregg L. Bernstein, City Councilman Nick Mosby and Marvin “Doc” Cheatham, former president of the Baltimore chapter of the NAACP. The march started at the corner of W. North Avenue and N. Fulton Avenue. Rev. Keith Bailey, president of the Fulton Heights Community Association, led the group in a prayer to acknowledge the residents who had been victimized by crime. “The march will drive the drug dealers and people in the community doing wrong out,” he said. “We will bring all the churches in the community out and bring them together and it will bring everyone else out of their Continued on A5
Minority Enterprises to Benefit from New Law By Zenitha Prince Special to the AFRO
The enactment of legislation that shifts not-for-profits from Maryland’s Minority Business Enterprise procurement program to another preference provider program will open the door of opportunity for more Black businesses and other MBEs, supporters say. The House of Delegates, earlier
this month, voted 137-0 in favor of the legislation (HB48) after amendments by the Senate, which passed it (SB1066) by a vote of 30-14. The change will go into effect July 1, though it exempts current contracts and those entered into on or before July 1, 2015. “I was absolutely elated,” said the bill’s sponsor Del. Barbara Johnson. The Baltimore Democrat praised Gov. Martin Continued on A5
Photo by Krishana Davis
Western district Major Rob Smith tells the crowd a story about a horrific homicide in the Fulton Heights neighborhood.
Workers Seek Overhaul of Labor Industry in Baltimore By Krishana Davis AFRO Staff Writer Charlotte Knox was among the first wave of people hired to work at the downtown Baltimore Hyatt Regency hotel. After 30 years, she was glad to retire last year. “When I came to work at the Hyatt, there were 400 plus employees, including managers and supervisors. Since then I have seen such a difference,” said Knox. Knox was able to retire after hip replacement surgery. But many of her co-workers weren’t as lucky, she said, noting that employees hired through temp agencies are forced to perform twice as much work as workers hired directly by the hotel—known as direct-hire employees. Direct-hire employees are assigned about 18 rooms per shift; temps clean 30, said Knox. She said after their eight hour shifts, sometimes without breaks, many temps are told to clock out and clean more rooms. Knox, of Baltimore, is among many laborers, labor advocates and union organizers who are protesting what they call unfair labor practices in Baltimore. Once regarded as a blue collar town, Baltimore is on the verge of labor strife, labor advocates said.
Photo by Avis Thomas Lester
Charlotte Knox
Copyright © 2013 by the Afro-American Company
On April 20, organized labor will participate in a rally aimed at making sure legalized gambling does not lead to disorganized labor. Labor unions, advocacy groups and workers will gather near the site of the new Baltimore casino, near the M&T Stadium downtown, to urge that casino officials employ fair labor practices, including fair wage. “At the casino, are those jobs going to be good paying jobs or are they going to be poverty wage jobs?” said Tracy Lingo, lead organizer for UNITE HERE Local 7, a labor union representing hospitality, airport, food, textile and laundry workers. “This rally on fair development is calling on the casino to make sure that they hire local residents and make sure that they create good paying jobs.” UNITE HERE has also been involved in the fair labor struggle with Baltimore’s Hyatt Regency Hotel. Last month, Regency workers and advocates gathered at City Hall to testify against Hyatt’s hiring practices, which they claim violate its direct-hire employment contract with the city. During the economic flowering of the Inner Harbor in the 1980s under then-Mayor William Donald Schaefer, the Hyatt Regency Hotel received $20 million in city subsidies to help bring Continued on A5