Volume Volume 124 123 No. No. 26 20–22
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January 30, 2016 - January 30, 2016, The Afro-American A1 $1.00
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JANUARY 30, 2016 - FEBRUARY 5, 2016
Inside
Baltimore
• Passing of
Balto. Coaching Legend - Carmie ‘Pete’ Pompey
The Palins: ‘Personal Responsibility’ Hypocrites
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Washington
Saving Flint
How Real are Civil War Dramas?
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• Md. Congressman AP Photo
Jazmine Davis stands next to water cases and jugs of water that will be loaded onto a U-Haul truck for the people of Flint on Jan. 25 in Kalamazoo, Mich. AFRO Editorial: More Heads Must Roll in Flint, Michigan -- Starting with Gov. Rick Snyder A5
Says No to D.C. Statehood
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New Lawsuit Seeks Replacement of Flint’s Lead Pipes By The Associated Press
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Environmental and civil rights groups want a federal judge to order the prompt replacement of all lead pipes in Flint’s water system to ensure that residents have a safe drinking supply, a demand that Gov. Rick Snyder said on Jan. 26 might be a long-term option but not an immediate
one. A lawsuit filed on Jan. 26 seeks an order forcing city and state officials to remedy alleged violations of the federal Safe Drinking Water Act, including a failure to properly treat the water for corrosion, test it for lead, notify residents of results and accurately report if the correct sample sites are being selected. Flint residents
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The King Monument in Washington D.C.
For Some, “National Day of Service” Weakens Stronger Image of MLK
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By Drew Johnson Urban News Service
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The group filed the complaint on behalf of citizens along with the American Civil Liberties Union of Michigan, the Concerned Pastors for Social Action and Melissa Mays, a Flint resident. Snyder’s administration has estimated it could cost up to $55 million to repair what officials have
L.A. Students Suffer as School Officials Waste Billions on Hi-tech Fiasco
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are currently unable to drink unfiltered tap water, and tests have shown high lead levels in some children’s blood. “The only way to permanently and completely fix the problem of lead in drinking water is to conduct the full replacement of the lead-containing pipes and solder in a water system,” said Sarah Tallman, a lawyer with the Natural Resources Defense Council.
L.A. schools lost a billion dollars on a failed tech experiment. Students got iPads that taught them nearly nothing. The Los Angeles Unified School District began delivering curriculum materials to students using Apple iPads in 2013. The devices were supposed to replace school books, foster interactive study and streamline test taking. But teachers, district officials and taxpayers now call this plan a pricey flop. The failed program triggered an FBI investigation, prompted the resignation of the district’s superintendent and left countless schoolrepair and construction projects unfinished. The iPad program initially cost $1.3 billion – $500 million for the devices and educational software from publishing giant Pearson and another $800 million to upgrade the district’s computer networks. Continued on A3
Ferguson, Feds Reach Tentative Police Reform Deal By The Associated Press
By Eric Easter Urban News Service This year, way too many people wanted to honor Martin Luther King Jr. In a morning meeting of parents from the elite private Potomac School in McLean, Virginia, Arun Gupta, an investment banker, gives his report on the response to the school’s sign-up for Martin Luther King Day activities, which Gupta coordinates. With only some variation in numbers, it’s the same report he’s given for the last seven years: “Once again, we are over-subscribed.” That means demand for the school’s coveted100 slots to Continued on A3
While the L.A. school district bought iPads for students, the poor conditions in classrooms went unaddressed.
Wikipedia
The death of Michael Brown at the hands of a police officer touched off days of unrest in Ferguson, MO.
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The Justice Department has reached a tentative agreement with Ferguson on systemic changes following the fatal police shooting of 18-year-old Michael Brown in 2014, city officials announced on Jan. 27. The recommended overhaul follows seven months of negotiations and likely averts a civil rights lawsuit that federal officials have the option to bring against departments that resist changing their policing practices. City officials posted the proposed 131-page deal between the federal government and the Ferguson Police Department on the city’s website and scheduled three public sessions over the next two weeks for input from residents. A City Council vote is scheduled for Feb. 9. Continued on A3