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NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
Volume 20 - No. 12 • 14 Pages
T H E F I L I P I N O A M E R I CA N C O M MU N I T Y N E WS PA P E R
Volume 18 - No. 17 • 2 Sections – 16 Pages
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CALIFORNIA’S FIRST FILIPINO AMERICAN ATTORNEY GENERAL
Rob Bonta nominated to serve as state’s top prosecutor making history again after Governor Gavin Newsom nominated him to be the next chief law enforcement officer on Wednesday, March 24. “Thank you, Governor Newsom, for the privilege CALIFORNIA is set to have its first Filipino Ameriand honor of a lifetime,” Bonta said on Wednescan attorney general. Assemblymember Rob Bonta (D-Alameda), who day, speaking from International Hotel Manilabecame the first Fil-Am in the state Legislature, is town Center in San Francisco, surrounded by his by CHRISTINA
File photo from October 2019 shows Gov. Gavin Newsom after signing AB32, authored by Assemblymember Rob Bonta, which moved for California to be the first in the nation to ban for-profit, private prisons and civil detention facilities. On Wednesday, March 24, Newsom nominated Bonta to serve as the state’s next attorney general.
DATELINE
M. ORIEL
AJPress
USA
House passes two immigration bills, sets pathway to citizenship for undocumented youth
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by KLARIZE
MEDENILLA AJPress
VACCINE ARRIVAL. A personnel wearing personal protective equipment disinfects the boxes of 400,000 doses of China-donated Sinovac vaccine before they are transferred to a cold delivery truck at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA) Terminal 2 in Pasay City on Wednesday, March 24. Some ranking government officials witnessed the arrival of the COVID-19 vaccines. PNA photo by Avito C. Dalan
FEMA to reimburse funeral expenses for ‘These attacks feel more personal’: some COVID-19 victims California’s Fil-Am chief justice responds THE U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) has announced its plan to offer funeral assistance to families who have lost loved ones to COVID-19. “The COVID-19 pandemic has brought overwhelming grief to many families. At FEMA, our mission is to help people before, during and after disasters. We are dedicated to helping ease some of the financial stress and burden caused by the virus,” the agency said on its website. Under the Coronavirus Response and Re-
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Filipino Americans mobilize to combat anti-Asian hatred across United States
FROM THE AJPRESS NEWS TEAM ACROSS AMERICA
THE U.S. House of Representatives on Thursday, March 18 overwhelmingly passed a pair of immigration bills designed to overhaul the American immigration system, including creating a pathway to citizenship for undocumented immigrants brought to the country as children. Commonly known as DREAMers, these
family. “I’m so humbled in the trust, faith and the confidence that you placed in me.” His nomination is subject to confirmation by the California State Assembly and Senate within 90 days, according to the governor’s office. “Rob represents what makes California great
FOR Asian Americans across the country, the events that unfolded on Tuesday, March 16 at three Asianowned spas in Atlanta punctuated a mounting fear: the community isn’t safe. A 21-year-old man entered three different massage parlors in the greater Atlanta area and gunned down workers and patrons, killing eight people in total, including six Asian women. The event was shocking and reverberated beyond the Asian American community. #StopAsianHate began trending on Twitter. Celebrities and public figures of all races began echoing party lines of unity and stopping racism. But a week after the Atlanta shooting, the outrage over anti-Asian racism is beginning to fizzle out in the mainstream. A grocery store shooting in Boulder, Colorado — which claimed the lives of 10 people — on Monday, March 22 reignited the broader issue of gun
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to violence against Asian Americans
American chief justice shared that the recent hate crimes felt “more personal” since she is a CALIFORNIA Chief Justice member of the community being Tani G. Cantil-Sakauye has targeted. condemned the violent attacks “Anti-Asian violence, like any against Asians and Asian Ameri- violence based on prejudice, cans in the United States. bias, or fear of the other, is repIn a statement issued on Fri- rehensible. Because of who I am day, March 19, the Filipina as an Asian-Filipina, because of by RITCHEL
MENDIOLA AJPress
my parents, my aunties, friends, and connected communities of color, these attacks feel more personal,” said Cantil-Sakauye. Nearly 3,800 anti-Asian incidents have been reported in all 50 states and the District of Columbia from March 19, 2020 to February 28, 2021, according to
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California Chief Justice Tani G. Cantil-Sakauye
CA’s My Turn COVID-19 vaccine scheduling Report: 83 Filipino registered nurses system now available in Tagalog in the US have died of COVID-19 by AJPRESS CALIFORNIA’S COVID-19 vaccine scheduling tool My Turn is now available in 12 languages, including Tagalog. MyTurn.ca.gov — a website that allows the state’s residents to schedule appointments and be notified when they’re eligible — has been updated to include five new languages in an effort to be accessible to more residents, the California Department of Public Health announced on Monday, March 22.
“California’s remarkable wealth of diversity is always top of mind as we create and perfect the tools that will ensure every resident can easily access life-saving COVID19 vaccines — regardless of the language they speak,” said Tomás Aragón, CDPH Director and State Public Health Officer. “The My Turn website and hotline play a key role in alerting Californians when they are vaccine eligible, and helping them schedule an appointment, so we want to ensure it is accessible to
everyone.” The department said 1.6 million appointments have been scheduled through the platform since its launch on Jan. 25. The website is now available in Armenian, Japanese, Khmer, Punjabi, and Russian, along with languages already offered: Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Korean, Spanish, Tagalog, Vietnamese, and English. By going to MyTurn.ca.gov, residents can find out whether
by CHRISTINA
M. ORIEL & RITCHEL MENDIOLA AJPress
OVER 80 registered nurses of Filipino descent have died from the coronavirus, making up 26.4% of total RN fatalities in the United States since the beginning of the pandemic, according to a new report. The National Nurses United on Thursday, March 18 released an update to its September 2020 “Sins of Omissions” report, finding that at least 329 RNs have died of COVID-19 and related complications since the beginning of the pandemic. The data collection tracked deaths up until u PAGE 4 February 11, 2021, and also found that at least
3,233 health care workers, including RNs, have died from the virus. Of the 329 deaths, 83 individuals were of Filipino descent, the report found. “Eighty-three (26.4%) of the 314 registered nurses, for whom race/ethnicity data is available, who have died of COVID-19 and related complications are Filipino. They make up 4% of registered nurses in the United States,” it said. Among the 170 RNs of color who have died, nearly half (48.8%) have been Filipino. The data comes from 314 registered nurses for which race and ethnicity data is available. Other highlights of the report include six states — New York, California, New Jersey, Illinois,
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