080720 - Northern California Edition1

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NORTHERN CALIFORNIA

Volume 19 - No. 31 • 16 Pages

T H E F I L I P I N O A M E R I CA N C O M M U N I T Y N E WS PA P E R

Volume 18 - No. 17 • 2 Sections – 16 Pages

AUGUST 7-13, 2020

1799 Old Bayshore Hwy, Suite 136, Burlingame, CA 94010 • Tel: (650) 689-5160 • Fax: (650) 239-9253 • www.asianjournal.com

Also published in LOS ANGELES, LAS VEGAS, NEW YORK/NEW JERSEY

Offi cial: ‘Discrepancies’ in state’s lab system may DATELINE USA Filipino-Mexican teen have resulted in undercount of COVID-19 cases among 9 service members FROM THE AJPRESS NEWS TEAM ACROSS AMERICA

killed in training accident off California coast

SINCE childhood, Bryan Juan-Carlos Baltierra had set his sights on a military career and enlisted a month after graduating from high school. On Wednesday, July 29, the 18-year-old private first class marked his one-year anniversary of being sworn into the United States Marine Corps. A day later, he was one of nine service members killed when an amphibious assault vehicle (AAV) sank off the coast of San Clemente Island during a routine training exercise, considered one of the deadliest sea incidents u PAGE A4

by RAE

ANN VARONA AJPress

AS California saw a drop in COVID-19 numbers earlier this week, a top health official suggested that discrepancies in the state’s electronic data system may have resulted in undercounts of cases. California Health and Humans Services Secre-

tary Dr. Mark Ghaly said on Tuesday, August 4 that “some discrepancies” have been discovered in the state system over the past few days. “There is a specific component that feeds information from labs to both the state system and the local public health system that may actually be the place where data is getting stuck,” said Ghaly. On Tuesday, a message on the state’s COVID19 dashboard said that due to “issues” with the

DFA: 2 Filipinos dead, 8 injured in Beirut blast by RITCHEL

MENDIOLA AJPress

Fil-Am professors voice concerns over new Cal State University ethnic or social justice studies requirement UNDERGRADUATE students of the California State University system — the largest public university system in the United States — will be required to take an ethnic studies or social justice class in order to graduate. The new “Ethnic Studies and Social Justice” requirement comes as the university’s Board of Trustees voted on Wednesday, July 22, to approve an amendment to Title 5 of the California Code of Regulations that modified its General Education (GE) requirements to include a course for students to “understand ethnic studies and social justice.” “This action, by the CSU and for the CSU, lifts ethnic studies to a place of prominence in our curriculum, connects it with the voices

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BIKE TO WORK. Workers in bicycles pedal to their workplaces along Epifanio de los Santos Avenue (EDSA) in Caloocan City on Wednesday, August 5. Local government units have put up bicycle lanes along roads as bicycles have become an alternative means of transportation in compliance with quarantine protocols. PNA photo by Joey O. Razon

How the COVID-19 response worsened the state of public education Education experts and leaders discuss the drawbacks of the U.S. response to COVID-19 and how best to provide for underserved students

education is in emergency levels of paltry funding, resources and AJPress aid for disadvantaged and lowerPUBLIC education advocates income students. for years have been promoting The Los Angeles Unified the reality that the future of the School District (LAUSD) and San United States hinges on today’s Diego Unified District (SDUD) kids receiving quality and afford- — the two largest school districts able education. in California — both announced But when the COVID-19 pan- last month that it would start out demic is here to stay with no the 2020-2021 school year online signs of subsiding in the foresee- to safeguard students, teachers able future, the state of public and school staff from the escalatby KLARIZE

MEDENILLA

ing COVID-19 situation in California, as previously reported in the Asian Journal. In the 17th installment of its “Tracking the Pandemic” press briefing series, Ethnic Media Services on Friday, July 31 held a briefing on the ways in which the U.S.’s responses to the COVID-19 pandemic have both highlighted and amplified disparities within K-12 public education. u PAGE A3

USCIS to increase fee to apply for naturalization by $500 by AJPRESS THE cost to become a naturalized United States citizen will increase by over $500, effective October 2, according to a rule change recently published in the Federal Register. The United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) will raise the application fee to become a naturalized citizen from $640 to $1,170, the final rule on Friday, July 31 said. The changes, which also update the fees for immigration ap-

state’s electronic laboratory system, “these data represent an underreporting of actual positive cases in one single day.” Ghaly said the glitches may be a result of high volumes of coronavirus case data “testing the capacity” of the state’s CalREDIE (California Reportable Disease Information Exchange) system. The announcement came after California Goveru PAGE A2

plications like H-1B visas, come after a review from the agency that said the current fees “do not recover the cost of providing adjudication and naturalization services.” “USCIS is required to examine incoming and outgoing expenditures and make adjustments based on that analysis,” said Joseph Edlow, USCIS deputy director for policy. “These overdue adjustments in fees are necessary to efficiently and fairly administer our nation’s lawful immigration system, secure the homeland

and protect Americans.” The current fees leave the agency, which is funded by fees, underfunded by nearly $1 billion annually, it argued. There will also be a $50 charge for seeking asylum. Other countries that impose a fee for this are Iran, Fiji and Australia. “A $50 fee is in line with the fees charged by these other nations,” the USCIS said. Community organizations like Asian Americans Advancing Justice are urging immigrants eliu PAGE A4

TWO Filipinos were among the people killed in a massive explosion in Lebanon’s capital Beirut, the Philippine Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) said on Wednesday, August 5. “Our hearts go out to the Lebanese people. And I hope material and medical help as well. DFA will try to extend as much help as it can out of its own resources not just to OFWs but also to Lebanese communities,” said Foreign Affairs Secretary Teodoro L. Locsin Jr. DFA Assistant Secretary Eduardo Meñez also reported that eight Filipinos were injured and 12 were missing, of which 11 are seafarers and one is a household worker. The Philippine Embassy in Lebanon, meanwhile, said 10 of the 11 sailors have already been found “safe and accounted for.” It added that the 10 suffered minor injuries, and are now with the management of the shipping company, Abu Merhi Cruises at Ain el Mraiseh, Beirut. “The Philippine Embassy Beirut will continue to ascertain the conditions of the seafarers and the other Filipinos who were reported hospitalized,” the Embassy assured. Overseas Workers Welfare Administration (OWWA) administrator Hans Leo Cadac, for his part, said the government will repatriate the remains of the two Filipinos who were killed.

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Palace: PH economy will not be able to withstand ‘prolonged’ MECQ by RITCHEL

MENDIOLA AJPress

THE Philippine economy will not be able to withstand a prolonged modified enhanced community quarantine (MECQ) in Mega Manila, Malacañang said on Tuesday, August 4. “Tatapatin ko po kayo, hindi na po kaya ng ekonomiya ang mas matagalan pang lockdown (I will be blunt, the economy cannot withstand a longer lockdown),” Presidential Spokesperson Harry Roque told reporters. The statement came following suggestions to extend the MECQ President Rodrigo Duterte talks to the people after holding a meeting with the Inter-Agency Task Force on Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF-EID) core members at the Malago Clubhouse until the end of the month. in Malacañang on Tuesday, August 2. Malacañang photo by King Rodriguez Roque stressed that placing Mega Manila under MECQ was a “compromise” to the demand of healthcare workers for a timeout. President Rodrigo Duterte on Sunday, August 2, shifted Metro Manila back to MECQ after approving the Cabinet’s recommendation to return to a more stringent lockdown in response to the medical community’s plea. Medical frontliners addressed u PAGE A2


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