November 4 - 11, 2015
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THE VOICE OF THE AFRICAN AMERICAN COMMUNITY SINCE 1934 March 15-21, 2018
Vol. 84 No. 32 www.spokesman-recorder.com
LESS THAN 1% That’s Black businesses’ share of MN public sector spending
By Charles Hallman Senior Staff Writer
When kids don’t feel safe at school By Keith Schubert Staff Writer First of a two-part story In the weeks following the school shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, there have been at least 21 threats made against Minnesota schools, according to Gov. Mark Dayton’s office. Dayton called these threats and the Parkland shooting a “grim warning” to lawmakers in
Minnesota. In response to the recent violence, Dayton proposed a Safe and Secure Schools Act at a March 7 press conference. The act is intended to protect kids and reduce gun violence. In the same conference, Dayton also urged legislators to work together to pass gun control legislation. During his press conference, Dayton pointed out that gun control doesn’t share the same partisan support that school safety does. Dayton ex-
plained that he wants the two pieces of legislation to be introduced separately, so gun control doesn’t get in the way of school safety. “[Republican legislators] don’t even want to talk about [gun control], much less act on it,” said Dayton. “It’s really shameful, but it’s a reality.”
By Keith Schubert Staff Writer From an early age, Leslie Badue knew she wanted to be an influencer and community activator. Her earliest recollection of questioning injustices was when she was in fourth grade and she asked her grandma who decides if one of her favorite cousins goes to jail. Badue knew her cousin wasn’t supposed to be going to jail. While she didn’t know the terms “War on Drugs” or “schoolto-prison pipeline,” she did know that she was witnessing some sort of injustice. From that moment forward, she says, “I wanted to be the powers that be so that I could change it myself. “I grew up in the generation after the War on Drugs, and so everybody that was
Photo by Keith Schubert being incarcerated looked like me, right? But everybody that was making the decisions didn’t,” Badue says. Now, at age 25, after taking other leadership positions and fighting for social equity on the front lines, Badue has the opportunity to create change as the newest president of the NAACP Minneapolis chapter.
SHOW US THE MONEY!
School safety The Safe and Secure Schools Act would include $15.9 million ■ See SAfe on page 8
Mpls Branch NAACP president aims to change hearts and minds
Leslie Badue
The African American Leadership Forum (AALF) two years ago asked several public entities about their spending with Black-owned businesses. Last weekend, the group released their report showing what at least seven public entities have spent in recent years with Black businesses. The results fell far short of a recommended six percent minimum to reflect the state’s African American population. The State of Minnesota, University of Minnesota, City of Minneapolis, City of St. Paul, Hennepin
ly filling out the rest of former Branch president Jason Sole’s term. “I have the utmost faith and trust in Badue…” Sole said in a Facebook post. “She brings a wealth of knowledge and governance experience to our Branch and exemplifies the energy, passion, dedication and skill of our next generation of activists.”
Development Group told the majority-Black audience as she moderated the “Show Me The Money” panel discussion on the need for more public spending with Black businesses to advance economic equity. “Many of us have been at these tables for 30 or 40 years…and it’s the same song and dance,” AALF Executive Director Jeff Hassan added. “The numbers are disgusting.” The AALF report discloses the following spending with Black-owned businesses: Hennepin County ($1.8 million), MAC ($1.2 million), State of Minnesota ($724,614), and City of St. Paul (over
Both Sole and LevyPounds only served half of their two-year presidential terms. In a position that has experienced a high turnover rate, Badue says she is there to stay. She will serve her time filling out Sole’s term and, if elected in November, says she has every intention of serving the full two-year term. The organization’s sustainability is one of the things that Badue plans on addressing as president. “The reality of it is that everyone’s a volunteer, so no one’s receiving any type of stipends, no type of income, and people are taking off their jobs,” she explains. “We cannot continue to just run on a voluntary basis, because then you’ll keep seeing the turnover.” Badue moved to Minneapolis to attend the University of St. Thomas, where she had Levy-Pounds as a professor. During Badue’s first year at St. Thomas, Levy-Pounds ran for NAACP chapter president and Badue went to support her. That is
County, Metropolitan Council and Metropolitan Airport Commission (MAC) reported that they spent a combined total of over $4 billion in fiscal years 2015 and 2016 in contracts and purchasing goods and services, but less than one percent of this went to Black-owned businesses, says the AALF 2017 Public Sector Report. The group released its findings during its scheduled March 10 “Show Me the Money!” forum at the U of M’s Humphrey School of Public Affairs. The forum’s title came from a popular line spoken by Cuba Gooding’s character in the movie Jerry Maguire. It was repeated by AALF officials when they met with representatives of the public entities a couple of years ago, Nawal Noor of Noor
$600,000). The group currently is working with Minneapolis Public Schools and St. Paul Public Schools to provide their “disaggregated” spending data as well. Noor described “disaggregation” to the MSR as a breakdown of spending by race. “What we learned in our research [is that] most entities don’t break out data to specifically show [spending on] African Americans,” she explained. Minnesota Department of Administration Assistant Commissioner Alice RobertsDavis said last Saturday that compiling ■ See AALf on page 8
Beer on wheels picks up speed By Dwight Hobbes Contributing Writer Contrary to an age-old witticism, youth isn’t always wasted on the young. Moses Tut, 24, is a sterling exception to that rule as vice president of Strategic Partnership at Running Tap. The new venture, a boutique distributorship, is a flourishing success that has, in a year and a half, innovated one of the world’s most popular businesses: buying and selling alcoholic beverages. Founded by Moses’ brother Isaac Tut, CEO, and Chris Ho, co-founder, Strategic Partnerships didn’t just build a better mousetrap but remodeled the mechanism ingeniously enough to make competitors wonder, “Why didn’t I think of that?”
Running Tap, Minnesota’s first such company and the nation’s second, delivers from breweries direct to homes, offices and events. Via an instantly far-reaching Internet marketplace, the enterprise swiftly evolved into a Midwest entity of consequence. The company is methodically
poised to increase success. What began last June with three breweries and a dozen clients now handles 24 breweries and over 600 clients. Talking over a late breakfast in a South Minneapolis eatery, Tut, stately and soft-spoken, imparted, “My upbringing, very disciplined, [is] where I attribute my success or maybe my positioning and grounding.” His modesty in crediting his parents is a matter of fact, as is his tone throughout the conversation. “Everything is my parents and the foundation they built for myself and my siblings. A mindset that is straightforward.” ■ See Beer on page 8
“These institutions aren’t broken. They weren’t created to be equitable.” “I love Minneapolis, and I love the NAACP and the work they’ve been able to do,” Badue says. “Now it’s the opportunity for me to just build upon what has already been done to leverage the expertise that already exists in the community.” Badue is current-
Badue says she was already planning to run for chapter president in November regardless of Sole’s decision to step down as current president. Before Sole, the Branch president was former mayoral candidate and civil rights attorney Nekima Levy-Pounds.
how she first got introduced to the chapter. The first committee she served on was the criminal justice, which Sole directed. In January of 2016, Badue became the chapter’s education chair. When Levy-Pounds left to ■ See NAACP on page 8
(l-r) Chris Ho, Isaac Tut and Moses Tut
Photo courtesy of LinkedIn