SB American News Week Ending 10/6

Page 1

THE SAN BERNARDINO

Scan QR Code to visit our Website

AMERICAN

“A Man In Debt is So Far A Slave” -R.W. Emerson

NEWSPAPER A Community Newspaper Serving San Bernardino, Riverside & Los Angeles Counties

September 30, 2021 Thursday Edition

Volume 52 No. 24 Mailing: P.O. Box 837, Victorville, CA 92393

Office: (909) 889-7677

Email: Mary @Sb-American.com

Website: www.SB-American.com

Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will. Find out just what people will submit to and you have found out the exact amount of injustice and wrong which will be imposed upon them and these will continue till they have resisted either with words or blows or with both. The limits of tyrants are prescribed by the endurance those of whom they suppress. —Fredrick Douglass (1849)

Don’t Raise Taxes on the Investments Black-Owned Businesses Depend On

Commentary – It’s Time to Rethink U.S. Haiti Policy: Shocking Treatment of Migrants Should Prompt Discussion Bocchit Edmond, Haitian Ambassador to U.S. | Special to California Black Media Partners

By Larry D. Ivory, President of the National Black Chamber of Commerce

In fact, 58% of Black-owned businesses reported being financially distressed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. (Photo: iStockphoto / NNPA) Across the United States, there are 2.6 million Blackowned businesses that account for over $138 billion in revenue each year. This innovative and entrepreneurial passion is what has fostered long-term economic prosperity and sustainability in communities from coast to coast. These businesses should be celebrated as pillars of our local communities and the backbone of our nation’s economy. Regrettably, just as we are starting to rebuild from the COVID-19 pandemic, some members of Congress are proposing a misguided business investment tax (H.R. 1068 and S.1598) targeting carried interest that would make it harder for Black-owned businesses to receive the critical private investment they need to recover and succeed in the times ahead. The House Ways & Means Committee recently included this destructive tax increase in a proposal they are pushing to add into the upcoming $3.5 trillion spending plan. The Biden administration has marketed this proposal as

an “investment in our economic future,” but it would hurt the very Black-owned businesses they proport to help. Despite the many hardships already faced by Black business owners during the pandemic, private investments have been a promising new source of growth for the African American community. In fact, in the first half of 2021 alone, Black business owners secured nearly $1.8 billion in investment funding, an increase of 450% from the same period last year and nearly double the total investments made in Black entrepreneurs in all of 2020. The numbers don’t lie, and the evidence is clear – now is not the time to impose restrictive tax hikes on one of the most promising avenues of growth for Black entrepreneurs. With all this being said, the economic devastation that the COVID-19 pandemic continues to have on businesses across America, is far from over. The pandemic has wreaked havoc on businesses of all sizes in all 50

states, yet African Americanowned businesses have been disproportionately hurt more than any other racial group. In fact, 58% of Black-owned businesses reported being financially distressed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. From February to April 2020, Black business ownership dropped by a crushing 41%. And although the total U.S. unemployment rate fell to 5.4 in July of this year, it remained a staggering 8.2 percent for Black workers. Which begs the question of why then politicians are even considering instituting economic policies that would harm Black-owned businesses, as opposed to helping them? African American entrepreneurs and business owners have always faced immense structural and financial obstacles to grow their businesses and achieve the American dream, ranging from higher interest rates to lack of access to traditional banks. This ill-advised tax hike would only make it even harder for many of these businesses to receive

the financial backing necessary to grow and promote innovation and economic opportunity. All of this is also not to suggest that African American businesses would be the only ones hurt by this proposal. More than 14,000 businesses across America that employ nearly 12 million workers depend on similar investments to hire workers, grow, or simply keep the doors open. At the National Black Chamber of Commerce (NBCC), we are dedicated to economically empowering and sustaining African American communities through entrepreneurship and capitalistic activity within the United States and via interaction with the Black community. The success and well-being of our nation’s Black-owned small businesses is vital to the overall health of our domestic economy, in communities nationwide. This is why it is as important as ever that leaders in Washington are supporting policies that promote investments in Black-owned businesses and job creation across the country. America’s Black small business community is robust and strong, but now more than ever, it needs our leaders’ unwavering support. For this reason, on behalf of the NBCC, I am firmly urging members of Congress to oppose any and all efforts to include this misguided business investment tax in the upcoming $3.5 trillion budget proposal. Larry D. Ivory is the Chairman of the National Black Chamber of Commerce, a nonprofit, nonpartisan, nonsectarian organization dedicated to the economic empowerment of African American communities.

Gov. Newsom’s New $15 Million Climate Change Program Includes Grants for Communities Aldon Thomas Stiles | California Black Media Last week, California Gov. Gavin Newsom announced a historic $15 billion climate change package. The initiative has funds in it to combat the state’s current environmental crisis as well as to help communities prepare for and prevent any disasters that may result from shifting weather patterns and changing global temperatures. It is the largest investment of its kind in the history of the state. "At the KNP fire today, while the realities of climate change surrounded us, we signed into law

a $15 BILLION package that will help California tackle the climate crisis — from record heat waves, to extreme drought, to massive wildfires," Newsom tweeted after the press conference he held in regards to this investment. The governor was referring to a range of wildfires authorities have designated the KNP (Kings Canyon National Park) complex that has been burning since Sept. 9 in that park and in the adjacent Sequoia National Park. As of Sunday, that wildfire had burned nearly 46,000 acres of land.

The pictures carry the weight of history. They are shocking in their own right, of course – desperate human beings, like most immigrants of old time to the United States of America from the old continent, carrying their worldly possessions, but attempting a dangerous border crossing on foot, for thousands of miles, instead of crossing the ocean, only to beaten and chased by men on horseback once they've arrived at their destination – but the not-so-subtle symbolism of a darker era of American history, from slavery through to Jim Crow, is clear for all to see. These images of Haitian migrants crossing the Rio Grande River have caused a stir because they appear so antithetical to the oft-repeated values of the Biden administration, and to the America that shaped the world over the past 200 years. We came to expect tougher rhetoric and even more ghastly actions regarding the border and America’s stance on immigration during the preceding administration, but Joe Biden and Kamala Harris came into office promising to ‘’ensure the dignity of migrants and uphold their legal right to seek asylum’’ and to reverse an era of border policy that famously

saw children locked in cages. Haitian migrants crossing the Rio Grande, however, have been denied their basic dignity by border enforcement authorities. Those who committed these violations must be held accountable, and compassion must be afforded to the people of our nation. Haiti finds itself at an hour of need. In previous crises, the U.S. stood shoulder to shoulder with Haiti, most recently after the terrible earthquake in 2010. Today, the nation is grieving after the heinous assassination of our President, Jovenel Moïse, on July 7. We are now recovering from a devastating 7.2 magnitude earthquake that struck the Tiburon Peninsula on August 14. For many, that earthquake was more disastrous than the 2010 catastrophe. Thousands lost their lives, important buildings and infrastructure were destroyed, and again, Haiti is having to pick up the pieces. Vice President Harris has expressed concern and promised an investigation into the incident at the US border, and it is right that we get to the bottom of what happened. I am working with US Government officials on this, and I appreciate the support we have received from politicians here on both sides of the aisle who have spoken out about the severity of what occurred. But I also hope that this can spur a deeper re-imagining of the relationship between our two nations and people. While fair treatment under the law for the “huddled masses” seeking to migrate to the US is continued on page 6

MISSION STATEMENT Clifton Harris /Editor in Chief Investigative Reporter sbamericannews@gmail.com Mary Martin-Harris / Editor Legal /Display Advertising (909) 889-7677 Clifton B. Harris / Audio Engineering Editor Digital Online Banner Advertising (909) 889-7677 The San Bernardino American News was established May 6, 1969. A legally adjudicated newspaper of general circulation on September 30, 1971, case number 15313 by the Superior Court of San Bernardino County. The San Bernardino AMERICAN News subscription rate is $59.00 per year. The San Bernardino AMERICAN News is committed to serving its readers by presenting news unbiased and objective, trusting in the mature judgment of the readers and, in so doing, strive to achieve a united community.

Across the state, the effects of climate change have decimated over 1.9 million acres of land, according to the California Department of Forestry and

Fire Protection. Some experts believe this is due to California’s severe drought this year. As is the case with many continued on page 3

News releases appearing in the San Bernardino AMERICAN News do not necessarily express the policy nor the opinion of the publishers. The San Bernardino AMERICAN News reserves the right to edit or rewrite all news releases.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.