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“People Without a Voice
| Thursday, | Thursday Vol.Vol. 6057 No. No. 5035 December August 31, 10,2017 2020
GREATER LIFE CHURCH RIBBON CUTTING
see page 10
THE CHALLENGES
Black America
Faces with Distant Learning
Cannot be Heard”
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Serving Serving San Diego SanCounty’s Diego County’s African & African AfricanAmerican & African Communities American57Communities Years 60 Years
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AS CALIFORNIA SHUTS DOWN AGAIN,
COUNTY PUBLIC
HEALTH ORDER PAGES 7–8
COVID-19 CASES IN SOUTHEAST 2,550 2,369 1,594
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By Quinci LeGardy
California Black Media
More than half of California is now under a regional stay-at-home order.
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GOP LAWMAKERS PUSH FOR TRANSPARENCY
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Last week, when the governor announced the impending shutdown, he said health officials had carved the state into five regions. Their goal is to coordinate a broad emergency response that would reach across county lines and consider the proximity and capacity of health services within each area based on population and density. Those regions are: Northern California; Greater Sacramento; Bay Area; San Joaquin; and Southern California. Effective Dec. 6 at 11:59 p.m., the Southern California
Source: County of San Diego a/o 12/1/20
See LAWMAKERS page 2
“ Photo: iStockphoto / NNPA)
By Stacy M. Brown
NNPA Newswire Senior National Correspondent
Students, teachers, parents, and administrators face ever-rising challenges as the coronavirus pandemic continues to force changes in how young people receive their education. The challenges are particularly pronounced in the African American community, where access to the internet, working parents, and a haphazard learning model have undermined pre-pandemic gains. Education experts have agreed that when students of color in underserved schools must go to blended or fully remote learning models, the digital divide gets broader, more profoundly affecting them. Their school attendance plummets, along with their understanding of the curricula, their motivation to learn, and subsequently their grades. “The digital divide again doubly impacts these students, as it completely stops our tutoring with almost all
Sen. Feinstein: Give Truth, Racial Healing, Up Your Own Seat and Transformation Commission Legislation Introduced for Sec. Padilla” By Antonio Ray Harvey California B lack M edia
of our school partners,” said Richard Kaplan, the executive director of IvyTutorsNetwork.com, a New York City Department of Education-approved vendor that teaches students in multiple underserved public and charter schools in the Bronx, Harlem, and Bedford Stuyvesant.
Black women leaders have a recommendation for Dianne Feinstein, California’s senior U.S. Senator: consider giving up your own seat so that California Secretary of State Alex Padilla can fill it. Their call is to appoint a Black Woman with political experience and a track record of success – someone who will be ready on day one to serve.
“Given that the schools are struggling to pay for and provide the most basic teaching during the pandemic and, further, administrators now lack the budget for outside tutors, we have been unable to help.
News broke last week that Feinstein, who has represented California in the upper house of the U.S. Congress for 28 years now, reached out to Gov. Gavin Newsom. She called to let him know that she supports Padilla, who is Latino, as Sen. Kamala Harris’s replacement in the U.S. Senate.
“We are no longer allowed in the classrooms for health reasons, and the students – many of them homeless – lack reliable Internet connections or suitable devices for effective remote sessions,” Kaplan remarked.
Black leaders campaigning for the governor to replace Harris with an African American woman responded promptly. “The good senator herself has been sitting in that seat for a longtime. She has served our state well. Very honorably. Maybe she should consider resigning, which would make room for Secretary Padilla to carry on her legacy,” said Amelia Ashley-Ward, publisher of
Voice & Viewpoint Newswire The U.S. Movement for Truth, Racial Healing, and Transformation (USTRHT) Movement Leadership Group applauds December 3, Sen. Cory Booker and 11 Senate Co-sponsors introduced a groundbreaking resolution calling for the establishment of the first-ever U.S. Truth, Racial Healing,
See SEAT page 16
and Transformation (TRHT) Commission. Sen, Booker’s effort complements the ongoing momentum in the House of Representatives through H. Con. Resolution 100 introduced by Congresswoman Barbara Lee in June 2020, which has 169 additional cosponsors. The bicameral See LEGISLATION page 2
Remote Work Could Help Black Renters Become Homeowners
“For some, fully remote actually means they might as well be in Tahiti or Timbuktu, inaccessible to effective teaching and all but forgotten.”
Voice & Viewpoint Newswire NNPA
The distance learning scheme or the online See LEARNING page 2
Sen. Cory Booker’s groundbreaking resolution complements California Rep. Barbara Lee’s June 2020 resolution in the U.S. House of Representatives
Photo via California Black Media
The rapid rise in pandemic-driven telework could make first-time homeownership most Photo: iStockphoto / NNPA)
broadly accessible to black renters compared to other renters, based on factors including income, the makeup of local industries, geography and more, a November Zillow analysis suggests. See HOMEOWNERSHIP page 16