Vol. 61 No. 37, Thursday, September 16, 2021

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Vol. 61 No. 37 | Thursday, September 16, 2021

www.sdvoice.info

Serving San Diego County’s African & African American Communities 61 Years

GOVERNOR NEWSOM

The Fourth City Council District and Redistricting

Defeats More

Than The Recall

see page 3

LATEST COUNTY

PUBLIC HEALTH ORDER &

Covid-19 Updates see pg. 10

Photo: courtesy of CBM

By Voice & Viewpoint Staff With more than 68% of the votes counted within an hour of the California Recall Election, Governor Gavin Newsom was declared the winner by the Associated

Press. It was not a guess, but a progressive analysis of voter response to the recall on a county by county basis. Throughout the media coverage of voter turnout, there See NEWSOM page 2

Covid-19 cases in 8,631 92115 southeast 92105

7,105 8,849

5,456 8,567

92102 92113

SOURCE: County of San Diego a/o 9/7/21

92114

Gospel Concert at North Apostolic

4,274 92139

see page 8

Jobs, Mental Health, Here’s what the California Legislature did this year and Gun Violence

Photo courtesy of CBM

Members of the state Assembly meet at the Capitol in Sacramento, Calif. in this May 26. 2021 photo. California lawmakers approved a measure that could make California the first state to pay people struggling with drug addiction to stay sober. The treatment, known as “contingency management,” pays people as little as $2 for every negative drug test over the course of a few weeks. The bill was approved Friday, Sept. 10, 2021 in the final hours as lawmakers worked to finish the 2021 legislative session by midnight.(AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli)

California leaders discuss helping Black men and boys

By Adam Beam and Don Thompson Associated Press California lawmakers finished their work for the 2021 legislative session last Friday night, just four days before voting concluded in a statewide recall election targeting Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom. The hundreds of

bills the Legislature put on Newsom’s desk in the past two weeks that have passed must be reviewed by the governor before becoming law, unless otherwise noted. Here’s a look at what passed

- and what failed - in the California Legislature this year.

HOUSING Two bills passed that would make it easier to build small

apartment buildings in areas where only single-family homes are allowed. The goal is to address a housing shortage in the nation’s most populous state. A group of 241 See LEGISLATURE page 2

By Aldon Thomas Stiles California Black Media The California Assembly’s Select Committee on the Status of Boys and Men of Color held a meeting last month that brought leg-

islators face-to-face with community organizers to discuss investing in African American and other youth of color in a “post-pandemic California.” See JOBS page 2

SEPTEMBER IS

Sickle Cell Awareness Month By Cori Zaragoza Contributing Writer September is National Sickle Cell Awareness Month, which was designated for the first time in 2020 by the United States Congress. For those who may not know, African Americans are disproportionately affected by sickle cell disease. According to the Sickle Cell Disease Association of America (SCDAA), sickle cell

disease is a blood disorder that affects the shape of blood cells in the human body. Red blood cells, usually round, become sickle-shaped with this disease and can harden and stick to the walls of veins, which can cause a stop in blood flow. This can lead to chronic pain, anemia, vision damage, organ damage, and even stroke. It is not a contagious disease and there is no cure.

Sickle cell disease is an inherited disorder, so a person can get this disease if both of their parents have the sickle cell trait. The SCDAA states that 1 in 3 African-Americans carry the sickle cell trait. Having the trait does not mean a diagnosis of sickle cell disease, however, it does mean that having children with someone else with the trait will lead to a higher percentage

WHO DOES IT AFFECT?

See SICKLE page 2

Photo: CDC

Photo: U.S. Office of Minority Health

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