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ThursdayMarch Vol. Vol.57 61No. No.35 11 | | Thursday, August18, 31,2021 2017
WHAT THE $1.9 TRILLION AMERICAN RESCUE PLAN MEANS FOR CALIFORNIANS
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SanCounty’s Diego African County’s African & African American57Communities 61 Years ServingServing San Diego & African American Communities Years
YOUR 2021 STIMULUS CASH:
Your Federal vs State Check By Quinci LeGardye California Black Media
Direct cash relief is coming to Californians soon. Both the state and federal government have begun issuing stimulus checks to Americans. The American Rescue Plan, which includes the third and largest round of federal COVID-19 stimulus of the pandemic so far, was signed into law by President Biden on March 12. According to several reports direct deposits began hitting peoples’ bank accounts as soon as March 14, with paper checks and pre-paid debit cards expected to follow soon.
By Quinci LeGardye California Black Media
Last Friday, President Joe Biden signed the latest round of federal COVID-19 relief, the $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan, into law. The broad scope of this stimulus package covers a wider range of national and state priorities as comSee PLAN page 2
COVID-19 CASES IN SOUTHEAST 4,218
92105
92102 6,980
92115
92114
Source: County of San Diego a/o 3/16/21
3,360
COMPUTERS FOR KIDS
RED TIER
see page 9
see pages 10-11
CITIZENS’ LAW ENFORCEMENT REVIEW
BOARD ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS
THE HOUSE PASSED SWEEPING POLICE REFORM NAMED AFTER ‘GEORGE FLOYD’, BUT WILL IT PASS THE SENATE?
By Jane Kennedy Trice Edney News
Image Credit: County of San Diego Communications Office
County of San Diego Communications Office
The County of San Diego is now taking applications for the second opening in recent months for the San Diego County Citizens’ Law Enforcement Review Board (CLERB).
be affiliated with the County. CLERB also investigates deaths in connection with the actions of sworn deputies and probation officers. The review board makes advisory findings on complaints, and recommends policy and procedure changes to the Sheriff, Chief Probation Officer and the Board of Supervisors.
A qualified applicant is needed to fill a vacancy opening July 1 for Supervisorial District 1. The first vacancy was announced Dec. 16 and closed Jan. 31. A decision is still pending on who will fill the position.
Applicants:
Volunteers for the second vacancy must live in District 1. The area includes, in part, Point Loma, Coronado, National City, Chula Vista, Imperial Beach, Bonita, San Ysidro and unincorporated areas of the South Bay.
• Cannot be a County employee.
CLERB was established in 1990 to investigate citizen complaints against San Diego County Sheriff ’s deputies and probation officers. The 11 members of CLERB include two from each of the five supervisorial districts. The eleventh is chosen at large from any of the five districts. CLERB members serve threeyear terms and are appointed by the Board of Supervisors. Members cannot
• Must be a registered voter in San Diego County. • Must be a resident of District 1.
• Cannot currently hold a position as a sworn law enforcement officer. • Serve a three-year term for no more than two consecutive full terms. • Should attend one CLERB meeting prior to applying for the vacancy. • Must complete a training course within three months of the appointment. The Clerk of the Board will take applications until April 2.
See STIMULUS page 2
SDCA
TO MOVE INTO
92139
By Tracy DeFore
This stimulus round will also include an additional $1,400 payment per dependent. Unlike previous rounds, this round will also include payments for dependents age 17 and above. The maximum amount possible is $5,600, for a couple with two adult
SAN DIEGO COUNTY
6,875
92113
als, $120,000 for heads of households and $160,000 for married couples.
STATE ALLOWS
5,569 6,855
Low-income Californians can also expect a state-specific Golden State Stimulus check, which will be distributed over the course of 2021. Though both stimulus payments are dispensed automatically, they do have big differences when it comes to qualifications.
For the federal stimulus payment, the full $1,400 amount will be distributed to individuals with an adjusted gross income less than $75,000, heads of households earning less than $112,500 and married couples earning less than $150,000. Payments will gradually lower for people earning more than those amounts, with the cutoffs for payments being $80,000 for individu-
Only those with the hardest of hearts will ever forget the dying words of George Floyd, a Black man who gasped, “I can’t breathe!” as a white Minneapolis police officer literally choked him to death. The horrific incident, which was captured in video, set off a season of protests across the United States and the globe and a national reckoning of the racial and criminal injustice that have plagued African Americans for generations. In a late-night session on March 3, the U.S. House of Representatives passed the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act, largely along party lines and with just one vote by a Republican, Texas Rep. Lance Gooden, who later said in a since-deleted tweet that it was an accident and he had pressed the wrong button.
This landmark, wide-ranging police reform legislation has received broad support from a wide variety of civil rights organizations, including the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, the NAACP, the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc., the National Urban League, the National Action Network, the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, and several other civil and human rights groups. “Never again should an unarmed individual be murdered or brutalized by someone who is supposed to serve and protect them,” Rep. Karen Bass (D-CA), who authored the bill, said in a statement. “Never again should the world be subject to witnessing what we saw happen to George Floyd in the streets in Minnesota.” Derek Chauvin, the Minneapolis, Minn. officer responsible for Floyd’s death, was fired and will soon be tried on a third-degree murder charge. Jury selection began in early March. The bill, which must be signed by President Biden before it becomes law, aims to end racial profiling, change the culture of the nation’s police departments, build trust between law enforcement and the communities they serve— and save lives.
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The bill - if passed by the Senate and signed by the President, would: • Prohibit federal, state, and local law enforcement from racial, religious, and discriminatory profiling. • Mandate training on racial, religious, and discriminatory profiling for all law enforcement. • Require law enforcement to collect data on all investigatory activities. • Ban chokeholds and carotid holds at the federal level and conditions law enforcement funding for state and local governments banning chokeholds. • Ban no-knock warrants in drug cases at the federal level and conditions law enforcement funding for state and local governments banning noknock warrants at the local and state level. • Require that deadly force be used only as a last resort and requires officers to employ de-escalation techniques first. Changes the standard to evaluate whether law enforcement use of force was justified from whether the force was “reasonable” to whether the force See REFORM page 2