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15,31,2021 Thursday April Vol. Vol.5761No. No.3515 | Thursday, August 2017
www.sdvoice.info
SanCounty’s Diego African County’s African & African American57Communities 61 Years ServingServing San Diego & African American Communities Years
MAYOR GLORIA’S
EMPOWERMENT PLAN for San Diego’s Black Community By John E. Warren Publisher
Mayor Todd Gloria has gone where no other Mayor before him, seriously, has gone in terms of addressing the issue of race and equity in the City of San Diego. He made a commitment to create a more equitable and inclusive city by addressing what he calls “systemic injustices experienced by many San Diegans.” San Diego’s Black community has become the spearhead of this effort. One of his major steps in this direction has been the creation of his Black Advisory Group, drawn from a cross section of the city’s Black community. At his Monday press conference announcing his Empowerment Plan, the Mayor made the following statement:
Bruce’s Beach:
How Blacks
Illegally
Lost Land in
California
COMMUNITY POETRY
– see page 9
BLACK MATERNAL HEALTH WEEK
LATEST
Mayor Gloria at a press conference on Monday, April 12, 2021 with members of his Black Advisory Group.
– see page 11
COUNTY PUBLIC HEALTH
ORDER & COVID-19 UPDATES
“
pages 6–7 & 12
With the help of my Black Advisory Group and community members, we have developed a framework to tackle some of our Black community’s most pressing issues. This plan will create opportunities for the Black community to thrive today and for generations to come.”
COVID-19 CASES IN SOUTHEAST
See PLAN page 10
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BIDEN NOMINATES
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Three Black Women for Federal Court of Appeals By Lauren Victoria Burke NNPA Newswire Correspondent
For his first three federal Court of Appeals nominations, President Biden named three Black women— Tiffany Cunningham, Ketanji Brown Jackson, and Candace Jackson-Akiwumi.
Remember these names: Ketanji Brown Jackson, Tiffany Cunningham, and Candace Jackson-Akiwumi. These are President Joseph Biden’s first three nominations for the federal Court of Appeals. See NOMINATES page 2
Ex-Loves, Lies and Video Game Addictions:
Pandemic Secrets By Stacy M. Brown
NNPA Newswire Senior National Correspondent
Reunions indeed count among the biggest pandemic secrets. (Photo: iStockphoto / NNPA)
Cannot be Heard”
Steve Marrow, who founded the kayak website called Paddle About, knew that during the COVID-19 pandemic, going to a party was out of the question
– or at least it should have been.
Image of the Bruce’s Beach Park deed of trust. The park was the first West Coast seaside resort for Black beachgoers and a residential enclave, courtesy of Jonathan Burgess.
By Antonio Ray Harvey California Black Media
The disturbing story of Los Angeles County’s Bruce’s Beach Park -- location of the first West Coast seaside resort for Black beachgoers and a residential enclave for a few African American families – has been making headlines around the country. One hundred years ago, Manhattan Beach city officials seized the Bruce’s beachfront property from an African American couple, Charles and Willa Bruce, citing an “urgent need” to build a city park. But the area was not developed for recreational use after it was forcefully taken from the Black owners. In addition to the Bruce’s land, the city grabbed about two dozen other properties from African American families along the city’s Pacific shore using eminent domain laws.
“I was leery of going, but we were in serious need of socialization,” Marrow explained. “Until that point, we hadn’t really done anything with friends. So, we went to
“This was a strategy and a tactic used everywhere – here in California. That’s why we get so much resistance when we fight it,” said Sacramento resident Jonathan Burgess, referring to Bruce’s beach and other properties he said were forcefully and illegally taken away from Black Californians in the past. Burgess’s family is engaged in a
See SECRETS page 2
See BEACH page 2
Marrow and his wife went anyway.
Source: County of San Diego a/o 4/13/21
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1619’s Nikole Hannah-Jones Keynotes SDSU Symposium Pulitzer winning 1619 Project creator and local Education leaders discussed anti-blackness, racial inequality and more By Vayunamu Bawa Contributing Writer
On Tuesday, April 6, 2021, the Black Resource Center at San Diego State University hosted the inaugural Black Research Symposium. The Black Lives and Minds SympoGuest speaker, sium titled "When They Nikole Hannah-Jones See Us" was designed to Photos by Vayunamu highlight both the imporBawa via Zoom tance of research and the various facets of the Black community. It involved research paper presentations, workshops, and panel discussions around the Black experience. The all-day event started off strong with poetry from San Diego poet Rudy Francisco. Workshops covered topics including grassroots organizing, the impacts of COVID-19, and mentorship programs, Black student experiences at predominantly white institutions, Black male mental health, and the role of Black women in faith communities. Pulitzer Prize winner, journalist and creator of the 1619 Project Nikole Hannah-Jones was the guest speaker. Hannah-Jones delivered a less-traditional keynote speech by opening up a conversation with the attendees. See 1619 page 9
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