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Vol. 62 No. 4 | Thursday, January 27, 2022
www.sdvoice.info
Serving San Diego County’s African & African American Communities 62 Years
FIGHTING HOMELESSNESS:
The President and Voter Suppression
Gov. Newsom Sets Sights on Mental Health, Addiction
SEE PAGE 3
By Antonio Ray Harvey California Black Media
Gov. Gavin Newsom says his administration is emphasizing combating drug addiction and mental illness as part of the state’s multi-year plan to solve California’s homelessness crisis – the worst in the country. Newsom says focusing on those health needs of unhoused people is a component of his ongoing “Comeback Plan,” an effort launched last year to help the state recover from the economic and social impacts of the pandemic. Photo: Courtesy of CBM.
California would allow children age 12 and up to be vaccinated without their parents’ consent under a proposal introduced Friday by a state senator who said youngsters “deserve the right to protect themselves” against infectious disease. Currently in California, minors ages 12 to 17 cannot be vaccinated without permission from their parents or guardians, unless the vaccine is specifically to prevent a sexually transmitted disease. Parental consent laws for vaccinations vary by state and region, and a few places such as Philadelphia and Washington, D.C., allow kids 11 and up, and in
San Francisco 12 and older, to consent to their own COVID-19 vaccines.
PUBLIC HEALTH ORDER & Covid-19 Updates
The bill by Democratic Sen. Scott Wiener would lift the parental requirement for that age group for any vaccine that has been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. If the bill passes, California would allow the youngest age of any state to be vaccinated without parental permission. See VAXXED page 6
Free Local Library Events for Youth & Families! SEE PAGE 7
SEE PG. 10
Covid-19 cases in
southeast
SOURCE: County of San Diego a/o 1/19/22
State Sen. Scott Wiener, D-San Francisco, addresses the state Senate at the Capitol in Sacramento, Calif., Tuesday, Jan. 18, 2022. (AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli)
Now Even Police Are Getting Black Books Banned
In the American Library Association’s 2020 list of top banned books, three included “anti-cop” content
By Maya Pottiger Word in Black
The banning of Black books is making the headlines again. This time, it’s because some parents are claiming all types of Black books — like picture book biographies of Civil Rights leaders — are teaching critical race theory. The American Library Association tracks annually the most challenged and banned books of the year, along with the reasons against them. So what’s the difference between a challenge and a ban? A challenge is when someone raises a concern about a book and asks for it to be moved — from youth to the adult or restricted shelves — or removed entirely. It’s upgraded to a ban if an official restricts access to the book, like if a principal removed a book from the school library. Photo: Charles Hackey - commons.wikimedia.org/CC BY 2.0
SEE PAGE 9
See HOMELESSNESS page 6
Preteens Can Get Vaxxed Without Parent Under California Bill By Don Thompson Associated Press
Young Ladies Mentorship Workshop
See BANNED page 6
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‘Sanford and Son’ at 50, ‘double-edged’ Black sitcom pioneer By Lynn Elber AP Television Writer When Demond Wilson heard that Redd Foxx was going to star in a TV sitcom, the actor brushed it off as a joke. Foxx was a killer stand-up comic, with a trademark raunchiness that Wilson figured to be a nonstarter for the timid broadcast networks that were television in 1972. It was the eve of cable, and the rise of streaming was decades away. “It would be like bringing a dog to a cat party,” is how Wilson described the notion of Foxx invading TV in a recent Associated Press interview. But the comedian cleaned up his act for the small screen, and “Sanford and Son,” with Wilson co-starring as Foxx’s beleaguered adult son, debuted 50 years ago this month on NBC.
Photo: Redd Foxx as Fred Sanford and Demond Wilson as his son, Lamont. The actors portrayed these characters on the television program Sanford and Son. (Public Domain)
An instant ratings smash, it opened the door for other Black family shows to move into the virtually all-white TV neighborhood. See SANFORD page 6
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