S
VIN
G
www.facebook.com/ SDVoiceandViewpoint
ER
@VoiceViewpoint
N DIEG
Vol. 62 No. 20
|
O
S
A
Thursday, May 19, 2022
www.sdvoice.info
Serving San Diego County’s African & African American Communities 62 Years
Those Massacred
The 43rd SDSU Black Baccalaureate Ceremony
In Buffalo, NY Tragedy Katherine Massey, 72
Heyward Patterson, 67
Pearl Young, 77
Celestine Chaney, 65
Andre Mackniel, 53
Roberta Drury, 32
Ruth Whitfield, 86
Aaron Salter, 55
Margus Morrison, 52
Geraldine Talley, 62
Thursday, May 12, 2022, San Diego State University’s African and African-American graduates brought their bright futures to the Lincoln High School Auditorium on Imperial Avenue for the annual Black Baccalaureate Ceremony — affectionately known as ‘Black Grad’. Photo: Darrel Wheeler
See Story and Photos, Pages 6-7
Covid cases in THE southeast SOURCE: County of San Diego a/o 5/12/22
11,659
18,248
17,405
19,985
14,753
9,482
92102
92105
92113
92114
92115
92139
PUBLIC HEALTH ORDER & Covid-19 updates,
Among the victims in the Buffalo shooting was a former police officer, and 11 of the 13 killed or injured were Black. Photo: NNPA
Officials Release Victims’ Names in Last Weekend’s Racially Motivated Attack
See Page 8
By Carolyn Thompson and Matt Sedensky Associated Press
Doris Lovett Turns 80
CA Primary Candidate Info
SEE PAGE 9
They were caregivers and protectors and helpers, running an errand or doing a favor or finishing out a shift, when their paths crossed with a young man driven by racism and hatred and baseless conspiracy theories.
REGISTER early! voting Locations
SEE PAGE 18
SEE PAGE 12
In a flash, the ordinariness of their day was broken at Tops Friendly Market in Buffalo, where in and around the supermarket’s aisles, a symbol of the mundane was transformed into a scene of mass murder.
Lawsuits To Extinguish Racist Gerrymandering By Mark Hedin Ethnic Media Services The 2020 Census found that in state after state, population growth in Black, Latinx, Asian American, and Native American populations is outpacing white growth. But new voting rules working their way through state governments, including gerrymandered district maps, make it difficult for
Courtesy of EMS
Carts lay abandoned. Bodies littered the tile floor. Police radios crackled with calls for help.
See LAWSUITS page 2
Investigators will try, for days to come, to piece together the massacre that killed 10 people, all Black and apparently hunted for the color of their skin. Those who loved them are left with
Why Schools Can No Longer Ignore Anti-Black Hate. See Opinion, Page 3
their memories of the lost, who suffered death amid the simple task of buying groceries. “These people were just shopping,” said Steve Carlson, 29, mourning his 72-year-old neighbor Katherine Massey, who checked in often, giving him gifts on his birthday and at Christmas, and pressing money into his hand when he helped with yard work. “They went to go get food to feed their families.” One came from volunteering at a food bank. Another had been tending to her husband at his nursing home. Most were in their 50s and beyond, and were destined for more, even if just the dinner they planned to make. Shonnell Harris, a manager at the store, was stocking shelves when See TRAGEDY page 2
Nearly 1 Million COVID-19 Deaths in us A look at the numbers By Carla K. Johnson and Nicky Forster Associated Press Doug Lambrecht was among the first of the nearly 1 million Americans to die from COVID-19. His demographic profile — an older white male with chronic health problems — mirrors the faces of many who would be lost over the next two years.
He died March 1, an early victim in a devastating outbreak that gave a first glimpse of the price older Americans would pay. The pandemic has generated gigabytes of data that make clear which U.S. groups have been hit the hardest. More than 700,000 people 65 and older died. Men died at higher rates than women. White people made up most of the deaths overall, yet an unequal burden fell on Black, Hispanic and
Native American people considering the younger average age of minority communities. Racial gaps narrowed between surges then widened again with each new wave. With 1 million deaths in sight, Doug’s son Nathan Lambrecht reflected on the toll. “I’m afraid that as the numbers get bigger, people are going to care less and less,” he said. “I just hope people who didn’t know them and didn’t have the same sort of loss in their lives due to See DEATH TOLL page 2
Darryl Hutchinson hugs a relative at the Metropolitan Baptist Church in Los Angeles during the July 21, 2020 funeral service for his cousin, Lydia Nunez, who died from COVID-19. Photo: Marcio Jose Sanchez
California Is First State to Break Down Black Employee Data By Antonio Ray Harvey California Black Media Last week, when Gov. Gavin Newsom presented the annual May revision of his budget proposal for the next fiscal year, he announced that California will establish new demographic categories when collecting data pertaining to the ethnic origin of Black state employees.
California Gov. Gavin Newsom outlines his 2022-2023 state budget revision during a news conference in Sacramento, Calif., Friday, May 13, 2022. AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli
Kamilah A. Moore, the chairperson of the California Task Force to Study and Develop Reparation Proposals for African Americans, said the breakdown of data is “amazing news.”
“California will become the first state in the nation to disaggregate data for its Black population by ancestry/lineage,” Moore posted on her Twitter page on May 13. “This will assist the task force in our efforts to develop comprehensive reparations proposals for descendants.” Disaggregated data refers to the separation of compiled information into smaller units to clarify underlying trends and patterns. Newsom’s actions are similar to a bill authored by then-Assemblyman Rob Bonta. In September 2016, former Gov. Jerry
Brown signed Assembly Bill (AB) 1726 into law that required the state Department of Public Health to separate demographic data it collects by ethnicity or ancestry for Native Hawaiian, Asian, and Pacific Islander groups. Recently, disaggregation of Black data has been a top priority for some Black lawmakers and advocates supporting reparations for Black descendants of American slavery in California. In January, Assemblymember Chris Holden (D-Pasadena), introduced AB 1604, the Upward Mobility Act of 2022, See DATA page 2
www.sdvoice.info