Vol. 59 No. 37, Thursday, September 12, 2019

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“People Without a Voice | Thursday Vol.Vol. 5957 No. No. 3735| Thursday, September August 31, 12,2017 2019

www.sdvoice.info

Cannot be Heard”

Serving Serving San Diego SanCounty’s Diego County’s African & African AfricanAmerican & African Communities American57Communities Years 59 Years

COVERED CALIFORNIA

HOLDS AFRICAN AMERICAN MEDIA ROUNDTABLE

aaae education forum

lincoln high blacktop classic

lemon grove�s labor day picnic

labor council�s annual dinner

See page 7

See page 10

See page 8

See page 9

NAREB URGES BLACK (L-R) LInda Offray, Pepi Jackson, Mayra Alvarez, Robert Ross, M.D., President and CEO, The California Endowment, and Peter Lee, Executive Director, Covered California at the California Endowment Headquarters in Los Angeles, Tuesday, September 3, 2019. Photo/Voice & Viewpoint

AMERICANS

NOT TO DEFER THEIR

DREAM OF

By Dr. John E. Warren Publisher

The California Endowment Headquarters In Los Angeles, CA was the site last week for a discussion on the status of Covered California and new health policies and initiatives that take effect in California in 2019 and 2020.

HOMEOWNERSHIP

One of the first speakers was Peter V. Lee, the Executive Director of Covered California. He noted that, for the very first time, we have 1.5 million people See ROUNDTABLE page 2

Drag Queen

Meets with Protest By: Dr. John E. Warren, with Drew Weisenberger Publisher with Contributing Writer

The acts of protest and controversy leading up to the Drag Queen Story Hour at the Chula Vista Library were not enough to stop the planned event. On Tuesday, September 10th, a local group of drag queens became a part of a series of such national events hosted by libraries around the country. The official statement is that “The Drag Queen Story Hour was started in San Francisco in

Photos by Drew Weisenberger and Dennis Hodges

See STORY page 2

EDUCATION IN THE SEGREGATED SOUTH:

CALIFORNIA DEMOCRATIC PARTY

A Determined African American Culture

Black Caucus Elects All Women to Board

Photo: NNPA

Rogers Professor of African American Studies at Princeton University, urged her more than 60,000 Twitter followers to not believe the myth that the schools were terrible pre-desegregation.

Newswire NNPA

By Manny Otiko California Black Media

You could feel the high level of energy in the room when the California Democratic Party African American Caucus (CDPAAC) made history this past weekend, electing four Black women to lead the organization.

Story Hour

According to the National Association of Real Estate Brokers (NAREB) wealth building usually begins with that first investment in owning your own home. Whether you purchase a first-time “starter” home or inherit a property or residence, you start down the road to building wealth. But something has changed in the Black community. The U.S. Census Bureau’s latest statistics indicate that the Black homeownership rate has dropped once again.

“I am at a loss of words. People were crying, cheering and texting me congratulations - all at the same time,” said Taisha Brown, who the CDPAAC’s members elected chair at the group’s convention, held Aug. 23-Aug. 25 at the Hilton DoubleTree in San Jose.

Now at 40.6%, the rate starkly signals a continual loss of wealth for Black Americans. By comparison, the non-Hispanic White homeownership rate for the same period was reported to be 73.1%, a nearly 30% difference. There’s a problem and NAREB is on point to stop the loss and return Black

See BOARD page 15

See HOMEOWNERSHIP page 2

Washington DC, USA, 1951. Student traffic controllers are waiting to be deployment at an intersection in Washinton DC. Photo: iStockphoto / NNPA

By Stacy M. Brown NNPA Newswire Correspondent

During segregation, Black schools in the South focused on building an environment of success for community children. Educator, activist and youth worker Derrick R. Brooms said black schools served multiple purposes – particularly during the Jim Crow era.

“There are ways in which some Black schools during that era served as both fugitive and liberation spaces and opportunities,” Brooms wrote on Twitter. “It was in these spaces that many black communities saw, supported, and invested in multiple possibilities,” Brooms said. The conversation started on social media last month when Imani Perry, a Hughes

“There’s an extraordinary body of black education history that tells otherwise,” Perry said. As examples, Perry provided James Anderson, Vanessa Siddle Walker, Michael Fultz, Heater Williams and Valinda Littlefield. Anderson is the author of, “The Education of Blacks in the South, 1860-1935” which received the Outstanding Book Award of the American Educational Research Association. He is also co-editor of New Perspectives on Black Educational History and has published numerous articles and book chapters on the history of education. See EDUCATION page 16


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