Volume 58, Number 48, November 2018

Page 1

50¢

www/facebook.com/ SDVoiceandViewpoint

Plus Tax

@VoiceViewpoint

PRESORTED STANDARD U.S. POSTAGE

PAID

PERMIT NO 585 SAN DIEGO, CA

“People Without a Voice Vol. Vol.58 57No. No.48 35 | | Thursday, Thursday November August 31, 29,2017 2018

Where Children Live

Matters

.. NATIONAL TRUST

Raises Over $10 Million to Preserve Historic Black Sites

Cannot be Heard”

Serving San Serving DiegoSan County’s DiegoAfrican County’s & African African American & African Communities American 57 Communities Years 58 Years

Tammy Colbert Needs A Kidney Transplant By Dr, John E. Warren Publisher

Tammy Colbert is a 54 year old single mother and grandmother living in San Diego, California where she grew up attending Montgomery Middle School and San Diego High School. In telling her own story she says: “Prior to my kidney failure, I worked as a medical laboratory technician. I loved being able to help people who are ill. These days, I am on the receiving end of illness. Due to chronic kidney disease I am unable to work or enjoy the simple tasks i used to love.” She continues on to say: “ My disease, which I have been battling for 18 years, is called Focal Segmental Glomerulosclerosis. It attacks the kidneys’ filtering system and causes scarring that eventually results in complete kidney failure.” Eight years ago she was put on the waiting list for a deceased-donor kidney and started hemodialysis

Photo by Rosemary Ketchum from Pexels

Photo by Brett Sayles from Pexels

Source: Seattle Housing Authority

By Dr, John E. Warren Publisher

SEATTLE — The part of this city east of Northgate Mall looks like many of the neighborhoods that surround it, with its modest midcentury homes beneath dogwood and Douglas fir trees. Whatever distinguishes this place is invisible from the street. But it appears that poor children who grow up here — to a greater degree than children living even a mile away — have good odds of escaping poverty over the course of their lives. Believing this, officials in the Seattle Housing Authority are offering some families with housing vouchers extra rent money and help to find a home here: between 100th and 115th Streets, east of Meridian, west of 35th Avenue. Officials drew these lines, and boundaries around several other Seattle neighborhoods, using highly detailed research on the economic fortunes of children in nearly every neighborhood in America. The research has shown that where children live matters deeply in whether they prosper as adults. On Monday the Census Bureau, in collaboration with researchers at Harvard and Brown, published nationwide data that will make it possible to pinpoint — down to the census tract, a level relevant to individual families — where children of all backgrounds have the best shot at getting ahead. This work, years in the making, seeks to bring the abstract promise of big data to the real lives of children. Across the country, city officials and philanthropists who have dreamed of such a map are planning how to use it. They’re hoping it can help crack open a problem, the persistence of neighborhood disadvantage, that has been resistant to government interventions and good intentions for years.

The National Trust for Historic Preservation announced that one year after the launch of the African American Cultural Heritage Action Fund the organization has hit a funding milestone, raising more than $10M dollars for this $25M initiative.

US COMMISSION ON CIVIL RIGHTS

Releases Report on Police Use of Force

The Action Fund aims to uplift stories of African American achievement, activism, and community, crafting a narrative that expands a view of history, and that helps to reconstruct our national identity while inspiring a new generation of activists to advocate for diverse historic places, according to the announcement.

Courtesy of The US Commission on Civil Right

“We are proud of how over this past year we’ve helped to broaden the conversation about the places that matter,” Stephanie Meeks, president and CEO of the National Trust for Historic Preservation, said in a news release.

In the United States Commission on Civil Rights, Police Use of Force: An Examination of Modern Policing Practices the Commission investigated rates of police use of force; whether rates and instantiations of use of force violate civil rights of persons of color, persons with disabilities, LGBT communities, and low-income persons; promising or proven policies and practices worth replicating to minimize unnecessary use of force; and the perception and reality of discrimination in police use of force.

See CHILDREN page 2

Tammy Colbert

See COLBERT page 2

Photo by Rosemary Ketchum from Pexels

The Commission considered evidence from law enforcement and court officials, community leaders and police reform advocates, scholars, legal experts, as well as testimony taken in by the Commission’s State Advisory Committees in Minnesota, New York, Maine, and Delaware. The Commission majority approved key findings including the following: While police officers have the difficult and admirable job of providing crucial

See TRUST page 6

See REPORT page 2

Airbnb Claims to Now Offer Welcoming Places to Stay Airbnb Experiences are activities designed and led by inspiring locals. They go beyond typical tours or classes by immersing guests in each host’s unique world. It’s an opportunity for anyone to share their hobbies, skills, or expertise without needing an extra room Newswire NNPA News

After more than a decade in business, Airbnb has gone beyond being recognized as just a worldwide accommodations platform that folks use as an alternative to hotels. The company was founded in 2008 by Brian Chesky, Joe Gebbia and Nate Blecharczyk;

After a decade in business, whether its hosting, satisfying guests or the wide-variety of Experiences, Airbnb success stories continue to pour in. A beautiful morning enjoying coffee in a unique city is among the Experiences provided by Airbnb (Courtesy photo).

it’s very first listing was Chesky and Gebbia’s Rausch Street San Francisco apartment. During a weekend where hotel rooms were completely sold out for a design conference, the duo decided to host guests on air beds and serve them breakfast in order to make enough money to pay their rent.

Today, Airbnb boasts more than 400 million guest arrivals with an average number of 2 million people staying with Airbnb per night, in an excess of 1,000 cities.But, the company offers more than just a room to sleep in. Airbnb also offers “Experiences,” which are one-of-a-kind activities designed and hosted by locals that you enjoy both when you’re traveling or when you’re at home. Unlike a typical tour or workshop, Experiences go beyond the activities themselves. They offer a deep-dive into the local host’s world through their passion. See EXPERIENCES page 10


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.