Vol. 60 No. 34, August 20, 2020

Page 1

PRESORTED STANDARD U.S. POSTAGE

60

th

PAID

Anniversary

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PERMIT NO 585 SAN DIEGO, CA

@VoiceViewpoint

¢ 50 Plus Tax “People Without a Voice

ThursdayAugust Vol. Vol.60 57No. No.34 35   | |Thursday, August20, 31, 2020 2017

SEE LOCAL

COVID-19 UPDATES ON PAGE 10

www.sdvoice.info

COVID-19 CASES IN SOUTHEAST

796 1,149

810

92105

92102 1,351

1,089

92114

92113

603

Source: County of San Diego a/o 8/18/20

Serving Serving San Diego SanCounty’s Diego County’s African & African AfricanAmerican & African Communities American57Communities Years 60 Years

92115

WOMEN’S SUFFRAGE:

The African American Contribution

see pages 8 & 9

92139

TRUMP Statewide Evictions ADMINISTRATION

RAMPS UP EFFORTS

TO DISMANTLE

POST OFFICE

Cannot be Heard”

Resume Sept. 2

-- As Lawmakers Push Bill to Protect Renters By Antonio Ray Harvey California Black Media

SHIRLEY WEBER’S ETHNIC STUDIES BILL

CSU

IS NOW STATE LAW Gov. Newsom signed AB 1460 into law on Monday, Aug. 17.

On Tuesday evening, the Senate Judiciary Committee passed Assembly Bill (AB) 1436. The legislation now moves to the Senate Appropriations Committee for review. If signed into law, the bill would prevent evictions for non-payment of rent and grant struggling property owners mortgage forbearance. Jamie Burson of Fairfield, CA sits on the bed of her motel room on August 4, 2020. Burson has been living between her car and motels since being evicted in April. Photo by Anne Wernikoff for CalMatters

Slowdowns at the post office have reportedly also resulted in seniors receiving their medications late and other important mail like social security checks. (Photo: iStockphoto / NNPA)

President Donald Trump has made no secret of his desire to dismantle the United States Postal Service or revamp the agency in a way that has angered Democrats and others who said it’s a tactic to prevent mailin voting for the upcoming election. The CARES Act passed in April authorized the postal service to borrow up to $10 billion from the Treasury Department for operating expenses if it’s determines that, due to the COVID-19 emergency, the post office would not fund operating expenses without borrowing money. “They have withheld that money. They have broken the law,” Congressional Black Caucus Chair Karen Bass told BlackPressUSA during a livestream interview last month. Other Democratic lawmakers, including Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio), Rep. Bobby Scott See USPS page 15

See EVICTIONS page 2

Fair Housing Still a Distant Journey for Black America

By Stacy M. Brown NNPA Newswire Senior National Correspondent

AB 1436 calls for preventing the eviction of tenants who missed rent payments during

HOMEOWNERSHIP FOR AFRICAN AMERICANS BY STATE By Trice Edney Wire

Assemblymember Shirley Weber during a floor session on June 10, 2020. Weber’s bill, AB 1460, was signed into Monday, August 17 making ethnic studies courses a requirement at CSU. Photo: a79.asmdc.org/

By Joe W. Bowers Jr. CBM

The new state law requires California State University (CSU), the nation’s largest four-year public university system, to provide courses in Ethnic studies at each of its 23 campuses beginning with the 2021– 22 academic year and requires CSU students to take a 3-credit course in Ethnic studies in order to graduate beginning in the 2024-2025 academic year.

Public pressure to restore a key HUD rule has united civil rights, public and private sector stakeholders in a swelling and nearly daily drumbeat of concern calling for fair housing to be supported and HUD’s replacement rule be rescinded.

The bill was introduced last year by Assemblymember Shirley Weber (D-San Diego), professor emeritus of Africana studies at San Diego State, on behalf of the California Faculty Association (CFA)

See HOUSING page 2

See STUDIES page 2

California Voters to Decide Whether Parolees Allowed to Vote By Quinci LeGardye California Black Media

In November, Californians will vote on a proposition that could expand voting rights to include parolees. If passed, Proposition 17, which passed the State Senate as ACA 6 June 24, would amend the state constitution so that any otherwise eligible person who is not currently incarcerated can vote.

The current law in California prohibits previously incarcerated persons from voting while on parole, though they can vote while on probation, county Post-Release Community Supervision and federal supervised release. Allowing parolees to vote would enfranchise over 40,000 Californians currently on parole. See VOTING page 15


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