News
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Apr 21 2011
In the Baldwin Hills Crenshaw Mall |
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Mar 3 2011
Here’s a look at African American people and issues making headlines throughout the country. Michigan Ohio Texas Wisconsin |
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Oct 7 2010
Here’s a look at African American issues and people making headlines throughout the country |
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Sep 23 2010
Here’s a look at African American issues and people making headlines throughout the country. National U.S. Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Secretary Shaun Donovan recently awarded $7.4 million to 10 historically black colleges and universities to help revitalize neighborhoods, promote affordable housing and stimulate economic development in their communities. The funding is provided through HUD’s Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU) Program. Donovan made the announcement to the Congressional Black Caucus’ Annual Legislative Conference in Washington. A new effort led by the National College Access Network (NCAN) and the USC Rossier School of Education’s Center for Urban Education (CUE) will try to align college access programs with student achievement goals at two Boston high schools. The objective for the Kresge Foundation-funded initiative is to expand the pool of college eligible high school students of color by improving the quality of college access programs and integrating these efforts with the schools’ academic goals. Program administrators are often unaware of the students they serve and whether the services are helping students improve their grades and fulfill the course requirements for college admission. Only 35 percent of Boston Public Schools’ college-bound graduates from the class of 2000 had actually earned degrees by 2007. Tia Brown McNair, assistant director for NCAN, the grant recipient, says the funding will provide her advocacy organization with the resources to increase the effectiveness of college access programs. |
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Sep 16 2010
Here’s a look at African American issues and people making headlines throughout the country. Alabama U.S. District Judge C. Lynwood Smith Jr., granted a motion that allowed former Jefferson County Commissioner Chris McNair to remain free on bond instead of having to report to federal prison as a result of a bribery case. Five other individuals involved will report to prison next week, but Doug Jones, McNair’s attorney, was able to convince the judge that because of his clients age, 86, and recent stroke, that his sentencing deadline should be reconsidered at a new hearing in October. California According to research recently released by the Center for Responsible Lending, California leads the United States in the worst foreclosure crisis since the Great Depression. Across the country, foreclosures have hit an all-time high, with nearly one in 10 homes with a mortgage currently in some stage of foreclosure. In California, nearly one in eight—or approximately 702,000—homes are currently in foreclosure, the economy is in ruins and unemployment stands at 12 percent with higher rates in Latino and Black communities. These groups represent more than half of all foreclosures, with 48 percent of foreclosures hitting Latinos and eight percent hitting Blacks. These borrowers were more likely to receive higher-cost sub-prime mortgages with loan terms that typically increased the risk of default, compared to safer loans made to similarly situated non-Hispanic White borrowers. District of Columbia Incumbent Washington, D.C., Mayor Adrian Fenty and challenger Vincent Gray have pulled out all the stops in the closing hours of their race, and employed a host of 11th-hour strategies to earn a four-year term in the executive suite at the John A. Wilson Building. Fenty had schools chancellor Michelle Rhee at his side recently, as the pair kicked off the first day of early voting in the district, while Gray is looking to his council colleague former Mayor Marion Barry, to attract the support of some of the city’s poorest residents. Fenty cast aside his reputed arrogance during a recent debate, making what appeared to be an earnest plea for forgiveness. He has admitted he’s been aloof, arrogant, less than inclusive of other leaders in his administration, but promised to improve, if voters give him a second chance. |



