When Praises Go Up! Gospel Showcase | |
Calling All Choirs, Soloists, Flag Ministries, Dance Ministries, Musicians, Poets & Spoken Word Artists | |
Final Audition Date: Saturday, October 15, 2011 – 12pm-4pm | |
Auditioning Groups Must Register in Advance | |
For Registration Application and Showcase Rules Visit www.newarksymphonyhall.org or the Newark Symphony Hall Box Office at 1020 Broad Street, Newark, New Jersey |
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For additional information call Faith Jackson at 973-643-4550 or faith@newarksymphonyhall.org | |
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Click here for more information, rules and application form. |
Oct 13
When praise goes up, Audition, 10/15/2011
Permanent link to this article: http://www.palmstreetblockassociation.org/2011/10/13/when-praise-goes-up-audition-10152011/
Oct 13
Essex County immigrant detention center a house of controversy
Posted by: “Maria Juega” charoj@msn.com charojj
Sep 26, 2011 6:29 am (PDT)
Published: Thursday, September 22, 2011, 8:00 AM Updated: Thursday, September 22, 2011, 11:58 AM
By Chris Megerian/Statehouse Bureau The Star-Ledger
Andrew Miller/For The Star-LedgerDelaney Hall, an Essex County-based private correctional facility for immigrant detainees. The center has become a focal point of controversy, as civil libertarians contend the privatized center profits from mandatory detention for immigrants who have committed civil, not criminal, violations. The signs on the walls will be taken down when detainees arrive.
NEWARK — Despite the barbed wire snaking across the top of its perimeter fence, Delaney Hall is not a traditional lock-up.
Some dorm rooms have skylights. Bookshelves line a library wall. When immigration detainees begin filling the stark-white rooms next month — thanks to the new contract between the federal government and Essex County — they will be free to walk the halls during the day.
These small comforts are part of a wide-ranging reform effort by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (known as ICE), which is seeking a less punitive form of incarceration for immigrant detainees. But the Newark facility, run by the company Community Education Centers and toured by The Star-Ledger last month, became the center of a controversy that pitted immigrant activists against politicians and company executives.
The battle took a distinctly New Jersey turn, with allegations that a now-canceled bidding process was stacked in favor of the politically connected company. It’s also provided a window into the raucous national debate over immigration detention.
Detention facilities create moneymaking opportunities for local governments and private firms, but advocates say they’re profiting from a flawed policy of mandatory detention for immigrants who may have only committed civil, not criminal, violations.
“There’s been no discussion that these are people,” said Kathy O’Leary of Pax Christi, a Catholic social justice organization. “There’s been much discussion about the dollars and cents.”
Detainees will include legal and illegal immigrants facing deportation for breaking immigration rules, such as overstaying a visa or entering the country without proper documents, or for committing nonviolent crimes. The contract with ICE, approved by the Essex freeholder board Sept. 7, will roughly double the number of detainees held in Newark, bringing the total to 1,250.
Essex County expects to earn $50 million a year and Community Education Centers gets a bigger bite of a growing market other companies have already tapped. Most detainees will be kept at the county jail and up to 450 will go to Delaney Hall, which also houses parolees and county inmates.
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The five-year arrangement allows the county to act as a middleman. If the detainee is housed in the jail, the county gets the full $108-a-night payment from ICE. If the detainee goes to Delaney Hall, the county pays the company $71 a night and keeps the $37 difference. “This is a very unpleasant way of getting revenue,” said Ralph Caputo, vice president of the freeholder board. “But it’s going to be helpful.”
Essex County Executive Joseph N. DiVincenzo Jr., once called the “Jack Welsh of correctional facilities” for his ability to turn inmates into dollars, said detainees will be a crucial source of revenue as his county wrestles with a tough economy.
“The $250 million we expect to receive over the five-year contract will significantly help reduce the financial burden on our taxpayers,” he said.
DiVincenzo said the county jail and Delaney Hall would provide “modern, safe and dignified housing with access to health care and visitation.”
POLICY AND PROFITS
Immigrant advocates say it’s wrong to turn faulty federal policy into a gold rush.
“They’re making money off the backs of immigrant suffering,” said Amy Gottlieb, director of the Immigrant Rights Program with the American Friends Service Committee in Newark.
Antonio Ginatta, advocacy director for Human Rights Watch’s U.S. Program, said too may people are being detained because of strict federal laws signed in the 1990s.
“The immigration system is detaining people that are not flight risks and are not dangers to the community,” he said.
Philip Alagia, DiVincenzo’s chief of staff, said Essex County doesn’t set immigration policy and detainees have to be housed somewhere.
“If it didn’t go to Essex, right now it would be in a county in Pennsylvania,” he said.
The Obama administration disappointed advocates by increasing deportations, but recently announced it would review 300,000 cases to focus on those considered a security risk. There are 33,390 detainees held by ICE on an average day this year, up from 30,295 in the 2007 fiscal year, the agency said.
The $2.6 billion detention network includes about 250 facilities. ICE also plans new operations near Miami, Chicago, San Francisco, Atlanta and Kansas City.
The expansion is geared toward two goals set by the Obama administration: increase capacity in urban areas so immigrants detained there aren’t shipped to rural facilities far away from their families, and reduce its reliance on local jails that rent unused beds to the federal government.
In New Jersey, which has an average of 941 detainees each day, immigration authorities use five county jails: Essex, Bergen, Monmouth, Hudson and Sussex. They also use a private facility in Elizabeth run by Corrections Corporation of America, a Nashville, Tenn. company and one of ICE’s biggest contractors. Detainees housed in the Northeast spend an average of 49 days in ICE facilities, according to contract documents.
Because many detainees haven’t committed crimes, advocates say it’s wrong to incarcerate them in a criminal setting. So ICE says it’s seeking a “wholly new generation of detention facilities.”
PRIVATIZING DETENTION
That’s where private companies like Community Education Centers step in. The West Caldwell company is better known in New Jersey for its drug rehabilitation programs and is the state Department of Corrections’ biggest contractor for halfway homes. The company, which also runs two Texas correctional facilities where ICE detainees are housed, has worked with Essex County for more than a decade.
The company has modified Delaney Hall in preparation for housing detainees. The lowest-security detainees will be sent there while those facing criminal charges will stay in the county jail. The front half will continue to house parolees and county inmates, while the back half will be for detainees. A second entrance is labeled “immigration services.”
This is a second chance for the company to use Delaney Hall for detainees. In 2008, one escaped and was later recaptured in Kentucky. All 120 detainees were moved back to the county jail. Officials said security is now tighter.
RELATED COVERAGE:
• Essex County freeholders approve 5-year deal for immigrant detention
• ICE warns it may alter Essex County contract to house immigrant detainees
• Essex County signs new 5-year agreement that could increase number of immigrant detainees, generate $50M annually
• Essex County to see an increase in immigrant detainees
• Immigration advocates gather in Newark to protest proposed Essex County detention center
But the contracting process became ensnared in controversy when critics said the county’s request for proposals was tailor-made for Delaney Hall. For example, bidders were required to already have an existing correctional facility located within 10 miles of the jail — Delaney Hall is adjacent to the jail. The company’s leader, John Clancy, has been a big-dollar donor to county and state politicians. A senior vice president, William Palatucci, is a close adviser to Gov. Chris Christie. U.S. Sen. Frank Lautenberg (D-N.J.) questioned whether the process was “entirely fair, open and transparent.”
County officials denied any wrongdoing. Eric Shuffler, a spokesman for Clancy, said it’s not surprising Delaney Hall would be “ready to accommodate the well-known policy of the federal government.”
After Clancy’s organization was the only one to bid on the contract on July 28, the county said it would restart the bidding process later this year. Delaney Hall will house detainees through Dec. 31 under an existing contract, which DiVincenzo said would save the county $600,000.
A look at ICE projects around the country shows it’s not unusual for a company to work closely with local government. Sometimes the company leads the charge to bring in detainees.
That’s what happened in Crete, Ill., about 40 miles south of Chicago. Representatives from the Corrections Corporation of America (CCA) called the town last year with a pitch for a new facility, saying it would bring new jobs and tax revenue to the area. Town administrator Thomas Durkin said Crete worked with the company to pitch a plan to ICE. They were tenatively selected as a site for a new facility in June.
ICE also tenatively selected Southwest Ranches, Fla., 30 miles north of Miami, for a facility. CCA owns land there and the town approved the site plan, administrator Burt Wraines said.
Nationwide, half of all ICE detainees were housed in private facilities in 2009, according to Detention Watch Network.
Ruthie Epstein, a critic of detention policies who works at Human Rights First in New York City, said Delaney Hall is better than county jails.
Said Shuffler: “We intend to exceed ICE’s standards when it comes to medical facilities, indoor and outdoor recreational opportunities, and visitation.”
That does not assuage all activists. Some note the chemical smell that wafts through the surrounding industrial park. Most of all, though, they are troubled by the underlying federal policy of mandatory detention. “No matter how nice you try to spin it, you’re looking at people with civil immigration violations behind barbed wire,” Gottlieb said.
Maria (Charo) Juega
Latin American Legal Defense
& Education Fund, Inc.
(LALDEF)
PO Box 80
Princeton NJ 08542
(877) 452-5333
Permanent link to this article: http://www.palmstreetblockassociation.org/2011/10/13/essex-county-immigrant-detention-center-a-house-of-controversy/
Oct 13
Black Male Teachers Disappearing
Black Teachers, Especially Black We are not even qualified to 43% of laid off CPS teachers |
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![]() Press Release
Disproportionate Number of
Teacher Lay Offs are Black and
Latino 09/23/2011
The majority of school teachers recently laid off by the Chicago Board of
Education are people of color, and hardest hit are African teachers in schools serving African American students, according to a new analysis released today by the Chicago Teachers Union (CTU). An analysis of Chicago Public Schools (CPS) layoffs shows 55 percent of
teachers who lost their jobs this past year are people of color. The data are especially troubling because according to the Illinois State Board of Education (ISBE), blacks make up only 30 percent of all public school teachers. Given the push for a longer, better school day neighborhood schools need more teachers not less. According to the ISBE School Report Card data for 2010:
Yet, a demographic analysis of the 75 percent of laid off teachers for whom
data was available on ISBE’s Teacher Service Record reveals:
“Clearly I am disturbed when any teacher is put out of work, however, this
is a disturbing trend that has real consequences for the overwhelming Black and Latino student population in our schools who look to their teachers as role models for achievement and success,” said CTU President Karen GJ Lewis. “We want to know what CPS is doing to address this racial disparity. With unemployment soaring in the black community, why is CPS exacerbating
this crisis by getting rid of experienced and valuable educators in the first place?” In addition to the racial disparity in the teacher layoffs, there are
disparities regarding the schools from which teachers were laid off. The 930 school-based teachers laid off are 4.4 percent of teachers working in schools. However, these layoffs were twice as likely to occur at schools with greater concentrations of low-income students or African American students. Throughout CPS, 87 percent of students receive free or reduced lunch.
However, these low-income students are not evenly distributed throughout the system. The schools that have a higher concentration of economically disadvantaged students have twice the teacher layoff rate of those schools with lower concentrations of these students, as shown in the chart below. ——————————————————————————————-
Demographics of Teachers and Students
in Chicago Public Schools Teachers
Number of Black Teachers Percentage Year
9,163 39.4% 2002 7,162 31.6% 2008 6,332 29.7% 2010 Down by 2,831 since 2002 Number of
White Teachers Percentage Year 10,466 45.0% 2002 11,037 48.7% 2008 10,596 49.7% 2010 Up by 130 since 2002 Number of
Latino Teachers Percentage Year 2,884 12.4% 2002 3,468 15.3% 2008 3,433 16.1% 2010 Up by 549 since 2002 Students
Number of
Black Students Percentage Year 50.8%
2002 45.4% 2008 184,176 45% 2010 Number of
White Students Percentage Year 9.6% 20028.3% 2008 36,835 9% 2010 Number of
Latino Students Percentage Year 36.1 % 200239.7% 2008 167,804 41% 2010 Research above data on teachers and students since 2002 |
Permanent link to this article: http://www.palmstreetblockassociation.org/2011/10/13/black-male-teachers-disappearing/
Oct 13
The National Alliance of Black School Educators 39th Annual Conference
The National Alliance of Black School Educators 39th Annual Conference
November 16 20, 2011
Ernest N. Morial Convention Center New Orleans, LA
Education is a Civil Right: Today’s Strategies that
Build Tomorrow’s Leaders of African Descent
http://www.nabse.org/conference/pdf/2011CONFERENCEPACKET.pdf
Please share this information with your friends!
Thank You
Permanent link to this article: http://www.palmstreetblockassociation.org/2011/10/13/the-national-alliance-of-black-school-educators-39th-annual-conference/
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