Dianne Morales Spent Years Working Grassroots, Her Next Step is to Create Change on a Citywide Scale

Dianne Morales Spent Years Working Grassroots, Her Next Step is to Create Change on a Citywide Scale


Dianne Morales is not your traditional candidate for New York City mayor, but that’s exactly why she thinks she’s the best candidate. Born and raised in Brooklyn by Puerto Rican parents, Morales has spent her career working for NYC communities at the ground level.

During her career, Morales has co-founded a national early childhood literacy program, created an after-school education program that is now used citywide, and created a career training program in healthcare in the Bronx. Now, Morales wants to scale up her plans to help everyone.

The Stony Brook and Columbia alum told BLACK ENTERPRISE she sees a batted and bruised city as a result of the coronavirus, but one that came together and literally survived together. That includes frontline workers and low-income immigrant workers.

Morales believes the city’s biggest issue is who it prioritizes.

I think one of the city’s biggest issues is the failure to prioritize communities, the failure for us to invest,” Morales said. “For so long we’ve been divesting from low-income communities that are continuing to suffer and continuing to feel the brunt of that divestment that has been seen over the last 14 months.”

The lack of investment is a big reason why Morales is one of the only candidates to support defunding the police. Morales’ plan would divert $3 billion of the New York Police Department budget to help create a Community First Responders Department. The department will be outside of the NYPD and will be staffed with trained personnel with backgrounds in mental health, wellness, and social issues. Areas she says the NYPD is not trained to address.

“I don’t think that policing equals public safety,” Morales told BLACK ENTERPRISE. “So for me, what it means is divesting from policing and reinvesting in our communities and what actually make our communities safe, because it not policing.”

Additionally, Morales, would remove the NYPD from social services including school safety officers, traffic enforcement, and drug intervention. She would also protect immigrant communities, providing the right to counsel for immigrant and undocumented communities and ensuring no city agency cooperates with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)

Morales spent a decade in various educational roles including two years at the Department of Education (DOE) and believes the city’s education system really shouldn’t leave anyone behind. Morales will streamline the K-16 system which includes a fully funded City University of New York (CUNY) system, making it possible for all students to access and achieve higher education at no cost.

The educator will also assist disabled students, especially those in marginalized communities. Morales will boost support to make sure disabled students are connected to resources, funding, and opportunities that prioritize their navigation of both DOE and CUNY systems.

Morales will also allocate funding to provide adequate resources, more training, and higher wages for teachers and education workers. She will also increase salaries for all CUNY faculty and staff.

One thing Morales knows is that for a student to be successful in the classroom they have to have a stable household. In New York City more than 100,000 school-aged children are housing insecure.

Within the first 100 days of her term, Morales will provide more secure and guaranteed pathways toward permanent residence. That includes the prompt conversion of hotels into permanent support housing and services for families of 100,000 unhoused school-aged youth.

Morales plans on appointing a deputy mayor who would be tasked with coordinating a citywide, cross-sector effort addressing housing, opportunity, and social mobility. She will also shift the $3 billion annual shelter budget toward preventative measures and implement preventative models that effectively respond to housing displacement and vulnerability.

Morales, a former service provider for NYCHA developments knows two things about the city’s public housing. It’s in disrepair and the majority of its residents are low-income.

Morales has big plans for NYCHA developments, starting with aligning NYCHA objectives with the Federal Green New Deal for Public Housing Act. The city will use grants and investments to make sure every apartment sees energy and technological upgrades including electrical upgrades, water quality upgrades, and community energy generation, including renewable energy rooftops and photovoltaic glass windows, and improved recycling and zero-waste programs.

Morales’ housing plan also includes ending the criminalization, policing, and surveillance of NYCHA communities and begin the transfer of those resources toward strategies that increase social mobility, self-determination, and community autonomy, including creative/art programming, entrepreneurial pipelines, transformative justice, and conflict resolution techniques.

Morales considers herself a foodie, mostly because she just likes to eat and says the ability to find any kind of food in New York is what separates it from other cities.

Her plans for New York City include guaranteed housing for all, democratizing healthcare, green jobs, a cooperative economy, a wealth tax, free CUNY, and public banking. Morales racked up an impressive number of endorsements including the Professional Staff Congress (2nd in ranked-choice voting), Progressive Women of New York (1st) and Working Families Party (2nd).

Morales believes the people are ready for a candidate like her but she isn’t sure everyone is.

“I think New Yorkers are speaking loudly in supporting this campaign,” Morales told BE. “I think that this is anyone’s race to win and folks should not underestimate the power of the people and what has come together as a result of my candidacy. “

Mississippi Woman Provides Vaccine Transportation for Local Community

Mississippi Woman Provides Vaccine Transportation for Local Community


Amid the American government’s rollout of the COVID-19 vaccination, one Mississippi native created a business to make sure her local community is covered.

Pam Chatman has been aiding in the vaccine rollout in the Missippi Delta through her Vaccine Transporation Initiative (VTI), WBUR reports. Since founding her company Boss Lady Workforce Transportation, Chatman has been spearheading a campaign that provides transportation to vaccination sites, creates local vaccine pop-ups, and helps educate the local community on receiving the vaccine.

With a lack of reliable resources to get vaccinated, Chatman saw the need to assist her neighbors surrounding her Cleveland, Mississippi, community. “We know here in rural Mississippi, a lot of places here do not have internet, So, it was difficult for them to register,” Chatman told Atlanta Black Star.

In addition to the mobile vaccination service and pop-ups, Chatman’s VTI initiative has also been going into the homes of homebound patients and giving them the vaccine.

“We are now going into Black communities taking mobile facilities there and actually meeting the people and serving the people where they are,” Chatman said. “We’re going into their communities, into their churches, and providing them the vaccine.”

Melvin Curry, co-owner of Life Savers Assisted Living, recalled how seamless his vaccination experience was thanks to VTI. The initiative helped Curry and 15 others, including his wife, staff, and clients, receive the vaccine. “It was very smooth,” Curry said. “There were no issues as far as our clients. Everything went well.”

Hernando, Missippi, native Keith Fulcher praised Chatman for being “the Mother Teresa of the Mississippi Delta” with her groundbreaking VTI initiative.

“I just want to give because there are so many people who are afraid to ask for the things they need,” Chatman said. So far her initiative has helped to get nearly 60 people vaccinated and raised over $30,000 in donations.

U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland Announces Investigation Into Louisville Police Department

U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland Announces Investigation Into Louisville Police Department


U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland announced the Justice Department will conduct an investigation into the Louisville Police Department.

The announcement and investigation comes a little over a year after the death of Breonna Taylor, an EMT who was shot six times and killed in her own home during a botched raid last year. Louisville’s police department and state attorney general Daniel Cameron faced scrutiny and backlash over the incident and the charges the officers are now facing.

During a press conference announcing the investigation, Garland referred to the Taylor case and said the investigation into the department “will assess whether (Louisville Metro Police Department) engages in a pattern or practice of using unreasonable force, including with respect to people involved in peaceful expressive activities.”

“It will determine whether LMPD engages in unconstitutional stops, searches and seizures, as well as whether the department unlawfully executes search warrants on private homes,” Garland added. “It will also assess whether LMPD engages in discriminatory conduct on the basis of race, or fails to perform public services that comply with the Americans with Disabilities Act. Investigation will include comprehensive review of the Louisville police department policies and training.”

Louisville Mayor Greg Fischer said in a press conference Monday he “strongly” welcomes the probe into Louisville’s Police Department, but added that the city has already taken steps to improve policing.

Taylor’s death along with the death of George Floyd jump started a resurgence in the Black Lives Matter movement.

While George Floyd’s killer Derek Chauvin was charge and indicted on second and third degree murder charges, Cameron charged just one officer in the Taylor shooting. Officer Brett Hankison was charged with three counts of wanton endangerment for shooting into the apartment of one of Taylor’s neighbors.

None of the other officers were charged for killing Taylor.

Garland and the Justice Department last week announced a probe into the Minneapolis Police Department following the conviction of Chauvin.

Chadwick Boseman Oscar NFT Artwork Leads To Backlash When Anthony Hopkins Receives Best Actor Award

Chadwick Boseman Oscar NFT Artwork Leads To Backlash When Anthony Hopkins Receives Best Actor Award


An Oscar tribute to the late Chadwick Boseman, who was the favorite to win the best actor award at the Oscars, received backlash by viewers when Anthony Hopkins received the award.

Boseman, who passed away last year, received a posthumous nomination for the best actor award based on his role in Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom. Boseman already won a Golden Globe, Screen Actors Guild Award, and a Critic’s Choice Award for the role.

Many expected Boseman to win, especially after producers moved it to the final award for the night. Additionally, it was announced before the show that all nominees would receive a one-of-a-kind digital artwork of Boseman redeemable by NFT.

The award show received significant backlash on social media when it was announced that Hopkins won the award for his role in The Father.

Hopkins did not attend the ceremony and did not give a speech virtually, which led to an awkward ending to the show. On Monday, Hopkins posted a speech on his Instagram account thanking those involved with The Father, before paying tribute to Boseman.

“I want to pay tribute to Chadwick Boseman who was taken from us far too early,” Hopkins said in the video.

Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom won two Oscars Sunday for best makeup and hairstyling and best costume design. Actress Viola Davis was nominated for best actress but lost to Frances McDormand for her role in Nomadland.
Boseman who is most known for his role as King T’Challa in Black Panther also played several iconic African Americans roles including civil rights attorney Thurgood Marshall and former MLB player Jackie Robinson. Fans of Black Panther have started a petition to continue the role of King T’Challa.

 

Lindsey Graham States There’s No Systemic Racism In U.S. Because Barack Obama and Kamala Harris Were Elected


When it comes to racism in America, it appears that those who don’t experience it claim that there isn’t any. Case in point, South Carolina Republican Senator Lindsey Graham seems to think that “America is not a racist country.” And his examples are President Barack Obama being elected to the highest office and Vice President Kamla Harris.

According to the New York Post, while appearing on Fox News over the weekend, Graham commented about systemic racism after being asked about the subject as it pertains to the recent guilty conviction of former Minnesota police officer Derek Chauvin for killing the unarmed George Floyd.

“Not in my opinion. We just elected a two-term African-American president. The vice president is of African-American-Indian descent,” he said. “So our systems are not racist. America is not a racist country. Within every society, you have bad actors. The Chauvin trial was a just result. What’s happening in Ohio where the police officer had to use deadly force to prevent a young girl from being stabbed to death is a different situation in my view.”

“So this attack on police and policing, reform the police, yes; call them all racist, no. You know, America is a work in progress but best, best place on the planet and Joe Biden spent a lot of time running the place down. I wish he would stop it,” Graham said.

According to The Huffington Post, in a follow-up Fox News interview on Sunday, Rep. Karen Bass (D-CA.), the former chair of the Congressional Black Caucus, responded to Graham’s statement.

“My response is, at some point in our country’s history, we have got to figure out a way to talk about race where we can talk about it objectively and people don’t feel individual guilt,” Bass said.

“You can look at each of our institutions,” she added. “Why is there such massive inequality when it comes to education when it comes to health care? Why does that exist? And so we have to figure out a way to talk about it. Right now, to say it doesn’t exist does not help anyone.”

‘Don’t Make Me Hurt You More!’ Officer Shouts While Punching Autistic Teen

‘Don’t Make Me Hurt You More!’ Officer Shouts While Punching Autistic Teen


The Vacaville Police Department is doing damage control after shocking surveillance footage showed one of its officers punching an autistic teen.

“Get your hands behind your back!” the officer can be heard shouting at the teen before punching him in the face, KVTU reports. “You’re going to get hurt. Don’t make me hurt you more!” the cop declared as the scuffle ensued. However, the teen he violently arrested was a 17-year-old with autism and ADHD. While the arresting officer didn’t know the teen had special needs, another officer on the dispatch did.

After the surveillance footage was shared on social media, local community members called out the arresting officer’s actions. “It was a very poor decision professionally from that officer,” said Josh Bartholomew, the neighbor whose Ring cameras captured the Wednesday encounter. “The officer had an opportunity to deescalate. He used the discretion to escalate the situation, and it turned out how it was.”

Vacaville Police Sergeant Katie Cardona released a video statement acknowledging the controversy surrounding the video. “We completely understand that the video shown on social media is extremely difficult to watch,” Cardona said. “The arresting officer did not have prior knowledge that the subject was a special-needs individual.”

However, dispatch audio revealed that another officer who was not at the scene was aware and was heard telling the responding officer that the subject “has autism.” The dispatcher responded, “Affirm, possible special needs, per prior contacts.” The officer replied, “Copy, I’m familiar with him.”

But the responding officer was already in the middle of scuffling with the teen. “Fighting with one!” the officer shouted over the radio. The teen was a suspect in a pipe attack incident that left a 16-year-old injured. The teen’s father released a Facebook statement saying, “I am pro-police, but I am not pro-abuse.”

Hair and Beauty Team For ‘Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom’ Make History With Oscars Win


The three-person hair and makeup team that worked on Netflix’s Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom made history with their Oscar nomination and win.

Sergio Lopez-Rivera, Mia Neal, and Jamika Wilson were the masterminds who transformed Viola Davis into 1920s blues singer Ma Rainey and won the Oscar for Best Makeup and Hairstyling. With Neal and Wilson being Black, they helped add to the history-making moment as the first Black nominees and winners for the prestigious award, LA Times reports.

During her acceptance speech, Neal highlighted her grandfather, a Northwestern University grad who was a member of the Tuskegee Airman and represented the U.S. in the first Pan-Am Games. However, despite his accolades, Wilson revealed how her late grandfather was refused a teaching job due to him being Black.

“So I want to say thank you to our ancestors who put the work in, were denied but never gave up,” Neal said. “And I also stand here as Jamika and I break this glass ceiling with so much excitement for the future. Because I can picture Black trans women standing up here and Asian sisters and our Latina sisters and Indigenous women. And I know that one day it won’t be unusual or groundbreaking, it will just be normal.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ziagqwDrHnc

The win comes just in time for Ma Rainey’s birthday, BET reports. The late blues legend was born on April 26, 1886, in Columbus, Georgia. The award-winning Netflix film helped tell her story of being one of the pioneers in the music genre.

Wilson and Lopez-Rivera have a long collaborative history with Viola Davis and worked to install the wigs Neal designed. Lopez-Rivera previously shared how deliberate Davis’s “messy” look in the film was in order to capture the essence of the late singer and the period-accurate horse head wig she wore. “It was applied precisely to look messy,” he told the Times.

In addition to the hair and makeup team taking home a win for the film, Ann Roth also won for Best Costume Design. Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom was nominated for five Academy Awards including the two wins, and lead actress and actor for Viola Davis and the late Chadwick Boseman, respectively.

Police Association Speaks Out Against School Use of Children’s Book on Racial Injustice

Police Association Speaks Out Against School Use of Children’s Book on Racial Injustice


A police association in Binghampton, New York, called out a local elementary school for featuring a book on racial injustice as its book of the month.

The Binghamton Police Benevolent Association sent out a statement on April 19 in response to MacArthur Elementary School highlighting the children’s book Something Happened In Our Town as its April Book of the Month, WBNG reports. The book is about two children, one white and one Black, and their communication on how they view the world based on their race.

While the children’s book takes a more innocent approach to tackle the much-needed conversation around race, the local police association found it harmful to the youth.

RELATED CONTENT: ‘Sesame Street’ Introduces Black Muppets to Open Discussion on Racism

“The Binghamton Police Benevolent Association feels that this book can leave children with several erroneous impressions,” the statement read in part. “Children should not trust and should be afraid of the police. Police stop, arrest, and kill black people for no other reason than their race. Police are racist. Police are not held accountable for their actions and indiscretions.”

The statement continued. “While the theme attempting to be promoted in this story was tolerance, it is the opinion of the P.B.A. there is a blatant anti-police message portrayed in the book,” it claimed before listing out example excerpts from the children’s book.

“It wasn’t a mistake, said her sister Liz. The cops shot him because he’s black”,” one excerpt from the book read. “But he won’t go to jail,” said his father. “Cops stick up for each other”, said Josh’s brother Malcolm. “And they don’t like black men”.” another example read.

The highlights were used by the association to further prove their claim that the book took a seemingly anti-police tone. The association ended its statement asking the school for an apology.

“While we recognize that it is not incumbent on us to determine what should be taught in schools, we feel that the language in this book works to undermine public safety and will leave children with the impression that they cannot trust the police,” it said.

The Binghamton City School District released a follow-up statement saying the YouTube video had been taken down and the book being featured as its book of the month didn’t mean it reflected their views on the police.

Student Urged Police to Help Teenager Who Was Fatally Shot Inside School Bathroom

Student Urged Police to Help Teenager Who Was Fatally Shot Inside School Bathroom


Recently released bodycam footage of the fatal police shooting of Anthony J. Thompson Jr. shows that another student was in the school’s bathroom where the incident took place.

“What are you doing? He’s bleeding,” the student cried out, WBIR reports. The teen’s pleas for cops to help Thompson came after an 11-second struggle to retrieve a gun Thompson was allegedly concealing. District Attorney General Charme Allen held a two-hour press conference last Wednesday where the bodycam footage from the April 12 shooting was first released.

“None of them in their statements say they thought he had it at school,” Allen confirmed when asked if the responding officers knew Thompson had a gun on him. The cops involved had arrived at Austin-East Magnet High School after the mother of Thompson’s girlfriend, Regina Perkins, called the cops on him to report a physical altercation he had with her daughter Alexus Page. The mother has since expressed her regret for calling the police who ended up fatally shooting the teenager.

Upon arriving at the scene, the school’s resource officer Adam Wilson asked, “Hey who’s in here?” as he entered the restroom. He approached Thompson calmly, asking, “Hey Anthony, how you doin’ man?” However, once the officers noticed the teen had his hands in his pocket with a gun, the situation escalated into a scuffle.

It ended with Thompson lying shot on the floor while handcuffed. It took four-and-a-half minutes before medical help arrived. When a school nurse cut off Thompson’s backpack and jacket to administer CPR, that’s when cops finally uncuffed him. When the teen was flipped over, cops noticed all the blood Thompson had lost.

“Basically, the bullet we know entered here from the jacket, it traveled through his body,” Allen explained. “It basically went through both lungs and went through the bottom of his heart.”

A medical examiner described the life-ending injury as “devastating.” Thompson’s family wanted authorities to wait until after his funeral to release the bodycam footage. However, it was released on the same day. They have expressed their disagreement with Allen’s decision to not press charges against the officers, WBIR reports.

Department Of Justice Considering Charges Against Derek Chauvin For Assaulting a Black Teenager in 2017

Department Of Justice Considering Charges Against Derek Chauvin For Assaulting a Black Teenager in 2017


The sentencing of former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin is taking place in several weeks but the killer of an unarmed George Floyd has more reason to fret.

According to ABC News, the Department of Justice is contemplating bringing charges against Chauvin for the actions he took against a young Black teenager in 2017.

While Minnesota state prosecutors were preparing for the Chauvin trial that just concluded, they received a set of videos that showed how Chauvin handled a case three years earlier that revealed similar behavior in arresting a young Black teenager.

The videos from Sept. 4, 2017, showed Chauvin hitting a Black teenager so hard in the head that the boy ended up needing stitches. He was seen in the video allegedly holding the boy down with his knee for almost 17 minutes, and similarly, in the same vein as Floyd, he ignored the teenager’s complaints of being unable to breathe.

“Those videos show a far more violent and forceful treatment of this child than Chauvin describes in his report [of the incident],” Matthew Frank, one of the state prosecutors, wrote in a court filing.

Based on the filing, Chauvin and another Minneapolis police officer had gone to a mother’s home who claimed she had been attacked by her 14-year-old son and young daughter. The officers entered the home and after speaking to the woman, they ordered the teenager to lie on the ground, but he refused to do so. Within seconds, Chauvin hit the teenager with his flashlight, while grabbing the boy’s throat, and after hitting him again, “applied a neck restraint, causing the child to lose consciousness and go to the ground.”

“Chauvin and [the other officer] placed [the teenager] in the prone position and handcuffed him behind his back while the teenager’s mother pleaded with them not to kill her son and told her son to stop resisting,” Frank wrote, also saying that at one point the teenager’s ear began bleeding. “About a minute after going to the ground, the child began repeatedly telling the officers that he could not breathe, and his mother told Chauvin to take his knee off her son.”

After 8 minutes, Chauvin moved his knee to the teenager’s upper back and left it there for nine more minutes.

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