Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com
- WASHINGTON, D.C- After weeks of political wranglings and divisiveness among Democratic and Republican lawmakers, Congress passed a stopgap funding bill Saturday evening that averted a looming government shutdown ahead of a midnight deadline.
- President Joe Biden signed the new law into effect late Saturday night, which means the government can stay open through Nov 17 and as the Thanksgiving holiday looms.
- In a statement, the president, who is up for reelection in 2024, said the bill was “good news for the American people.” “But I want to be clear: we should never have been in this position in the first place.
- "Just a few months ago, Speaker McCarthy and I reached a budget agreement to avoid precisely this type of manufactured crisis,” he said.
- The Senate approved the measure after the House abruptly reversed course earlier in the day and passed the bipartisan deal that could ultimately cost House Speaker Kevin McCarthy his speaker's seat, McCarthy telling reporters so what and that "Americans come first."
- Among a host of other congressional naysayers relative to the funding legislation, controversial GOP Rep. Matt Gaetz told CNN Sunday that he'll work hard to remove the Speaker from his leadership role this week, an indication that Republicans remain angry over the bipartisan funding bill and that the usual partisan bickering will continue in Congress.
- The stopgap bill includes natural disaster aid but funding for Ukraine, a sticking part for many congressional lawmakers , and across partisan lines, did not make the cut. it is expected to be voted on in coming weeks, sources said Friday.
- Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com, the most read Black digital newspaper and Black blog in Ohio and in the Midwest. Tel: (216) 659-0473. Email: editor@clevelandurbannews.com. We interviewed former president Barack Obama one-on-one when he was campaigning for president. As to the Obama interview CLICK HERE TO READ THE ENTIRE ARTICLE AT CLEVELAND URBAN NEWS.COM, OHIO'S LEADER IN BLACK DIGITAL NEWS.
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Congress passes stopgap funding bill to avert a government shutdown.....President Biden comments.....By Clevelandurbannews.com, Ohio's Black digital news leader.
Ohio Congresswoman Emilia Sykes condemns House Republicans' extreme spending cuts as a government shutdown looms....Clevelandurbannews.com, Ohio's Black digital news leader
Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Yesterday, U.S. Rep, Emilia Sykes (OH-13) (pictures), an Akron Democrat who leads Ohio's 13th congressional district, voted against House Republicans' extreme funding bills that the congresswoman said would hurt U.S. service members and their family members and weaken national security. The congresswoman also called for bipartisan cooperation in an effort to avoid a looming government shutdown.
"Just days from the end of the fiscal year, House Republicans' partisan antics are looking more likely than ever to result in a government shutdown that interrupts critical government services, hurts small businesses, forces our troops to serve without pay, and furloughs over 6,000 federal workers in Ohio's 13th Congressional District alone," said Rep. Sykes. "Instead of working across the aisle to avoid a shutdown, extreme politicians are ramming through devastating cuts to vital programs and services like healthcare, food assistance and our national security."
Sykes also said that poor people will get hurt.
"Our neighbors simply cannot afford these cuts when the cost-of-living is already too high," she said. "These extreme, completely irresponsible proposals would only increase costs at a time when families are already struggling to make ends meet. I'll continue to put the needs of the people of Ohio's 13th Congressional District first, and work with any member to stop a shutdown and avoid the devastating consequences this would have for our communities."
Rep. Sykes has signed onto two letters to House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, one with fellow first-term House Democrats and one with the New Democrat Coalition, both emphasizing the need to put the American people first, and to fund our essential government services and avoid a government shutdown.
Sykes has also introduced two bills— the Pay Our Military Act and the Feed Our Families Act – which put people over politics to protect Americans' livelihoods, and provide stability and certainty during a government shutdown, and a bill to help America's military. The Pay Our Military Act would ensure that U.S. service members, the people who put their lives on the line every day to keep our country safe, continue to receive their paychecks during a government shutdown. The Feed Our Families Act would ensure families who rely on the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (also known as SNAP) to put food on their tables can still access their benefits during a shutdown.
Rep. Sykes is one of three blacks in Congress from Ohio, and one of thre black women federal lawmakers from the pivotal state. She spoke on the House floor last week about the importance of avoiding a government shutdown. Watch her remarks here.
Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com, the most read Black digital newspaper and Black blog in Ohio and in the Midwest. Tel: (216) 659-0473. Email: editor@clevelandurbannews.com. We interviewed former president Barack Obama one-on-one when he was campaigning for president. As to the Obama interview CLICK HERE TO READ THE ENTIRE ARTICLE AT CLEVELAND URBAN NEWS.COM, OHIO'S LEADER IN BLACK DIGITAL NEWS.
88th Annual Anisfield-Wolf Book Awards is September 28, 2023 at CWRU in Cleveland with Dr. Henry Louis Gates a key part of the free and open-to-the-public program....By Clevelandurbannews.com, Ohio's black digital news leader
Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com
CLEVELAND, Ohio – The recipients of the 8th Annual Anisfield-Wolf Book Award, the only national juried prize for literature that confronts racism and explores diversity are as follows, will receive their awards during a ceremony on Thursday, September 28, 2023 at the Maltz Performing Arts Center on the campus of Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland. The event is free and open to the public. The Cleveland Foundation, an annual partner relative to he distinguished award ceremony, released the list of award winners earlier this year, and they are as follows:
- Geraldine Brooks, “Horse,” Fiction (Viking)
- Lan Samantha Chang, “The Family Chao,” Fiction (W.W. Norton)
- Matthew F. Delmont, “Half American: The Epic Story of African Americans Fighting World War II at Home and Abroad,” Nonfiction (Viking)
- Charlayne Hunter-Gault, Lifetime Achievement
- Saeed Jones, “Alive at the End of the World,” Poetry (Coffee House Press)
For additional information, a complete list of the recipients since 1935, and to learn more about The Asterisk* podcast featuring previous winners, visit www.Anisfield-Wolf.org.
"These remarkable books deliver groundbreaking insights on race and diversity,” said Dr. Henry Louis Gates Jr. (pictured), who chairs the jury and is a Black scholar and Harvard University researcher who serves as the annual host of the event. “This year, we honor a profound and funny novel centered in a Chinese restaurant, a brilliant story of 19th-century horse-racing with contemporary echoes, a stunning poetry collection that captures who we are now, and a meticulous history that recasts our understanding of World War II. All are capped by the lifetime achievement of Charlayne Hunter-Gault, who remade this country with her courage and her nuanced reporting.”
Dr. Gates directs the Hutchins Center for African & African American Research at Harvard University, where he is also the Alphonse Fletcher University Professor. Joining him in selecting the winners each year are poet Rita Dove, novelist Joyce Carol Oates, psychologist Steven Pinker and historian Simon Schama.
Karen R. Long, manager of the book awards at the Cleveland Foundation, noted the prescience of philanthropist Edith Anisfield Wolf in founding the prize in 1935.
“Her notion that literature can ignite justice is valid nearly 90 years later, and we are honored to add the 2023 winners to the canon,” Long said. "We are proud the newest books tackle the toughest topics and insist on ways forward.”
Past winners include seven writers who later won Nobel prizes – Ralph J. Bunche, Nadine Gordimer, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., Toni Morrison, Gunnar Myrdal, Wole Soyinka and Derek Walcott. They are among the 262 recipients of the prize.
About the 2023 Winners
Geraldine Brooks, 67, crafted her ninth book, “Horse” to imagine the relationship between Lexington, a legendary antebellum American racehorse, and his Black groom, Jarret, as the stallion rises to greatness. The novel toggles between the 1850s, the 1950s and 2019, where a pair of young D.C. intellectuals are caught up in the horse’s story through art and science. What resulted, according to Anisfield-Wolf Book Awards Jury Chair Henry Louis Gates Jr., is “a dazzling achievement, a brilliant example of how to turn historical events into a fiction that stands on its own.” Brooks won the Pulitzer Prize in fiction in 2006 for “March.” A native of Australia, she graduated from the University of Sydney before working as a reporter for The Sydney Morning Herald. Brooks went on to earn her master’s degree from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism and worked as a foreign correspondent for The Wall Street Journal. She lives in Martha’s Vineyard, Mass. and was named an Officer of the Order of Australia in 2016.
Lan Samantha Chang, 58, crafted “The Family Chao” – which earned a spot on Barack Obama’s 2022 summer reading list – as a comedic retelling of Dostoyevsky’s “The Brothers Karamazov” through the lens of a dysfunctional Chinese-American family. They own a restaurant in small-town Wisconsin until the patriarch is murdered and others rush to impose a sinister twist on their American dream. Anisfield-Wolf Juror Joyce Carol Oates extolled the novel as “an outstanding work of fiction”’ that she found to be exceptionally accomplished and ambitious. Chang has directed the Iowa Writers’ Workshop for 17 years. She graduated from Yale University and the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. She herself is a graduate of the University of Iowa Writers' Workshop and was a Wallace E. Stegner Fellow at Stanford University. The American Academy in Berlin, the National Endowment for the Arts and the Guggenheim Foundation all granted her fellowships. Earlier books include “All is Forgotten, Nothing is Lost” and “Hunger.” She lives with her husband and daughter in Iowa City, Iowa.
Matthew F. Delmont, 45, is a historian whose “Half American: The Epic Story of African Americans Fighting World War II at Home and Abroad” explores the vital contributions that Black men and women made to the United States’ victorious effort in World War II, only to return home to find segregation and racism athwart their schools, communities and jobs. “The role of African Americans in World War II rewrites our understanding of ‘the greatest generation’ in the ‘good war,’ given the shocking discrimination and harassment of millions of patriots willing to risk their lives in it,” Anisfield-Wolf Juror Steven Pinker notes. “The tension between the America-vs.-Fascism clash and the White-America-vs.-Black-America clash highlights the way in which humans belong to multiple overlapping coalitions, and how a recognition of these contradictions can lead to moral and historical shifts.” Delmont received his bachelor's degree from Harvard University and his master’s and doctorate in American studies from Brown University. He is the Sherman Fairchild Distinguished Professor of History at Dartmouth College. He lives in Etna, New Hampshire with his family.
Charlayne Hunter-Gault, 81, made history and chronicled it as a journalist, author and lecturer. Alongside her high school classmate, Hamilton Holmes, she desegregated the University of Georgia in 1961 amid taunts, tear gas, vandalism and a riot. She graduated in 1963, embarking on a storied career in journalism that began at The New Yorker. She was the first Black writer for “Talk of the Town.” The assassination of Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. interrupted a brief stint in graduate school and led Hunter-Gault to join the NBC affiliate in Washington, D.C. She then went on to The New York Times – establishing the paper’s Harlem bureau – and then PBS, where she won numerous Emmy and Peabody awards. Hunter-Gault became NPR’s chief correspondent in Africa and then CNN’s Johannesburg bureau chief from 1999-2005. The following year, she published the book “New News Out of Africa: Uncovering Africa’s Renaissance.” A Peabody citation declared that she “demonstrated a talent for ennobling her subjects, and revealed a depth of understanding of the African experience that was unrivaled in Western media.” Hunter-Gault, mother of daughter Suesan Stovall and son Chuma Gault, currently lives in Sarasota, Florida with her husband, Ronald Gault.
Saeed Jones, 37, is a Pushcart Prize-winning poet and writer whose first collection of poetry, “Prelude to Bruise,” was a 2014 finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award. His 2019 memoir, “How We Fight for Our Lives,” won the Kirkus Prize for Nonfiction. “Alive at the End of the World,” Jones’ second collection, contains 46 poems that sweep from strict verse to prose paragraphs. Anisfield-Wolf Juror Rita Dove calls the book “an aching reminder that a queer Black man leads a meta existence; he cannot live without thinking about living, constantly negotiating the everyday with an eye to the peril that can intrude at any time, from police violence to the minutest reactions from highbrow bigots.” Jones, who moved from New York City to Columbus, Ohio in 2019, received his bachelor’s from Western Kentucky University and his master’s from Rutgers University-Newark. He was the founding LGBTQ editor and the executive culture editor at BuzzFeed.
Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com, the most read Black digital newspaper and Black blog in Ohio and in the Midwest. Tel: (216) 659-0473. Email: editor@clevelandurbannews.com. We interviewed former president Barack Obama one-on-one when he was campaigning for president. As to the Obama interview CLICK HERE TO READ THE ENTIRE ARTICLE AT CLEVELAND URBAN NEWS.COM, OHIO'S LEADER IN BLACK DIGITAL NEWS.
City of Cleveland, Bedrock MDA paves way for $3.5 billion Cuyahoga Riverfront transformation City considering creation of novel Shore-to-Core TIF District to help fund critical infrastructure.... Clevelandurbannews.com
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The MDA is aligned with the Cuyahoga Riverfront Masterplan, a comprehensive multi-year plan that reimagines and transforms 35 acres along the riverfront, including Tower City Center and the surrounding landscape with the core tenets of accessibility, equity, sustainability, and resilience. Bedrock will begin construction on initial public infrastructure improvements, including rehabilitation of the existing bulkhead, in October 2023.
“We are embarking on projects that reconnect us to our waterfronts and bring us closer to our goal of an 18-hour, 15-minute downtown that benefits all Clevelanders through people-centered development,” said Mayor Justin M. Bibb. “This is a great example of how public-private partnerships can accelerate the pace of change and a jumping off point for our continued collaboration with Bedrock as we design the future of the riverfront together.”
The plan, in coordination with other public and private resources and efforts, anticipates more than 3.5 million square feet of commercial mixed-use development along the Cuyahoga riverfront anchored by transformational public improvements and accessibility. This includes residential—both for-sale and rental units—commercial, office, retail, entertainment and a riverwalk with more than 12 acres of public parks and open space.
“We look forward to the ongoing collaboration with the Administration, Cleveland City Council and stakeholders across the community to deliver a vibrant, accessible and connected riverfront neighborhood,” said Kofi Bonner, chief executive officer at Bedrock. “This is a once-in-a-generation endeavor and every partner is critical to its success. We are honored to participate and partner with the City of Cleveland.”
The MDA is the first to be established under the City’s new community benefits package. Under the ordinance, Bedrock and the City would enter one or more community benefit agreements to maximize opportunities for minority-owned and female-owned small businesses as well as incorporate the City’s sustainability and affordable housing goals into the project.
“This legislation sets the stage for myriad public infrastructure, right of way, public parks, and public space investments,” said the city’s Chief of Integrated Development Jeff Epstein. “Above all, these plans call for unprecedented public access to the Cuyahoga Riverfront. This work, in tandem with the North Coast Connector and lakefront master planning process, is the foundation of the mayor’s sweeping Shore-to-Core-to-Shore development vision for Cleveland.”
To help advance these goals, which will require substantial public infrastructure investments, the City proposes the creation of a Shore-to-Core Tax Increment Financing (TIF) Overlay District—a designated area where new taxes generated by an increase in property values contribute to a public improvement fund.
Historically, Cleveland has used TIF districts and their revenue to fund individual projects, but this will be the first time the city is considering a TIF on such a broad scale. In addition to riverfront and lakefront infrastructure, some of the dollars generated through the TIF will be spent in neighborhoods across the city, funding upgrades to public spaces and other improvements.
Models like the Shore-to-Core TIF have been successfully utilized across Ohio and the country. Locally, cities like Columbus and Independence use similar models to create and sustain catalytic growth for their cities.
The City is currently analyzing the potential scope and geography of the Shore-to-Core TIF District. Specifics will be included with the additional legislation required to create the district, which is anticipated later this year. The Shore-to-Core TIF District will not reduce current taxes paid to entities, like the Cleveland Metropolitan School District, that receive a share of property taxes.
The City is also considering additional project-specific TIFs to help fund other aspects of waterfront development and related projects.
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Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com, the most read Black digital newspaper and Black blog in Ohio and in the Midwest. Tel: (216) 659-0473. Email: editor@clevelandurbannews.com. We interviewed former president Barack Obama one-on-one when he was campaigning for president. As to the Obama interview, CLICK HERE TO READ THE ENTIRE ARTICLE AT CLEVELAND URBAN NEWS.COM, OHIO'S LEADER IN BLACK DIGITAL NEWS.
State Sens. Antonio and Russo, Ohio Dems push for more public hearings on redistricting and gerrymandering and denounce the current hearing process.....Clevelandurbannews.com, Ohio's Black digital news leader
"I'm thankful to the Ohioans who came and testified in favor of fair maps today, but it's unfortunate that so few were able to make it given the time of day, location and short notice," said Sen Antonio, a Lakewood Democrat who's 23rd state legislative district includes 14 of Cleveland's 17 wards. "As co-chair, I will make every effort to ensure more Ohioans get the time and opportunity to share their thoughts on the maps and this process."
Antonio said that the hearings are meant to be a vital part of the process, which gives the people a chance to be heard, and that "the fact it was announced barely 24 hours ago and placed at a remote location at 10 a.m. when a majority of Ohioans are working shows you what the Republican-controlled commission thinks of hearing from the people. "
The ORC has scheduled two more statewide meetings on what Democrats say are flawed maps introduced by Republicans They are set for the following days:
- 10:00 a.m. Monday, September 25 at Punderson Manor in NE Ohio
- 10:00 a.m. Tuesday, September 26 in the Senate Finance Hearing Room at the Ohio Statehouse
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