Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com
10 female Cleveland, Cuyahoga County judges attend Black Women's PAC fundraising luncheon and Meet & Greet on October 23 at the Mediterranean Party Center....Read who else was there via this article....By Clevelandurbannews.com
Last Updated on Friday, 29 October 2021 16:23
Daughter of Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson found dead 2 months after the mayor's grandson is murdered....The grandson, Frank Q. Jackson, was her son....No arrests have been made in the shooting death of the mayor's 24-year-old grandson
By Kathy Wray Colemnan, associate publisher, editor-in-chief
CLEVELANDURBANNEWS.COM-CLEVELAND, Ohio-Janece Jackson, the stepdaughter of Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson and the mother of the mayor's 24-year-old slain grandson, Frank Q. Jackson, has died.
Police said Janece Jackson was found unresponsive on Friday and that the cause of her death has not been made public. Other sources say the cause of her death is unknown. She is the only daughter of Jackson's longtime wife, Edwina Jackson.
Mayor Jackson is a Democrat and the city's four-term Black mayor who is retiring at the end of the year after opting not to seek an unprecedented fifth term. Voters will determine his successor via a Nov 2 general election when City Council President Kevin Kelley faces nonprofit executive Justin Bibb for a nonpartisan runoff. The 17 city council seats are also up for grabs as are open judicial seats in Cleveland and some suburban offices.
The death of the mayor's daughter comes roughly two months after the Sept 19 shooting death of his grandson, Frank Q. Jackson, the younger Jackson's murder now among a plethora of unsolved murders of Black people in the largely Black major American city of some 372,000 people.
Frank Q Jackson was shot multiple times inside a home in the Kinsman neighborhood on the city's largely Black east side.
Police were called to the shooting near Sidaway and East 70th St. in the Garden Valley projects at around 9 p.m and have not released any details about a possible suspect.
A $5,000 reward is being offered for information leading to an arrest in the case, police said.
Mayor Jackson, who was escorted by police into and out of the home where the shooting incident occurred, was on the scene for much of the night as were Cleveland Police Chief Calvin Williams and Ward 6 Councilman Blaine Griffin.
The mayor's grandson was in the news multiple times in the months leading up to his murder.
His death came three days after arson charges were filed against a man who is accused of setting fire to a car seen speeding away after the 2019 fatal shooting of Antonio Parra. Cleveland police officers went the mayor’s house the night of that shooting in search of Frank Q. Jackson after learning that the car at issue was registered to the mayor's grandson.
Frank Q. Jackson said in response that he was not driving the car when the arson and fatal shooting occurred and that he had loaned out his car. No murder charges have been filed in that case, which remains under investigation as does the case regarding the murder of the mayor's grandson.
Also, the grandson, whom the mayor helped to raise, was charged with domestic violence following an argument with his girlfriend back in 2020 and in July he was charged with felonious assault on a police officer and failure to comply with a police officer's order, a first and fourth degree felony respectively.
And he was already on probation relative to a plea deal before Common Pleas Judge John O'Donnell that came following a 2019 indictment on felonious assault, abduction charges and two counts of failure to comply with police in which he was accused of punching and choking a young 18-year-old Black woman, and striking her with a metal truck hitch.
In that case he agreed to plead guilty to misdemeanor assault in exchange for dismissal of the felonious assault and other charges.
In turn, Judge O'Donnell handed him a suspended 90 day sentence and put him on probation for 18 months.
In spite of his run ins with the law, the mayor's grandson was loved, the mayor once telling reporters in response to the controversy surrounding his grandson that he loves his family just like others do.
Last Updated on Friday, 29 October 2021 17:39
Memorial service for Cleveland journalist, activist and Hough vintner Mansfield Frazier is Sat., Oct 23, 2021 at the Maltz Performing Arts Center in Cleveland, Coolcleveland.com announces
This is an announcement from Coolcleveland.com where Mansfield Frazier wrote a weekly column as to his memorial service on Oct 23
CLEVELAND, Ohio-A public memorial service for Cleveland journalist, activist and Hough vintner Mansfield Frazier will take place on Sat, Oct 23, 2021 at the Maltz Performing Arts Center, 1855 Ansel Road in Cleveland on the campus of Case Western Reserve University. Admission is free and open to the public. Free public parking is available. All guests, staff, and speakers must show proof of vaccination or produce a negative test result within 72 hours of entering to be admitted into the venue. Masks are required at all times for visitors.
Viewing: 11:30AM
Memorial Service: 12:30PM
Conclusion: 2:30PM
Tickets for the viewing and service are recommended. Livestream tickets are also available for those unable to attend in person. Both can be found here.
Rather than flowers or gifts, the public is asked to make a donation to Neighborhood Solutions, Inc., the nonprofit organization that Mansfield Frazier created using innovative educational and entrepreneurial strategies to encourage, prepare and assist at-risk youth, veterans, and those returning — or who have returned — to neighborhoods after incarceration in creating greener, healthier and wealthier places to live, work and raise families.
To make a donation to Neighborhood Solutions, please click here.
Mansfield Frazier bio:
When Mansfield Frazier was growing up in Cleveland’s Central neighborhood in the 1950s, he had great expectations. His father, who ran a bar, provided for his family, and Mansfield was a good student with a natural gift for gab. He was accepted to The Ohio State University. But after a high school romance that resulted in a teenage marriage and a couple of kids, his life took a different direction.
For a while he worked in industry and was a skilled craftsman — as he said, the best on the job. But it was the 1960s. Every time there was a promotion to supervisor, a white guy whom Mansfield had trained got the job.
When his marriage broke up and he became totally frustrated with the discrimination in the workplace, he left Cleveland and spent the next 30 year operating for the most part outside of the law — mostly involved in credit card scams and con games. He was arrested 15 times and convicted 5 times. I still chuckle when I recall his anecdotes about his brushes with the law.
During his prison stints he used his time to read and expand his own education. His vocabulary was enhanced because sometimes the only book that he could get was a dictionary. He had a good working knowledge of the Bible because other times that was the only book available. When there was a prison library — like in The Shawshank Redemption — he read whatever he could get his hands on. He honed his writing skills. In 1995, he published his first book, From Behind The Wall: Commentary on Crime, Punishment, Race, and the Underclass by a Prison Inmate.
He started Château Hough, the winery and vineyard at 66th and Hough, so that he could hire formerly incarcerated people. He wanted to teach formerly incarcerated people a trade and show them that they did not have to go back to crime. If you wanted to turn your life around, Mansfield found a job for you. He started the non-profit Neighborhood Solutions to create re-entry programs for the formerly incarcerated, and they published the national magazine Reentry Advocate, distributed in prison libraries and some halfway houses throughout the country.
Mansfield passed away peacefully at the age of 78 in the home he built in the Hough neighborhood near his vineyard that has rehabilitated so many people returning from prison. He was surrounded by his wife Brenda and family members as he battled low blood pressure and kidney issues. A parade of friends, community organizers, politicians, those he mentored, and good folks from the non-profit community were grateful to be able to say goodbye.
Since 2007, Mansfield Frazier has written over 1400 commentaries for Coolcleveland.com. He continued to write, publish, podcast, create videos and advocate for social justice throughout his life.
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.
Last Updated on Saturday, 23 October 2021 00:04
Black Women's PAC of greater Cleveland to host annual Candidates Meet & Greet Fundraiser on Sat., Oct. 23, 2021 at the Mediterranean Party Center in Bedford Heights....By Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com
BEDFORD HEIGHTS, Ohio-Led by organization president Elaine Gohlstin, the Black Women's Political Action Committee of greater Cleveland (BWPAC) is hosting its annual Candidates Meet & Greet Fundraiser this weekend.
"We welcome everybody to this event," said Gohlstin, who added that the monies from fundraisers help the organization with events and any donations it might make to candidates the group of political Black women has endorsed. She said her group also educates women politically and pushes for more Black women to become actively engaged in the political process.
The fundraiser is $50 per person and is Sat, Oct 23, 2021 from 12pm - 4pm at the Mediterranean Party Center, 5021 Rockside Road. in Bedford Hts., Ohio, a Cleveland suburb
Heavy hors d'oeuvres will be served. To purchase tickets call BJ at 216-990-1210 or Maria at 216-406-0597. Interested persons can also visit the BWPAC website to buy tickets at www.bwpac.org/events Tickets can also be purchased at the door, organizers said.
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.
Last Updated on Friday, 22 October 2021 13:12
Fifth Third Bank announces $20 million to transform Cleveland's largely Black Buckeye neighborhood as part of Mayor Frank Jackson's Neighborhood Transformation Initiative....By Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com
Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com
By Kathy Wray Coleman, associate publisher, editor-in-chief
Cleveland, Ohio- Fifth Third Bank and Enterprise Community Partners recently announced the establishment of a $20 million neighborhood program to support and revitalize the Buckeye neighborhood in Cleveland, an effort initiated as part of Mayor Frank Jackson's Neighborhood Transformation Initiative.
The monies for the program are being made available through Fifth Third Foundation, which was established in 1948 and is one of the first charitable foundations created by a financial institution. The investment will include $2 million in grants and $18 million in affordable financing from housing to small business loans.
The $20 million Neighborhood Investment Program for the Buckeye community is part of Fifth Third’s $2.8 billion commitment that will provide $2.2 billion in lending, $500 million in investments, $60 million in financial accessibility and $40 million in philanthropy from the Fifth Third Foundation as part of Fifth Third’s Accelerating Racial Equality, Equity and Inclusion initiative.
According to Fifth Third media relations spokesperson Laura Passerallo, Cleveland's program will encompass roughly three years and is a partnership with Cleveland Neighborhood Progress, Burten, Bell, Carr Development, Inc., CHN Housing Partners and cross-sector collaborations.
Top administrative officials of Fifth Third said the revitalization effort in one of the city's poorest neighborhoods has broader implications.
Dana Capers, community and economic development manager for Fifth Third Bank of Northern Ohio, agreed and added that Fifth Third seeks also to build community relationships with marginalized Black communities that have been routinely disenfranchised by the business and housing markets.
"We are committed to providing strategic insight that will help establish an upward trajectory for communities that have historically had limited investment opportunities," Capers said. "This is more than giving bank dollars and programs to communities in need. Through the Neighborhood Investment Program, we’ll connect comprehensive assistance to build relationships within these communities. This will develop a foundation of equity to help eliminate racial disparities and level the playing field.”
Buckeye neighborhood residents and businesses can apply for the program based loans and grants based on the ability to meet specific criteria, including partnering with the neighborhood’s Black residents, existing civic infrastructure in the neighborhood and capability to manage equitable investment and wealth-building opportunities.
Tania Menesse, CEO and president at Cleveland Neighborhood Progress, a community development corporation in the Buckeye area and community partner in the project that will expand businesses and increase home ownership through grant initiatives and financial loan programs, thanked Fifth Third for what she says is a viable investment in Cleveland's inner city communities that need it most.
“There’s been so much work done to get to this point," said Menesse. We’re so appreciative of Fifth Third and Enterprise Community Partners recognizing the momentum and our ability to take this work in the southern part of the neighborhood, which we’ve all been anxious to embark on. This investment gives us the chance to do that.”
Also planned is a pilot program to help residents purchase and rehabilitate single-family and two-story homes. New owners will be able to live in one unit while providing a quality affordable home to another family. The additional income will help new homeowners thrive, build wealth and prevent displacement of Black residents. They’ll also have access to landlord and small business training over the first 18 months.
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.
Last Updated on Sunday, 24 October 2021 22:04
Cleveland's race for mayor: Led by the Imperial Women Coalition, Black Cleveland activists host mayoral runoff candidates debate at the Cleveland African-American Museum
Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com
CLEVELAND, Ohio-Led by the Imperial Women Coalition, Cleveland activists, in cooperation with the Cleveland African-American Museum, hosted the Cleveland Activists' Inner City Mayoral Candidates In Person Debate between mayoral runoff candidates Justin Bibb and Council President Kevin Kelley on Sat, Oct 16 at the museum in the historic Hough neighborhood in Ward 7 on the city's largely Black east side.
Organized by Museum Executive Director Frances Caldwell and Cleveland activist Kathy Wray Coleman, who leads Imperial Women Coalition and Women's March Cleveland and was the lead organizer, the well attended debate was moderated by Rhonda Crowder and Kevin "Chill" Heard from the Greater Cleveland Association of Black Journalists and free food was provided Audience members enjoyed a catered complimentary lunch of fried catfish and perch, fruit, salad, hush puppies, and more with both Bibb and Kelley contributing for the food that activists paid for.
Media there include Cleveland Fox8 News, Cleveland Channel 3 News, Spectrum Local News, Associated Press, Ideastream, Clevelandurbannews.com, Headlines and Headaches, and the Call and Post, a Black print weekly.
Bibb and Kelley were eager to debate in the heart of Cleveland's Black community as they prepare to square off on Tues, Nov. 2 for the nonpartisan general election. Current Mayor Frank Jackson, the city's four-term Black mayor, is retiring at the end of the year after nearly 16 years as mayor and did not seek a fifth term.
Before the debate activist Genevieve Mitchell did a reading of the poem "Desiderata." Also, former Cleveland councilman Zack Reed, who placed fourth in the seven-way non- partisan primary for mayor last month and now supports Bibb, spoke briefly in support of Bibb before the debate began, and activist Donna Walker- Brown and Cuyahoga County Councilwoman Yvonne Conwell, both of whom have endorsed Kelley, spoke in support of Kelley.
Activist Kathy Wray Coleman introduced Bibb and described him to the audience as young, Black educated, and that is elected he would be the second youngest mayor in Cleveland history behind former mayor Dennis Kucinich.
This election year is the first time the mayor's office has been open for grabs since Jackson, then a city council president, ousted incumbent mayor Jane Campbell from office in 2005 with the help of Black leaders.
Bibb is Black and Kelley is White as voters will soon determine if Cleveland, a city with a population of roughly 372,000 people, will continue to be led by a Black mayor.
The debate topic issues ranged from jobs and education to excessive force and police reforms, neighborhoods and heightened crime, and how city officials will spend millions of COVID-19 federal dollars earmarked to help poor Black communities in Cleveland during a pandemic.
Economic development was also a topic as were diversity in the mayor's cabinet and law enforcement leadership team, and whether Blacks will get some of the top jobs at City Hall.
"Number one, we gotta lower crime in this city and I intend to hire a police chief that shares my passion for social justice, equity and fairness," said Bibb when outlining what his three priorities as mayor would be, if he is elected.
Kelley identified crime as one of his top priorities too, and said that the earmarked Covid- 19 dollars from the federal government, some of which has already been distributed, will not be equally distributed between the city's 17 wards as some White council persons had requested and will instead go to communities in need, a disproportionate number of them Black.
"It will not be distributed between the 17 wards," Kelly said, adding that fair play requires that the wards in most need get priority.
The two candidates, both of them Democrats, agreed that crime and neighborhoods are paramount and said that more focus must be given to revitalizing inner city communities in the largely Black major American city, tackling poverty, and improving the public schools that the mayor controls under state law. Neither candidate would say whether Cleveland Metropolitan School District CEO Dr. Eric Gordon would be retained if they become mayor.
Kelley, 53 and a sixteen-year west side councilman, argued that he is more experienced than Bibb, 34, a chief strategy office for a non-profit agency and former vice president of a bank who interned with Barack Obama but has never held public office, and Bibb described Kelley as part of the status quo that has interfered with Cleveland's growth and catered to big business and the corporate sector.
A sticking point for both candidates was Issue 24, a Cleveland ballot initiative put on the ballot by a group of activists led primarily by Black Lives Matter Cleveland and Samaria Rice, the mother of 12-year-old police killing victim Tamir Rice. The initiative, which voters will decide via next month's election, is aimed at improving oversight of Cleveland police and establishing a decision- making civilian review team.
Kelly said that Issue 24 should not even be on the table and that "the consent decree is the pathway to [police] accountability."
Bibb said he wholeheartedly supports Issue 24.
"I'm the son of a cop and this is not an anti-police bill, " Bibb said of Issue 24. "What this bill does is allow more community voices around the table."
Both candidates said the court-monitored consent decree for police reforms that is currently in place is needed but unlike Bibb, Kelley does not support continuing Mayor Jackson's no chase policy. That policy precludes police car chases absent a suspected felony, a policy Jackson adopted following reckless police chases that resulted in police killings of Black people, some of them bystanders and others, like police killing victims Malissa Williams and Timothy Russell, both gunned down by police in 2012 in Russell's stationary car. Williams and Russell were not even wanted by the law but were chased and killed by 13 non-Black cops shooting an unprecedented 137 bullets at them.
Other activist groups associated with the event include Black Money Matters, Black on Black Crime Inc., Black Women's PAC of greater Cleveland, Brick House Wellness Center for Women, Cleveland Peacemakers, Peace in the Hood, Carl Stokes Brigade, Black Lives Matter Cuyahoga County, and Black Man's Army.
Among other people at the debate were state Rep Stephanie Howse of Cleveland, who is currently running for city council in Ward 7 against former Councilman TJ Dow, Republican Congressional Nominee Lavern Gore, former Ohio senator Shirley Smith Cleveland, Ward 9 Councilman Kevin Conwell, Cleveland judicial candidate Andrea Nelson Moore, Cleveland radio personality Charles E. Bibb Sr., prospective County executive candidate Lee Weingart, the Revs Aaron Phillips, Pamela Pinkney-Butts,and Benjamin Gohlstin, Black Women's PAC President Elaine Gohlstin, Mike Seals, activists Nate Simpson, Michael Nelson, Art McKoy, Marva and David Patterson, Jeff Mixson, and former Cleveland School Board president Gerald C. Henley and his wife Annalisa.
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.
Last Updated on Friday, 05 November 2021 00:18
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