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Congresswoman Fudge speaks on government shut down ending, calls for bipartisan truce

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By Kathy Wray Coleman, editor-in-chief,  Cleveland Urban News.Com and The Kathy Wray Coleman Online News Blog.Com, Ohio's No 1 and No 2 online Black news venues (www.clevelandurbannews.com) Reach Cleveland Urban News.Com by email at editor@clevelandurbannews.com and by phone at 216-659-0473

 

WASHINGTON, DC – Congresswoman Marcia L. Fudge (OH-11) (pictured), a Warrensville Heights Democrat and chair of the Congressional Black Caucus of Blacks in Congress, released  a press statement today after the U.S. House of Representatives last night voted to pass legislation that ends the government shutdown and avoids default.

 

The legislation, H.R. 2775,  passed the House with 285 yeas and 144 nays.

 

“I am pleased the House has finally acted responsibly to reopen the government, and make sure our bills are paid on time, at least in the short term," said Fudge in a press statement to Cleveland Urban News.Com, Ohio's most read online Black newspaper.

 

"However, the constant conflict that has come to define Congress puts our country and the American people at risk and we cannot continue to function in a manner that drives us from one crisis to the next,” said Congresswoman Fudge.

 

The impasse came to a climax just over two weeks ago after Republicans, led by House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio and  Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, initiated the 16-day shutdown in an unsuccessful attempt to dismantle the Affordable Care Act, President Obama's sweeping healthcare plan that Congress passed into law in 2010, a controversial law that the U.S. Supreme Court upheld as constitutional last year.

 

“We still need a budget that includes a sound fiscal strategy for this nation.  Otherwise, we will once again be forced to vote on a temporary solution," said Fudge, whose predominantly Black 11th congressional district includes Cleveland and a pocket of Akron, Ohio.  "Our military personnel, federal employees, veterans, seniors, families and small business owners should never have to face another manufactured crisis because of partisan politics.”

 

Fudge said that collaboration across the aisles of Congress reopened the government, ensuring that hundreds of thousands will be able to return to work.

 

Millions will have services restored, she said, before calling for a bi-partisan truce among congressional leaders and other members of Congress.

 

"I sincerely hope House Republicans will resolve to lay aside extreme partisan demands in the future and put Americans’ needs first," said Fudge. "We must remind ourselves we were sent here to work together to resolve issues, not create problems for the entire world to endure.”

 

 

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Last Updated on Friday, 18 October 2013 18:57

Retired Judge Sara Harper inducted into Ohio Civil Rights Hall of Fame

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By Bret Crow

The Ohio Civil Rights Commission has inducted retired Ohio Eighth District Court of Appeals Judge Sara J. Harper, 87, into the Ohio Civil Rights Hall of Fame.

 

In her official bio that will accompany an educational display, it notes that she was the first African American woman to graduate from Case Western Reserve University Law School, the first woman to serve on the judiciary of the U.S. Marine Corps Reserve, the first of two Black women to win seats on an Ohio court of appeals, the first African American woman to run for chief justice of the Ohio Supreme Court, and the first African American woman to sit by assignment on the Ohio Supreme Court.

 

“As president of the Cleveland NAACP in the early 1980s,” the bio states, “Harper fought against strip searches by police of female NAACP members who were arrested for minor traffic infractions.” The bio also touts the fact that Harper co-founded the first victims’ rights program in the country.

 

Her many awards include the Ohio Supreme Court’s Excellent Judicial Service Award, the NAACP’s Unsung Heroine Award, and the Raymond Pace Alexander Award. She is a member of the Ohio Veteran’s Hall of Fame and the National Bar Association’s Hall of Fame. She continues to give back to the community with the Sara J. Harper Library, founded in the early 1990s at the Outhwaite Homes Estates on East 43rd Street in Cleveland. The mission of the library is to provide a safe environment that encourages and promotes reading, learning, and positive avenues for self-realization.

 

View the video from the Ohio Civil Rights Hall of Fame Class of 2013 induction ceremony held last week.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 16 October 2013 04:34

Delores Smith, the wife of Cleveland NAACP President The Rev Hilton Smith, dies, Rev Caviness of Greater Abyssinia to do eulogy, funeral is Friday, October 18 at 11:30 am, wake is an hour before, viewing is Thursday at Strowder's Funeral Home

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By Kathy Wray Coleman, editor-in-chief,  Cleveland Urban News.Com and The Kathy Wray Coleman Online News Blog.Com, Ohio's No 1 and No 2 online Black news venues (www.clevelandurbannews.com) Reach Cleveland Urban News.Com by email at editor@clevelandurbannews.com and by phone at 216-659-0473


CLEVELAND, Ohio- The wife of Cleveland NAACP President The Rev Hilton Smith passed away on Saturday, October 12, 2013, after a long illness, officials of the local chapter of the nation's most renowned Civil Rights organization said Monday. Arrangements for Delores W. Smith are by Strowder's Funeral Home in Cleveland. The wake is at the Greater Abyssinia Baptist Church in Cleveland where Rev Smith is an associate minister, 1161 East 105th St, at 10:30 am, on  Friday, October 18, with the funeral following at 11:30 am.  The viewing is on Thursday, October 17 from 10:00 am to 7:30 pm at Strowder's Funeral Home, 822 East 105th Street in Cleveland, phone 216-761-3092.


Cleveland Ward 6 Councilwoman Mamie Mitchell, a member of the Cleveland NAACP Executive Board, said that Smith and his wife "were always together at public events and that they were such a nice and pleasant couple and role models who always dressed well."


"She was quiet and he is friendly and the consummate gentleman," said Mitchell.


"We offer condolences to Rev Smith and his family," said Community Activist Mary Seawright, a member of the grassroots groups Imperial Women and Black on Black Crime Inc who owns and operates Seawright Enterprises in Cleveland and is also a member of the Cleveland NAACP.


Senior Greater Abyssinia Pastor the Rev. Dr. E. T. Caviness, the first vice president of the Cleveland NAACP and the executive director of the Cleveland Chapter Southern Christian Leadership Conference, will do the eulogy.


Rev Smith, 66, is senor vice president for corporate and community affairs with Turner Construction Company in Cleveland and a former Cleveland School Board president. He took the helm of president of the local NAACP late last year and replaced longtime president George Forbes, 82, a former Cleveland City Council president and current general counsel for the Call and Post Newspaper, Ohio's Black press.


Delores Smith was once a model, her friends said.

 

Regarding her age at death, NAACP officials would only say that she was "sixty something." Her obituary is being written and will be released prior to the wake and funeral, Cleveland NAACP officials said.


The Smith's have three grown children, and four grandchildren.

Last Updated on Friday, 18 October 2013 02:53

Updated: Mayoral Candidate Lanci ditches Black leaders, media at activists forum, says Sharpton, Rev Jesse Jackson, Mayor Jackson, Black leaders, elected officials get rich while Black community deteriorates, some disagree, agree, donates to Black museum

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Pictured are Cleveland Mayoral Candidate Ken Lanci (in Black suit), Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson, and Community Activist Art McKoy, founder of the Easty Cleveland, Ohio activist group Black on Black Crime Inc.

 

By Kathy Wray Coleman, editor-in-chief,  Cleveland Urban News.Com and The Kathy Wray Coleman Online News Blog.Com, Ohio's No 1 and No 2 online Black news venues (www.clevelandurbannews.com) Reach Cleveland Urban News.Com by email at editor@clevelandurbannews.com and by phone at 216-659-0473


CLEVELAND, Ohio-Cleveland Mayoral Candidate Ken Lanci took on Black elected officials and Black leaders, both  locally and nationally, and the local mainstream media, including the Plain Dealer, at a community forum held last night at Black on Black Crime headquarters in East Cleveland, a neighboring majority Black and impoverished suburb of Cleveland. And the 63-year-old Italian-American multimillionaire and businessman who grew up in a housing project on the largely Black east side of Cleveland was at ease with a packed room full of aggressive community activists and others from Cleveland, East Cleveland and elsewhere that came to hear his political pitch prior to the November 5 general election,  a non-partisan election that pits him against fellow Democrat and two-term Black Mayor Frank Jackson.


Jackson, 67, a former Cleveland City Council president, also grew up in the ghetto on the east side of the majority Black major metropolitan city of some 400,000 people.


"Why is it that they want to keep you down and out?," Lanci said of Black politicians and other Black leaders.


Lanci said that Black leaders like the Reverends Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson, former Congressman Louis Stokes, and Mayor Jackson have gotten rich while the Black community is deteriorating, and that he last week pledged $5,000 to help pay for a building roof for the Cleveland African-American Museum in Cleveland's Huff neighborhood in Ward 7, partly because Black leaders would not help. He said that the mainstream media, including television stations and the Plain Dealer, Ohio's largest newspaper, were bought and sold by the Jackson for Mayor Campaign.


He said that all public policy makers and other elected officials and city leaders have to do to improve the quality of life for Cleveland residents is to do the right thing.


"You can be very successful just by doing the right thing," said Lanci.


Jackson spokesperson Maureen Harper said that she could not comment on the campaign and Plain Dealer Editor Debra Adams Simmons could not be reached for comment.


The likable multimillionaire who owns and operates a graphics and printing business on East 30th St and Payne Avenue in Cleveland said at the activists forum that if he wins for mayor his appointed police chief and other top law enforcement brass will be selected in cooperation with the Cleveland Police Patrolmen's Association, the rank and file union of the Cleveland police which has endorsed him.


A married father of three with six grandchildren, Lanci said that

"activists will not have to picket City Hall because they will have an office  at  City Hall if I am elected mayor."


Asked his views by community activists on the 137 shots fiasco by Cleveland police that left two unarmed Blacks dead late last year, the mayoral candidate said that Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Tim McGinty had decided not to charge the 13 police officers that did the killing, none of whom are Black and all of whom are back on the job, and that he would not second guess him. He pledged efficient plans for better safety, more jobs, and improving the city's public schools. He called for a moratorium on foreclosures after Community Activist and Clevelander Marva Patterson asked what he will do to minimize foreclosure fraud and the theft of homes in Cuyahoga County by officials.


Lanci said that he will hold Cleveland schools principals and teachers accountable.


Lanci said that "our school system is worse than when he [Mayor Frank Jackson] came in [as mayor] eight years ago."


Jackson controls the city schools pursuant to state law.


Most activists at last night's gathering backed Lanci. But activists like retired Plain Dealer reporter Dick Peery questioned his stance in not demanding that the police officers involved in the 137 shots tragedy that began with a car chase in Cleveland and ended in East Cleveland with the deaths of unarmed Blacks Malissa Williams 30, and Timothy Russell, 43, on November 29, 2012, be disciplined.


A few, but not many,  said his criticism of Black leaders was uncalled for.


"People like Rev Sharpton, Mayor Jackson and Congressman Stokes have done some good things for the Black community but they cannot be all things to all people all of the time, and neither can President Obama," said Community Activist Amy Hurd of Cleveland, who said she skipped the forum because Black women are often silenced by male leaders of Black on Black Crime, a grassroots group led by group President Ernie Harris and founded by Community Activist Art McKoy.


Both McKoy and Harris support Lanci for mayor.


Donnie Pastard, an activist member of Black on Black Crime and the Carl Stokes Brigade, said that she agrees with Lanci on his stance on Black leaders and elected officials and she said that they have "sold out."


Activist and entrepreneur Mary Seawright wanted to know if Lanci could help as to the rape of incarcerated Black men in prisons in Ohio. And another member of Black on Black Crime asked if he would promote an African-Centered school curriculum for the majority Black Cleveland schools children.


Black on Black Crime Vice President Al Porter, who lives in Ward 10 in Cleveland,  told Cleveland Urban News.Com after the forum that "Ken Lanci highlighted what leaders are not doing to help the community."


Longtime Community Activist Ada Averyhart, a Clevelander and Lanci supporter, applauded Lanci for his donation to the city's struggling Black museum.


"What are Black leaders doing to help the museum and Black people?" asked Averyhart.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 16 October 2013 22:05

AP interviews President Barack Obama one-on-one on the partial government shutdown

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The Associated Press in the White House library in Washington interviewed President Barack Obama on the partial government shutdown initiated earlier this month. Obama, who successfully ran for president as a first-term senator, spoke critically about first-term Republican senators, such as Ted Cruz of Texas, who have been leading efforts to shut the government if Republicans can't extract concessions from the White House. He said that when he was in the Senate, he "didn't go around courting the media." And I certainly didn't go around trying to shut down the government, he said.


Cleveland Urban News.Com and The Kathy Wray Coleman Online News Blog.Com, Ohio's No 1 and No 2 online Black news venues (www.clevelandurbannews.com) Reach Cleveland Urban News.Com by email at editor@clevelandurbannews.com and by phone at 216-659-0473

 

By the Associate Press

 

WASHINGTON, D.C.-THE PRESIDENT: So what I've said to them is this: Make sure that the United States government pays its bills. That's not negotiable. That's what families all around the country do. If I buy a car and I decide not to pay my car note one month, I'm not saving money -- I'm just a deadbeat. Well, this is the exact same situation.

Q: But if they don't, if they get up to this deadline and they are not willing to pass this clean debt ceiling that you're asking them to do, would you be willing to take other action to prevent default?

THE PRESIDENT: I don't expect to get there. There were at least some quotes yesterday that Speaker Boehner is willing to make sure that we don't default. And just as is true with the government shutdown, there are enough votes in the House of Representatives to make sure that the government reopens today. And I'm pretty willing to bet that there are enough votes in the House of Representatives right now to make sure that the United States doesn't end up being a deadbeat. The only thing that's preventing that from happening is Speaker Boehner calling the vote.

And I think most Americans, when they think about how our government is supposed to work, they say to themselves, each member of Congress has their conscience, they're supposed to represent their constituents back home. And if, in fact, there's a majority of the members of the House of Representatives who are prepared to move forward so that families can get back to work, so that people who are -- whether it's veterans or children or small businesses who are getting services from the federal government can start getting those services again -- I think most people would say, if there are votes to do it, let's go ahead and do it.

And then we've got a whole bunch of things that we've got to have a serious conversation about. We should be having a conversation not just about debt and deficits; we should be also having a conversation about how are we making sure that young people are getting a great education; how do we rebuild our infrastructure and put people back to work; how are we going to make sure that we fix a broken immigration system; how are we going to do all the things that we need to grow the economy and make sure that we are building a strong middle class and providing ladders for opportunity for people to get into the middle class if they're willing to work hard.

Q: Well, the tea party has really stood in the way of a lot of those objectives that you're seeking. Do you think the tea party has been good or bad for America?

THE PRESIDENT: Well, I don't want to paint anybody with a broad brush. And I think one of the great things about our democracy is, is that we've always had a whole bunch of different regional attitudes and philosophies about government and ideologies, and the tea party is just the latest expression of probably some very real fears and anxieties on the part of certain Americans. And I get that. So there's nothing objectionable to having strong principled positions on issues, even if I completely disagree with many of their positions.

Last Updated on Friday, 11 October 2013 19:58

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