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Benjamin Netanyahu wins Israel's election and is expected to form extreme right-wing government

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Pictured is newly elected prime minister of Israel Benjamin Netanyahu


Last Updated on Friday, 04 November 2022 13:43

Set-up man in murder of former Cleveland mayor Frank Jackson's grandson found guilty ....Frank Q Jackson, 24, was murdered on September 19, 2021....By editor Kathy Wray Coleman of Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com

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Pictured are Robert Shepherd, 30 (wearing white t-shirt),
and Frank Q. Jackson, 24

CLEVELANDURBANNEWS.COM-CLEVELAND, Ohio-The Cleveland man accused of setting up the murder of former Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson's 24-year-old grandson by luring him to the murder scene was convicted on Monday of aggravated murder in his death by a Cuyahoga County common pleas jury.

After deliberating for six hours, jurors found Robert Shepherd, 30, guilty on all four counts, including murder, aggravated murder and felonios assault, in the shooting death in September of 2021 of Frank Q. Jackson, though he was not charged with pulling the trigger. Common Pleas Court Judge Deena Calabrese scheduled sentencing for Nov. 15 and Shepherd, who is Black and a member of the heartless felon gang, faces life in prison.

Jackson's  great grandson, Donald Jackson-Gates, 19, faces aggravated murder and several other charges in an unrelated case in what prosecutors say is a revenge killing of Shepherd's nephew, Cris'Shon Coleman, 20, of Cleveland.

Cleveland police homicide detectives built the case against Shepard largely through surveillance cameras that show him luring Frank Q Jackson to get murdered, but such cameras purportedly do not show the killer.

Though headed to prison, Shepherd remains in jail on a $1 million bond since his arrest  just days after the former mayor's stepdaughter, Janece Jackson, the  mother of the mayor's slain grandson, was found unresponsive at a home in Cleveland in October of 2021 and later pronounced dead at a nearby hospital.

Police said that the cause of her death has not been made public. Other sources say the cause of her death is unknown. She was the only daughter of Jackson's longtime wife, Edwina Jackson.

A Democrat, Jackson opted not to seek an unprecedented fifth term last year.  He was succeeded into office by current mayor Justin M. Bibb, Cleveland's  fourth Black mayor behind Jackson, its  third Black mayor and a Democrat like Bibb, 35, and the city's second youngest mayor.

Frank Q Jackson was shot multiple times at a home in the Kinsman neighborhood on the city's largely Black east side on Sept 19. Police were called to the shooting near Sidaway and East 70th St. in the Garden Valley projects at around 9 p.m.

A woman witness told police she dropped the younger Jackson off at the house to pick up his dirt bike when she heard multiple shots. She immediately left the scene and called 911.

He was shot seven times—in the head, back, right arm and his left side The older Jackson, who was mayor at the time, was escorted by police into and out of the home where the shooting incident occurred and  was on the scene for much of the night as were then Cleveland police chief Calvin Williams and Ward 6 Councilman Blaine Griffin, Griffin now president of the 17-member all Democratic city council. Williams has since retired and Mayor Bibb has appointee Wayne Drummond, a 33-year veteran of the police force who stepped up as interim police chief,  to replace him as chief.

The former mayor's grandson was in the news multiple times in the months leading up to his murder. His suspicious murder came three days after arson charges were filed against a man who was accused of setting fire to a car seen speeding away after the 2019 fatal shooting of  Antonio Parra.

Cleveland police officers went to the former mayor’s house the night of that shooting of Parra occurred in search of Frank Q. Jackson after learning that the car at issue was registered to the mayor's grandson.

Frank Q. Jackson allegedly told police that he was not driving the car when the arson and fatal shooting occurred and had sold the car.  Arson charges against a  suspect in that case, which remains under investigation, have since been dropped

Also, the grandson, whom the former mayor helped to raise,  was charged with domestic violence following an argument with his girlfriend back in 2020 an he lad also been 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 former mayor's grandson was loved, Frank Jackson once telling reporters in response to the controversy surrounding his grandson that he loves his family just like others do.

Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com the most read Black digital newspaper and 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 Tuesday, 15 November 2022 23:07

U.S. Supreme Court hears oral arguments in affirmative action cases brought against two universities and is poised to overturn affirmative action nationwide....Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, the first Black female Supreme Court justice, is concerned

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Pictured is U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, the first Black female Supreme Court justice, cautions her conservative judicial colleagues on the high court's bench of possibly overturning  affirmative action altogether nationwide, saying it would create an inequity for Black and Hispanic students and make it harder for colleges and universities to recruit such students. The court is expected to rule next year on the controversial affirmative action issues in cases brought aginst Harvard Universitty and the University of North Carolina relative to the student admissions processs.

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Conservative Supreme Court justices on Monday, via oral arguments held before the court, indicated they are willing to end the explicit consideration of race in college admissions as they weighed cases challenging affirmative action policies at the University of North Carolina and Harvard University.

Members of the court's conservative majority questioned the legal rationale for allowing the practice and probed to what extent universities could enact new "race neutral" admissions policies aimed at improving racial diversity. Some justices, however, indicated they would be willing to allow applicants to discuss their racial identity in some form as part of essays touching upon their experiences, such as examples of overcoming discrimination. READ THE FULL ARTICLE AT NBCNEWS.COM

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 Tuesday, 01 November 2022 03:11

City of Cleveland's Director of Community Relations Board Angela Shute-Woodson added to speak at October 29, 2022 Imperial Avenue Murders anniversary rally after the keynote speakers....By Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com

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Pictured is Angela Shute-Woodson, director of the community relations board for the city of Cleveland and senior advisor to Mayor Justin M. Bibb

 

Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com

CLEVELAND, Ohio Angela Shute-Woodson, a former community activists and the director of the community relations board for the city of Cleveland and senior advisor to Mayor Justin M. Bibb, has been added as a speaker for the Cleveland Imperial Avenue Murders anniversary rally and vigil, which will be hosted by the Imperial Women Coalition and other Cleveland area activist groups and is Sat, Oct., 29, 2022 beginning at 1pm at 12205 Imperial Avenue on the city's largely Black east side. For more information contact the Imperial Women Coalition at (216) 659-0473.

Mayor Bibb, 35, took office in January of this year and is the city’s fourth Black mayor. He succeeded outgoing mayor Frank Jackson, 75, a four-term Black mayorand the city's longest serving mayor who opted against seeking a fifth term in office.

"We will remember the 11 Black women murdered on Imperial Avenue and  we look forward to hearing from our keynote speakers as well as the new community relations director for the city of Cleveland as to what substantive kinds of things the mayor and city council might do, if anything, to address this growing  epidemic of the murders of Black women and girls in Cleveland," said seasoned Cleveland activist and organizer Kathy Wray Coleman, who leads the Imperial Women Coalition, an activist coalition  group founded in 2009 around the Imperial Avenue Murders of 11 Black women by the late serial killer Anthony Sowell.

Coleman is a key organizer of the event along with Black on Black Crime Inc. president Alfred PorterJr, also a community activist.

Shute-Woodson is scheduled to speak along with the five keynote speakers of Cleveland activists Angelique Malone and Ilyese Walwyn, state Sen Nickie Antonio, Cleveland Councilman Kevin Conwell, and Melissa Graves,  CEO of the Journey Center for Safety and Healing in Cleveland. Malone's mother, Christine Malone, was one of some five Black women murdered in Cleveland along East 93rd Sreet, and her killer remains along with the killer or killere of three more of the other four murder victims remains at large Other activists will also speak in an open mic forum after Woodson and the keynote speakers speak.

Oct 29, 2022 marks the13-year anniversary of the day of the discovery by police and other authorities of the lifeless bodies of 11 Black women, who were strangled and murdered by Cleveland serial killer Sowell at his since demolished home on Imperial Ave on the city's largely Black east side. Dubbed the "Cleveland Strangler," Sowell died in prison of a terminal illness in February of 2021 while on death row.

Since the Imperial Avenue murders, and in the last two years, murders of Black Cleveland women in the city have increased by 50 percent, studies show, and Cleveland is one of the worst places to live in the country for Black women, a Pttsburgh study reveals. But in spite of this alarming data nothing significantly has been done by policy makers of Cleveland,  Cuyahoga County, or the state of Ohio, or federally to curb this heightened violence against Black women.


Dead at the hands of serial killer Sowell are Tishana Culver, Leshanda Long, Michelle Mason, Tonia Carmichael, Nancy Cobbs, Amelda Hunter, Telacia Fortson, Janice Webb, Kim Yvette Smith, and Diane Turner. Community activists say that they will never forget the  Imperial Avenue Murders as they continue to push for public policy changes to eradicate heinous crime against Black women of Cleveland, a  majority Black major American city of some 383,000 people.


"We will never forget," said long time activist Art McKoy of Black on Black Crime Inc, who, like Coleman and Porter Jr, and some others, is among a cadre of local community activists who have been in the trenches for more than a decade over the murders of Black women on Imperial Avenue and elsewhere in the city.

In addition to the Imperial Women Coalition and  Black on Black Crime Inc, other participating groups for the upcoming anniversary rally and vigil on Imperial Ave include Cleveland Peacemakers, Greater Cleveland Immigrant Support Network, the Black Man's Army of Cleveland, the Black Women's Army of Cleveland, the Brickhouse Wellness Center, International Women's Day March Cleveland, Find Our Children The Missing-Ebony Alert, Survivors and Victims of Tragedy, the Laura Cowan Foundation, Refusefacism Ohio, Carl Stokes Brigade, and members of the Coalition to Stop the Inhumanities in the Cuyahoga County Jail.

Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com the most read Black digital newspaper and 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 Saturday, 29 October 2022 08:26

Ohio homelessness news and Nov 15, 2022 is the child tax credit filing deadline, a tax credit for up to $3,600 per child of which is applicable....Get help for high energy bills and housing as Ohio copes with rising rents....By the Coalition on Housing

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Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com

By the Coalition for Housing and Homelessness in Ohio

CLEVELAND, Ohio-As unsheltered homelessness has increased since the beginning of the pandemic, we've seen alarming efforts to criminalize unhoused citizens in Ohio around the country, despite ample evidence that this approach is ineffective, inhumane, and expensive. This week the Urban Institute issued new research detailing just how much time, money, and effort Denver wasted on policing their homeless population, while showing that a Housing First approach helps police focus attention on actual crime.

Another article this week highlights the effort to expand the Low Income Housing Tax Credit in Congress's lame duck session. Here in Ohio, we are advocating for the Statehouse to pass our $308 million ARPA proposal during lame duck session. This would lay the groundwork for a major long-term increase in affordable housing production as we support the Ohio Housing Council's efforts to create a state LIHTC next year.

HUD asked us to spread the word that there's still time to apply for the expanded Child Tax Credit (up to $3,600 per child) before the Nov. 15 deadline. You can help your clients, residents, and neighbors apply using this simple tax filing tool: GetCTC. Agencies can also access these outreach resources to share info about the Child Tax Credit and EITC.

Marcus Roth
Communications/Development Director

Policing Doesn't End Homelessness. Supportive Housing Does.
(Urban Institute) Instead of addressing the issue's root causes—a lack of housing and supportive services—many cities have leaned into punitive responses that criminalize homelessness, such as arresting people for sitting or sleeping in certain public places. But this approach is costly and ineffective. Police don't solve homelessness, they only move it around—to other neighborhoods, jails, and emergency rooms—rather than connecting people with the housing and services they need. What would it take to actually end homelessness for people living on the street? And how would that affect the time and resources police spend managing the problem without solving it? New data from a supportive housing program in Denver show what could happen when communities address the underlying causes of homelessness rather than continuing the status quo.

Lawmakers, advocates eye year-end bills for housing credit
(Roll Call) WASHINGTON, DC - Lawmakers and advocates are eyeing year-end legislation as vehicles to expand a low-income housing construction incentive as opportunities dwindle to address a growing affordability crisis before the next Congress. Despite bipartisan support for the low-income housing tax credit, or LIHTC, its expansion in a year-end bill may come down to cost and negotiations around bigger partisan priorities, including the child tax credit, and research and development incentives. Supporters see the year-end tax and appropriations bills as the last, best chance to take action on housing in this Congress and warn there may be fewer opportunities if Republicans retake the House after the November midterms.

Some families staying homeless longer as housing shortage squeezes local market
(Dayton Daily News) A Greene County homeless shelter for families with children says the shelter is chronically full, and families are being granted extended stays because of an ongoing housing shortage... choices for affordable housing are becoming slimmer, and families are having to work harder to find a permanent place to live. Previously, families would stay in the shelter for 60 days. However, earlier this year, the shelter extended the program to 90 days, and then extendable on a week-by-week basis until the family finds housing.

Columbus can fight affordable housing crisis at ballot box |Opinion
(Columbus Dispatch) Fortunately, Columbus voters on Nov. 8 will have the opportunity to help our city take a significant step toward increasing affordable housing options. The bond package on the ballot will invest $200 million in affordable housing – the single most tangible and impactful action we can take to overcome this crisis. It would address four key priorities – $80 million for construction of affordable rental units, $50 million for affordable homeownership, $40 million to preserve existing housing affordability, and $30 million for programs and permanent housing to address homelessness.

Affordable housing spending is on the ballot in cities across the US
(SmartCitiesDive) This election cycle, about 80 local jurisdictions have placed some housing measure on the ballot, whether that's related to funding new housing, making it easier to build new housing in their communities, or helping those who can't afford it, said Ben Kelly, a Denver-based public affairs consultant focused on housing development among other issues... "This is happening in jurisdictions in all states and sizes trying to address some segment of their affordable housing challenges," Kelly said. "The pressures are reaching a level that local jurisdictions are really actively looking for local solutions."

Council amends Affordable Housing Trust Fund rules as the first subsidized project is announced
(WVXU) A lengthy debate in a Cincinnati Council committee Tuesday resulted in a compromise over the Affordable Housing Trust Fund, but not one most advocates are pleased with. The committee voted 5-3 to restrict $5 million of the fund to units affordable to households making 80% or less of the Area Median Income (AMI)... The three council members opposing the motion sided instead with affordable housing advocates who say the money should be restricted to lower-income units as outlined in the original trust fund ordinance in 2018: all money going to units affordable at 60% or less AMI, and at least half the funds going to units affordable to 30% AMI.

Cleveland introduces $15 million in new 'housing for all' requests: Stimulus Watch
(Cleveland.com) Mayor Justin Bibb wants to spend $15 million on two newly detailed proposals aimed at improving housing throughout the city. The largest of the two proposals would establish a $10 million fund to help homeowners and landlords pay for improvements on their homes. Officials also proposed spending an additional $5 million to create a revolving loan fund to repair 100 vacant and abandoned homes throughout the city. Both requests would be funded entirely by the American Rescue Plan Act. The $15 million in new housing proposals are in addition to $53 million in separate ARPA-funded housing proposals city council has already approved. Those proposals include $35 million to incentivize public/private housing and nearly $18 million in an ARPA-funded Housing and Urban Development Grant to address homelessness with non-aggregate shelters and to provide affordable housing.

'Predatory investing' is obstructing efforts to improve housing in Cleveland: Stimulus Watch
(Cleveland.com) Many real estate investors – often, but not always from outside Cleveland -- have exploited the city's relatively high rent and low housing prices to scoop up properties that are often left to rot. "Predatory investors," as some experts call them, buy cheap houses in economically distressed neighborhoods, but either refuse to make improvements or fail to receive permits for upgrades, despite cashing rent checks. Then, they sometimes sell the homes – often to other, similarly situated companies – for a quick profit.

Ohioans Cope with Rising Rents
(Public News Service) Between December 2019 and December 2021, the average rent for a two-bedroom apartment in Ohio's five most populous counties increased between 15% and 18%, according to data from Zillow. But median household incomes in Ohio increased by just 6% between those years, according to census data... Organizations like Community Legal Aid are working to support tenants as rents rise. For example, some cities are expanding legal representation for tenants facing eviction cases. Cleveland and Toledo city councils created right-to-counsel ordinances, which provide attorneys to extremely low-income tenants.

Corporate Landlords Profit from Segregation, at Cost of Black Homeownership and Wealth
(Shelterforce) An investigation by a United States House of Representatives subcommittee has revealed that despite the COVID-19 eviction moratorium, corporate landlords still evicted tenants and did so at three times the rates previously recorded in public data. Additionally, even though rents were already rising, tenants of corporate landlords frequently faced even higher rent hikes. These findings follow a record-setting quarter when investors bought over 90,000 U.S. homes.

Black Families Fall Further Behind on Homeownership
(Stateline) The persistence of redlining, the Great Recession, gentrification and the increasing number of homes being scooped up by investors all have contributed to a growing Black-White disparity in homeownership, which is larger now than it was in the early 1960s, before the 1968 Fair Housing Act and other civil rights legislation. The Urban Institute is working with cities in a dozen states and the District of Columbia on strategies to bring Black homeownership back up. Among them are financial assistance to Black homebuyers to help them cover down payments and closing costs, and support for current homeowners facing foreclosure.


Events

Nov. 28 – 30: Ohio Housing Conference – The Ohio Housing Conference, hosted by Ohio Housing Finance Agency and Ohio Capital Corporation for Housing takes place at the Greater Columbus Convention Center. Registration is now open!

Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com the most read Black digital newspaper and 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, 28 October 2022 18:47

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