Thursday, April 28, 2011

Ethnic Studies Update: Former TUSD teacher John Ward files claims against the district

By Doug MacEachern
The very first person to stand up to the political operatives of the Ethnic Studies program at Tucson Unified School District was John Ward, a legitimate, talented history teacher who objected to the overt activism of the program's "progressive" instructors.

He paid a price for blowing the whistle. The activists, many of whom had no teacher credentials at the time, were assigned to "team teach" the "Latino perspective" in history classes with genuine teachers like Ward. But it quickly became evident that the sort of history his co-instructors had in mind was mere leftist, revolutionary propaganda.

Posted by Diana Rosendo
To read more, click here

Stop Arizona's Latino-bashing bandwagon

By Linda Valdez
A letter filled with ethnic stereotypes was read on the floor of the Arizona Senate by GOP Sen. Lori Klein who later told The Arizona Guardian that “If this letter is true, and that’s how little regard they have to get ahead in life and to be educated, we have a serious problem and we need to look at it.” The "they" she refers to are Latino children.

If the letter is true? If?

Posted by Diana Rosendo

To read more, click here

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Bogus arguments for Tucson ethnic studies rebunked

By Doug MacEachern

The unsupportable claim that the ethnic-studies classes of Tucson Unified School District somehow improve the academic performance of its students has survived a slew of critics.

But now, the district's own statisticians have - finally - examined the claims and found them lacking. Can the true believers ignore the district's own findings, too?


Posted By Diana Rosendo

To read more, click here

Tucson Schools may strip Ethnic Studies as requirement

TUCSON - Some Mexican American Studies courses would no longer be used to satisfy core-curriculum requirements under a resolution expected to be presented Tuesday to the Tucson Unified School District board.

The resolution is offered by board President Mark Stegeman and has created a division among board members over a program that already has garnered the attention of state lawmakers.



To read more, click here

GOP Hispanic Conference Highlights Deep Denial on Immigration

Today, in Miami, the Republican-backed Hispanic Leadership Network hosted a conference to “provide a unique opportunity for center-right leaders to speak with—and more importantly listen to—the Hispanic community,” according to conference co-chair Jeb Bush.

read more here

[posted by Ariana Hernandez]

The Three Amigos on Immigration: Reps. Smith (TX), Gallegly (CA), and King (IA)

The leaders of House Mass Deportation Caucus, Reps. Smith, Gallegly, and King, are not only driving the GOP immigration strategy, they are driving their party off of a political cliff.

Those “Three Amigos” are proving to be the GOP’s lead strategists not only on immigration reform – but Latino politics. Saner heads have tried to prevail on the Republican side, but to no avail. The efforts of Jeb Bush, Tom Ridge, and even Newt Gingrich to get the Republican Party to move away from anti-immigrant policies and rhetoric alienating Hispanic voters has hit a brick wall -- built by Smith, Gallegly and King.

read more here

[posted by Ariana Hernandez]

Poll: Latino Voters Have 'Widely Negative' Views Of GOP

WASHINGTON -- A recent poll out of California found an uphill battle for Republicans hoping to make inroads with Latinos, the largest and fastest growing minority in the United States.

read more here

[posted by Ariana Hernandez]

Hispanic Census numbers are staggering!

By now you have probably heard about the US Census numbers from the 2010 Census. His-panics accounted for 56 percent of the nation’s growth; most of this growth reflects new births. While indeed these numbers are staggering for the general public, for the Hispanic community this growth has been self-evident.

For full article click here.

Posted by Montzerrat Garcia.

The Urgency of Latino Education Attainment

Reflecting on the 2010 Census results and the dramatic increase in the U.S. Latino community, I ask myself how we once again find ourselves in the same predicament as ten years ago, with no national sense of urgency to fix Latino education when it has significant implications for our future workforce.

For full article click here.

Posted by Montzerrat Garcia.

There is a Difference between One and Ten

In the mid-sixties, I attended a lecture by Dr. Ernesto Galarza. Someone in the audience asked him why politicos and those in social movements didn’t care about Mexican Americans. Galarza responded that most elected officials that were Democrats cared about Mexican Americans but that we were never their number one priority or even close to it on their do list.
Galarza went to the blackboard and drew a vertical line and showed the difference between one and ten. According to Galarza, the legislators would negotiate with the other party that also had its priorities, and if they got the majority of their first five items, they would consider the legislative session successful. For years, farm workers or “Mexican” issues never seemed to break out of the number ten spot. Democrats cared about Mexicans, but just not enough to invite them to the wedding.

For full article click here.

Posted by Montzerrat Garcia.

Border Communities are Ground Zero for Hunger

— The tiny towns in the borderland of East San Diego County —Campo, Boulevard and Tierra del Sol— mark the road north for hundreds of migrants as they cross the border and travel on. Hardly any migrants stay — just those who die in the crossing. Instead, for the people who live here, some with roots going back for generations, these tiny communities are home to growing hunger and poverty.

For full article click here.

Posted by Montzerrat Garcia.

Percentage of Latino children in preschool declining

Reversing a decades-long trend, the percentage of Latino children attending preschool across the U.S. declined between 2005 and 2009, with possible far-reaching consequences for California.
That’s the conclusion of a report by UC Berkeley researchers, to be released at the Education Writers Association’s annual conference in New Orleans.
The drop in Latino attendance could be a result of multiple factors, the researchers say. One is that the unemployment rate of Hispanic women over the age of 20 nearly doubled between 2005 and 2009, mainly as a fallout from the Great Recession that began in 2007. That means that these women either were less able to afford preschool, or felt that it wasn’t needed because they could care for their children themselves at no cost.

For full article click here.

Posted by Montzerrat Garcia.

The Dream of a Mercado in Barrio Logan finally becomes reality!

Editorial:
For the past 22 years the residents of Barrio Logan have been waiting for the empty lot along Cesar Chavez Parkway to be developed. Finally, after many starts and stops, unfulfilled promises and political wrangling, the Mercado Del Barrio Project is set to begin construction next week.
For the residents of this community there is a sigh of relief because the seven acre lot has been nothing more than an eye sore for the past two decades.

For full article click here.

Posted by Montzerrat Garcia.

Save Ethnic Studies CSU Tour

The California Faculty Association, San Diego Chapter will host a delegation from the Arizona’s “Save Ethnic Studies” organization on Wednesday, March 16, 2011, from 5:00-7:00 p.m., as part of the “Save Ethnic Studies” California State University tour. The “Save Ethnic Studies” presentations will include an overview of the work that Critical Raza Educators in Tucson public schools are doing and describe the struggle these educators are waging against Arizona’s legislative attacks on academic freedom and cultural competence in Arizona’s education system. It will also provide a context for related issues that are currently occurring in California.

For full article click here.

Posted by Montzerrat Garcia.

Census: A More Diverse California Means Big Political Changes Ahead

The most diverse state in the nation became even more so over the past decade, with big shifts in California’s ethnic populations certain to trigger seismic changes in its political landscape as well.
Even as the state’s overall population grew more slowly than at any time in the last century, the Latino and Asian populations experienced robust growth, according to 2010 U.S. Census data released Tuesday. Demographers attribute much of the growth to an infusion of immigrants from places like Central America, South Asia, Korea and the Philippines, though census data on those populations won’t be available for some time.

For full article click here.

Posted by Montzerrat Garcia.

The Battle Over Redistricting — Will Latinos Be Represented?

WASHINGTON — It’s an impending battle: the process of redistricting throughout the country, where Hispanic political interests are at stake. The eye of the hurricane will most likely be in states with high Latino populations like Texas, Nevada and California.

A fierce battle will be waged which in the past has ended in the courts.

For full article click here.

Posted by Montzerrat Garcia.

OUR BARRIOS ARE NOT FOR SALE!!

On Saturday, January 29, the Save Our Barrios Coalition will hold a Barrio Congress (community meeting) to unite organizations and community activists and build a strategy to halt the gentrification (also called “community development”-amounting to destruction) of Logan Heights in San Diego and other communities throughout the United States.

For full article click here.

Posted by Montzerrat Garcia.

Activist Nativo Lopez threatened with jail for 'gibberish'

A Superior Court judge this morning threatened to throw immigrant-rights activist Nativo Lopez back in jail if he doesn't stop with the legal gibberish.

Lopez, a recalled former Santa Ana schools trustee, faces eight voter fraud-related charges stemming from changing his voting address in 2008 from his Santa Ana home to the Boyle Heights office of Hermandad Mexicana Latinoamericana, a group he heads. He's alleged to have voted in L.A. County despite still living in Orange County.

Lopez is serving as his own attorney and Judge George G. Lomeli showed little patience with his unorthodox defense.

"If you continue your behavior, if you continue to disrupt this court with your nonsensical comments, the court will remand you into custody," Judge George G. Lomeli told Lopez at his mental competency hearing in Los Angeles today.

If Lomeli wasn't impressed with Lopez, the feeling appeared mutual.

"He got belligerent, threatening to arrest me for just asking a question," said Lopez, who had repeatedly told the judge, "I accept your dishonor."
click here.
posted by izabel pintor.

Report: Mexican children vulnerable at border

WASHINGTON (AP) -- A new report says a law designed to protect Mexican children who cross the US border alone is not being executed well, so the children remain vulnerable to drug cartels, gangs and other dangers.

For complete, click here.

Posted by Izabel Pintor.

Record number of Latinos voted in US last year

"WASHINGTON (AP) -- More Latinos than ever voted in the November 2010 election as a relatively young population reached the voting age, a fresh sign that the fastest growing U.S. minority stands as a formidable force in electoral politics.

A study by the Pew Hispanic Center found that 6.6 million Latinos, who mainly pick Democrats, voted in 2010, up from the 5.6 million who voted in the previous contests in 2006. As a share of the electorate, Latinos made up 6.9 percent of the 96 million voters in 2010, up from 5.8 percent of the 96.1 million voters four years earlier. The center released its report on Tuesday.

Among those record voters were 600,000 Latinos who turned 18 each year between 2006 and 2010 as well as 1.4 million foreign-born adult Latinos who became U.S. citizens and therefore eligible to vote, the center said.

"A lot of that growth is driven by U.S.-born young people who are coming of age and now (are) eligible to vote," said Mark Lopez, Pew Hispanic Center associate director.

Republicans and Democrats are certain to factor the voting numbers in any political calculation as they look to the presidency in 2012, control of Congress and elections for decades to come. Strong Hispanic growth in the Southwest and West could make some states more fertile territory for Democrats."

For complete article, click here.

Posted by Izabel pintor.

Pew Analysis: Latino Voters are Many, but Not as Many as There Could Be

Despite strong recent turnouts at the polls, Latinos trail other groups when it comes to voting, according to an analysis of census data released Tuesday by the Pew Hispanic Center.

More than 6.6 million Latinos went to the polls in the recent November midterm election, making the group a rich prize for Democrats and Republicans in the 2012 cycle, which includes a battle for the presidency and control of both houses of Congress. The growing Latino population, particularly in the Southwest and West, makes the group a pillar of support for Democrats, who have been the beneficiaries of votes by Latinos, who generally favor the party's position on immigration reform



Read more

Posted by Jessica Damian

Sacramento Representatives Split on "Birthright Citizenship" Proposition

GOP Rep. Steve King of Iowa, the incoming chairman of the subcommittee that oversees immigration, is expected to push a bill that would deny "birthright citizenship" to such children.


The idea has a growing list of supporters, including Republican Reps. Tom McClintock of Elk Grove and Dan Lungren of Gold River, but it has aroused intense opposition, as well.

Democratic Rep. Doris Matsui of Sacramento called King's plan "both unconstitutional and shortsighted."

The issue is dividing Republicans, too.

"We find both this rhetoric and this unconstitutional conduct reprehensible, insulting and a poor reflection upon Republicans," DeeDee Blasé, the founder of Somos Republicans, a Latino GOP organization based in the Southwestern states, said in a letter to House Republican leaders.



Read more:
Posted by Jessia Damian

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Record number of Latinos voted in midterms

More Latinos than ever voted in the 2010 midterm election as a relatively young population reached the voting age, a fresh sign that the nation's fastest growing minority stands as a formidable force in electoral politics.


for complete article click here

posted by Flor Parra

Record number of Latinos voted in US last year

WASHINGTON -- More Latinos than ever voted in the November 2010 election as a relatively young population reached the voting age, a fresh sign that the fastest growing U.S. minority stands as a formidable force in electoral politics.

A study by the Pew Hispanic Center found that 6.6 million Latinos, who mainly pick Democrats, voted in 2010, up from the 5.6 million who voted in the previous contests in 2006.

For complete article, click here

[Posted by Perla Parra]

Cutting off services to illegal immigrants easier said than done

SACRAMENTO – While Gov. Jerry Brown and lawmakers wrestle with the budget crisis, some Californians are adamant that much of the problem can be laid at the feet of people who are in the country illegally.

Their message is: Stop teaching the kids, cut off welfare checks and ship the prisoners back home.

That way, billions of dollars spent on services could be put to work cutting the deficit, paying for vital programs and keeping tax increases at bay.

But that's easier said than done.

For complete article, click here.

Posted by Izabel Pintor.

Students will rally for California Dream Act

A gathering with food, music and a torch-lighting to support two bills that would allow AB 540 college students to receive certain types of financial aid and fee waivers will take place from 4-8 p.m. on Friday, April 22 at Hillcrest Park, 1200 N. Harbor Blvd. in Fullerton.

(Note: The location was later changed to Pioneer Park in Anaheim, organizers said.)

The event is part of a 15-city tour of the torch, set to reach Sacramento in July. Speakers will call on state leaders to support the measures, and students will talk about how the bills, known as the California Dream Act, would affect them, said Ivan Ceja, an organizer and Fullerton College student.

For complete article, click here.

Posted by Izabel Pintor.

2010 Census Results Show Increasingly Hispanic Populations in Every State

The results are in and the face of America is changing. Recently released data collected by the United States Census Bureau shows that even in some surprising areas, such as Utah, Latinos are the driving force behind population growth.

“Four out of ten new Utah people from 2000 to 2010 are minorities,” Pamela Perlich, senior research economist at the University of Utah’s Bureau of Economic and Business Research, told USA Today. “There’s a wave of diversity sweeping across the state.”

to read more, click here

[posted by : Blanca Chavez - Herrera]

Arizona ethnic studies ban goes into effect

By Megan Gordon and Mary K. Reinhart
A new law aimed at ending ethnic-studies classes went into effect today.

For three years, state Superintendent of Public Instruction Tom Horne pushed the bill in hopes of terminating the ethnic-studies curriculum in the Tucson Unified School District

To read more, click here
Posted by: Diana Rosendo

Saturday, April 23, 2011

A more diverse, urban nationcensus: Houston still ranks 4th Census Bureau reports Hispanic population grew 43% in a decade

The rest of the nation is looking more like Texas these days, as the Hispanic population in the United States climbed to 50.5 million people.
Across the country, the Hispanic population grew more quickly than Anglos and African-Americans, accounting for more than half of U.S. growth over the past decade.

For full article, click here

Posted by J.A.Zzenith

Hispanics' political clout pumped up by census Texas among states where Latinos will pursue new congressional districts

SAN ANTONIO - For Anna Alicia Romero and other Hispanic activists, the release of final census numbers this week signaled the official start of an audacious new campaign: securing as many as 10 new Hispanic congressional districts across the country.

For full article, click here

Posted by J.A.Zzenith

City Council redistricting plan draws fire Mayor's proposal would increase seats from 9 to 11, but critics say attempt to boost Hispanic districts not

Mayor Annise Parker presented her administration's City Council redistricting plan Wednesday, drawing immediate concern from Latino council members and activists who had hoped the map would more clearly reflect their community's growth.

For full article, click here

Posted by J.A.Zzenith

Hispanics look to flex muscles Texas House redistricting panel must mirror new census, they say

With Texas populous enough for four new seats in Congress, the four Hispanic lawmakers on the state House committee charged with drawing a new map took every opportunity Thursday to remind witnesses and their colleagues that the growth came courtesy of Hispanic Texans.

For full article, click here

Posted by J.A.Zzenith

District proposal catches criticism Group wants legislative map to reflect state's Hispanic growth

AUSTIN - Adopting the redistricting map proposed by the House Redistricting Committee chairman would be a sure-fire way for the state to end up in court, said representatives of a group of organizations that make up the Texas Latino Redistricting Task Force.
"It reduces the number of districts in which Hispanics have a majority of voters. It's retrogressive," Nina Perales, litigation director for the Mexican American Legal Defense Fund, said of the Solomons plan.

For full article, click here

Posted by J.A.Zzenith

Latino leaders offer own map of City Council Alternative is one of 16 received in past two weeks

Hispanic civic leaders on Wednesday presented an alternative redistricting map for the Houston City Council that creates a third district on the city's southwest side where they said a Latino would have "a fighting chance" to win.

For full article, click here

Posted by J.A.Zzenith

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

United Farm Workers Fight Dwindling Membership

The United Farm Workers of America drew national attention when workers led by Cesar Chavez inspired a boycott of table grapes in the 1960s and then forced vineyard owners to sign hundreds of contracts providing better pay and working conditions.

But experts say employer intimidation, high worker turnover and demographic changes have resulted in union membership plummeting in recent decades, despite the problems workers reeled off at the meeting: low or stagnant wages; employers who don't provide shade from the scorching sun; and foremen who rob workers of their pay or prevent them from taking water and bathroom breaks.



Read more

Posted by Jessica Damian

Parent and Teacher Involvement in Educational Success of Minorities

According to Ester Cepeda 35% of parents of Latino students are absent from school activities. In this article she debates whether teachers can supplement the attention missing at home and avoid blaming parents for lack of involvement in school.
Read More
Posted by Jessica Damian

Hispanic Republican Group Challenges GOP

In these times, it's not easy being a Hispanic Republican.

Take it from DeeDee Garcia Blase of Scottsdale, Ariz. The 39-year-old Mexican-American political activist and Air Force veteran is a force of nature. She is the founder of Somos Republicans, a grass-roots Hispanic Republican organization that acts as a guerrilla insurgency against the GOP establishment. After just two years, the group claims 6,000 members in a dozen states.



Read more


Posted by Jessica Damian

New bill targets employers who hire illegal immigrants

One of the Texas House's most prolific writers of anti-illegal immigration legislation filed her fifth related bill Wednesday. This one targets employers who hire undocumented workers.

State Rep. Debbie Riddle, R-Tomball , said her bill would make it a state jail felony "to intentionally, knowingly or recklessly hire a person who is not lawfully permitted to be in America."

"Employers who reward and incentivize this illegal behavior are the primary culprit in the illegal immigration problem," Riddle said in a statement. "Now they're going to have to think hard about whether or not it's worth the risk to them and their business when they make these hiring decisions."

The bill would exempt from prosecution people who hire undocumented workers to help out at single-family residences.

For complete article, click herePosted by Elizabeth Vargas

GOP: Illegal immigrants taking minorities' jobs

Rep. Emanuel Cleaver II, D-Mo., chairman of the Congressional Black Caucus, criticized the hearing's premise in a statement. Several other Democratic lawmakers echoed that argument, saying Republicans were ignoring their lack of support for job training, affirmative action, college financial aid and other programs more critical to employment of minorities.

"I am concerned by the majority's attempt to manufacture tension between African-Americans and immigrant communities. It seems as though they would like for our communities to think about immigration in terms of 'us versus them,' and I reject that notion," Cleaver said in his statement.

Rep. John Conyers of Michigan, ranking Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee, issued a warning at the start of the hearing against any attempts to pit blacks against Latino immigrants, a notion that he said he found "so abhorrent and repulsive."

For complete article, click here

Posted by Elizabeth Vargas

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

MALDEF, LATINO OFFICERS CHARGE CITY OF WESTMINSTER POLICE DEPARTMENT WITH EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION

LOS ANGELES, CA - On March 2nd, MALDEF held a press conference announcing a lawsuit filed against the City of Westminster, as well as two former Police Chiefs of the Westminster Police Department, for discrimination against Latino police officers on the basis of their national origin. Plaintiffs have been denied promotions and Special Assignments, which can lead to promotions, in violation of the law.

to read more, click here

[posted by: Blanca Chavez - Herrera]

Monday, April 18, 2011

Police officers file employer discrimination suit

By AMY TAXIN Associated Press
Posted: 03/02/2011 10:41:27 AM PST
Updated: 03/02/2011 03:41:35 PM PST

WESTMINSTER, Calif.—Three Latino police officers have sued their Southern California employer, alleging they have been passed over for promotions because of their ethnicity.
The officers for the Westminster Police Department say they have been turned down for special assignments including detective work in narcotics and gangs even though they have received honors, awards and good performance reviews.
The officers started to suspect they were being discriminated against when they realized all three of them were being passed over despite their exemplary records, said Victor Viramontes, who is the plaintiffs' attorney and national senior counsel for the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund.


for complete article, click here

posted by: Angie Ngo
Diversity defines Silicon Valley, except at town halls

By Joe Rodriguez
jrodriguez@mercurynews.com
© Copyright 2011, Bay Area News Group
Posted: 04/16/2011 11:20:42 PM PDT
Updated: 04/18/2011 03:02:58 PM PDT


Silicon Valley may have the most dynamic, multiracial society on earth, but you wouldn't know it at city hall. With the 2010 census in, minorities now outnumber whites almost 2-to-1 in Santa Clara County. Yet non-Hispanic whites hold the vast majority of local city council seats, as well as every city manager's office in Santa Clara County's 15 towns and cities.


for complete article, click here

posted by Angie Ngo
Retired Lt. Gen. Sanchez weighs run for US Senate

By HENRY C. JACKSON and WILL WEISSERT Associated Press
Posted: 04/18/2011 03:58:42 PM PDT

SAN ANTONIO—Retired Army Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez said Monday he is considering running for the U.S. Senate in Texas as a Democrat, giving the party a high-profile recruit they hope can resonate with the state's rapidly growing Hispanic population.

For complete article, click here

posted by Angie Ngo

Separate But Equal: Latino Students Forced Into ESL Classes in Texas

The Mexican-American Legal Defense Fund (MALDEF) posted some important legal documents online for everyone to see. Here’s an excerpt from their press release:
At Preston Hollow Elementary School, a public school in an upper-income neighborhood of Dallas, Texas, Latino and other minority students were segregated into the school’s English as a Second Language (ESL) classrooms. They were kept separate from the Anglo students in the school, even though the majority of the Latino students in the ESL classes were proficient in English and some had even tested in English and been classified as “gifted and talented.” The Latino students were not allowed to mix with the Anglo students even in art, music, and physical education classes and were grouped in classrooms in separate hallways from the Anglo students.

For full article, click here


Posted by Sylvia Lopez

Latino Farmers Reject USDA Settlement, Claim Racism

A lawyer representing Hispanic farmers alleging discrimination by the United States Department of Agriculture over a number of years called the $1.3 billion settlement offered by the government on Friday “unacceptable.”

The group of farmers, which also includes women farmers, claims the USDA favored white farmers for years by giving them preference for loans and assistance. The offer by the government would amount to about $50,000 per farmer and set aside another $160 million in farm debt relief for eligible women and Hispanic farmers.

For more, click here

Posted by Sylvia Lopez

AZ Senate Elimates Spanish Election Material

So this really isn’t about immigrants, undocumented or not. The folks in power in Arizona don’t want anything in their state that doesn’t look or sound like they do. This recent vote in the Arizona state senate proves the point.
The bill, SB1490 proposed by Maricopa County Senator Steve Smith, bars the production of all government material in laguanges other than English. The Arizona Senate has approved it.

For full article, click here


Posted by Sylvia Lopez

How Latinos Are Changing The Electoral College Map

Studying census data is somewhat like reading tea leaves or gazing into a crystal ball, one is always trying to determine what is said and what it means in the future. There are several things I discovered as I gazed at the crystal ball that are the census data: Latinos are going to play a major role in forthcoming presidential elections and Latinos are spreading over the entire country.

For more, click here


Posted by Sylvia Lopez

Latinos Will Surpass the 55 Million Mark

So now that we’re 42 states into the 50-state Census roll-out reveal it’s a good time to pause to see where we are and what to expect. Back in the day (it’s only been 5 months but it seems like an eternity) when Carlos Guerra, Sara Inés Calderón, Gilberto Ocañas and I sat for coffee at the Foundry in San Antonio to plot News Taco we were convinced that the US Census was going to be a startling revelation. We wagered that the count would show at least 55 million Latinos in the United States – far more than most estimates had predicted. It turns out there’s some good ju-ju in the Foundry coffee because our aim was dead-on

for more, click here

Posted by Sylvia Lopez

Neo-Nazi, Latino Confrontation In Claremont

Head-shaven and military boot wearing a group of about two dozen white supremacists marched on the streets of Claremont, CA, in protest against what they claim is an “unbridled flow of immigration” into the region. What’s interesting is that these guys didn’t make the distinction between documented and undocumented immigrants, they don’t discriminate their hate, they pretty much don’t like any and all immigrants.

for more, click here

Posted by Sylvia Lopez

Texas Set To Pass Voter ID Law

The Republicans in Texas have been trying for years to pass voter ID legislation—and today they very likely will be almost done. The measure, which requires voters to show photo identification before casting a ballot in person, has already passed through the Senate and today, with a Republican supermajority controlling the lower chamber, it almost definitely will pass the House. Given that Gov. Perry has been itching to pass this thing for years, the bill should fly into law faster than a School House Rock song. The Democrats’ long battle to defeat the measure is seemingly over.

for full article, click here

Posted by Sylvia Lopez

Sunday, April 17, 2011

L.A.'s Border Between Racism and Discrimination

Some establishments address me in English and Spanish as well, but there is a third party that speaks to me in a loud monosyllabic Spanish reminiscent of how ignorant people address the deaf. These coffee shop and fast food restaurant workers treat me with a condescending brand of respect, or rather, costumer service that leaves me unsatisfied and wondering if it’s something personal. I speak both languages, and I do not have trouble being spoken to in either, but it’s insulting to be spoken to in charades. It is like a sort of ignorance that goes unchecked. It’s not mean or evil, but it sticks with you.

for more, click here

Posted by Sylvia Lopez

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Asians, Latinos sue over San Mateo County voting

A group of Asian Americans and Latinos filed a voting-rights lawsuit Thursday against San Mateo County, the only county in California that elects supervisors in at-large balloting rather than by districts.

for complete article click here

posted by Flor Parra

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Arizona teacher in middle of immigration debate

PHOENIX — An Arizona substitute teacher has found himself in the middle of the state's polarizing immigration debate after he criticized Hispanic students in a letter to a state senator, saying a majority of students he recently taught refused to say the Pledge of Allegiance.

The letter by substitute teacher Tony Hill was read aloud Thursday as the state Senate considered one of five bills on illegal immigration. Hill wrote that a majority of eight-grade students at an unnamed suburban Glendale school said that "We are Mexicans and Americans stole our land."

Hill also wrote that while substitute teaching in the area, "most of the Hispanic students do not want to be educated but rather (want to) be gang members and gangsters."

For complete article, click here

Posted by Elizabeth Vargas

Guest worker program for immigrants proposed

"There are millions of people living amongst us," he said. "The vast majority are just honest, hardworking people."

Workman, who filed House Bill 2886 on Thursday, said the federal government has not dealt appropriately with illegal immigration, which is supposed to be its responsibility.

Workman, who owns a construction company, said the proposed Texas Immigration Reconciliation Act also would help fill the needs of Texas businesses and serve as a way to collect more taxes to "pay for services provided."

For complete article, click here

Posted by Elizabeth Vargas

Latinos hope to strengthen their political power through redistricting

The shapes of California's political districts will change dramatically by August, altered by 2010 Census data showing demographic shifts and that much of the state's growth occurred in the Central Valley and Inland Empire.
Latino groups argue it is time for their representation to match their population.

For complete article, click here

[Posted by Perla Parra]

Monday, April 11, 2011

In California, GOP Writes Off Latino Voters


Here's a portrait of two bills that are worlds apart, and two very different veterans of the political wars who have come to gain a common understanding.



Marty Wilson, 56, and Richie Ross, 61, cannot think of a single campaign in which they worked on the same side. But like Ross, Wilson understands that California has become a very different place.

Read more:


Posted by Jessica Damian

All bark but no Bit

State Legislatures Slow on Immigration Measures

Under newly fortified Republican control, many state governments started the year pledging forceful action to crack down on illegal immigration, saying they would fill a void left by the stalemate in Washington over the issue.

Still, immigrant advocates in many states say the debate has clearly shifted in favor of tougher enforcement. They say they have had to fight just to hold the line on immigration issues that they thought were long settled.

Bills similar to Arizona’s are advancing in Florida, Kansas, Oklahoma and South Carolina. In Kansas and Oklahoma, even though Republicans control the legislatures and the executive branch, immigration proposals have encountered unusually vocal opposition from business.

To view the entire story, click on the link below

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/14/us/14immig.html?_r=1&scp=6&sq=education%20immigration&st=cse

--amy

Social Domino Affect to families of the deported

A 17-Month Detention, Now an Uncertain Future

It's kind of easy to say just send him back," she says. "But there's a domino effect. This affects his wife, his kids, his family, his friends, his co-workers. I wish they would be open-minded ... and really understand what they're doing to human beings."

Davalos' court hearing isn't scheduled until 2014. He'll have to prove his three U.S.-born children will suffer an extreme and exceptionally unusual hardship if he's deported. It's a very high bar, and Salvatierra knows it.

She already is framing her argument: "He's obviously a good father, a good provider, a good husband," she says, "and he has demonstrated he's a worthy individual to remain in the United States."

"I feel like I have to be the perfect person," he says.

"I was looking for a better life, that's why I came," he says. "It's not because I wanted to do something bad to this country."

He returned to his job cleaning pools.

Click on the link to view the entire article and comments:
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2011/04/10/us/AP-US-Immigration-Limbo-Davalos.html?scp=3&sq=illegal%20immigration&st=nyt

by Amy D

Thursday, April 7, 2011

Brash congressman won't lead immigration panel

Republicans eliminated a potential liability with Latino voters on Friday by refusing to give the top spot on an immigration subcommittee to a congressman who once proposed stopping illegal immigrants with an electrified fence.

For full article, click here

Posted by J.A.Zzenith

Latino clout in Congress appears to stay consistent

Latino political clout stayed steady in the new Congress that convened this week following the election of five new Hispanic House members and one senator.
The 112th Congress has 26 Latino members, less than the 27 who served for the past two years but a substantial increase from the 19 Latinos in Congress a decade ago, according to records of the National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials (NALEO).

For full article, click here

Posted by J.A.Zzenith

Los Nietos Middle School improves academics, sheds underperforming label

WHITTIER - Labeled as underperforming according to federal standards for more than a half-dozen years, now Los Nietos Middle School is enjoying a completely different designation - just in time for the district's 150th anniversary celebration.

Officials say the 400-student campus is the only middle school in Los Angeles County that managed this school year to exit Program Improvement (PI), a status placed on schools that fail to meet annual federal testing targets for two consecutive years.

The predominantly Hispanic and low-income Los Nietos Middle School had been languishing in PI since 2003. Things were so bad that a consultant came in to help develop an alternative governance plan for the middle school to improve student achievement.

But it paid off this year, said Los Nietos School District Superintendent Jonathan Vasquez. The middle school was able to show enough improvement in its test scores for two straight years, both schoolwide and among its low-income, Hispanic and special-education subgroups, to shed its PI status.



Read more: http://www.sgvtribune.com/ci_17505971?IADID=Search-www.sgvtribune.com-www.sgvtribune.com#ixzz1IpJC2h8N

Demonstration for peace at Muir Wednesday

PASADENA - Following a racially charged brawl among students at John Muir High School, community members plan to gather around the school today in a show of peace.
Concerned Community Volunteers Inc. is hosting "Hands in Hands" from 10 a.m. to noon, hoping to form a human chain around the school.

"We are coming together as a community to protect the students," said Millie Lee, a local resident and activist spearheading the effort. "Anyone who has a passion for Muir and wants to see the best for Muir will be involved."

Lee hopes the event will bring attention to the violence in northwest Pasadena that has claimed the lives of five Muir students in the last five years.

Most recently, Brandon Jackson, a Muir student, was killed in Altadena in February.
She also hopes to call attention to the racial tensions festering between blacks and Latinos in northwest Pasadena, Lee said.



Read more: http://www.sgvtribune.com/ci_17781885?IADID=Search-www.sgvtribune.com-www.sgvtribune.com#ixzz1IpHlMkCQ

PUSD, City Council inch toward new school board election system

PASADENA - The plan to push geographic-based voting districts as a means to elect members to the Pasadena Unified School District board cleared a hurdle Tuesday, but not without opposition from the public.
In a joint meeting between the Pasadena City Council and the PUSD board, both governing bodies unanimously approved the formation of a community task force to draft changes to the city charter that would clear the way for geographic-based voting districts and draw the actual district lines.

....

The Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights successfully sued the Merced School District for not having a proportionate number of Latinos on the school board, forcing the school system to draw voter districts based on both geography and ethnicity. Under the provisions of California Voters Rights Act, minorities are entitled to voting districts that allow them proportionate representation in elected bodies.

The Lawyers Committee visited Pasadena in 2010 as a guest of the League of United Latin American Citizens and told the group that the PUSD was vulnerable to a lawsuit based on disproportionate Latino representation, said Ramon Miramontes, PUSD board and LULAC member.

While Latinos make up 46 percent of the Pasadena residents, Miramontes is the lone Latino serving on the school board.



Read more: http://www.sgvtribune.com/ci_17406924?IADID=Search-www.sgvtribune.com-www.sgvtribune.com#ixzz1IpGOPtVi


Read more: http://www.sgvtribune.com/ci_17406924?IADID=Search-www.sgvtribune.com-www.sgvtribune.com#ixzz1IpGFLuRg

New census milestone: Hispanics reach 50 million

WASHINGTON - Hispanics accounted for more than half of the U.S. population increase over the last decade, exceeding estimates in most states as they crossed a new census milestone: 50 million, or 1 in 6 Americans.

Meanwhile, more than 9 million Americans checked two or more race categories on their 2010 census forms, up 32 percent from 2000, a sign of burgeoning multiracial growth in an increasingly minority nation.

The Census Bureau on Thursday released its first set of national-level findings from the 2010 count on race and migration, detailing a decade in which rapid minority growth, aging whites and the housing boom and bust were the predominant story lines.

Analysts said the results confirmed a demographic transformation under way that is upending traditional notions of racial minorities, political swing districts, even city and suburb.



Read more: http://www.sgvtribune.com/ci_17693445?IADID=Search-www.sgvtribune.com-www.sgvtribune.com#ixzz1IpFRnXWB

Whittier sees dramatic change in demographics as Latino numbers rise

Whittier sees dramatic change in demographics as Latino numbers rise

By Mike Sprague, Staff Writer
Posted: 03/17/2011 03:57:08 PM PDT

Once a mostly white city, new Census figures show that nearly two-thirds of Whittier is now Latino.

This trend was reflected throughout the Whittier area. Latinos now make up the largest ethnic group in La Mirada and nearly a quarter of La Habra Heights.

They also have solid majorities in all other communities, including making up more than 91 percent of Pico Rivera.



Read more: http://www.sgvtribune.com/ci_17637788?IADID=Search-www.sgvtribune.com-www.sgvtribune.com#ixzz1IpEWuU72

-jennie lu

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Obama's double-talk is troubling to Latinos

More and more Latinos are wising up to President Obama's phony immigration two-step.

For complete article click here

posted by Flor Parra

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Hispanic lawmakers sue state over Census

The lawsuit applies to redistricting maps that are being crafted by the Legislature for Congress, the Texas House and Senate and the State Board of Education.

For complete article, click here

Posted by Elizabeth Vargas

As Latinos go, so goes the nation

Pundits have discussed the "browning" of America for a good two decades now. By that they mean the growth and geographic spread of the Latino population in the U.S.

But the unveiling of the latest U.S. Census figures marked a tipping point: Latinos are a demographic that cannot be ignored or taken for granted. Exceeding almost all prior estimates, the number of Hispanic Americans now tops 50 million people, comprising 16 percent of the population. By 2050, they will likely be one-third of the nation's population.
And that, mi amigo, portends opportunity. So enough talk of "browning." Let's rework the lingo. Hispanics are golden, as in golden opportunity.

For complete article, click here

[Posted by Perla Parra]

President Obama to run again in 2012

Obama has a huge advantage among Latinos, whose voting power threatens the GOP's Southern bastion. The 2010 census showed that North Carolina's Hispanic population doubled in a decade to 800,000, and that five of the state's six largest cities are dominated by what once were minorities. The same population dynamic is at work in Virginia and Georgia.

for complete article click here

posted by Flor Parra

Deportion of 4year old citizen rises several debates

4-Year-Old Citizen Who Was Deported Comes Back

It has been a confusing three weeks for Emily Ruiz, the 4-year-old United States citizen and Long Island native who was deported earlier this month to her parents’ native country, Guatemala. But on Wednesday morning she was reunited with her mother, father and little brother at Kennedy International Airport, after the family’s lawyer, David M. Sperling, flew to Guatemala to retrieve her.

http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/03/30/4-year-old-citizen-who-was-deported-comes-back/?scp=7
&sq=immigration+reform&st=nyt


posted by: Amy De La Fuente Things to consider: - How might this story be supportive for an Anglo cry to deport illegal immgrants? (through the linience shown on Emily's parents) - Would this story have gained more sympathic support from Anglos if Emily's parents had ducumentation? or would race still be a remaining factor for criticism? - Should media-exposed illegal immgrats be deported because of the exposure of their sensitive legal status? even though they did not commit any infraction that would call for their documentation?

Monday, April 4, 2011

Planting seeds of change

The day of gardening marked the city's first annual César Chávez Community Garden Day in an effort to spark community outreach, encourage healthy eating habits, and recognize César Chávez as the leader of the United Farmer Workers Union and civil rights for farm laborers everywhere.

for complete article click here

posted by Flor Parra

Sunday, April 3, 2011

RUBEN NAVARRETTE JR.: Seeking respect in Census numbers

SAN DIEGO -- Dear U.S. Census Bureau, I know you mean well and only want to give Americans a snapshot of what their country looks like. But please, hold off on releasing more figures about the phenomenal growth of the Hispanic population.

Most Hispanics I talk to around the country are excited because their community is becoming more prominent. But they're also nervous because they realize that population figures scare the daylights out of many Anglos, who respond by pushing repressive and repugnant ideas -- from Arizona-style immigration laws to a ban on ethnic studies to shredding the 14th Amendment by denying citizenship to the U.S.-born children of illegal immigrants.

For complete article, click here

[Posted by Perla Parra]

President declares March 31 as Cesar Chavez Day

FRESNO, Calif. -- President Barack Obama has declared March 31 as Cesar Chavez Day, honoring the late farmworker activist on his birthday.

Obama signed the proclamation Wednesday, saying that "Chavez's legacy provides lessons from which all Americans can learn."

For complete article, click here

[Posted by Perla Parra]

Domestic Workers Call for Protections

Latina domestic workers are calling on state legislators to enact fair labor laws. A group of women demonstrated Wednesday in front of the Women's Building in San Francisco's Mission District to mark International Domestic Workers’ Day, singing and chanting in favor of worker protections

for complete article click here

posted by Flor Parra

San Mateo County now half Asian and Hispanic but many city, county leaders are still white men

Asian and Hispanic residents are replacing whites across San Mateo County, but you wouldn't know that by looking at the people in positions of power around the Peninsula.

for complete article click here

posted by Flor Parra

Tulare to vote on district elections for council

Voters in Tulare will decide next year if the city should elect council members by district instead of citywide.
The Tulare City Council on Monday agreed to put the question before voters in June 2012. The measure will include proposed district boundaries for five council seats.
The council's decision settles a lawsuit by a civil rights group challenging Tulare's at-large voting system, which elects candidates who win the most votes citywide.

For complete article, click here

[Posted by Perla Parra]
Hispanic Republicans tone down immigration talk

By JAY ROOT Associated Press
Posted: 02/02/2011 01:56:39 AM PST

AUSTIN, Texas—As a Republican, Rep. Aaron Pena is expected to take a hard line on immigration. But as a Latino who represents a heavily Hispanic district along the U.S.-Mexico border, the South Texas lawyer finds some of the anti-immigrant proposals in the Legislature to be unfair and unnecessarily harsh.
Pena is among a handful of new Latino Republicans in the Texas Legislature, and they are taking a careful walk through the minefield of hot-button immigration and cultural wedge issues that are sure to spark debate, and possibly legal reforms, in the Texas Legislature this year.
Several of them are scheduled to meet as a group Wednesday with Attorney General Greg Abbott, who is helping lead a Latino outreach effort, aides said. Abbott's eventual advice on the legality of some of the immigration bills could be a key factor in what happens to them in the Legislature.

for complete article, click here

posted by angie ngo
Latino mayoral candidates could split Chicago vote

By SOPHIA TAREEN Associated Press
Posted: 01/11/2011 02:07:14 PM PST


CHICAGO—In a city with a long history of voting along ethnic lines, the two prominent Latinos running for Chicago mayor don't see a reason to unify around a consensus candidate as several African-Americans who once eyed the job have done.
Gery Chico and Miguel del Valle don't even see themselves as direct rivals—reflecting the fractured nature of the city's Hispanic population and their different approaches in a campaign that has a chance of producing Chicago's first Latino mayor. How strongly they run could have a big impact on a tough race with two more widely known candidates, former White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel and former U.S. Sen. Carol Moseley Braun.

for complete article, click here

posted by angie ngo
Oakley Union's newest trustee aims to bridge to cultural differences

By Rowena Coetsee
Contra Costa Times
Posted: 03/23/2011 02:41:38 PM PDT

OAKLEY -- The newest board member of the elementary school district here says he wants to contribute to its efforts to recognize different cultures.
Arthur Fernandez, 42, was sworn into office earlier this month in the Oakley Union Elementary School District, where he will serve the rest of his predecessor's four-year term that ends December 2012.
Andrew Coffman resigned last month after being elected in November, citing the requirements of his job.
Fernandez, an 11-year Oakley resident, has two daughters in the district, and has been active in their schools along with his wife, Lidia.
He works as a probation supervisor at Orin Allen Youth Rehabilitation Facility in Byron.
Fernandez said he was the only father active in the Parent Teacher Student Association last year at O'Hara Park Middle School, where his older daughter is an eighth-grader. He also helped organize a day of activities celebrating this area's cultures.

For Complete Article, click here

posted by angie ngo

Thursday, March 31, 2011

Obama woos Hispanic vote on education

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama, aware of news that the U.S. Hispanic population has hit 50 million, is turning his attention on issues key to Hispanics, including education.

Early this week, Obama held a town hall meeting at a D.C. high school, roughly three miles from the White House, where two-thirds of the students are Hispanic. The town hall, broadcast by the Spanish-language TV network Univision, overlapped with the president's live address to the nation on Libya, but reportedly drew 2.7 million viewers.

"This is an issue that is critical for the success of America generally," Obama said. "We already have a situation where one out of five students are Latino in our schools, and when you look at those who are 10 years old or younger, it's actually one in four.

for complete article, click here

[Posted by Ariana Hernandez]

Immigration Advocates Push Obama To Make Good On Campaign Promises

WASHINGTON -- Rep. Luis Gutierrez (D-Ill.), chairman of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus' immigration task force, announced on Thursday a national campaign to hold President Obama accountable for promises he made on the campaign trail to reform the country's broken immigration system.

Featuring the stories of families devastated by deportations, "Change Takes Courage" will hold events across at least 20 states, Gutierrez announced at a press conference on Capitol Hill. The campaign will include meetings and press events with local leaders and immigration advocates designed to put pressure on the administration. The first will be held on Saturday afternoon at the Instituto Biblico de Rhode Island in Providence; another will take place in Honolulu, Hawaii, the president's birthplace, in May.

Spearheaded by the Fair Immigration Reform Movement, a coalition of more than 200 immigration advocacy groups, the campaign will contrast clips of the promises Obama made on the campaign trail with two years of Congressional inaction, and spotlight the flesh-and-blood experiences of families torn apart by deportation.


for complete article, click here


[Posted by Ariana Hernandez]

Do You Call Them Latinos or Hispanics?

The U.S. 2010 Census reported that there are now 50.3 million U.S. Hispanics. Sadly, this ever growing populace is destined to flail about, because according to a Pew Hispanic report, Latinos feel leaderless.

The Pew center asked U.S. Hispanics who they considered the "most important Latino leader in the country today." Two-thirds of respondents said they did not know.

For complete article, click here

[Psted by, Ariana Hernandez]

Thousands protest Georgia immigration bills

ATLANTA — Thousands of people gathered at the Georgia Capitol Thursday, waving signs and chanting to protest legislation that targets illegal immigrants.

State Reps. Matt Ramsey and Sen. Jack Murphy, both Republicans, have sponsored legislation that would require many employers to use a federal database to check the immigration status of new hires. Legislation also would authorize law-enforcement officers to check the immigration status of suspects who can't produce an accepted form of identification

For complete article, click here

Posted by Elizabeth Vargas

A Challenge for the Growing Middle Class Latino Population

The 50.5 million Latinos accounted for 56 percent of the nation's growth – mostly from births, not immigration – from 2000 to 2010. Adult Hispanics are now one in every six Americans, and almost one in every four children is Hispanic. Now the largest minority group, Latinos are well on their way to comprising one-third of the U.S. population in 2050.

But as every "Spider-Man" fan knows, with great power comes great responsibility. And this is no less true for a community on the cusp of carving out its part in American history than it is for a crime-fighter with spider powers.



Read more:
Posted by Jessica Damian

Senate Oks Farmworker "Card Check" Bill on Cesar Chavez Day

On a day honoring labor leader Cesar Chavez, the state Senate approved "card check" legislation that would create an alternative path to a secret-ballot election for farmworkers seeking union representation.

Senate Bill 104, which passed today on a 24-14 party-line vote, would let workers unionize by having a majority of employees sign and submit petition cards to the Agricultural Labor Relations Board. The bill, sponsored by the United Farm Workers union, would also create steeper penalties for employers who seek to block workers from unionizing or engage in unfair labor practices.


Read More
Posted by Jessica Damian

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

AB540 attack fails

SACRAMENTO .- The newly Assemblyman Hesperia and founder of the Minuteman Tim Donnelly failed yesterday in its attempt to repeal the law AB540, which allows undocumented students to pay the same tuition university that legal residents and citizens, even if exempted in part to members of the armed forces, their spouses and children.

For full article, click here.


Posted by: Mariana Verdin

Asian Americans Aim for "Ya es Hora" Citizenship Push

The campaign - which starts next week with a workshop in the San Gabriel Valley's sizable Chinese and Vietnamese communities - is modeled after the "Ya es hora" citizenship campaign launched by a close-knit partnership between community groups, Spanish-language media giant Univision and the National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials.

That program, which consists of in-person workshops broadcast on television, has helped nearly 40,000 people fill out their naturalization applications and nearly 100,000 get their citizenship questions answered via a bilingual hotline since 2007.



Read more:

Posted by Jessica Damian

Commentary: Numbers Don't Bode Well for California Republicans

It's not a stretch to say that the Republican Party, which once dominated California politics and was very competitive into the 1990s, has devolved into a party of rapidly aging white people, and as they disappear, its fortunes may sink further.

The party's stridency on taxes, illegal immigration, abortion and other hot-button issues alienated both white moderates – most noticeably in the suburbs – and the surging numbers of Latino and Asian voters.

Read More

Posted by Jessica Damian

Sacramento Redistricting Panel Will Get Latino Representation

A glitch became apparent in Sacramento's new citizens advisory committee on redistricting, but the City Council moved quickly Tuesday evening to try to fix it.

Once the mayor and each council member picked one member, and four others were nominated through the usual committee process, it turned out that there was not a single Latino on the panel.

Several Latino political and civic activists showed up at Tuesday's meeting to point that out -- and to urge the council to stand behind its pledge to have a committee that reflects Sacramento's diversity.


Read More
Posted by Jessica Damian

Should California Make it Easier for Farmworkers to Organize Unions?

The Legislature is considering Senate Bill 104, which would create an "alternative procedure" known as "card check" for farmworkers to decide whether or not to unionize - having a majority of employees fill out cards authorizing a union to represent them as an alternative to the current secret-ballot election.


Read More

Posted by Jessica Damian

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Hundreds Brave Rain to March for Cesar Chavez in Sacramento

The 11th annual event honored Chavez's work on behalf of farmworkers, but with labor unions across the country under siege – from efforts in Wisconsin to eliminate collective bargaining to general attacks on pensions for public employees – the Sacramento march and subsequent rally took on even more urgency

Read More

Posted by Jessica Damian

Field Poll: Pluralities Say Immigration Hasn't Hurt State or Their Neighborhoods

California is home to 10 million immigrants, but most voters say new immigrants haven't altered the quality of life in their neighborhoods, according to a new Field/UC Berkeley poll.

Some intervied give their opinons on Mexican immigrants.


Read more:

Posted by Jessica Damian

Tulare to Move to District Based Voting to Represent Latino Voters

TULARE, Calif. -- Tulare officials will be changing how the city conducts its elections after reaching a settlement with attorneys representing Latino voters.

After agreeing to settle a lawsuit Monday, the city will move away from so-called at-large elections to a district-based voting system.


Read more

Posted by Jessica Damian

AZ Senate Says NO to Immigration Bills

I read the reports twice, just to make sure, then I went back to read them again.
There were five bills dealing with stringent measures that would add spikes to Arizona’s notorious SB1070, tee’d up for a vote, and all of them were rejected. News Taco reported on the Arizona immigration bill conveyor belt yesterday, and conventional thinking was that they’d all be approved. But when it came time for the actual vote the conservative legislators didn’t have the numbers.

For more on this story, CLICK HERE.

OFFENSIVE AGAINST ARIZONA-TYPE LAWS GAIN MOMENTUM

Last week’s defeat of five stringent immigration bills in the Arizona legislature was no fluke.
Ever since that state’s notorious SB1070 was signed into law, Arizona has become the focus of the national immigration debate – if for no other reason than for the extreme recourses that it took against undocumented workers. Backers of the bill celebrated what they called the “toughness” of the new law that was signed by Governor Jan Brewer but has been stalled through court challenges. It could be that they over-celebrated.

For more on this story, CLICK HERE.

DREAMERS: The New "Coming Out"

The term has been synonymous with the gay rights movement, but recently college students have appropriated the idea and applied it to their immigration status. It’s become a deliberate “thing” that aims to put faces and names on the controversial DREAM Act issue.
Southern California Public Radio published a story describing the movment where college kids are outing themselves as a show of unity and defiance.

For more on this story, CLICK HERE.

Monday, March 28, 2011

As Goes Florida Hispanics , So Goes Florida

A key element of the Democratic battleplan to win Florida for Barack Obama and Bill Nelson are Democratic-leaning Hispanics who went overwhelmingly for Obama in 2008 and then barely turned out in 2010. Last cycle, when exit polls showed Marco Rubio won 55 percent of the Hispanic vote in Florida, it represented 12 percent of the electorate. It was 14 percent of the electorate in 2008, when Obama won 57 percent of that vote.

For full article: click here.

Originally posted by: Tampa Bay Online
Article by: Jordan Rodriguez

Latino leaders to gather in Austin

“It’s the political convention of the Latino community,” said Antonio Gonzalez with the William C. Velasquez Institute, which conducts research aimed at improving the level of Latino political and economic participation. “It’s a very rich conversation. There’s no other gathering where everybody comes together.”

The congreso, or congress, was created in 2006 by nine national organizations, including the League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC), Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund (MALDEF), the William C. Velasquez Institute and Southwest Voter.

The congreso was a response to grassroots community leaders who felt the U.S. Congress wasn’t acting on issues that matter to Latinos, Camarillo said.

For complete article, click here

Posted by Elizabeth Vargas

Friday, March 25, 2011

NCLR Panel Sees the Growing Latino Population as Key Influencers in the Future of American Politics

In the face of harsh anti-immigrant and anti-Latino rhetoric during the 2010 midterm elections, Latinos emerged as important political players, with Hispanic candidates proving competitive in statewide races and Latino voters affecting the balance of power in Congress. Yet with such little progress on the issues that matter to Latinos and so many candidates demonizing or neglecting the community, why did Latino voters go to the polls?

to read more, click here

[posted by: Blanca Chavez - Herrera]

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

ambda Theta Phi Fraternity Gives Back to Community
y Amanda Zepeda
Thursday, January 13th, 2011

The Latin fraternity Lambda Theta Phi executed their third toy giveaway last week on campus. More than 80 parents and children participated in the event, which was fashioned after the story of the Three Wise Men.
hotographer : Jonatan Valladares / The Pioneer

Chivalry above self.

The Lambda Theta Phi Latin Fraternity put their respective motto to demonstration in their annual “Tres Reyes Magos Toy Giveaway.”

The event was held on Jan. 6 in the lower level of the Student Union, where more than 80 parents and children were treated to a reenactment of the history of the Latino holiday and were given gifts donated by various groups and people at CSUEB and throughout the city of Hayward.

For complete article, check out,http://thepioneeronline.com/features/2011/01/lambda-theta-phi-fraternity-gives-back-to-community

Posted By: Angie Ngo
New Latino group unites Oakland youth across gang lines

By Katy Murphy
Oakland Tribune
Posted: 12/31/2009 03:37:48 PM PST
Updated: 01/05/2010 11:15:11 AM PST
The room was quiet as Joaquin, 16, whose real name was concealed for his protection, spoke. Boys in baggy jeans and oversize hoodies, girls in skinny jeans with manicured eyebrows — they just listened. They are all part of Raza Club, a group of teenagers who come together to learn about Latino history and social justice, to share their personal struggles and grief, to lend a hand to someone in need and, maybe, to start a movement to change Oakland.

For complete article, http://www.insidebayarea.com/top-stories/ci_14102891

Posted By: Angie Ngo
Opinion: Latino Report Card offers road map to greater success

By Ron Gonzales and Manuel Pastor
Special to the Mercury News
Posted: 03/20/2011 08:00:00 PM PDT

Silicon Valley has long been the center of global innovation, developing cutting edge industries unimaginable a generation ago. By embracing progress, we've fostered a revolution in the way the world works. Now, Silicon Valley faces another form of change, a demographic shift that will define this region for years to come.
Recent census data reflects a nationwide trend: our region's Latino population is the fastest growing population in Silicon Valley. Today, one in four of us is Latino, and in just 30 years, it is estimated that Latinos will be the region's largest population group. This growth isn't fueled primarily by immigration but by a homegrown second generation growing up, learning and working in the valley.

For complete article, http://http://www.mercurynews.com/ci_17649549"

Posted By: Angie Ngo

Sunday, March 20, 2011

San Francisco police struggling to resolve Mission District violence

Community leaders have often lamented that there are issues of trust between residents and police, especially with undocumented immigrants who fear they or their families could be deported if they come forward with information.

for full article click here

posted by Flor Parra

Friday, March 18, 2011

Census heralds political change in California

Congressional districts represented by Visalia Republican Devin Nunes and Merced Democrat Dennis Cardoza now have majority Hispanic populations, a threshold reached sometime in the past decade.
The redrawn elective seats could increase Hispanic political power and the number of Hispanic elected officials. But experts said that might not be the case -- at least for a while.

For complete article, click here

[Posted by Perla Parra]

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Democrats seek to remove school districts from 'sanctuary city' bill

A panel of state lawmakers today is expected to consider reducing the scope of the sanctuary city bill, a piece of immigration-related legislation that Gov. Rick Perry has said should be a priority.

Led by state Rep. Rene Oliveira, D-Brownsville , Democrats on the House State Affairs Committee are trying to remove references to school districts in the bill. He said there could be legal and financial problems for school districts if they get involved in immigration issues.

"This bill is supposed to be about sanctuary cities, not sanctuary schools," Oliveira said.

For complete article, click here

Posted by Elizabeth Vargas

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Alternative to kicking out immigrants

Utah G.O.P. Adopts Immigration Alternative

In the first move by a state to extend legal recognition to illegal immigrant laborers, the Utah Legislature has passed immigration bills that include a guest worker program that would allow unauthorized foreigners to work legally in the state.

Related
New Laws to Control Immigration Pass in Utah (March 6, 2011) With the immigration package, passed in both chambers of the Republican-controlled Legislature late Friday, Utah made a sharp break with the hard-line trend in state immigration legislation that has been led by Arizona, which passed a strict enforcement law last April.

Utah’s package includes measures to tighten enforcement against illegal immigrants that echo Arizona’s tough stance — like a requirement that the police check the immigration status of anyone arrested on a felony or a serious misdemeanor charge.

But supporters said the hybrid package offered an alternative to states, including those controlled by Republicans, that are seeking to avoid the costly political polarization and legal challenges that followed Arizona’s law and that also want to recognize the need of some businesses for immigrant labor in spite of high unemployment nationally.

The guest worker bill came after intense lobbying by business and farm groups as well as by some immigrant advocates, and it enjoyed the quiet but all-important endorsement of the Mormon Church. It is likely to raise many of the same constitutional questions as the Arizona law, including whether it intrudes on areas of immigration law reserved exclusively for the federal government. Central provisions of Arizona’s law, known as S. B. 1070, were suspended by federal courts pending a lawsuit by the Obama administration.

But in contrast to Arizona’s approach, Utah lawmakers framed their bill to set up a negotiation, rather than a confrontation, between the governor and the federal authorities. Gov. Gary R. Herbert, a Republican who handily won election in November, is expected to sign the bill.

“Utah is the anti-Arizona,” said Frank Sharry, executive director of America’s Voice, a group in Washington that favors legislation by Congress to grant legal status to illegal immigrants. “Instead of indulging the fantasy that you can drive thousands of people out of your state, it combines enforcement with the idea that those who are settled should be brought into the system.”

Under one bill approved on Friday, Utah would issue a two-year work permit to illegal immigrants who could prove that they had been living and working in the state. To qualify, immigrants would have to pass a criminal background check and pay fines of up to $2,500.

The bill gives the governor until 2013 to negotiate with federal immigration authorities for a waiver for the guest worker program. Under federal law, it is a violation for an employer to knowingly hire an illegal immigrant. If no waiver has been obtained by then, the guest worker program would go into effect anyway.

Under a separate bill, also approved Friday, officers would be required to check the immigration status of anyone they arrest on a felony or serious misdemeanor charge.

Lawmakers revised that bill to remove terms borrowed from the Arizona law that would have allowed the police to ask immigration questions based on a “reasonable suspicion” that a person they stopped was an illegal immigrant. That provision, among others, was strongly opposed by Latinos in Arizona, who said it would lead to racial profiling.

State Representative Bill Wright, a Republican who was the sponsor of the guest worker bill in the House, said it was intended to be a practical way to deal with illegal immigrants in the state. “I’m a very conservative Republican; I’m not moderate at all,” he said. But, he said, “we literally do not have the ability to remove those who are here illegally.”

The enforcement measure was sponsored by State Representative Stephen Sandstrom, a Republican who has been an outspoken proponent of following Arizona’s lead on immigration.

Many groups in Utah hoped to avoid the expense and furor provoked by Arizona’s bill. In November, a range of groups signed a proposal called the Utah Compact, which laid out principles that included respect for the law but also supported a free-market business approach and opposed measures that would separate families by deportation. It was signed by the Salt Lake Chamber, a statewide business group; the Roman Catholic Church; the Salt Lake City Police Department and mayor’s office; and local immigration advocate groups.

The Mormon Church, which had been cautious on the issue, did not sign the compact but immediately endorsed it.

For more information, click on the link below, for an addititional page of information:
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/07/us/07utah.html?_r=1&scp=4&sq=latinos&st=nyt

post by Amy De La Fuente

Monday, March 14, 2011

Wisconsin’s Struggle Important To Latino Workers, Unions

It was 1966 when Mexican-American civil rights activist Jesús Salas et. al. founded “Obreros Unidos”, an independent farm labor union in Wisconsin. Their objective was to improve working conditions for migrant farm workers that traveled from Texas to Wisconsin yearly. They knew of a Wisconsin state provision that protected agricultural workers which was non-existent at the federal government level.
Mexican-American migrants first started settling in Southeastern Wisconsin as early as the 1920s with Puerto Ricans following in the 1940s.


for more, click here


[posted by Sylvia Lopez]

Texas, U.S. Must Adjust To New Latino Majority

There is no longer an ethnic majority in Texas — or anywhere — at least not for very long. Recent Census figures show that in Texas, Latinos are 37.6% of the population and Anglos are about 45%. We know that, in the next 10 years, there’s a moment coming wherein these two percentages will slide past each other: “Hello, goodbye. Hola, adiós.”

It is a game changer in Texas, which serves as a symbol for how we can conceive of the rest of the country. There’s no turning back. Who knows what the future brings, no one can predict it, but it is a game changer, that is for sure. This is a game changer the same way, in the 1820s in Texas, whites became the largest ethnic group in Texas, to affect the history of that state for many generations to come.

for complete article, click here


[posted by Sylvia Lopez]

Group Hopes To Save Ethnic Studies In Arizona



Save Ethnic Studies, Inc. is a non-profit organization that recently started in Arizona to help challenge HB 2281, the state’s new anti-ethnic studies (or, more appropriately, Chicano Studies) law that makes it a crime to teach ethnic studies.


for complete article, click here


[posted by Sylvia Lopez]

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Courthouse Vigil Seeks Justice For Farmworkers

A crowd of about 80 — among them Catholic Bishop Stephen Blaire — gathered at the San Joaquin County Courthouse to call on Superior Court Judge Michael Garrigan to refuse a plea deal for the employers of Vasquez Jimenez, a 17-year-old, pregnant farmworker who collapsed from heatstroke May 14, 2008, in a Farmington vineyard. She died two days later.



Read more:
Posted by Jessica Damian

Census Data: Latino Growth Will Impact Congressional Redistricting

The 2001 gerrymander gave Latinos short shrift, especially in the drawing of congressional seats, to protect white incumbents, but the commission will rectify that this year.

Coupled with a "top-two" primary system, the array of redrawn districts could mean a major change in how political power is divided in the nation's largest state.



Read More

Posted by Jessica Damian

Modesto Mayoral Candidates Court Latinos

At a Latino Community Roundtable forum Thursday, three candidates promised color-blind leadership for Modesto if elected to the mayor's office in November.
Despite the diversity, just two Latinos ever have served on the Modesto City Council.

Read More

Posted by Jessica Damian

Latinos Lose Out on Attacks on Unions

This opinion article claims that recent assaults on public sector unions are also an attack on Latinos and other minorities that these unions represent.


Read More

Posted by Jessica Damian

Redistricting Commision Picks Angelo Ancheta for Redistricting Commission

California's new redistricting commission was made whole Friday when Angelo Ancheta was chosen from six other Democratic candidates to replace a member who resigned earlier this month.
Read More
Posted by Jessica Damian

Friday, March 11, 2011

The Mission Weighs In On the Next Police Chief

Despite rumors that the selection has already been made, Mission residents and members of the SF Latino Democratic Club met with San Francisco police commissioners Thursday night to share their views on who should become the city's police chief.

for full article click here

posted by Flor Parra

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Census: Bakersfield grew nearly 41 percent in last decade

Bakersfield’s population, by sheer number, grew more than any other city in California between 2000 and 2010, according to new data released Tuesday by the U.S. Census Bureau.
Hispanics now outnumber non-Hispanic whites in Bakersfield, the data show. More than 45 percent of the city’s population was Hispanic in the latest count, the numbers show, compared to 32.5 percent in 2000.
Census data is collected every 10 years so political boundaries can be redrawn for the U.S. House of Representatives. States, counties, cities and other jurisdictions also use the numbers to update local districts.

For complete article, click here

[Posted by Perla Parra]

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Census shows big gains by Asian Americans, Latinos

U.S. Census figures released Tuesday gave Asian Americans and Latinos plenty of reason to bask in their growing population clout in California - but for the Bay Area, the numbers foreshadowed what will surely be a lessening of political power.

for complete article click here

posted by Flor Parra

IMMIGRATION

Restaurant owners and produce packagers in Texas are again urging lawmakers to vote against get-tough immigration bills that some businesses say would hurt the state economy.

Texas Association of Business president Bill Hammond on Tuesday said the economy would be "devastated" by proposals aimed at cracking down on illegal immigration. Hammond has been among the vocal private sector opponents of more than a dozen anti-illegal immigration bills moving through the Legislature.

For complete article, click here

Posted by Elizabeth Vargas

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

NM Hispanic group: Richardson doesn't speak for us

By SUE MAJOR HOLMES Associated Press
Posted: 12/30/2010 02:36:29 PM PST
Updated: 12/30/2010 03:28:32 PM PST

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M.—A coalition of New Mexico Hispanic groups demanded Thursday that Gov. Bill Richardson not speak on behalf of the community, saying he failed to follow through on promises and was abusive toward Hispanics in his eight years in office.
The Hispano Round Table of New Mexico, representing more than 50 groups, unanimously passed a resolution saying the Democratic governor was "ruthless, dishonest, deceptive, dishonorable, contemptuous and abusive" toward their community, failed to create a promised state Department of Hispano Affairs, and misled prominent Hispanic groups with that promise.

For complete article, http://www.mercurynews.com/ci_16975862

Posted By Angie Ngo

Monday, March 7, 2011

Port Chester to Appeal U.S. Voting-Rights Ruling Aimed at Helping Latinos

It seemed as if Port Chester, N.Y., was finally about to end a bitter chapter in its history — after four years of voting-rights litigation against the federal government, more than $1.2 million in legal fees, the creation of a new voting system and the election of the municipality’s first Latino to its board of trustees.

But this week, the village’s elected leaders decided that they were not done fighting.

On Tuesday night, Port Chester’s trustees voted to hire a law firm to appeal the federal court ruling that created the new system, which was devised to give the Westchester County village’s large Latino population a better chance of electing one of its own to the board.

In a 4-to-2 vote, the board authorized spending $225,000 for the law firm, though members acknowledged that additional fees would have to be authorized should the case be retried.

One of the appeal’s main proponents was Joseph Kenner, a Republican trustee who, in the inaugural election under the new voting system last June, became the first black candidate to be elected to the board. He said in an interview on Wednesday that although he had won under the new system, he had never thought the federal government’s lawsuit, filed in 2006 under the Voting Rights Act, or a federal judge’s decision to throw out the old system were justified.

Voting data, he said, showed that the preferred candidates of Latino voters had won under the old system, which elected six at-large board members. The Justice Department had argued — and the federal judge agreed — that the at-large system denied the Latino population fair representation. In the new system, called cumulative voting, voters could use six votes however they chose, including casting all six for one candidate.

“I’ve been studying this issue since before I became a trustee,” Mr. Kenner said. “This is a case that should never have been brought against Port Chester.”

In an opinion article published this month in The Journal News, he wrote that a successful appeal would “remove the shameful and unwarranted stigma of the judge’s ruling.”

But opponents say it would be a costly move with dubious chances of success.

Mayor Dennis G. Pilla, a Democrat and a village trustee who voted against the motion to retain an appeals lawyer, said the consent decree in the case allowed the village to make adjustments to the new voting system without further litigation.

“The chance of success on appeal is very slim, and the cumulative voting system can be adjusted through a course other than litigation,” he said. “Now we’re going to open the piggy bank again.”

The village is still awaiting a final judgment from the federal judge in the case. Mr. Kenner said that the village would not file an appeal until then but that he wanted a law firm to get a head start in preparing one.


http://www.nytimes.com/2011/02/24/nyregion/24chester.html?_r=1&scp=2&sq=latinos&st=nyt

Texas Immigration Law Makes Room for House-Mexicans

The worst part about Texas House Bill 1202 is that the authors don’t see how it’s insulting and hypocritical, on the other hand the bill paints a realistic picture of what some folks not only don’t get, they don’t see it at all. So in a house-Mexican and field-Mexican kind of way, it makes perfect sense.

TX HB1202, sponsored by Rep. Debbie Riddle, is, at its core, a very tough immigration bill. CNN.com says:

As proposed, House Bill 1202 would create tough state punishments for those who “intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly” hire an unauthorized immigrant. Violators could face up to two years in jail and a fine of up to $10,000.

If that were where it ended we’d know which pile to toss it on. There are literally hundreds of bills just like HB1202 being filed and debated in states across the country. But this one deserves to be tossed in a pile of…it’s own. Debbie Riddle put a caveat in her bill:

that protects those who hire unauthorized immigrants “for the purpose of obtaining labor or other work to be performed exclusively or primarily at a single-family residence.”




For more on this story, Click Here.



[Posted by Eswin Quinonez]

Is Arizona Racially Profiling Latinos To Deny Them Civil Rights?

Arizona political leaders seem to be targeting Latinos to prevent them from exercising their civil rights by banning them from the state Capitol. Two things immediately pop into my head as I consider this. One, this is plainly racist. Two, it’s a potent sign of what’s going on in Arizona and what the future will be like there.

This is plainly racial profiling, but are lawmakers going after Latino activists just because they’ve already gone after workers, students, educators and drivers in Arizona?

For more on this story, Click Here.


[Posted by Eswin Quinonez]

Sunday, March 6, 2011

GOP's anti-immigrant stance could turn Texas into a blue state

As the latino population increases in Texas, the state has followed California in becoming a Majority-Minority state. Texas could be moving away from a red state and into a blue state as there are more Latinos that are democrats.Despite all the anti immigration reform in the U.S, the high number of Latinos in Texas has led the state to gain four new congressional seats. The number of seats gained can mean that Latinos are favored to have their voices heard. Read more here

[Posted by Wendy Hernandez]