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Don’t vaccinate before you educate

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by Marvin J. Ramirez­

Marvin  J. RamírezMarvin J. Ramírez­

­NOTE FROM THE EDITOR: The alarm has been set off. The issue of the vaccine begins to be front-page headlines in main press and medical organizations, while many doctors and scientists begin seriously to question and reject the intention of the government to start vaccinating children and the adult population with a vaccine that they are proving it causes mental retardation and death in children and adults.

The following article, written by Dr. Mayer Eisentein, has plenty evidence to convince those disbelievers, that the vaccine should be rejected at all cost.

by Mayer Eisenstein, MD, JD, MPH

Falsus in uno, falsus in omnibus. Latin expression, “False in one thing, False in everything.”

Twentieth century medicine has been shown to be false in many of its assumptions while it has held physicians with non-interventionist philosophies to a higher standard than interventionist physicians. The unscientific reasoning, “I think therefore I believe” has replaced scientific evidence based decision making. How can we have trust in a medical system, which has been shown to be untrue in some of its practice? The answer is with great skepticism. Let us hope that scientific reason will prevail and the motto for the 21st Century will become “The scientific evidence points in that direction, therefore I believe.” All vaccine programs carry risk and benefit. Therefore, the goal should not only be the prevention of a specific disease by vaccination, but also the benefits must outweigh any potential long term negative side effects.

Vaccine proponents claim that the benefits of childhood vaccination are undeniable. However, at the same time vaccine opponents point out that the incidents of autism, diabetes, and other chronic immune and neurological dysfunction in children have increased dramatically in the last 30 years. This points out the difficulty in making an informed decision to vaccinate or not to vaccinate.

Here Is the Core of My Concern:

  1. There is no convincing scientific evidence that mass inoculations can be credited with eliminating any childhood disease.
  2. It is commonly believed that the Salk vaccine was responsible for halting the polio epidemics that plagued American children in the 1940’s and 1950’s. If so, why did the epidemics also end in Europe, where polio vaccine was not so extensively used?
  3. There are significant risks associated with every vaccination and numerous contraindications that may make it dangerous for the shots to be given to your child.
  4. While the myriad short-term hazards of most vaccinations are known (but rarely explained), no one knows the long-term consequences of injecting foreign proteins into the body of your child. Even more shocking is the fact that no one is making any structured effort to find out.
  5. There is a growing suspicion that vaccination against relatively harmless childhood diseases may be responsible for the dramatic increase in autoimmune diseases since the introduction of mass inoculations. These are life altering diseases such as cancer, leukemia, rheumatoid arthritis, multiple sclerosis, asthma, autism.
  6. Vaccines contain many ingredients of which the public is not aware. These are just some of the ingredients used in production of vaccines: – Ethylene glycol – antifreeze- Phenol – also known as carbolic acid. This is used as a disinfectant, dye. -Formaldehyde – a known cancer causing agent. – Aluminum – is associated with Alzheimer’s disease and seizures, also cancer producing in laboratory mice. It is used as an additive to promote antibody response.- Thimerosal – a mercury disinfectant/ preservative. It can result in brain injury and autoimmune disease.- Neomycin, Streptomycin – antibiotics which have caused allergic reactions in some people.
  7. These vaccines are also grown on and strained thru animal or human tissue such as monkey kidney tissue, chicken embryo, embryonic guinea pig cells, calf serum, human diploid cells (the dissected organs of aborted fetuses as in the case of rubella, hepatitis A, and chicken pox vaccines).
  8. The problem with using animal cells is that during serial passage of the virus through the animal cells, animal RNA and DNA can be transferred from one host to another. Undetected animal viruses may slip past quality control testing procedures, as happened during the years 1955 thru 1961. The polio vaccine, which was grown on the kidney of the African Green monkey (simian), was contaminated with SV40 (simian virus #40 – the 40th discovered) which differs from the prior 39 because it has oncogenic (cancer causing) properties.

What other viruses could be slipping by from animal tissue, administered through vaccinations, that we don’t know of?

When I started practicing medicine in 1973, the number of mandated childhood vaccines in the first 18 months of life was 10 and the incidence of autism was 1 in 10,000. Today the number of mandated vaccines is 36 and the incidence of autism is 1 in 150! If this trend continues, many more vaccines, such as influenza, rotovirus, pneumococcal, HepA as well as HPV and meningococcal vaccines will become mandated. Is there a connection between autism and vaccines? Is it the inordinate number of vaccines given to our children in the first 18 months of life? Is it the unnecessary toxins in vaccines? It seems that most parents of autistic children can pinpoint the onset of their child’s autism and are able to point to a happy, healthy, normal child before receiving the vaccines.

Letter received by Dr. Eisenstein – March 2008

Hi, I am the mother of a daughter who was diagnosed with Autistic Disorder. I was recently looking back at old videos of her before the MMR vaccine (amongst the others she got that day). She was happy, engaging, made eye contact, pointed at things, and then she gradually lost all of that . I had NO CLUE!!! Is it true that the kids that ya’ll deal with do not have autism because of your views on vaccines? A friend of mine, who also has a child on the Spectrum, said she heard that you do not. WOW! Could I kick myself or what! Thank you for your time. I hope to hear back from you.

LL

Like the mandated Hepatitis B vaccine, the HPV vaccine is recommended, allegedly, to prevent a sexually transmitted disease, Human Papiloma Virus. Does our government have the right to legislate our morality? Recent reports by the organization Judicial Watch have revealed that the HPV vaccine, itself, has been responsible for at least three deaths and over 1,300 adverse events.

It is not surprising that more and more families are relying on personal religious exemptions to avoid this overwhelming, non-scientific approach to preventing illnesses.

These are some of the questions that I am asked at my vaccine seminar. Is the vaccine paradigm failing??? Why are more and more parents questioning mandatory vaccination?? Do vaccines really save lives?? Is there a connection between autism and vaccines?? Why is there still mercury in some vaccines – including the flu vaccine??

If the concept of mandatory vaccinations is abandoned, the burden of proof as to efficacy of the whole childhood vaccine program will be shifted to our legislatures. It’s time to let scientific evidence determine medical policy not politics!

There is hope on the horizon.

I never thought that a congressional bill would be introduced to study the effects of vaccines on health outcome. Much to my surprise, Congresswoman Carolyn Maloney, in the 110th Congress 1st Session 2007, introduced a bill to do just that specifically. This bill mentions Homefirst ® Health Services, the practice which I have guided since 1973.

H. R. 2832 – To direct the Secretary of Health and Human Services to conduct or support a comprehensive study comparing total health outcomes, including risk of autism, in vaccinated populations in the United States with such outcomes in unvaccinated populations in the United States, and for other purposes. The secretary shall seek to include in the study under this section Populations in the United States that have traditionally remained unvaccinated (such as the Homefirst® practice in Chicago).

Also, a recent study by Generation Rescue, June 26, 2007 the “Cal-Oregon Unvaccinated Survey” reported:

“We surveyed over 9,000 boys in California and Oregon and found that vaccinated boys had a 155% greater chance of having a neurological disorder like ADHD or autism than unvaccinated boys.”

Until the scientific evidence shows that the benefits of childhood vaccines outweigh the risk – more and more parents will continue to question the concept of mandatory vaccination, refuse to vaccinate their children and look for various means, including a personal religious exemption, to be in compliance with the law while keeping their ­children from receiving vaccines.

This is the greatest country in the world. I have full confidence that our government will eventually address these issues. Until then, we can expect more and more families to question the value of mandatory vaccination.

 

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San Francisco officializes its new Police Chief

by Marvin Ramírez

San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom takes the oath of office to new SFPD Chief George Gascón at City Hall.: (PHOTO COURTESY OF TODD YAMADA)San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom takes the oath of office to new SFPD Chief George Gascón at City Hall. (PHOTO COURTESY OF TODD YAMADA)

George Gascón was officially sworn in as San Francisco top cop on Friday, August 21, although he had been sworn in on June 17 when Mayor Newsom appointed him at the mayor’s office.

Surrounded by city officials and community people, Gascón, a Latino and the first outsider in 30 years, Gascón looked happy to assumed the post that former Chief Heather Fong was leaving upon retirement. (El Reportero previously reported that Gascón was the first Latino to serve as chief. However, Chief Tony Ribera served in 1992).

Gascon arrives from Mesa, Ariz., where he led that police department since 2006. Prior to that, he served 28 years in the Los Angeles Police Department.

­News reports show that San Francisco’s first female police chief, Fong, oversaw changes including the implementation of foot patrols, new zone policing strategies credited with recent drops in violence, and efforts to foster better relationships between police and the community.

Former San Francisco Police Chief Tony Ribera, who led the department from 1992 to 1996, said that by selecting Gascon to replace Fong, the mayor’s offi ce and the Police Commission signaled that “it was time for a change.”

However, he said, outsiders face particular challenges when implementing reforms.

“The track record of outsiders has not been very good,” Ribera said in an interview Wednesday. “But that doesn’t mean that Chief Gascon won’t be good.”

The most recent outsiders include Charles Gain, who was Oakland’s police chief before taking over San Francisco’s police department in 1975, and Richard Hongisto, a former Cleveland police chief and San Francisco supervisor Gain served for fi ve years. Hongisto lasted 42 days before he was fired.

During the June 17 reception, Gascón answered questions on a variety of topics, including marijuana possession, how he’ll get witnesses to crimes to come forward (through officers getting to know residents), and whether he’ll take seriously the quality-oflife crimes that plague the Tenderloin (yes, because residents and businesses want it).

However, El Reportero hit him with a hot-bottom question: car confi scations, after the newly appointed chief suggested he would follow the Constitution.

This has been violated repeatedly by the SFPD for a longtime, even though the city prides itself highly on issues of civil rights and bill of rights, especially on the City Sanctuary status. The sanctuary mandates that no city resources shall be used to assist immigration officers in the enforcement of immigration laws.

He said that if any of his officers conduct themselves unethically or outside the scope of the law, “we need to talk.”

“You’re saying you’re going to follow the Constitution, is that right,” asked El Reportero’s editor.

“Yes,” responded Garcón.

“Well, San Francisco, its mayor and the police, have been confiscating the cars of the undocumented for lack of a driver’s license, and this is unconstitutional, it is illegal,” said the reporter.

“Unconstitutional in capital letter.”

The U.S. Constitution states that no private property shall be confiscated without due process.

This reporter handed in to the new chief a copy of an article by former and highly decorated ex police officer Jack McLamb of Arizona, whose articles exposing government and police corruption, have been read and republished in dozens of media outlets.

The article’s headline states that, “Despite actions of police and local courts, higher courts have ruled that American citizens have a right to travel without state permits,” meaning no one is obligated by law to be demanded a driver’s license.

Garcón promised El Reportero to look into it, and to discuss the matter later.

The actions of the police confiscating the cars from the undocumented have been followed and covered by the El Reportero during the past three years, with both, editorials and news reports.

In conversation with El Reportero, Supervisor David Campos said that he has been meeting with city officials to deal with the issue, and have found a legal way out to the impounding of cars, but that it was still on the works before it is implemented.

“It won’t stop the impounding” all together, Campos said, “but it will allow drivers to recover their cars immediately.” (SF Weekly, SFGate, and ­www.kron.com, contributed to this report.)

New battery could change the world: Ceramatec sodium-sulphur battery

Sent by Earl Koskella

Interesting new battery with tremendous potential: In a modest building on the west side of Salt Lake City, a team of specialists in advanced materials and electrochemistry has produced what could be the single most important breakthrough for clean, alternative energy since Socrates first noted solar heating 2,400 years ago.

The prize is the culmination of 10 years of research and testing — a new generation of deep-storage battery that’s small enough, and safe enough, to sit in your basement and power your home.

It promises to nudge the world to a paradigm shift as big as the switch from centralized mainframe computers in the 1980s to personal laptops. But this time the mainframe is America’s antiquated electrical grid; and the switch is to personal power stations in millions of individual homes.

Inside Ceramatec’s wonder battery is a chunk of solid sodium metal mated to a sulphur compound by an extraordinary, paper-thin ceramic membrane. The membrane conducts ions — electrically charged particles — back and forth to generate a current. The company calculates that the battery will cram 20 to 40 kilowatt hours of energy into a package about the size of a refrigerator, and operate below 90 degrees C.

This may not startle you, but it should. It’s amazing. The most energy-dense batteries available today are huge bottles of super-hot molten sodium, swirling around at 600 degrees or so. At that temperature the material is highly conductive of electricity but it’s both toxic and corrosive. You wouldn’t want your kids around one of these.

The essence of Ceramatec’s breakthrough is that high energy density (a lot of juice) can be achieved safely controversiaat normal temperatures and with solid components, not hot liquid.

Ceramatec says its new generation of battery would deliver a continuous flow of 5 kilowatts of electricity over four hours, with 3,650 daily discharge/recharge cycles over 10 years. With the batteries expected to sell in the neighborhood of $2,000, that translates to less than 3 cents per kilowatt hour over the battery’s life. Conventional power from the grid typically costs in the neighborhood of 8 cents per kilowatt hour.

Re-read that last paragraph and let the information really sink in. Five kilowatts over four hours — how much is that? Imagine your trash compactor, food processor, vacuum cleaner, stereo, sewing machine, one surface unit of an electric range and thirty-three 60-watt light bulbs all running nonstop for four hours each day before the house battery runs out. That’s a pretty exciting place to live.

And then you recharge. With a projected 3,650 discharge/recharge cycles — one per day for a decade — you leave the next-best battery in the dust. Deep-cycling lead/acid batteries like the ones used in RVs are only good for a few hundred cycles, so they’re kaput in a year or so.

How do you recharge? By tapping your solar panels or windmills. It’s just like plugging in your cell phone or iPod, only you plug in your house.

A small three-bedroom home in Provo might average, say, 18 kWh of electric consumption per day in the summer — that’s 1,000 watts for 18 hours. A much larger home, say five bedrooms in the Grandview area, might average 80 kWh, according to Provo Power. Either way, a supplement of 20 to 40 kWh per day is substantial. If you could produce that much power in a day — for example through solar cells on the roof — your power bills would plummet.

­Ceramatec’s battery breakthrough now makes that possible.

Clyde Shepherd of Alpine is floored by the prospect. He recently installed the second of two windmills on his property that are each rated at 2.4 kilowatts continuous output. He’s searching for a battery system that can capture and store some of that for later use when it’s calm outside, but he hasn’t found a good solution.

“This changes the whole scope of things and would have a major impact on what we’re trying to do,” Shepherd said. “Something that would provide 20 kilowatts would put us near 100 percent of what we would need to be completely independent.

It would save literally thousands of dollars a year.”

Taken from the Daily Herald article authored by Randy Wright.

Nicaragua Becomes Illiteracy Free

­by the El Reportero’s news services

Daniel OrtegaDaniel Ortega

Nicaragua has become illiteracy-free after reducing to 3.5 percent the number of citizens who do not know how to read and write, President Daniel Ortega has announced. Ortega made the announcement at a rally held Saturday at the Revolution Square in Managua, where Education Minister Miguel de Castilla gave him the certificate.

The President recalled that the literacy campaign had begun on August 23, 1980, a year after the triumph of the Sandinista Revolution.

At that time, the illiteracy rate was 53 percent. The Sandinistas then lowered it to 12 percent, but after 16 years of neo-liberal governments (1990-2006) the figure rose against to 30 percent.

Neo-liberal governments were not interested in teaching people how to read and write because they just want to get cheap labor force, Ortega said.

He urged the Ministry of Education to now teach people the Constitution, so they can defend their rights. Education and health are human rights, he added.

The Literacy Campaign now took almost two years. It began right after the Sandinista National Liberation Front party won the 2006 general elections. As in the fi rst literacy campaign, Cuban teachers now helped Nicaraguans to know how to read and write.

Nicaragua is the fourth Bolivarian Alliance for the People of our Americas bloc member to become illiteracy free after Cuba, Venezuela and Bolivia.

U.S. more worried about Mexico than Colombia

August 20, John Feeley, the U.S. chargé d’affaires in Mexico City, told a security conference that the U.S. is more worried now about the situation in Mexico than it was about Colombia when the U.S. fi rst launched Plan Colombia at the beginning of the decade.

Such a strong statement suggests that the new Barack Obama administration’s evaluation of the internal security situation in Mexico has been completed and the verdict is that the current mix of policies are not working.

Honduras high court threatens Zelaya with arrest

Honduras’s Supreme Court has rejected a Costa Rica-brokered deal that would have restored ousted President Manuel Zelaya to power and sternly warned that he faces arrest if he returns.

In a ruling late Saturday that fell in line with similar pronouncements by the military-backed regime, the high court said that Zelaya will not be allowed to return to power, and “cannot avoid having to submit to established procedures of the penal process” should he return to Honduras.

Zelaya was ousted from power in a June 28 military backed coup and replaced with interim leader Roberto Micheletti.

The court decision also accused Zelaya of “crimes against the government, treason against the nation, abuse of power” and other misdeeds, as it affirmed the legitimacy of Micheletti’s government.

Fidel Castro appears on television

Former leader Fidel Castro appeared on Sunday on Cuban television for the first time since June of last year in a video of him chatting with students from Venezuela, reported Reuters.

Castro, 83, appeared to be in good condition as he spoke with the students about the state of the world in a meeting that took place on Saturday in Havana, according to the television report.

The video followed a front-page photograph of Castro meeting with Ecuadorean president Rafael Correa published on Sunday in the state-run newspaper Juventud Rebelde.

Castro has not been in public since undergoing intestinal surgery in July 2006. He resigned the presidency last year and was replaced by brother Raul Castro.

­Does the U.S. want bases in Colombia?

One of the oddest aspects of the regional row over the proposed U.S. bases in Colombia is the U.S. administration’s lukewarm enthusiasm for the project.

This reserved U.S. attitude suggests that perhaps the U.S. does not view the deal’s enhanced access to the seven military bases in Colombia as the strategic necessity that the current Colombian government does.

Health care debate becomes ‘shoving match’ with immigrants stuck on the receiving end

by Erick Galindo

The health care debate has become a shoving match, and immigrants, legal and otherwise, are being pushed the hardest.

President Obama’s admission that immigration reform will have to wait until next year further fueled fears that, while one-f fth of the nation’s 45 million uninsured are immigrants, health reform benefits will not cover them.

“We are critically concerned,” Jennifer Ng’andu, deputy director of the Health Policy Project for the National Council de La Raza, told Weekly Report. “There are no current provisions extending public benefits to undocumented immigrants, and now legal immigrants are in danger of losing some benefits.”

Obama told Hispanic Link and nine other members of the Hispanic media invited to a “roundtable” discussion on Hispanic-related matters that the animosity around both issues will be tough to overcome at the present time.

“I think that, with respect to the debate that’s taking place around health care reform now, it is not going to be possible to provide coverage for undocumented workers,” Obama said.

Additionally, he noted that health coverage had already been extended to 11 million children includ:ing undocumented ones.

“That was a fight that had been out there for a decade. It was a huge accomplishment,” he said.

A weeks-long battle for public support of proposed reform has intensified as members of Congress have faced tough crowds peppered with hostile shouting and pushing matches at “town hall” meetings across the country.

Many detractors have made it clear they do not like “Obama’s plan” because he is a “socialist.” Encouraged by such groups as the U,S. Chamber of Commerce’ Libertarian political party and rabidly right-wing talk radio hosts, the outrage and outbursts at these meetings are part of an opposition strategy to disrupt the administration’s message Comprehensive care supporters have reacted by sending their own members to counter.

Immigration has been thrown into the fray is nativist groups such as the Federation for American Immigration Reform lobby vigorously for exclusion of “illegal aliens.”

Including them under the plan is unwarranted and would add billions to the price tag,’ ‘said Dan Stein, president of FAIR. “In Pennsylvania and all across the nation the public is understandably upset about the staggering costs of illegal immigration and adamantly oppose providing a full range of health benefits to illegal aliens.”

NCLR’s Ng’andu says the notion that immigrants’ legal or otherwise do not pay taxes is incorrect.

“Immigrants pay taxes like everyone else’” he added. “Everyone should be integrated and everyone should share in the responsibility.”

These hot-button issues intersect beyond 160C Pennsylvania Ave.

While Massachusetts’s Commonwealth Care program has become a reform model, the state legislature voted last month to stop covering documented immigrants with fewer than five years on their green card— all 30~000 of them.

Pennsylvania Senator Arlen Specter who switched registration from Republican to Democrat earlier this year’ has said he will not support health legislation that covers undocumented immigrants.

­In the past Specter has supported path-to-citizenship legislation’ but assured a rowdy crowd at an Aug. 12 town hall meeting in Lebanon, Pennsylvania., that “none of the bills in Congress would provide health insurance to illegal immigrants.”

In California, the health care and immigration debates have always been intertwined.

In February, several counties, including heavily Latino Sacramento County, began to cut non-emergency care to the undocumented citing financial restraints.

The pro-immigrant Immigration Policy Center charges that the issue is being used “as a way to jam a stick into the wheels of impending reform.”

Obama reacted, “When it comes to legal immigrants, then my attitude is that’ in the same way the Children’s Health Insurance Program made sense’ we should try to provide help for those who are here legally.

“We don’t want children, or their parents for that matter, to be on a playground with tuberculosis and not have access to any health care services. Hispanic Link.

Boxing

August 22nd (Saturday), 2009 At Toyota Center, Houston, TX

  • (HBO) Juan Diaz (34-2) vs. TBA (The Ring Magazine #1 Lightweight vs. Unranked).­

In The New Orleans Arena, New Orleans, LA

  • (PPV) Roy Jones Jr. (53-5) vs. Jeff Lacy (25-2) (The Ring Magazine #6 Light Heavyweight vs. Unranked),

In Budapest, Hungary

  • Karoly Balzsay (21-0) vs. Robert Stieglitz (34-2) (The Ring Magazine #8 Super Middleweight vs. Unranked).
  • (WBC Lightweight belt) Ina Menzer (24-0) vs. TBA.
  • Zsolt Bedak (13-0) vs. TBA.

At Pala Casino Spa and Resort, Pala, CA

  • Grady Brewer (25-11) vs. Zaurbek Baysangurov (20-1).
  • Bayan Jargal (12-0-1) vs. TBA Rafael Valenzuela (12-1) vs. TBA.

August 29th (Saturday), 2009 At The Cultural Center, Miyoshi, Japan

  • Hidenobu Honda (30-6) vs. Daigo Nakahiro(20-2)

George López ready for return

by Antonio Mejías-Rentas

George LópezGeorge López

George López is upbeat about his upcoming entry into the crowded late-night television market.

At this month’s Television Critics Association gathering in Pasadena, Calif., the star of the late, lamented, self-titled ABC sitcom talked about López Tonight, which premieres on TBS in November.

“The simple plan of the show is to create an energy that isn’t anywhere on TV,’’ he said, joking “but apparently in some parts of the country I’ll be up against telenovelas — can’t win that battle.”

As to competing for top guests, he added, “l don’t think The Tonight Show is going after Menudo.” Then he presented a pilot episode that included a cameo appearance by President Barack Obama.

Lopez campaigned for Obama and called the President a ‘’close friend.” He told reporters he would be “personally offended” if he did not appear on López Tonight the next time he’s in Los Angeles.

But the comedian will be on TV before his new show premieres: he will co-host, with actress Eva Longoria-Parker, the 2009 Alma Awards in September.

The Desperate Housewives costar will again executive-produce the ceremony produced by the National Council of La Raza. It will air for the first time during Hispanic Heritage Month. The ceremony will be taped in Los Angeles Sept. 17 and be shown the next day on ABC.

In other television news:

  • ­Latin Music Legends, a musical variety show hosted by Trini López, will have its national premiere in the singer’s hometown of Palm Springs before being rolled out to PBS stations nationally. The special, taped at the Orpheum Theatre in Los Angeles, will debut Aug. 14 on KCVR and includes performances by Julio Iglesias, El Chicano, Tierra and a tribute to another legendary Palm Springs resident, the late Lalo Guerrero.
  • Telemundo will air the original version of a drama airing successfully on Spain’s state-run Televisión Espariola (TVE). It will be the Latin American distributor for Amar en tiempos revueltos, set in Spain’s post-war period at the beginning of the last century.

State Assembly names Ammiano Chair of the Public Safety Committee

compiled by Chanaye J. Thomas

The California Assembly appointed Assembly member Tom Ammiano (D-San Francisco) as Chair of the Assembly Public Safety Committee for the 2009-2010 Regular Session.

The Assembly Public Safety Committee is responsible for overseeing and reviewing legislation within the California Penal Code. This includes almost all issues that are related to criminal justice, including but not limited to: prisons, sentencing, juvenile justice, criminal penalties, gun control, and controlled substances.

NOAA funding to support Ocean Observing Central and North California

The NOAA Integrated Ocean Observing System (IOOS) is awarding over $1.6 million in 2009 competitive grant funding to support ocean-observing efforts in Central and Northern California, according to a written statement.

The grants will go to the Central and Northern California Ocean Observing System through the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute. Funding supports long-term monitoring of environmental conditions in support of protecting marine life and habitat.

Governor believes extended shelter funds may help homeless

According to a written announcement, Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger signed Assembly member Tom Ammiano’s (D-San Francisco) bill AB 767 into law last week. The bill is an urgency measure that extends the deadline to encumber Prop. 1C multi family housing, homeless youth, shelter and begin funding from the original Housing and Emergency Shelter Trust Fund of 2006.

The bill garnered unanimous support in the California Legislature before reaching the Governor’s desk.

“The extension of the deadline of the Shelter Trust Fund is one crucial step in addressing the housing crisis facing residents throughout the state,” said Ammiano.

­House approves Gallison’s employee credit check bill

State House reports that The House of Representatives has passed a bill sponsored by Rep. Raymond E. Gallison Jr. to ban employers from requesting credit reports as part of the application process for prospective employees.

“There’s no connection between employees’ fi nancial history and their job performance,” said Representative Gallison, a Democrat whose district 69 is in Bristol and Ports mouth.

There are exceptions in the bill for employers in types of businesses like supervised fi nancial institutions, investment fi rms, law enforcement agencies and jewelry and precious metal companies.

New Cato report economic benefits of legalizing immigrants

In Washington D.C., a new report released August 13th, Restriction or Legalization? Measuring the Economic Benefi ts of Immigration Reform, the Cato Institute is seeking to quantify the benefits that would fl ow to the U.S. economy from comprehensive immigration reform, which grants some form of legal status to unauthorized immigrants

already living in the United States, according to the Immigration Policy Center.

Reform that includes legalization would yield a net benefi t of $180 billion over 10 years, while enforcement efforts alone would incur $80 billion in losses.

Macy’s customers support Reading Is Fundamental Program

The Reading Is Fundamental Program, a provider of free books to 566, 672 underserved children, reports that as families in the Bay Area prepare to send their kids back to school, Macy’s is giving customers the opportunity to support local children’s literacy programs through the Book A Brighter Future Campaign, while saving money with in-store coupons.

“Through the Book A Brighter Future campaign, one dollar of every three received is being invested locally to support programs like the Oakland Unified School District, and other children’s literacy initiatives,” says RIF President and CEO Carol H. Rasco.

Some U.S.-Mexico remittances flow in reversecrease

by Kent Paterson

For decades, money sent home by Mexicans laboring in the United States has been a key pillar of the Mexican economy. Now, scattered reports are surfacing of Mexicans sending money to support relatives in the United States hard hit by the economic crisis north of the border. Latinos, especially immigrants, are suffering a disproportionate share of the joblessness that is officially rising to engulf close to 10 percent of the overall U.S. population.

According to Chihuahua state tourism department official Demetrio Sotomayor Cuéllar, a 21 percent decrease over last year in the number of paisanos (Mexican immigrants traveling home for visits) crossing the Chihuahua border from June 26 to July 14 led officials to investigate the visitor drop. In the course of the probe, Sotomayor said, officials ran across unusual reports in the hands of Mexico’s Interior Ministry.

Much to their surprise, officials learned that some Mexicans were financially sustaining migrant relatives.

“This was something that was never seen before and now it is,” Sotomayor said.

“Family members who are employed in Mexico are sending money to those relatives who are unemployed in the United States.”

Nonetheless, it is difficult to know whether money flowing northward to unemployed Mexican immigrants constitutes a significant stream of revenue not only for migrant households but also for U.S. tax revenues that finance services used by native-born U.S. citizens. The federal interior minister has not made public the reports cited by Sotomayor, and Mexico’s National Institute of Statistics, Geography and Informatics has not started systematically compiling data on transfers on money to migrants in the US.

Confronted with a growing unemployment problem at home, most Mexicans would seem hard-pressed to send large amounts of money to El Norte.

However, alternative sources of cash are still readily available in Mexico. Pawn shops, payday-type lenders and loan sharks of all shapes and sizes are popping up everywhere; in Guadalajara, a 24-hour pawn shop is even open for business.

One thing is certain: the sharp decrease in remittances sent from the United States is hitting many Mexican households. The reduced remittance flow implies serious implications for the ability of Mexico’s federal government, which is heavily dependent on a 15 percent sales tax, to support social programs.

The central Bank of Mexico recently reported a record drop of 19.9 percent in remittances received in Mexico during the month of May. From January to May, remittances slid 11.2 percent in comparison with the same period last year, according

to the International Monetary Fund.

An analysis by the Spanish-owned bank BBVA Bancomer estimated that migrant dollars arriving to Mexico could go down by as much as four billion dollars this year, reducing the country’s annual remittance income from about $25.1 billion in 2008 to slightly more than $21 billion in 2009. Other estimates put the expected remittance total in the $22-23 billion range for 2009.

Reduced remittance revenues ­impact some areas of Mexico more than others.

In the first three months of 2009, 26 of Mexico’s 32 states captured fewer remittances. The states of Chiapas, Veracruz, Guanajuato and Mexico experienced the greatest plunge in migrant dollars. On the other hand, a handful of states actually saw increases in remittances. Entities experiencing a positive upturn included Aguascalientes, Baja California Sur, Coahuila, Colima, Jalisco, and Nayarit.

The third largest receptor of remittances after India and China, Mexico is far from alone in groping with the remittance crisis. The World Bank estimated this month that global migrant remittances, which totaled $328 billion in 2008, could fall to $304 billion in 2009.

Certain nations are even more dependent than Mexico on money earned by nationals working abroad. Tajikistan, Lesotho, Guyana, Moldova and Honduras are among countries where migrant remittances represent one-quarter or more of the Gross Domestic Product.

Not all the news from the remittance front is negative.

South Asia is expected to receive more income this year than last from migrants working in the Persian Gulf region. Hispanic Link.

(Kent Paterson researched and wrote this article for Frontera NorteSur, a publication of the Center for Latin American and Border Studies at New Mexico State University. Reprinted with permission) ©2009

Summing up the neighborhood summit

­by José de la Isla

WASHINGTON, D.C. – During his whirlwind trip to Guadalajara to meet with, Mexico President Felipe Calderón and Canada Prime-minister Stephen Harper, President Obama disclosed to his North American homologues that his planned action on U.S. immigration reform has now been put off until 2010.

The president had made a similar disclosure the Friday prior to his trip to a roundtable press meeting with Hispanic Link News Service and other reporters covering the Latino beat.

At that time Obama outlined an immigration reform framework and said preparatory administrative measures were already underway.

He cited the FBI’s clearing of a background-check backlog, greater use of advanced technologies for processing, and the termination of indiscriminate raids.

In the fall, a bipartisan taskforce of invested parties would begin crafting legislation for introduction in the beginning of the new year. Republican buy-in is essential to achieve comprehensive reform, he told us.

Obama also pledged to work on Mexico and Canada border issues related to emissions control that contribute to global warming and address the drug cartel menace. The U.S. and Canada have already begun training 9,000 college-educated Mexican federal police officers for that effort.

Earlier, the influential Mexico City news website EjeCentral.com summed up the summit as having more disaccord than producing agreements and that little happened of major substance.

Before the meeting, President Felipe Calderón was reported to have wanted Harper to back off from the unilteral imposition of a visa requirement of Mexican citizens visiting Canada. Not for now, Harper is reported to have told Calderón.

The visa requirement will remain for the present while Canada formulates a policy addressing people who seek asylum. In turn, Mexico has triggered a retaliatory requirement of Canadians who work in Mexico who must now also acquire visas. EjeCentral.com reported that 69 percent of the Canadian public approves of the measure. Of 225 asylum applications received weekly before the visa requirement, a drop to 17 percent was reported for the week after the measure was applied.

Calderón sought for President Obama to cancel the prohibition of Mexican cargo vessels on U.S. highways, a measure running counter to the NAFTA. U.S. comercial interests, except for the trucking industry, generally favor lifting the embargo because of retaliatory tariffs imposed by Mexico on a large number of products that affect 40 states. Obama has previously disclosed that work is progressing for a measure to go to Congress soon. Prime Minister Harper meanwhile has expressed displeasure with the U.S. “Buy American” provisions in the stimulus law that Obama signed in February.

The package has been interpreted by local and state governments as excluding Canada and Mexico from bidding.

While Obama endorses Calderón’s use of the military to combat drug-trafficking cartels, Senator Patrick Leahy (D-Vermont), the powerful chairman of the Subcommittee on Foreign Operations, in a released statement Aug. 6, said it was “premature” to declare Mexico to have met the requirements for the conditional U.S. funding assistance for its military-led drug war.

Of the $1.4 billion approved in 2007 for the three-year assistance program to disrupt and curb criminal drug organizations, the law requires the administration to withhold 15 percent of the appropriation each year until the Secretary of State submits a report to Congress affirming that Mexico’s military and police who violate human rights, are prosecuted in accordance with Mexican and international law. An unnamed White House spokesman said Obama brought up the matter with Calderón during their direct talks.

Preparations and emergency measures concerning the “novel H1N1” (formerly referred to as swine flu) was a topic where there was general agreement about public health measures to take.

“The North American Leaders’ Summit,” as the meeting was billed, is the annual gathering of the North American leaders to do collaborative work on issues of mutual concern, such as border security, immigration reform and economic recovery.

At the press meeting with Hispanic Link and nine other reporters prior to his Guadalajara trip, Obama delineated a difference between NAFTA, the trade agreement, and this summit on interests between the North American heads of state. President Obama has previously met twice with Calderón and Harper. The Canadian prime minister is scheduled to arrive in Washington for further talks in September. Hispanic Link.

[José de la Isla’s latest book is now available free in digital version at www.DayNightLifeDeathHope.com. He writes a weekly commentary for Hispanic Link News Service and is author of The Rise of Hispanic Political Power (2003). E-mail him at joseisla3@yahoo.com.] ©2009