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Prison punishes more people than just the inmates

by the University of Michigan

ANN ARBOR, Michigan.— More people live behind bars in the U.S. than in any other country, and this system also punishes the health of the friends and loved ones left behind.

In the first known study of its kind, University of Michigan researchers found that people with a family member or friend in prison suffer worse physical and mental health, more stress and depressive symptoms, and that those symptoms worsen the closer the relationship to the person incarcerated.

The study results could help explain health disparities between minorities and whites, said Daniel Kruger, U-M Research Professor at the School of Public Health and lead researcher on the study. African Americans are both more likely to know someone incarcerated, Kruger said, and they also report feeling closer to the person incarcerated than whites do. “It’s like a double whammy,” he said. Forty-nine percent of blacks reported a friend or relative in prison during the past five years compared to just 20 percent of whites.

Those who knew someone incarcerated had 40 percent more days where poor physical health interfered with their usual activities, including work, and 54 percent more days where poor mental or emotional health interfered with these activities, Kruger said.

Others have examined the health effects of incarceration on inmates and a few studies have investigated the health of children whose mothers are incarcerated. But those studies focused on people already in the system, Kruger said.

“We actually took a representative sample of people in the community and asked them whether they had a friend or relative incarcerated in the last five years,” Kruger said.

“We also included a powerful array of known health predictors as control variables.”

For instance, the researchers considered whether a person smoked tobacco, drank alcohol heavily, was overweight or obese, and had adequate nutrition and physical exercise.

The study consisted of 1288 adults from Flint, Michigan, an urban area with high unemployment and crime rates, and surrounding areas of Genesee County. In the study, 67 percent of respondents were white and 26 percent African American.

“Our study demonstrates that incarceration is not only enormously expensive economically, it also has public health costs and these should be taken into consideration,” Kruger said. “In the last 30 years or so we have seen a more and more punitive system, one where judges no longer have discretion for sentencing.”

Moving towards a rehabilitation model may benefit both the offending individuals and society. “The vast majority ­of people incarcerated are non-violent drug offenders, we should shift oversight of substance use and abuse to the health care sector.”

One out of every 100 adults in the U.S. is in jail or prison, and more than three times as many Blacks and Latinos live in jails or prisons than college dorms, Kruger said.

This particular study looked only at Blacks, not Latinos, because there is not a large enough population of Hispanics in Flint and Genesee County.

The paper, “The Association of Incarceration with Community Health and Racial Health Disparities,” will appear in the April issue of Progress in Community Health Partnerships.

San Francisco reencarnates Rubén Darío, honors Gioconda Belli

by Marvin Ramírez

Homage to the Prince of Letters: L-R: Gisele Icabalzeta (FraterNica), Mike Galo ( ex boxer and community relationist), and Gioconda Belli (novelist and poet), during the presentation of her new book. (photo by Marvin j Ramirez)Homage to the Prince of Letters L-R: Gisele Icabalzeta (FraterNica), Mike Galo ( ex boxing champion and community relationist), and Gioconda Belli (novelist and poet), during the presentation of her new book. (photo by Marvin J Ramirez)

A Sunday of book reading and poetry. It was an extravagant day of poetry declamation, something that hardly happens anymore in modern times, where one sits quietly and respectfully listens and feels for hours the drama that comes with it.

“It’s something out of series that there are people who are able to stay for two hours listening to poetry,” said Gioconda Belli, a novelist and poet, who is perhaps one of the most respected female writers by Nicaraguans in and out of the motherland, and a strong critic of the administration ­of President Daniel Ortega and his wife, poet Rosario Murillo, She was the special guest at the Marco Literario Dariano at the San Francisco War Memorial on Sunday 19 of April.

Poetry is a growing movement in Nicaragua, land of Rubén Darío, the greatest Latin American poet of all times, who with his unique and sophisticated style, changed the course of the Spanish language.

Darío, born in Metapa, Nicaragua Jan. 18, 1867 – died in the city of Leon Feb. 6, 1916, was the poet who initiated Spanish-American literary movement known as Modernismo (modernism), flourishing at the end of the 19th century. Darío has had the greatest and most lasting influence into 20th century Spanish literature, and journalism. He has been praised as The Prince of Castilian letters, and undisputed father of the modernismo literary movement[1]. Darío is revered as Nicaragua’s greatest diplomat and a leading voice of Central and South America.

And poetry growth is obvious in Granada, Nicaragua – which many historians believe it to be the first city founded by Spaniards in the mainland of the American continent – which is now the cradle of poetry in the world.

Rubén DaríoRubén Darío

For five years, poets from many parts of the globe celebrate the Festival International de Poesía in Granada. This year, the event took place from the 16 to 21 of April.

And is this type of movements what astonishes Belli. “It was what I witnessed at el Festival de Poesía in Nicaragua,” so many people in attendance, what makes her believe, Belli said to the approximately 150 people at the Veteran’s auditorium, most of who were from the writer and poet’s homeland, Nicaragua.

Every year, Nicaraguans celebrate in San Francisco the glory of Darío, and this year the event brought Belli as its special feature. She is admired as the queen of letters in Nicaragua, while her writing is taking momentum internationally.

The event brought respected ­figures such as Luis Echegoyén, actor, and retired TV broadcaster, and a hearty poetry lover, who despite being from El Salvador, loves Darío’s poetry work. He interpreted in declamation and drama, one of Darío’s most veneered poems: Los Motivos del Lobo, which made the attendees fall from their chair.

Dr. William Icabalzeta, a Bay Area dentist and member of FraterNica, a nonprofit organization that promotes culture and events for Nicaragua in the Bay Area, caused a storm of emotions on the audience with his declamation of Darío’s La Marcha Triunfal. Some said it almost make them cry.

Belli’s poetry and fiction have been published worldwide. Her first novel, The ­Inhabited Woman, was an international bestseller; her collection of poems, Línea de fuego, won the esteemed Casa de las Americas Prize in 1978.

She is the author of the award-winning The Country Under My Skin and The Scroll of Seduction.

Infinity in the Palm of Her Hand, her latest literary work – which won the prestigious 2008 Biblioteca Breve Prize – was the motive of her visit in San Francisco. She presented her book and signed autographs before and after her presentation, in which she read some of her own poetry and read from the book.

Belli lives in Santa Monica, California, and Managua.

Fujimori’s conviction with regional resonance

by El Reportero’s news services

Alberto FujimoriAlberto Fujimori

With this conclusion, Alberto Fujimori, the President of Peru from 1991 to 2000 was sentenced to 25 years in prison by Judge César San Martín.

“It is reasonable to infer that such a vast criminal plan, and the institutional compromise that it signified, could only have taken place with the direct participation of the incumbent head of state,” said the former president.

The ruling is unprecedented in Latin America. Fujimori is the first former, elected head of state in the region to be brought to trial and convicted in his own country for serious human rights violations. The conviction was a triumph for the Peruvian judicial system. It could have regional repercussions as a deterrent to authoritarian rule. It is not over yet, however – Fujimori is appealing.

A big year

This year, 2009, is one of those in which Latin America has masses of elections and other votes. Already (this report went to press in early April) Venezuelans and El Salvadoreans have gone to the polls in national elections: Venezuela backed President Hugo Chávez in his request that he (and other executive officials) could be re-elected indefinitely.

El Salvador held municipal and congressional elections in January followed by presidential elections on March15. Before the year is out, Chile, Honduras, Panama and Uruguay will have elected new presidents and Bolivia and Ecuador (almost certainly) re-elected their incumbents. Mexico will have elected a completely new lower house of congress, while Argentina will have voted for a fresh half of the chamber of deputies and replaced (or reaffi rmed) one third of the senate.

Obama extends hands to Chavez, Ortega at summit

PORT-OF-SPAIN, Trinidad – President Barack Obama offered a spirit of cooperation to America’s hemispheric neighbors at a summit Saturday, listening to complaints about past U.S. meddling and even reaching out to Venezuela’s leftist leader.

While he worked to ease friction between the U.S. and their countries, Obama cautioned leaders at the Summit of the Americas to resist a temptation to blame all their problems on their behemoth neighbor to the north.

“I have a lot to learn and I very much look forward to listening and figuring out how we can work together more effectively,” Obama said.

Obama said he was ready to accept Cuban President Raul Castro’s proposal of talks on issues once off-limits for Cuba, including political prisoners held by the communist government.

While praising America’s initial effort to thaw relations with Havana, the leaders pushed the U.S. to go further and lift the 47-year-old U.S. trade embargo against Cuba.

As the first full day of meetings began on the two-island nation of Trinidad and Tobago Saturday, Obama exchanged handshakes and pats on the back with Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez, who once likened Obama’s predecessor, President George W. Bush, to the devil.­

In front of photographers, Chavez gave Obama a copy of The Open Veins of Latin America: Five Centuries of the Pillage of a Continent, a book by Eduardo Galeano that chronicles U.S. and European economic and political interference in the region.

Options for millions worldwide: starvation or ‘criminal act’

by David Bacon

second of two pants

Instead of recognizing the reality that immigrants from Mexico and elsewhere will continue to cross into the United States seeking work when their option is abject poverty, sometimes even starvation, the U.S. government has attempted to make holding a job a criminal act.

Responding to a green light from the Department of Homeland Security, some states and local communities have passed measures that go even further. Mississippi passed a bill making it a felony for an undocumented worker to hold a job, with jail time of 1-10 years, fines of up to $10,000, and no bail for anyone arrested~ Employers get immunity.

Last summer, in his job then as Homeland Security Secretary, Michael Chertoff proposed a rule requiring employers to fire workers who couldn’t correct a mismatch between the Social Security number given to their employer and the SSA database.

The regulation assumed those workers had no valid immigration visa, and therefore no valid Social Security number With 12 million people here without legal immigration status, the regulation would have led to massive firings, bringing many industries and businesses to a halt. Citizens and legal visa holders would have been swept up as well, since the Social Security database is often inaccurate.

While the courts enjoined this particular regulation, the idea of using Social Security numbers to identify and fire millions of workers is still very much alive in Washington, D.C.

Under Chertoff, the Bureau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement conducted sweeping workplace raids, arresting and deporting thousands of workers. Many were charged with an additional crime, identity theft, because to get a job, they used a Social Security number belonging to someone else. Workers using those numbers actually deposit money into Social Security funds, and will never collect benefits their contributions paid for.

New Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano says the big raids need to be reexamined, but she continues to support measures that drive undocumented workers from their jobs and keep employers from hiring them.

During her term as Arizona’s governor, the state legislature passed a law requiring employers to verify the immigration status of every worker through a federal database called E-Verify, even more full of errors than Social Security. They must fire workers whose names get flagged. This is now becoming the model for federal enforcement.

Many of these punitive measures surtaced in proposals for “comprehensive immigration reform’, that were debated in Congress in 2006 and 2007. The comprehensive bills combined criminalization of work for the undocumented with huge guest worker programs.

While those proposals failed in Congress, the Bush administration implemented some of their most draconian provisions by administrative action. Many fear that new proposals for immigration reform being formulated by Congress and the administration will continue these efforts to criminalize work.

(Labor writer David Bacon, author of “Illegal People: How Globalization creates Migration and Criminalizes Immigrants, wrote this commentary for New America Media).

In other related news:

79 Candles Top Dolores Huerta’s Birthday Cake

by Jon Higuera

Dolores Huerta, co-founder of the United Farm Workers who stood shoulder to shoulder with the late César Chávez to help create better working conditions for migrant farm workers, turned 79 on April 10.

Her birthday was observed in various ways, including a message board from the UFW that allowed persons to send public notes of congratulations via the Internet.

Born in New Mexico, she was raised in Stockton, Calif. Her activism dates back to 1955 when she co-founded the Sacramento chapter of the Community Service Organization. Seven years later she co-founded the National Farm Workers ­Association with Chávez. It eventually become the UFW.

Throughout the years, the mother of 11 children never slowed her tireless advocacy efforts, which included coordinating the UFW’s successful East Coast table grape boycott in the 1960s.

Chávez once described her character: “She’s absolutely fearless, physically as well as psychologically, and she just can’t stand to see people pushed around.” Hispanic Link.

Boxing

Saturday, April 11 — at Las Vegas, NV (HBO)

  • Paul Williams vs. Ronald ‘Winky’ Wright.
  • Chris Arreola vs. Jameel McCline.

Sunday, April 19 — at Quezon City, Philippines

  • IBF flyweight title: Nonito Donaire vs. Raul Martinez.
  • IBF light flyweight title: Ulises Solis vs. Brian Viloria.

Friday, April 24 — at Newark, NJ

  • John Duddy vs. Billy Lyell.
  • Kassim Ouma vs. TBA.

Saturday, April 25 — at Mashantucket, CT (HBO)

  • ­WBC super middleweight title: Carl Froch vs. Jermain Taylor
  • Allan Green vs. Carlos De Leon Jr.

Saturday, April 25 — at Bayamon, Puerto Rico (HBO)

  • WBO super bantamweight title: Juan Manuel Lopez vs. Gerry Penalosa.
  • Interim WBO light welterweight title: Lamont Peterson vs. Willy Blain.

Saturday, April 25 — at Krefeld, Germany

  • WBA middleweight title: Felix Sturm vs. Koji Sato.
  • WBO super middleweight title: Karoly Balzsay vs. TBA.

Saturday, April 25 — at El Paso, TX

  • WBA super featherweight title: Jorge Linares vs. Josafat Perez.

Saturday, May 2 — at Las Vegas, NV (HBO-PPV)

  • Manny Pacquiao vs. Ricky Hatton.
  • WBO featherweight title: Steven Luevano vs. Bernabe Concepcion.

Cornelia (from Town to Town at SFSU

por el equipo de El Reportero

Carlos BarónCarlos Barón

Adapted and directed by Professor Carlos Barón, and its music composed and directed by student Damián Núñez The play follows the adventures of the remnants of a theatre troupe, represented by the characters of Lear, Cordelia and The Fool, as they travel from town to town in search of performance gigs.

The original script, by Argentinian playwright Alberto Adellach, is an adaptation of Shakespeare’s “King Lear” with its own third-world roots and a universal scope. Professor Carlos Barón has translated the play to English and added a new scene and lyrics, making the play further resonate in today’s American society.

Graduate student Damián Núñez has composed eclectic music to be played by a pianist, cellist, bassoonist and percussionist. Adellach’s version won the 1982 Casa de las Américas Literary Award, given by the one of the top cultural institutions in Cuba.

On April 9 – 11, 8 p.m. April 12, 2 p.m. At the Little Theatre, Creative Arts Building, San Francisco State University, 1600 Holloway at 19th Ave., San Francisco, $10.

On April 16 – 18, 8 p.m. April 19, 2 p.m., at SOMArts Cultural Center, 934 Brannan St., San Francisco, CA 94103, $15 general/$10 students and seniors. For more Information call 415/338-2467; http://creativearts.sfsu.edu/cordelia.

Edgardo & Candela regresa a Yoshi’s

Un punto clave en la escena de salsa del Área de la Bahía, por más de 2 décadas, el cantante de conga Edgardo Cambón y su banda de salsa “Candela” regresa a Yoshi para una noche de explosión rítmica y mucha diversión, bailando las tonadas originales de Edgardo y los arreglos de Candela de reconocidos éxitos de salsa, combinados con un poco de Jazz Latino para el público más ávido.

El sábado 18 de abril, 2009. En Yoshi’s SF, 1330 Calle Fillmore, San Francisco, CA 94115. Para más información, llame al 415-655-5600, o visite: http://www.yoshis.com.

Dos presentaciones: 8:00 p.m. y 10:00 p.m., cover $16. ¡Pista de baile abierta!

Programas de inmersión idiomática de SFUSD en película

Los cineastas Marcia Jarmel y Ken Schneider crearon una película que retrata las experiencias de los estudiantes en los programas de inmersión idiomática en SFUSD, que se presentará este año en el Festival de Cine Internacional de San Francisco.

La cinta, Speaking in Tongues – 4 kids, 4 languages, 1 city, 1 world, sigue de cerca a cuatro estudiantes durante un año academic para ilustrar los complejos contrastes de la educación bilingüe. Sus padres hablan de sus razones para inscribir a sus hijos y por qué siguen siendo fuertes partidarios de la inmersión idiomática, a pesar de las críticas de familias, amigos y activistas a favor de sólo inglés. Vea la sinopsis: www.speakingintonguesfilm.info.

26 de abril / 3:15 p.m., 2 de mayo a las 3:30 p.m. y 7 de mayo a las 2:30 p.m. En Cine Sundance Kabuki / 1881 Calle Post. Las entradas están a la venta en ­http://fest09.sffs.org.

Grand tribute to the 90th birthday of ranchera singer Chavela Vargas

by Antonio Mejías-Rentas

Chavela VargasChavela Vargas

NONAG ERIAN: A web page and a tribute concert wi11 mark the 90th birthday of ranchera singer Chavela Vargas next month.

At the Mexi­co City concert — where famous admirers such as Joaquín Sabina, Miguel Bosé and Julieta Venegas are expected to perform—a web page detailing Vargas’ lengthy and fruitful career will be unveiled. Though in frail health, Vargas herself is also likely to perform.

Organizers have also invited two of the singer’s most prestigious friends: Nobel Laureate Gabriel García Márquez and Oscar-winning director Pedro Almodóvar.

Vargas was born Isabel Vargas Lizano in Costa Rica on April 17,1919. At 14 she fled her country and moved to Mexico, where she started singing in the streets before becoming a professional. Her coarse, deep voice was ideal for the Mexican rancheras, which she originally performed dressed as a man, and one of Mexico’s top composers, Jóse Alfredo Jiménez, became a friend and a mentor. She also befriended the country’s top artists and intellectuals, including Diego Rivera, Frida Kahlo, Agustín Lara and Juan Rulfo.

She recorded more than 80 albums before retiring in the 1970s. In a 2002 autobiography she described a 15-year battle with alcoholism and revealed she was a lesbian.

Urged by Almodóvar, who used her songs in some of his films, Vargas returned to the stage in 1991 and in 2003 debuted at Carnegie Hall, a performance released a year later in CD.

The tribute is slated for April 21 at the Teatro de la Ciudad de México.

DOUBLECELEBRATION: A gala to mark the 125th anniversary of New York’s Metropolitan Opera on March 15 also celebrated tenor Plácido Domingo’s 40-year history with the company.

Mario Vargas LlosaMario Vargas Llosa

Domingo was among several stars who recreated famed performances with original sets and costumes at the country’s top opera house. The Spanish tenor perfomed several arias, including one performed by Enrico Caruso in the 1910world premiere of Puccini’s La Fanciulla del West.

Domingo made his Met debut in 1968 and has opened the company’s season 21 times, surpassing by four Caruso’s record.

ONE LINERS: Peruvian writer Mario Vargas Llosa is among finalists for the Man Booker International literary prize, a cash award of $85,000 to be announced in May. ­Salma Hayek will play Adam Sandler’s wife in an untitled comedy about a 30-year high-school reunion, with a cast that also includes Chris Rock and David Spade. Film maker Anthony Felton has announced that his film Héctor Lavoe, The Singer is about to go into post-production for an expected September release. Hispanic Link.

Parental rights amendment being introduced by Congressman Pete Hoekstra

Compiled by the El Reporter’s staff

Pete HoekstraPete Hoekstra

U.S. Rep. Pete Hoekstra, R-Holland, conducted a news conference March 31, announcing he will be introducing a bill with 70 congressional co-sponsors that would amend the Constitution to explicitly state that parents, not government or any other organization, have a fundamental right to raise their children as they see fit.

“In the President’s first address to a joint session of Congress, he stated that there is ‘no program or policy that can substitute for a mother or father,’” Hoekstra said. “I agree wholeheartedly.” The most effective means of protecting the parent-child relationship is by securing an amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

The draft amendment places the text preserving parents’ rights into the text of the Constitution, ensuring that the child-parent relationship remains protected for generations to come.

“The right of parents to raise their children as they see fit is under direct attack by government and the courts,” Hoekstra said.

“The Parents’ Rights Amendment is about pre serving that right for parents as opposed to empowering policymakers either in Washington or any other organization.” Conducting Talk Show interviews on this topic are Congressman Pete Hoekstra and Michael Farris of ParentalRights.org.

West County School District workers rally to protect health and safety of kids

Endangered workers at the West County Unified School District here held a rally April 1, to protect the health and safety of school, and to preserve the jobs of frontline employees entrusted to care for them.

The rally precedes a school board meeting where the District plans to slash scores of jobs of frontline classified employees. The workers are asking the Board to postpone that decision to look for alternatives to layoffs, and they want to be part of the solution.

“Before the district makes these draconian cuts on the backs of employees who are entrusted to care for the health and safety of these school children, we ask the District sit down at a table with us and other stakeholders to fi nd a safe solution,” said Richard Leung of Public Employees Union Local 1.

“The employees who do ­the actual work have ideas on how the district’s operations can be streamlined to reduce redundancy, improve effi ciency and savings. This can help to make the pain of layoffs, if necessary, fair, equitable and minimal,” added Leung.

Assembly Republicans to introduce emergency measure to give gas stations relief from costly new mandate

SACRAMENTO- Assembly Republicans on Wednesday will introduce emergency legislation that will give gas stations relief from a costly new mandate that takes effect April 1st and could force many gas stations to shut down or face significant fines if they haven’t installed new fuel nozzles to capture more fuel vapor, a written statement announced.

The measure, authored by Assemblyman Martin Garrick (R-Carlsbad), said the release, will be introduced in the Legislature’s special session so that it can be acted upon immediately and would put in place a one-year enforcement holiday for the new mandate.

This will give gas stations greater time to comply with the rule, to prevent fi nes, closures, worker lay offs and higher gas prices. As of last week, just 35.9 percent of impacted gas stations across California had installed the new fuel nozzles, the document said.

Latino lawyer vs immigration foes: did Obama cave in?

by Raúl Reyes

I thought I had heard it all from Lou Dobbs, CNN’s most trusted name in anti-immigrant hysteria. Still, I was surprised when he went off on President Obama recently for delivering a speech to the United States Hispanic Chamber of Commerce. Dobbs accused the USHCC of being “an organization interested in the export of American capital and production to Mexico and Mexico’s export of drugs and illegal aliens to the United States.”Actually, the mission of the USHCC is “to foster Hispanic economic development and create sustainable prosperity for the benefit of American society.” The chamber protested Dobbs’ remarks and he later apologized for “misspeaking.”

End of story.Almost.

Personally, I can’t help wondering what the outcome would have been if Dobbs had made incendiary remarks about an African-American or Jewish group. Hispanic advocacy organizations are like the late Rodney Dangerfield – they get no respect. Just ask Thomas Saenz, legal advisor to Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa. Saenz was slated to head up the civil rights division at the Department of Justice. It was reported everywhere from blogs to The New York Times that he was offered and had accepted the position. Then the offer was rescinded. The nomination went instead to another Latino, Maryland Secretary of Labor Thomas Pérez.What was the problem? Immigration — although the civil rights division deals primarily with voting rights, discrimination and police misconduct.

The Obama White House was apparently scared off by opposition to Saenz’s past work with the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund. An op-ed in the Investor’s Business Daily called Saenz “a man who has devoted his life to promoting illegal immigrant rights.” I think Saenz has done an outstanding job protecting the constitutional rights of Latinos. He led the 1994 fight against California’s Proposition 187, which would have denied education and health services to undocumented workers. The real story here is that restrictionists have succeeded in distorting the mission of groups like MALDEF and the National Council of La Raza.

I am not a member of these organizations, nor have I agreed with all of their policies. However, I respect their efforts on behalf of Hispanics, and believe that their civil rights work benefits all U.S. residents.

I find it troubling that because they support comprehensive immigration reform, they are labeled “pro-illegal alien,” or worse, denounced as extremist.Ironically, some of the harshest critics of Latino advocacy groups are themselves far removed from the mainstream. Poll after poll has shown that a majority of voting-age adults favor some form of path to citizenship for the estimated 12 million undocumented U.S. residents. Anti-immigration hardliners did not fare well in the 2008 elections. It’s easy to associate lobbying groups with protecting the interests and influence of the wealthy and powerful.

­Yet MALDEF and the NCLR were borne out of political underrepresentation, discrimination, and the fight for civil rights. They have also been training grounds for top Hispanic lawyers. I have faith in Obama’s commitment to comprehensive reform. Maybe he simply didn’t want a distracting confirmation hearing while dealing with the grim economic situation. But it’s disappointing to think that he caved to a vocal minority with intolerant views of Latinos. Hispanic Link.

(Raúl Reyes is an attorney in New York City. Email him at rarplace@aol.com). ©2009

There’s still time to complete those unfinished educations

por José de la Isla

HOUSTON – The U.S. Census Bureau released new numbers about Hispanic higher education this month. Reports like this are like one’s annual check-up. In the end, some small lifestyle changes and a good diet will make the future a whole lot brighter.

Out of about 12.7 million college students in 2007, 11.5 percent of those attending full-time were Latino, a leap from 10.3 percent the year before. That means about 1.5 million in 2007, compared to 1.2 million in 2006.

Of the 5.3 million students who attend part-time, Hispanics comprised 713,000, or 13.5 percent.

As a rough baseline, Hispanics make up 15 percent of the national population.

Out of about 900,000 full-time students, Hispanic women run ahead of Hispanic men, with 55 percent of Hispanic undergraduates and 60 percent of graduate students.

In an age when the presumption about high Hispanic secondary school dropout rates is virtually cliché, this snapshot is startling.

It is part of a possible trend that deserves much more attention.

Back in 2002, Richard Fry of the Pew Hispanic Center authored a report that flew in the face of what many people surmised. He found large numbers of Latinos enrolled in postsecondary education. “In fact,” he said, “by some measures a greater share of Latinos are attending exposure. One would think relatively few incentives are needed to boost Latino education attainment numbers. Yet too often our advocates become boosters for dysfunctional systems when a simple shot in the arm can help these huge numbers complete their courses of study.

That relates to something Barack Obama must have had in mind when he said on Feb. 24, “I ask every American to commit to at least one year or more of higher education or career training. This can be a community college or a four-year school, vocational training or an apprenticeship.

But whatever the training may be, every American will need to get more than a high school diploma.”

That means completed, not incomplete, education levels.

Still, the same old interests are out there pushing for failing systems instead of focusing on individuals who started, but just didn’t finish, the marathon.

Much attention needs to go into this segment of the population which has already proven it can compete.

These students didn’t finish because financial need, youthful lack of discernment, or other life distractions that threw them off course. National and local Hispanic advocacy groups and officials need to figure out how to innovate re-entry through new public investments to encourage success, not subsidize failure.

Among the incentives to reintroduce young adults (yes, many of whom are already working or starting families) to education ladders should be approaches using the Internet, ipod, e-mail and web conferencing.

The education portion of the historic $787 billion stimulus jolt should bring back those who didn’t finish.

They are the proverbial low-hanging fruit.

Public dollars have already been spent as down payments on their education.

It’s time to encourage them and the system to finish the job.

The failing portions of an education establishment that shoves students out and blames the learner — well, they shouldn’t get any of the money. Tell the administration to put that in their transparency website. That’s a healthful diet everybody can live with. Hispanic Link.

(Reporter Edwin Mora assisted in researching and preparing this column. De la Isla is author of The Rise of Hispanic Political Power (Archer Books, 2003). He writes a weekly commentary for Hispanic Link News Service. E-mail ­joseisla3@yahoo.com). ©2009