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St. Luke’s Hospital faces an imminent collapse

by Ali Tabatabai

Hillary se presenta en la Misión: Manifestantes protestan la visita de Hillary Clinton, quien asistió a una cena recauda fondos en la Misión el 18 de noviembre (photo by Marvin J. Ramirez)Hillary shows up in the Mission Protesters march against Hillary Clinton’s visit in the Mission to a fundriser dinner event Nov. 18 (photo by Marvin J. Ramirez)

California Pacific Medical Center executives, community members, and medical staff from St. Luke’s Hospital convened again on Tuesday, to discuss the fate of the hospital before the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

At the health commission meeting, CPMC executives said they welcomed an open dialogue with the city and outlined their plan for transferring inpatient emergency services to other hospitals in the North of Market area. However, public health officials expressed their dissatisfaction with CPMC’s prior communication with the city about such cutbacks at St. Luke’s.

“It concerns me that [CPMC] is just now developing a dialogue with the commission and the health department,” said commissioner Chatherine Dodd.

Christopher Willrich, California Pacific’s vice president of strategy and business development, said CPMC hopes to explain its long term strategy for improving San Francisco’s healthcare infrastructure and that emergency care services could be absorbed at its other hospitals, including a proposed $1.7 billion new hospital on the Cathedral Hill Hotel site.

“We want to make sure that dollars spent and invested are going to lead to the maximum benefit for the community,” Willrich said.

However, physicians and nurses at St. Luke’s remain weary about the company’s intentions, as well as its numbers used to justify the hospital’s downgrades.

According to a statement released by hospital physicians, CPMC mislead the public when they claimed that 60 percent of the inpatient beds at St. Luke’s remain empty at any given time. The physicians say the figure is based on how many beds the hospital is licensed for, not the actual beds it currently has, which are occupied at 58 percent daily average rate.

“St. Luke’s faces an imminent collapse,” said Dr. Bonita Palmer, who contributed the statement, “Sutter [Health] no longer has plans for us to exist as a hospital at all.”

CPMC, an affiliate of Sutter Health, had originally planned to cut its pediatric and neonatal intensive care unit starting Nov. 16, eventually ­eliminating all long-term emergency stays and turning St. Luke’s into an outpatient ambulatory hub by 2009.

Those plans have been delayed, however, as CPMC failed to comply with a city ordinance requiring official notice be sent to the city’s health commission before such a closure.

A public hearing will be held in accordance with the law known as Proposition Q, at the Health Commission on Tuesday, Dec. 4.

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Nicaraguan banana workers win $2.5M in Dole lawsuit

by the El Reportero news services

A U.S. jury awarded punitive damages to Nicaraguans who claimed pesticides made them sterile.

­On Thursday the jury found that American food giant Dole should pay $2.5 million in punitive damages to five workers who claimed they were made sterile by use of a pesticide on Nicaraguan banana plantations in the 1970s.

The Superior Court jury awarded $3.3 million in actual damages to six workers last week, most of it to be paid by California-based Dole Fresh Fruit Co. and the remainder by Dow Chemical Co. of Michigan. The jury’s finding that Dole acted maliciously in harming five of the six allowed punitive damages to be considered for the five.

The punitive damages were to be split evenly among the five workers exposed to the pesticide known as DBCP.

Lawyers for both sides called it a win. Duane Miller, the workers’ attorney, said it sends a message that multinational corporations such as Dole are accountable for what they do, even overseas.

Nicaragua foreign minister to discuss closer trade in Moscow

­MOSCOW – Nicaraguan Foreign Minister Samuel Santos Lopez arrives on an official visit to Moscow Sunday to discuss closer trade and the possibility of larger defense and machinery product deliveries from Russia.

At the Russian-Nicaraguan political consultations held in May at the level of deputy foreign ministers, the parties expressed their desire to expand cooperation in the energy sphere, the construction of hydropower facilities, tourism development, transport infrastructure modernization and an increase in Russia’s exports of machinery, equipment and technologies.

During his visit, which will last until November 21, López is expected to discuss “measures to make trade more stable and balanced through diversification of its commodity structure, especially via the deliveries of engineering and defense products from Russia,” Russian Foreign Ministry spokesman Mikhail Kamynin said.

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Latino anti-war ties U.S. immigration surge to Irak message

by Marc Heller

Rubén SalazarRubén Salazar

As director of Latinos Against the War, Carlos Montes plans demonstrations against U.S. military involvement in Iraq. So why is he talking about immigration?

“A lot of people don’t see the link,” Montes explains to Weekly Report. Making t:he connection between the Iraq war and the mass movement of people is one way he is trying to stir the Hispanic community to speak out against the conflict, he says.

The Latino anti-war movement could use more spark, say organizers with Hispanic and non-Hispanic anti-war groups. The Hispanic appetite for war protests East Los Angeles made headlines. Journalist Ruben Salazar was killed by police while covering that event for KMEX-TV.

Montes makes this link between immigration and war: U.S. foreign policy whether it’s war or free trade or other positions—leads to globalization, which leads to poverty and unemployment in other countries, which results in mass migration and perhaps more undocumented immigrants coming to the United States.

It’s not that Latinos are absent from the war debate, Montes says. His own group played a part in a Sept. 15 march in Washington against the war and organized an anti-war encampment at the Westwood Federal Office Building in Los Angeles in September.

Latinos Against the War also has helped organize protests against discriminatory U.S. immigration policies.

“Every anti-war demonstration I go to in Los Angeles, I see hundreds of Hispanics,” Montes says. “l always see lots of Latinos marching.”

But he acknowledges that the sight of Hispanics marching may not indicate Hispanic participation in leading roles: “Some antiwar groups don’t have leadership among Hispanics, or blacks for that matter, and we’ve brought that concern up.

Several anti-war groups contacted by Hispanic Link struggled to list Hispanics in leadership positions, saying they had few or none. Of more than 1,400 groups in the coalition called United for Peace and Justice, only a small percentage are Latino-oriented, and the 29-member steering committee has no Latinos, concedes Leslie Cagan, national coordinator.

“There should be. That’s a weakness on our part,” Cagan says.

“The history of antiwar work is that a lot of organizations are white or predominantly white, and we’re struggling to be more multiracial.”

One reason for the low representation may be the military’s success at recruiting Hispanics, says Rafael Sencion, lead organizer of Latinos and Latinas for Peace and Justice, in New York City.

Some Hispanic youths see the Army as a quick way out of rough neighbor-hoods~ he suggests.

Latinos Against the War highlights that issue on its Web site’ bashing the government for “Affi rmative Action programs that heavily and discriminatorily recruit our youth into the military.”

Neighborhoods themselves might even discourage young Latinos from protesting the war, Sencion says’ if young Hispanics don’t see the bigger picture outside their own communities.

Language barriers may discourage them from joining non-Hispanic anti-war groups, he observes.

But, Sencion quickly adds, “Participation is very alive and I think that the Latino community in New York is very much against the war.
­Hispanic Link.

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Cuban and Brazilian dance fusion

by Juliet Blalack

Cubahía­Cubahía

The music and dance of Brazil and Cuba come to life in Cubahia! On Nov. 17, Cubahia! will be at Laney College Theater at 900 Fallon St, Oakland starting at 8 p.m. It will show again on Dec. 2 at 7:30 p.m. at Florence Gould Theatre, Palace of the Legion of Honor, 34th Ave. and Clement St. Tickets are $24 advance and $27 at the door. Call 800-504-4849 to buy tickets, and call 510-528-5306 or visit www.brasarte.com para mas información for more information.

MILK CLUB hosts state senate debate

All of the announced candidates for state senate district 3 are scheduled to debate at the State Building’s Milton Marks Auditorium, 455 Golden Gate Ave., in San Francisco on Nov. 17 from 3-5 p.m. Contact Howard Grayson for more information 415-860-5809.

Che Guevara remembered forum

Ernesto 'Che' GuevaraErnesto ‘Che’ Guevara

Educator Eduardo Martínez Zapata will examine Che Guevara’s life as a socialist leader. A Cuban dinner will be served before the forum at 5:30 p.m. for $8.50 (sliding scale available). The forum costs $2 and beings at 7 p.m. on Nov. 17, at New Valencia Hall, 625 Larkin St., Ste. 202. For more information call 415-730-2917 or email bafsp@yahoo.com.

City College faculty art exhibit

Curators will display City College (Fort Mason Campus) Faculty Members’ artworks in the Coffee Gallery from Nov. 19 to Jan. 22. The gallery is located in the lobby of Building B, Fort Mason Art Campus at Laguna St. and Marina Blvd. The exhibit is free. For further information, please call the Fort Mason Art Campus at (415) 561-1840.

Indigenous artists from California, the larger U.S., and Palestine display multimedia works.

The SoMA Arts Center is displaying Internal Exile: Palestine/Israel, Indian Country/USA, Mexico/ California, a multimedia art exhibit connecting the struggles of indigenous people across countries. These works of Israeli, Palestinian, Native, Chicano and Latino artists may be viewed for free during gallery hours. Musicians and poets will perform for the opening Nov. 19 from 5: 30-9 p.m. Artists will speak on a panel “A Celebration of Resistance” Nov. 28 from 7-9 p.m. For both events, $10-20 is requested but not required. Please contact Susan Greene at 415-271-0576 or www.breakthesilencearts.typepad.com.

Modern Australian circus comes to Berkeley

Circus Oz combines an eclectic mix of original live music, daring stunts, trapeze, adagio and juggling,

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Dominican singer wins all the awards he was nominated for

by Antonio Mejías-Rentas

Juan Luis GuerraJuan Luis Guerra

HIGH ROLLER: Juan Luis Guerra followed an emotional tribute by his peers by winning fi ve Latin Grammy awards last week in Las Vegas.

The Dominican singer songwriter took all the awards for which he was nominated and swept the top three categories of Recording’ Album and Song of the Year.

He was recognized for La llave de mi corazón, an album whose title track was ­a radio hit. The track marked a signifi cant comeback for the veteran artist. It was also named Best Tropical Song. The album was also chosen in the Merengue category.

“It’s my most romantic album’”, said Guerra said.

“They are all love songs. inspired by my love for my wife Nora.” La llave de ml corazón won a sixth Grammy in the engineering category.

The Nov. 8 ceremony at the Mandalay Bay Resort—the fi rst time in eight years it was held in Las Vegas—was broadcast nationally by Univisión.

A day before, the Latin Recording Academy held several tributes to veteran artists’ including the Person of the Year dinner for Guerra.

Singers from all musical genres sang many of the best known compositions by the artist, who was also recog­nized for his charity work.

After performances by Ricky Martin’ Lucero and Carlos Vives, among others, Panamanian singer songwriter Ruben Blades handed Guerra his award.

I’m honored to be your friend and your colleague’” said Blades’ who currently serves as his country’s Minister of Tourism.

Ricky MartinRicky Martin

Also on Nov. 7, the Latin Academy geve its Lifetime Achievement and Trustees Awards to nine distinguished recording artists, most with careers that span several decades.

Launching a week full of related Latin Grammy activities was a fundraiser dinner and auction at the Nov. 6 Las Vegas premiere of Love in the Time of Cholera for the Pies Descalzos Foundation created by Shekira.

The Colombian singer-songwriter performed her songs from the film’s soundtrack, including one, Pienso en ti, chosen by director Mike Newell.

“It’s a song I wrote when I was 17 and I think it symbolizes the longing of a love’” she said The fi lm is based on the Gabriel García Marquez novel El amor en los tiempos del cólera.

Shakira said she was encouraged by the Colombian Nobel laureate to perform in the fi lm, which opens theatrically in the United States this week.
­Hispanic Link.

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San Mateo complex opens discounted doors to the 55+

by Juliet Blalack

Arnold SchwarzeneggerArnold Schwarzenegger

Nazareth Place, located in downtown San Mateo, is offering condominiums to active adults over 55 years old, according to a company press release.

Nazareth is selling studio and one bedroom condos for prices from $199,000 to $339,950. The company also works with The Bay Area Homebuyer Agency to access loans for potential homebuyers.

California air resources board takes a breather from EPA power battle

The state air resources board has decided to delay a lawsuit against the Environmental Protection Agency.

The state was trying to obtain the power to regulate emissions from new cars. In April, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled the federal EPA has the authority to regulate such matters. According to a press release the state is delaying the lawsuit requesting a waiver from EPA control that the federal courts would have to grant.

“Governor Schwarzenegger believes the state and federal government should remain focused on the southern California wildfi res. We have decided to postpone fi ling the lawsuit until the fi res are under control and the victims are on the road to recovery,” said Mary Nichols, chair of the air resources board.

Governor appoints San Diego Latino to Psychology Board

Alex CaleroAlex Calero

Alex Calero, 31, of San Diego, was appointed to the State Board of Psychology by Gov. Schwarzenegger. Since 2005, he has served as staff counsel in the enforcement division for the California Department of Corporations. Previously, Calero was a law clerk for the Law Office of Danny Brace in 2005 and held the same position for the California State Attorney General’s Office in 2004. Prior to that, he served as a legislative aid for Assemblymember Bill Leonard’s Offi ce from 2000 to 2001. This position does not require Senate confi rmation and the compensation is $100 per diem. Calero is registered decline-to-state.

Puerto Rican rums target U.S. Market

Rums of Puerto Rico ­launched a new $2.2 million marketing and advertising campaign in the United States entitled “Here.” The campaign was developed by Group LIH in San Juan, P.R.

The campaign began late October with ten 15- second television commercials produced by Alfa Recording Studio in San Juan. Each spot will feature a Puerto Rican celebrity speaking about a different aspect of Puerto Rican rum, including the history, tradition, location, quality, leadership in sales and the versatility of rum, according to a marketwire article.­

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“Oh, shut up!” said the King

­by José de la Isla

HOUSTON—Confronting Venezuela President Hugo Chávez during a plenary session of the XVII Ibero-American Summit, held in Santiago de Chile this month, King Juan Carlos of Spain, told the Venezuelan to bug-off, in so many words.

The incident occurred when Spanish President José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero had the floor. Chávez interrupted a second time.

In his first interruption, Chávez denounced Spain’s former president José María Aznar. Rodríguez Zapatero cut in while Chávez revealed a conversation he had with Aznar during the former president’s 2002 trip to Venezuela.

Chávez finished the statement, saying, “A snake is more human than a fascist or a racist; a tiger is more human than a fascist or a racist.”

Rodríguez Zapatero called for some respect for the ex-president. “It’s possible to be diametrically opposed to an ideological position and it’s not I who is close to Aznar’s ideas, but he was elected by the Spanish people and I demand that respect.“

Chávez interrupted, claiming his right to express  his opinions.

“Of course. Of course,” said Rodríguez Zapatero. But Chávez continued making interjections. King Juan Carlos, who was leaning back in a chair next to Rodríguez Zapatero, reared forward, his patience tried. Visibly upset, he faced Chávez at the end of the table and three panelists away, and raised his hand in Chávez’s direction.

He then made his now-famous vituperation, “Why don’t you shut up!”

That’s when Chilean President Michelle Bachelet called for tabling private conversations. Now with Nicaragua’s President Daniel Ortega starting to criticize Spanish companies, as had Chávez the day before, the King decided to leave the session. Cuba Vice President Carlos Lage said in Venezuela’s defense that an attack on Spain’s former president was not an attack on the King or on Spain’s current government.

Minutes later, King Juan Carlos returned to attend the closing ceremony at the urging of Michelle Bachelet, who went out looking for him.

Not willing to let sleeping dogs lie at the closing ceremony, Chávez brought up Spanish colonialism as responsible for “the greatest genocide known in the history of our people.” He added Juan Carlos “might be king but he can’t make me shut up.”

In 2003 Chávez had compared Aznar, Spain’s former president, as imperious for saying Chávez ought to not duplicate Cuba’s experience in Venezuela. Then in May 2005, Aznar, who was out of offi ce and visiting Brazil, criticized Venezuela’s relationship with Cuba. Chávez compared Aznar to Hitler and called him a fascist and an “imbecile.”

Two years ago, because of the Venezuelan’s close association with Castro, Aznar called Chávez a threat to democracy in Latin America. He also attributed Chavez’s brashness to domestic failures softened by $60 a barrel oil revenues padding Venezuela’s coffers.

In October 2006, Aznar again called Chávez-brand populism and radicalism a threat to Latin America. In April of this year, Chávez remarked that it’s better to have nothing to do with people like Aznar, telling a group of students that Aznar had supported the attempted coup against him in 2002 and supported the U.S. invasion of Iraq.

Throughout the 1990s and to the present, Spanish corporations have been the leading European investors in Latin America. So much so their commercial interests are sometimes referred to as the re-conquest.

While he was at it, Chávez included Mexico’s Vicente Fox and Peru ex- presidents Alejandro Toledo as “lackeys and puppy dogs of the empire.”

While Hugo Chávez was making his fi nal remarks at the closing ceremony at the National Stadium in Santiago de Chile, Cuba Vice President Carlos Lage handed him his cell phone. Fidel was calling.

Fidel, Chávez told the audience, was remembering the Chilean combat volunteers who died fi ghting Nicaraguan dictator Anastasio Somoza. Chávez called on the crowd to send out a cheer to Castro. “¡Fidel, Fidel! What is it he has the imperialists can’t handle.” Maybe it was their last hoorah.

But the multitudes — the nerve endings of economic statistics and commercial strategies — the consumers and workers talked about at forums, they are the ones just now finding a voice and who won’t shut up.

[José de la Isla, author of “The Rise of Hispanic Political Power” (Archer Books, 2003) writes a weekly commentary for Hispanic Link News Service. E-mail ­joseisla3@yahoo.com]. © 2007

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The real victims of immigration rais

by Raúl Reyes

Earlier this year, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents burst into a factory in New Bedford, Mass., and rounded up more than 300 undocumented immigrants for detention and deportation. In the ensuing chaos, many parents were afraid to give information about their children, fearing that they would be arrested too.

Some children were literally left behind, including a breast-feeding baby who refused a bottle and had to be hospitalized for dehydration. Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick termed the aftermath of the raid “a humanitarian crisis.”

ICE statistics show such roundups are on the rise. The number of workplace arrests rose from less than 500 in 2002 to over 3600 in 2006. By a huge margin, these were mostly administrative arrests, aimed at people lacking proper documentation, as opposed to those who had committed a crime.

Now a study by the Urban Institute, a nonpartisan research center, has documented the raids’ negative impact on children. It found that the number of children separated from their parents was significant. For every two undocumented workers arrested, one child was left behind. In the wake of ICE raids, children were found to suffer from health disorders, psychological trauma and economic instability, The Urban Institute noted that most were in fact U.S. citizens or legal residents.

According to the Pew Center, there are 5 million children with at least one undocumented parent. In 2005, two-thirds of these (64 percent) were U.S. citizens, 37 percent were five and younger, and 65 percent were ten and younger. So it follows that the immigration raids are directly affecting some of the youngest and most vulnerable.

The ICE raids seem especially harsh considering that the public favors a path to legalization for the 12 million undocumented workers already here. In separate polls taken this year by ABC, CBS, Los Angeles Times/Bloomberg, FOX, and Pew, a majority have consistently supported the idea of allowing undocumented workers to obtain citizenship.

To be sure, undocumented parents put their own children at risk by bringing them here illegally, or by remaining here themselves. But children should not be punished for the sins of their parents, nor should the immigration status of parents doom a child’s future. Safeguarding all children — regardless of their immigration status — should be a paramount goal of our society.

The Urban Institute recommended the government adopt clear guidelines for releasing arrested parents to their kids, and that Congress hold hearings on the conse quences of the ICE raids. However, I fi nd the notion of armed offi cers breaking down doors and making mass arrests to be consistent with a police state.

We are never going to deport the millions of undocumented workers currently in the country. What is the point of arresting a few hundred here and there if it is causing long-term harm to our children? ICE should stop the raids. And if they must continue them, they should concentrate on criminal arrests.

While it’s a fact that the U.S. immigration system is broken, these roundups only make the problem worse by creating a climate of fear among immigrants and driving them further into the shadows. Our country has to move beyond our “enforcement only” approach if we are ever going to solve this crisis. It’s time to demand 21st century solutions to our ongoing problem, not more zealous arrests that put children at risk.

(Raúl Reyes is an attorney in New York City. Reach him at rarplace@aol.com­). ­©2007

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“Subprime” lending mortgages: an injustice

by Marvin J Ramirez

Marvin RamirezMarvin Ramirez

A recent foreclosure study shows a dramatic injustice done to minorities.

­While the losses stand to hit Oakland with more than $875 million, national losses could exceed $25 billion. And what is more highlighted in this study is the racial disparities in the so called, high-cost sub-prime lending.

It would seem that is all a fraud, purposely perpetrated against hard-working people, especially people of color.

I call it fraud because I’ve heard in news accounts, that the banks or lenders, which at night pay each other with promissory notes and not with Federal Reserve Notes (cash dollars), have been putting pressure on mortgage appraisers, to inflate home prices. And this means that if you bought a home at a certain high price, you could’ve paid an illusionary price – not real. However, in your pocket is real. And many like you, might now be about to lose what you called for a short period of time, your home.

It’s been a piece-of-cake deal for the lenders, who probably, in private, divide the profits sucked in from those despaired dreamers of owning their own home by charging them more than what the real value is.

Not only many people are losing their home after the bubbled mortgages hit the ceiling, but in the middle of this scheme, entire neighborhoods are being broken up by the displacement of working families.

According to the ACORN study, the real costs communities incur when high foreclosure rates spawn is that they derelict buildings and depress residential and commercial property values.

“Neighborhoods with concentrated foreclosures experience higher rates of violent crime and artificially decreased property values, placing additional costs and maintenance burdens on local governments and devaluing the assets of neighbors – even those in good financial standing,” says the study.

As ACORN recommends, the rules of lending should change, or we will continue being banks’ slaves.

Loans should be modifi ed into a fi xed rate loan based on the borrower’s capacity to repay the mort­gage. This could stop the abuse and bring peace to families. But this can only happens if laws are passed for this purpose.

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Study shows achievement gaps, resource disparities in state’s public schools

by Billy Blackwell II

Mission High School, built in 1926, was declared a landmark in June 7, 2006­Mission High School, built in 1926, was declared a landmark in June 7, 2006

Even as stan­dardized test scores across the board rise, Latinos, along with African- North Americans, students have been consistently underperforming white and Asian students in reading and math tests. This gap in achievement, which has been going on for decades, is now the focus of statewide and national concern.

“In a state with 6.3 million public school students — nearly half of whom are Hispanic, 25 percent still learning the English language and 40 percent struggling against poverty — closing the achievement gap is essential to a secure future,” California’s State Superintendent of Public Education Jack O’Connell said.

A new report tackles the issue and O’Connell invited San Francisco Unified School District Superintendent Carlos García as one of the educators, community and business leaders to speak to an estimated 4,000 attendees at a two-day summit this week to discuss the issue.

­According to O’Connell, his is a complicated and controversial issue that won’t be solved overnight or even during his administration.

Jennie OakesJennie Oakes

The achievement gap has often been discussed as a culture issue that lays the problem back at the feet of the under-performing communities, which caused  researchers at UCLA to respond.

“So many people seem to respond to this discussion as if there was a cultural problem, as if there much be something wrong with African-North American and Latino communities that makes them score lower on standardized tests,” said Professor Jeannie Oakes, Director of UC ACCORD and Co-Director of UCLA’s Institute for Democracy, Education and Access, co-author of the 2007 Education Opportunity Report. “California’s white students also score far lower than white students throughout the state, although nobody seems to be asking why white students are scoring so low.”

The problem started almost 30 years ago when Californians voted in Proposition 13, which capped property taxes, according to Professor John Rogers, co-director of UCLA’s IDEA and co-author of the report.

Carlos GarcíaCarlos García

“California is spending less money on its students that most states and the results are that all students are falling behind,” Rogers said.

The 2007 Education Opportunity Report examined unequal educational achievement in light of the conditions in public schools. Supplemental reports show that throughout the public school system Latino and African-North American communities suffer disproportionately from lack of school funding, leaving them with more overcrowded classrooms, fewer qualified teachers and not enough college preparatory courses.

“The achievement gap is mirrored by an opportunity gap for Latinos and African Americans,” researchers said. When they looked at the data throughout the state, drops in test scores by Latino were mirrored lack of basic fundamental educational resources. Low-test scores in Latino and African American communities happened in areas in school where they received fewer resources, according to the reseachers.

  • 35 percent of Latino students attend overcrowded high schools, which is almost twice as many as white high school student.
  • Latino students are two and a half times more likely than white students and three times more likely than Asian students to experience serious shortages of qualified teachers.
  • 65 percent of Latino students attend high schools with too few college preparatory courses for all students to enroll in college preparatory curriculum.

“These research results demonstrate that closing the opportunities gap faced by African American and Latino students will have tremendous benefits for the state as a whole,” Oakes said.

The two-day Achievement Gap Summit in Sacramento this week marks the first time a comprehensive statewide effort has been made to focus on why the gap exists and develop sustainable, systematic solutions for closing it.

The Summit is part of a yearlong effort by O’Connell, in partnership with the California Department of Education, educators, researchers and community leaders through the  state and nation to focus on this controversial issue.

SFUSD Superintendent García spoke on a panel of Latino and African-North American school superintendents to discuss this controversial issue. He is a member of O’Connell’s P-16 council, a statewide assembly of education, business, and community leaders charged with developing strategies to better coordinate, integrate, and improve education for preschool through college students.­

García told El Report­ero that several programs have been put in place to provide additional resources to underperforming schools in his district. And even though performance among SFUSD students improved overall, the achievement gap keeps widening. For example, in 2001, 15 percent of Latino students in SFUSD were profi cient and 33 percent of all students were profi cient in the district overall. In 2007, 28 percent of Latino students were profi cient and 49 percent of all students were profi cient, García said.

 

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