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Immigration debate rancor threatens everyone

by Janet Murguía

It was hard not to notice the tone of the uproar which led to the demise of immigration reform legislation earlier this summer. Immigrants were accused of everything from crime to loose morals to bringing leprosy to our shores.

But when concerns are raised that the air was becoming ugly and dangerously anti-Latino, talk-show hosts and legislators took pains to say that their problem is with illegal immigrants, that they have nothing against those here legally or with the larger ethnic groups that they are a part of.

In short, they insisted that this is not about race but about the problem of illegality.

As the feedback we’ve received at the National Council of La Raza since that time and at our national conference last month clearly demonstrate, Latinos aren’t buying that explanation.

What started out as a debate on immigration has turned into something far larger and far uglier.

Everyone in this nation should heed what is occurring. Less than a month went by after immigration reform failed for majorities in both the House and Senate to vote for proposals that attacked not illegal immigrants, but those legally in the United States and even those who have become naturalized citizens.

The most egregious of these was an amendment offered on the Senate floor in July by Senator John Ensign (R-Nevada) which was framed as a restriction on Social Security benefits to anyone who was once undocumented; yet it would have made every foreign-born person (think Madeleine Albright, or Henry Kissinger, or every refugee from the second world war, Southeast Asia or Cuba) prove their immigration status for every moment of their work history in order to receive Social Security benefits.

If they were out of status for one single day, the fact that they paid into the system would be irrelevant. The government would keep the money they contributed over the years and, of course, they would be rendered ineligible for Social Security.

This shocking amendment received 57 votes — more than enough to pass. Fortunately, a procedural requirement prevented it from becoming law, at least for now.

This is not an isolated case. Similar amendments have already been proposed in the House and Senate affecting housing programs, food stamps and other social policies. Many have already passed. Documentation requirements recently added to the Medicaid program – aimed at immigrants but requiring paperwork from every person seeking to use the program – have resulted in delays and denial of services to elderly U.S. residents who are eligible but may not have the documents readily available to prove it.

The argument in favor of these proposals is entirely without merit. Legislators are placing restrictions on programs already off limits to undocumented immigrants. These proposals just affect legal immigrants and U.S. citizens.

The problem is even worse in local jurisdictions as the vacuum in congressional action on immigration reform is filled by state and local governments looking for ways to address the issue.

Prince William County in Virginia recently passed a law which requires local police to act as immigration agents. County officials are meeting now to determine whether to check documents of people using public libraries, parks and swimming pools. In Georgia, sheriffs’ departments regularly set up roadblocks for the sole purpose of stopping persons who look Mexican and scrutinizing their documents.

This pattern is repeating across the country at an alarming rate.

Add to this a wave of hate and mean-spiritedness on the airwaves and you begin to understand why we don’t believe the concerns have to do with illegality. Numerous verbal attacks on the radio have led to or accompanied a well-documented resurgence in hate groups and crimes.

Hispanic Americans are increasingly outraged that we are suspect everywhere we go, constantly asked to prove we belong in our own home. We see our beloved country in danger of becoming something we hardly recognize – a place so eager to hound those whose “crime” is coming to the United States to work, that the country seems to be rushing to undercut every other value we hold dear. A poll conducted last year by the Pew Hispanic Center found more than half of this country’s Latinos reporting that discrimination against them has increased because of the immigration debate.

Latinos are extremely upset at being singled out as targets, but we sense urgency. We are the canary in the coal mine, sending a warning to our country that it is teetering on something that harms us all. Those who think the rancorous immigration debate does not affect everyone are sorely mistaken. For Latinos, it is obvious that we cannot stand on the sidelines. The sooner that becomes obvious to the rest of the country, the better.

(This is the first in a series of monthly commentaries written for Hispanic Link News Service by Janet Murguía, president of the National Council of La Raza, the largest Hispanic advocacy and civil rights organization in the United States).

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The state must and should assist homeowners

by Marvin J. Ramirez

Marvin J. RamirezMarvin J. Ramirez

The damage is done now, after greed and excessive ambition hit its highest levels. The ‘get a real estate license and become a millionaire overnight or buy a home at ridicule, illusionary price, and wait for a couple of y­ears for the price to go up,’ it’s over.

Predatory lending is to blame. Lenders got their money from the bank, and while everyone else in the business chain got their huge profits, innocent people got stuck with a debt not even five working families together could afford to pay. And all of this was done without governmental supervision and protection to consumers.

However, a California reinvestment coalition is calling upon state leaders to protect homeowners, and families from predatory lending.

“I am here out of concern for the 500,000 or more Californians who may lose their homes as a result of irresponsible lending. California has had the most foreclosures in the nation and six California cities were among the nation’s ten cities with the highest foreclosure rates in June,” said Alan Fisher, executive director of the California Reinvestment Coalition (CRC).

The statement was made on Aug. 21 at the California State Senate Banking, Finance & Insurance Committee’s informational hearing on homeownership preservation in today’s mortgage market.

“The loss of home ownership is just the first step in the economic and human impact of this crisis. If homes go vacant, neighborhoods lose value. There is a domino effect causing other homes become in danger of foreclosure as they lose value. All these homeowners become more financially stretched and retail sales drop. Cities lose revenue and employment decreases,” said the statement.

If the state doesn’t assist homeowners during this crisis, then it can be accused of being an accomplice in this crime. The Governor and the Legislature must help families, which consequently will help the economy of the state.

 

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Emeryville orders Woodfin Hotel to pay workers back wages

by Juliana Birnbaum Fox

Workers score a win: Workers and labor activists celebrate after a judge ruled in their favor against Woodfin HotelWorkers score a win – ­Workers and labor activists celebrate after a judge ruled in their favor against Woodfin Hotel (photo courtesy of working East Bay)­

The Emeryville City Council voted unanimously in a special hearing on August 27th, ordering the Woodfin Suites Hotel to pay about $300,000 in fines and back wages to workers. In a milestone for the protracted battle between the hotel and its housekeeping staff which has brought immigrant and living wage issues to the forefront of city politics, the Council’s rejection of the Woodfinís appeal of an earlier decision is final.

After a rally outside the city hall, over 200 workers, supporters and activists packed the hearing, crowding both of the hall’s chambers and the overflow basement. For months, workers and activists have picketed the hotel, demanding that the company pay back wages to housekeepers who were illegally underpaid under the Cityís living wage law.

The Woodfin has until September 14th to pay the wages and the fines, though they have announced that they wonít accept this decision. If the hotel refuses to obey, Emeryville would have to sue to make them pay.

The saga at the hotel began last Dec. 11 when the hotel put 21 immigrant workers on two-week paid leave after workers demanded that the hotel comply with Emeryville’s 2005 living wage ordinance. It then fired the workers, claiming that their Social Security numbers did not match government records. Earlier this year, the city of Emeryville conducted an investigation of the workers’ claims that they were retaliated against and that they are owed a substantial amount of back wages.

“This is not charity these are wages that the workers earned for themselves and deserve to be paid,” said Brooke Anderson, Organizing Director at the East Bay Alliance for a Sustainable Economy, speaking to KTVU news.

Luz, who worked at Woodfin for 3 years and has become a spokesperson on the issue, said that for years the hotel never questioned her immigration status, until the workers began to ask that the hotel comply with the city wage regulations. When Woodfin fired the 21 workers, it justified the action by saying that they were afraid of Immigration, though it was later revealed that the hotel had used its influence with the Republican party to call in the immigration authorities themselves. Woodfin’s lawyer Bruno Katz, who was escorted out of the hearing at one point for speaking out of turn, made a statement backing up the hotel’s actions as an effort to comply with Immigration and C  For the past two decades employers have threatened, and often implemented, similar terminations across the nation.

“Firings for no-match discrepancies are a misuse of the Social Security database,” reported David Bacon in The Nation. “Employers have used those efforts as pretexts to discharge employees when they organize unions, demand better wages and try to enforce labor standards, or simply to replace higher-paid workers with lower-paid ones.”

“We do not have the workers our economy needs to keep growing each year,” U.S. Commerce Secretary Carlos M. Gutierrez said at a recent press conference. “The demographics simply are not on our side. Ultimately, Congress will have to pass comprehensive immigration reform.”­

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Chávez unveils constitutional reform in Venezuela

by the El Reportero news services

Hugo ChávezHugo Chávez

After months of speculation since his decisive electoral triumph in December 2006, Venezuela’s President Hugo Chávez finally presented the details of his proposed constitutional reform last week.

The reform, drawn up under the enabling law he passed at the turn of the year, which granted the executive full powers to legislate in key areas, is designed to enshrine the concept of 21st century socialism into a new constitution by 2008.

Chávez presented the constitutional reform to the 167-seat national assembly, which unanimously approved it in the first of three readings on 21 August. It will then be presented to the Venezuelan people in the form of a referendum.

Chavez’s largesse unprecedented in Latin America

TOOLS CARACAS, Venezuela – Laid-off Brazilian factory workers have their jobs back, Nicaraguan farmers are getting low-interest loans and Bolivian mayors can afford new health clinics, all thanks to Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez. Bolstered by windfall oil profits, Chavez’s government is now offering more direct state funding to Latin America and the Caribbean than the United States.

A tally by the Associated Press shows Venezuela has pledged more than $8.8 billion in aid, financing and energy funding so far this year. While the most recent figures available from Washington show $3 billion in U.S. grants and loans reached the region in 2005, it isn’t known how much of the Venezuelan money has actually been delivered. And Chavez’s spending abroad doesn’t come close to the overall volume of U.S. private investment and trade in Latin America. But in terms of direct government funding, the scale of Venezuela’s commitments is unprecedented for a Latin American country.

Opposition swings again at Ecuador’s Correa

On 23 August the supreme court asked congress to strip President Rafael Correa of his immunity so that he could be tried for criminal libel. Congress is unlikely to give the supreme court permission to try the president but it may well use the threat to force President Correa not to dissolve congress as soon as the constituent assembly is elected. The constituent assembly elections are on 30 September, and Correa as become increasingly outspoken about congress, calling it a sewer that needs to be shut down. Even some of Correa’s supporters fear that without congress there will be no checks of the executive.

Realignment in the Mercosur

The past month saw a realignment in the Mercosur, the South American customs union with ambitions of becoming a political alliance. It all started with the successive visits of the Argentine and Brazilian Presidents, Néstor Kirchner and Lula da Silva, to Mexico.

The visits brought Mexico closer to the Mercosur, but also revealed differences between Argentina and Brazil. Lula also embarked on a tour of Central America and the Caribbean, prompting the Venezuelan President, Hugo Chávez, to take a counter-tour to strengthen his position in South America. Chávez had a clear advantage over Lula in their struggle for infl uence in the region. Yet a Venezuelan link to an Argentine scandal has offset this balance.

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Boxing

Saturday, September 8 – at Los Angeles (HBO PPV) –

  • 12 rounds, super middleweights: Fernando Vargas (26-4, 22 KOs) vs. Ricardo Mayorga (28-6-1, 23 KOs);
  • 12 rounds, light middleweights: Luis Collazo (27-3, 13 KOs) vs. Sharmba Mitchell (57-6, 30 KOs);
  • 12 rounds, light middleweights: Daniel Santos (30-3-1, 21 KOs) vs. Jose Antonio Rivera (38-5-1, 24 KOs);
  • 12 rounds, light heavyweights: Paul Briggs (26-3, 18 KOs) vs. Hugo Hernan Garay (28-2, 15 KOs).

Saturday, September 15 – at Las Vegas (HBO)-

  • 12 rounds, WBC super featherweight title: Juan Manuel Marquez (47-3-1, 35 KOs) vs. Marco Antonio Barrera (63-5, 42 KOs);
  • 10 rounds, middleweights: Kassim Ouma (25-3-1, 15 KOs) vs.Sergio Mora (19-4, 4 KOs).

Saturday, September 22 at Munich, Germany –

  • 12 rounds, heavyweights, Vitali Klitschko (35-2, 34 KOs) vs. Jameel McCline (38-7-3, 23 KOs).

Saturday, September 29 – at TBA (Showtime) –

  • 12 rounds, WBC heavyweight title: Oleg Maskaev (34-5, 26 KOs) vs. Samuel Peter (28-1, 22 KOs).

Saturday, October 6 – at Vancouver –

  • 12 rounds, super featherweights: Manny Pacquiao (44-3-2, 35 KOs) vs. Humberto Soto (42-5-2, 26 KOs).
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Scholars tell PBS: disclose new Burns’ footage

by Salome Eguizabal

Several organizations and distinguished scholars have added their voices to the Defend the Honor campaign to press the Public Broadcasting Service and Ken Burns to disclose what additional footage has been 5included in his World War II documentary.

This, they say, is essential for them to evaluate the TV documentary’s representation of Latinos.

The first episode in the series of seven programs is scheduled to air Sept. 23, coinciding with Hispanic Heritage month.

Eleven Latino organizations and 52 individuals— 18 of whom hold Ph.D.s—released a public statement Aug. 20 emphasizing that the issue is far from resolved and they will continue pressing for a solution The campaign expects the list of supporters to grow in the upcoming weeks.

The list includes prominent Latino figures such as author Sandra Cisneros, former FCC commissioner Gloria Tristani and former California Congressman Esteban Torres.

Besides requesting a meeting with PBS and Ken Burns to discuss the new material, the advocates are demanding an explanation as to how the network plans to incorporate Latino perspectives in future projects.

Burns’ documentary initially excluded any mention of Hispanic participation in the war.

In response to constant public pressure, Burns says he has added 28 minutes to the series, featuring interviews with two Hispanics Marines and one Native American.

“We want to see how the Latino experience is depicted,” Gus Chávez, co-chair of the Defend the Honor campaign, told Weekly Report. “We do not know how an add-on piece of less than 25 minutes of footage covering Latinos can be representative.”

Burns said in early May he would include the additional footage following talks with the American Gl Forum and the Hispanic Association on Corporate Responsibility. The Forum chapter in San Antonio now has joined with the Defend the Honor campaign.

“Ken Burns cannot choose to make a secret deal with only two of the many Latino groups that were involved in discussion with him and PBS, and then claim that the matter is resolved,” stated Marta Garcia, a co-founder of Defend the Honor.

Jess Quintero, president of the Hispanic War Veterans of America—another advocacy group in the forefront of this issue— told Weekly Report that PBS’s World War II project has so far failed Hispanic and Native American veterans.

“We feel that by not including the contributions of Latinos and Native Americans, Mr. Burns and PBS are practicing media exclusion,” said Quintero, adding that, “We are intent on continuing to press the issue even after the so-called documentary airs.”

Quintero called on PBS in the future to: 1) Make a commitment to projects that are inclusive and equal, 2) to tell the truth, and 3) to implement review boards to assess the fairness and inclusion of their planned programming.

“If the history of the United States is to be told’ let it be told inclusively of those Hispanic and Native American warriors who fought so bravely,” Quintero said.

Other advocates expressed the hope that regardless of how the current issue with “The War” concludes, the Latino protests over exclusion will force PBS to adhere to better standards for future projects.

“PBS will never again exclude Latinos when it comes to making programming of this magnitude because they continue to be criticized by the Latino community at large,” Chávez said. “This has become the core issue of the year.”

Chávez said Defend the Honor continues to write letters to companies that are promoting the documentary.

“We want to let them know what they’re being accomplices to.”

Hispanic Link.

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The Key to the City for Barry Bonds

by Edgar Martínez

Homage to Barry Bonds: Barry Bonds receives the Key to the City from San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom at Justin Herman Plaza. ( PHOTO BY MARVIN J. RAMIREZ )Homage to Barry Bonds Barry Bonds receives the Key to the City from San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom at Justin Herman Plaza. (photo by Marvin J. Ramirez)

In the middle of a day of a radiant summer sun in the Justin Herman Plaza, the greatest home runner of history, Barry Bonds, was honored majestically and delivered the Keys to the City of San Francisco by San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom before almost a thousand people.

Newsom, praised and stood out the 15 years of Bonds with the San Francisco Giants and his prowess breaking the record with 755 home runs that Hank Aaron held for 33 years.

Holding with mu­ch effort, Larry Bear, the vice-president of the Giants, delivered him – without giving it to him, since it weight very much – the home plate that Bonds trod when he batted his home run 756 last August 7 at the AT&T Park of San Francisco.

Bonds, considered by some a hero and for others a “a suspect” of reaching glory using prohibited substances – although nothing has been proved yet – and being in the middle of an investigation that still does not end – walked amid applauses to the podium to thank for the homage.

Un niño fanático de Bonds lleva una camisa de Bonds y toma una foto con su cámara en la Plaza Justin HermanA child Bonds fun wears a Bonds shirt and gets a shot with his camera at Justin Herman Plaza. (photo by Marvin J. Ramirez)

“Fifteen years my friend, 15 years in this beautiful city, ” he said to the Giants team owner, Peter Magowan.

It was the way of Bonds of reminding him the passed time since he blessed him with a multimillionaire contract criticized by the press at the time, but with support from his deceased father Bobby Bonds and his godfather Willie Mays, two ex-giants of weight.

>Bonds, who remains divorced from the press, was per moments between sarcastic and haughty, especially when, after receiving the key, said to have had the keys all the time.

His teammates, Omar Vizquel and the New York-Rican Rich Aurilia gave the best support to their partner and friend with a good applauded speech.

The two baseball players backed him up qualifying him as an excellent partner, a simple person as there is no other one so tenderly that he loves cartoons on TV.

Among the present personalities were the ex mayor of San Francisco Willie Brown, the legends of the Hall of Fame Willie Mays and Willie Macovey, and ex-pitcher and now commentator of radio KNBR for The Giants, Mike Krukow.

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Guess whose birthday

Salvador Durán, Gerente General y CEO de la Cooperativa de Crédito Federal del: Área de la Misión, celebra su cumpleaños con miembros de su personal el 9 de agosto.Holding the cake, Salvador Durán, General Manager and CEO of the Mission Area Federal Credit Union celebrates his birthdate with co-workers on August 9. From left-right: Raquel Parra, Angelica Lozoya, Leidi Sanabria, Jessica Lozoya, Margaret Libby, and Dan Collins. In the back members of the Youth Credit Union Program. (photo by Marvin J. Ramírez)

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Radio Bilingüe presents “Chilefornia

por Juliana Birnbaum Fox

Nerio DegraciaNerio Degracia

El Nerio Degracia le trae una tarde de jazz latino puro, clásico, tocando su silófono como nadie más, acompañado
por Jaime Vanegas, uno de los percusionistas más finos en el Área de la Bahía (antiguo miembro del grupo de Latin Rock de los 70, Zorro) y Jack Gruber. En el Mantra restaurante
un lugar exclusivo de Palo Alto, todos los viernes a las 8 p.m. Gratis. Para más información visite: http://www.myspace.com/
neriodegracia1
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Radio Bilingüe presenta “Chilefornia

En el 30mo aniversario de la primera ola de exiliados chilenos que llegaron a California, Radio Bilingüe presenta una serie especial titulada “Chilefornia”. Esta serie cultural de diez programas se enfoca en la contribución de los inmijuntosgrantes chilenos y da inicio a la celebración del Mes de Herencia Latina Nacional.

“Chilefornia” es una serie de diez programas de 30 minutos en español, y se estrenará el Día del Trabajo el 3 de septiembre a las 9:00 AM PST en Radio Bilingüe. La serie terminará el viernes 14 de septiembre. Los programas se repetirán a partir del 17 de septiembre en el mismo horario. También estarán disponibles en vivo en el servicio de transmisión vía web de Radio Bilingüe en www.radiobilingue.org.

Jimmy Bosch trae “Salsa Dura” a Oakland

Jimmy Bosh in OaklandJimmy Bosh in Oakland

Jimmy Bosch, un talentoso trombonista e innovador de “Salsa Dura” contemporánea, una forma de Salsa avant-garde de Nueva York, se presentará en el Club Caribe de Oakland el jueves 30 de agosto. Bosch, quien ha hecho arreglos para la orquesta de Marc Anthony, actuará con Anthony Blea y su Charanga. Entre los invitados especiales se encuentran DJ Luis Medina de la reconocida Radio KPFA de SF. La fiesta comienza a las 9 pm en el Club Caribe en 1408 Calle Webster en Oakland, y las entradas valen $15 antes de las 10 pm y $20 después. Para más información llame al (510) 251-0769 o visite www.saboryritmo.com.

Mezcla de salsa clásica, cumbias y merengue en La Peña

Otro Mundo, una banda de 10 piezas que interpretará lo mejor de la salsa clásica, mezclando grandes cumbias y merengues, estará en el Centro Cultural La Peña de Berkeley el jueves 6 de septiembre. La banda cuenta con grandes vocales, ritmos apretados y una poderosa sección de trompetas. Los miembros de la banda se han reunido en el Área de la Bahía de todas partes de América para crear este excitante sonido. La presentación comenzará a las 8 pm; las entradas valen $10.

El viernes 7, La Peña presentará el estreno en Berkeley de War Made Easy, How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death. La película, narrada por Sean Penn, se enfoca en la manera que los medios han diseminados mensajes a favor de la guerra, distorsionando la historia y exagerando los hechos. Está basada en la investigación y el análisis realizado por el crítico de los medios, Norman Solomon, quien se encontrará en la presentación para una sesión de preguntas y respuestas.

El Centro Cultural La Peña está ubicado en 3105 Avenida Shattuck en Berkeley. Para más información llame al 510-849-2568 o vaya a www.lapena.org.

Tributo a Santana, Miembro Original José Chepito Areas

Un evento especial llamado “Tributo a una Leyenda Viviente”, que honraría a José Chepito Areas, un miembro original de la banda Santana, se realizó el 24 de agosto.

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The heaviest and most renowned singers to tour together

by Maira García

Juan GabrielJuan Gabriel

SUPERSTAR CONCERTS: Some of Latin America’s most renowned singers will tour together in a series of must-see concerts. Cardenas Marketing Network and Corona Extra have joined forces to bring the 2007 Corona Concert Series, which will feature Chayanne, Juan Gabriel, Marco Antonio Solís, Ana Gabriel, Joan Sebastian, and Pepe Aguilar.

The first concert kicked off Aug. 19 at the Houston Toyota Center with Joan Sebastian and Pepe Aguilar.

The next concert will feature Marco Antonio Solís Aug. 24 at the American Airlines Arena in Miami, Fla.

The concert series will make rounds in Illinois, New York and Georgia as well.

LATINO RAP: Los Angeles will play host Sept. 12-14 to the fifth annual Latin Rap Conference. The conference is an effort to educate and promote Hispanics in the music industry, as well as create a network of professionals.

The conference will feature seminars, showcases and plenty of parties. Confirmed attendees include MTV Tr3s, L.A. radio station Power 106 and mun2.

Among artists scheduled to perform are Kemo The Blaxican, Psych Realm and Frost.

LA LABOR: The Texas Folklife Gallery in Austin will host the paintings of Roel Flores, son of Mexican immigrants, starting Sept. 9.

The exhibition, titled La Labor: The Paintings of Roel Flores, will run through Dec. 21. Flores’ paintings integrate the struggles of migrant workers and field work and his love for music. He began picking cotton with his family at age 6, joined a conjunto band when he was 15 and began painting just 12 years ago.

His experiences as migrantworker and musician are illustrated throughout his work. A pre-opening party will be held Sept. 8 with Flores in attendance.

Tickets are $50. For more information regarding the event, contact Texas Folklife at (512) 441-9255 or email info@texasfolklife.org.

Hispanic Link.

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