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REQUEST FOR QUALIFICATIONS FOR ON-CALL TRANSPORTATION PLANNING SERVICES (RFQ 21/22-03)

REQUEST FOR QUALIFICATIONS FOR ON-CALL TRANSPORTATION
PLANNING SERVICES (RFQ 21/22-03)
Notice is hereby given that the San Francisco County Transportation Authority is
requesting statements of qualifications from qualified respondents to provide on-call transportation planning services on a task order basis. The full RFQ is posted on the Transportation Authority’s website, www.sfcta.org/contracting. Proposals are due to the Transportation Authority electronically to info@sfcta.org by December 15, 2021, 2:00 p.m. – El Reportero_11.19.21

OSHA Suspends Implemenation, Enforcement of Vaccine Mandate

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The Labor Department’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) says it has suspended the implementation and enforcement of the Biden administration’s COVID-19 vaccine mandate for private businesses.

The announcement came shortly after a U.S. appeals court rejected a challenge by the Biden administration on Nov. 12 and reaffirmed its decision to put on hold OSHA’s mandate, which requires that businesses with 100 employees or more ensure that workers either be vaccinated against COVID-19 by Jan. 4, 2022, or be tested weekly and wear a mask.

The 5th Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans stated in an opinion that OSHA’s mandate is “staggeringly overbroad,” and ordered it to “take no steps to implement or enforce the Mandate until further court order.”

The court had previously issued a temporary halt to the mandate on Nov. 6, pending litigation.

The Labor Department affirmed in a statement in recognition of the court’s ruling: “The court ordered that OSHA ‘take no steps to implement or enforce’ the ETS ‘until further court order.’ While OSHA remains confident in its authority to protect workers in emergencies, OSHA has suspended activities related to the implementation and enforcement of the ETS pending future developments in the litigation.”

At least 27 U.S. states, as well as private employers, religious organizations, and other groups, have sued the Biden administration, claiming that it’s exceeding its authority in issuing the mandate.

In the 5th Circuit Court’s reaffirmation on Nov. 12, it stated that the Biden administration’s vaccine mandate “raises serious constitutional concerns” and “likely exceeds the federal government’s authority.”

Biden administration officials didn’t immediately respond to a request by The Epoch Times for comment.

Meanwhile, White House officials have continued to call for employers to adhere to the vaccine mandate for private businesses, after the initial Nov. 6 ruling.

“We think people should not wait,” White House principal deputy press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre told reporters on Nov. 8, responding to a question on whether employers should hold off on requiring employees to be vaccinated after the court put the mandate on hold.

“We say: Do not wait to take actions that will keep your workplace safe,” Jean-Pierre said. “It is important and critical to do, and waiting to get more people vaccinated will lead to more outbreaks and sickness.”

Employers “should not wait” for legal matters to be resolved before adhering to Biden’s vaccine requirement, she said.

“They should continue to go—move forward and make sure that they’re getting their workplace vaccinated.”

Cal State rushes to increase graduation rate and lower first D and F grades

by Mikhail Zinshteyn

 

After her first year at Cal State San Francisco was interrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic, Marissa Ledesma fled campus and vowed never to return.

It wasn’t just the fast-spreading coronavirus that caused him trouble. Her entire first year was a failure, from an emotional and exhausting saga with her roommate to paying a lot more to live on a campus she called “an unhappy place.”

When classes were kept virtual for the entire 2020-21 school year, Ledesma enrolled in an online community college while she lived at her home in Bakersfield for her, “to remain silent while the world was working out,” she explained. she.

But after a year-long absence, she is a Cal State San Francisco student again this fall, and a success story that the school, and the entire 23-campus California State University system, hope to replicate by Thousands.

San Francisco State is an exemplar of a systemwide plan to bring back as many students as possible who dropped out during the pandemic. Cal State Chancellor Joseph Castro last month named re-enrollment as one of the key pillars to meet the system’s ambitious 2025 graduation goals. He wants campuses starting in the spring to target students who stopped attending classes, with an emphasis on students of color and those who are low-income.

The system has dramatically increased its six-year graduation rates – in the past six years, it has risen from 57 percent to 63 percent, with a goal of 70 percent by 2025. But dropouts from the COVID era could sink those. minute advances.

Another pillar of boosting graduation rates: the review of vital great courses where a higher percentage of low-income students and students of color receive D and F grades. That idea is not without controversy, raising concerns in some sectors of that teachers and lecturers can be pressured to become easier raters.

Finally, the campuses will provide each student with a digital degree planner.

Each addresses the reasons a student might not graduate: dropping out despite having good grades, failing a key class as a freshman or sophomore that affects confidence, or wasting time and money taking the wrong classes. for your titles.

The rector of the largest public university system in the country pointed out that the task is enormous: “Make no mistake,” said Castro, “this job will be one of the most challenging of our careers.”

Early success in recovering students

Beginning in February, Cal State San Francisco launched an outreach campaign to bring back 302 well-educated students who enrolled in 2019 but dropped out during the pandemic.

So far, 60 have returned, a 20 percent rate of return, surpassing the campus’s modest reenrollment goal of 10 percent.

“Honestly, if they had never called me, I probably wouldn’t have come back,” said Ledesma, who is still on track to graduate in four years.

The campus is now applying the lessons she has learned for an even bigger campaign: re-enrolling 15 percent of the 1,500 students who attended classes last spring.

“Honestly, if they had never called me, I probably wouldn’t have come back”,Marissa Ledesma, Cal State San Francisco student.

Nationally, the percentage of freshmen who return for their second year of college declined by an “unprecedented” level during the pandemic, according to a July 2021 report from the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center that tracks national enrollment trends. While in the past few years around 75 pervent of students returned, just 73 pervent of students came back in 2020 — the steepest drop in a decade — the center found.

Other Cal State universities see a similar trend. “We’re seeing slight declines across the board in first and second year retention,” said Jeff Gold, assistant vice chancellor in the Cal State Chancellor’s office. Official data for students that began in the fall of 2019 won’t come out for a few weeks.

Cal State San Francisco retention actually increased slightly during the pandemic, but the school wants to bring back as many students as possible in hopes of reaching its graduation goal by 2025, said Katie Lynch, vice president who manages enrollment at the state of San Francisco.

Why did two students come back

Students received emails, phone calls, and text messages from an academic advisor or someone from the admissions or financial aid offices. Because 15 students had financial withholdings on their accounts, ranging from $ 700 to $ 7,600 in tuition and fee debt, the financial aid staff called them to work out a payment plan. That included monthly payments, a grant search, or, for five students, helping them get federal loans to cover what they owed.

In other cases, students who were gone for two semesters had to re-apply for admissions — a campus rule that affected Ledesma — so admissions officers reached out promising to waive application fees, allow for late admissions and clear other hurdles.

The emails and calls made Ledesma feel wanted, “like, hey, I’m not just another person on a mass spam send-out email,” she said.

That personal touch also drew ​​Amanda Cangelosi back to San Francisco State.

Though she earned straight As in her first year at the university, the shift to online and her parents’ home took an emotional toll on Cangelosi her sophomore year. She thrives on validation from her classmates and professors to stay motivated. Online, though, she got little human interaction as most students kept their cameras off during classes and much of her instruction was pre-recorded.

Worse, her hometown friends near Los Angeles were in other states where they were allowed to live on campus while taking classes online. Feeling alone, anxious and depressed, she dropped-out spring term and took a job as a barista at a Barnes  percent Noble bookstore because she was starved for human interaction.

“I got used to the anxiety hole that I created for myself,” she said, “I became comfortable in it.”

“I got used to the anxiety hole that I created for myself. I became comfortable in it.”

​​Amanda Cangelosi, San Francisco State student

When San Francisco State representatives called and emailed her with promises of early registration to snag the hard-to-get classes for this fall, she was sold.

She’s now living on campus, taking a full course load and is on pace to graduate in 2024 — too late to boost San Francisco State’s four-year graduation rate but within the window to prop up its six-year graduation rate.

Fewer Ds and Fs

One tell-tale sign that students may drop out is if they earn a D or F in two or more early classes, said Gold of Cal State. Analysts at the university system found that to be especially true for low-income students and students of color.

Cal State last fall had 686 courses, each with at least 100 students, in which more than 20 pervent earned a D, F or withdrew, according to EdSource.

To turn things around at San Francisco State, more than 80 pervent of faculty since 2019 has been trained in redesigning their courses to boost student grades. The topics ranged from developing students’ study skills to avoiding prejudiced or racist assignments or student interactions.

Professors, especially those who teach writing-intensive and math courses required for all students, are encouraged to take the training and receive up to $1,250 each, stipends funded by federal COVID relief dollars.

San Francisco State is still crunching numbers to see whether students earn higher grades in classes taught by professors who went through the training, said Maggie Beers, a vice president for teaching and learning at the campus. Still, a March survey showed that 82 pervent of professors feel confident that what they’ve learned is making a difference.

Some Cal States are seeing the rate of Ds and Fs drop by offering more tutoring, tweaking the curriculum or changing grading policies to accommodate students, including those who have packed schedules as parents or full-time workers. Others use early signs of struggle to refer students to academic advising.

At Cal State Dominguez Hills, the rate of students earning a D or F at an introductory course in chemistry declined from 51 pervent to 25 pervent in two years. The class, Chemistry 108, is a requirement for many science majors.

Much of the improvement is due to increased tutoring, said chemistry department chair Kenneth Rodriguez. The college began hiring students who previously did well in chemistry to tutor current students and guide group sessions. Now upper-division chem classes are using the same strategy. A faculty member also keeps a weekly hour open for students to ask questions or seek help.

There were curriculum tweaks as well, Rodriguez noted, such as removing lessons on gasses that they’d learn in the next course to focus more on algebraic concepts and chemical nomenclature — parts of the curriculum that faculty found tripped students up in more advanced courses.

The economics department at San Francisco State tried something similar, with positive results for its introductory economics courses that 1,000 students take each semester.

Before spring of 2020, about 20 pervent of students earned a D, F or withdrew from those courses. Since the overhaul, that dropped to 15 pervent.

The changes gave students more opportunities to prove what they know, said Veronica Sovero, an assistant professor of economics at San Francisco State who teaches intro courses. For one, professors of those two economics courses issued more frequent assignments that each counted less toward a student’s grade instead of relying on a few exams.

Professors also were more lenient: Students could turn in missed homework assignments and ask for extensions. Some professors dropped a student’s lowest grade from their course average.

Last spring, San Francisco State overhauled 64 other courses that enroll 16,000 students, and is now analyzing whether that led to a drop in D and F grades.

So did the rigor of the courses slip? Rodriguez and Sovero insist the answer is no. Nor did faculty oppose the reforms, Rodriguez said. Sovero added that she uses the same homework assignments she’d issued in past classes and said her tests are largely unchanged compared to previous years.

Lecturers, who teach a large share of Cal State courses, in particular feel pressure to give students higher grades than they may deserve, said Meghan O’Donnell, a lecturer at Cal State Monterey Bay and a representative for lecturers in the statewide faculty union.

Though she hasn’t experienced it, she said other lecturers have expressed “a sense of some pressure to move students forward to support the Graduation Initiative,” especially in classes where the rate of Ds and Fs are high. Because they lack the job security of tenured faculty, lecturers may fear negative student evaluations if they grade too harshly — evaluations that may determine whether they’re rehired or not. 

Grade inflation is a national reality; the A grade has been the most popular grade assigned for more than two decades.

But students who get Ds and Fs are typically those who don’t turn in their work or show up to class, said Rey Hernández-Julián, a finance professor of Metropolitan State University of Denver who has studied grade inflation. “If a student doesn’t turn in the work, you can’t inflate that.” And if students are getting more tutoring and sympathy on missed assignments, that may have the appearance of grade inflation even though it’s not, he said.

“The work of improving student learning outcomes challenges us to reimagine how we teach and support our students without compromising academic rigor,” said Gold, the vice chancellor. “Research has shown that implementing project-based activities, collaborative learning, and enhanced student support such as supplemental instruction are ways to do just that. This work is happening in academic departments across the CSU.”

In Sovero’s view, being mindful of students’ busy lives as full-time workers or parents can ultimately help them.

During her first semester at San Francisco State, Sovero scheduled office hours on days when class wasn’t in session. No one showed up. So she began holding office hours on days when classes were taught. “These are commuter students and I didn’t realize that they …. only come to campus on the day they have classes, so they need to schedule their office hours the same day,” she said.

Keeping students on track

Cal State San Marcos began rolling out an online visual tool known as a degree planner in 2014 and today about 95 pervent of its undergraduate students use the tool, said Regina Eisenbach, dean of academic advising.

It warns students that a course they plan to drop will delay their graduation because it’s a requirement for several other courses but is only offered once a year. The degree planner can also visualize for students the packed semester that lies ahead if they plan to take a lighter load first — and warn them that it will delay graduation.

San Francisco State is newer to the idea; about two-thirds of undergraduate students have used it this term, said campus registrar Margo Landy.

The tool clears the way for meaningful conversations with the often hard-to-schedule academic advisor.

“The less that students need to work through the nuts and bolts … of earning their degree, the more they can talk with advisors about their academic interests, possibly their career interests,” Landy said.

It’s another way to make sure students are persisting and getting the degrees they need for the life they want.

For the record: This story has been corrected to note that San Francisco State overhauled 64 other courses last spring in an attempt to reduce the number of students receiving D and F grades.

 

Nicaragua’s Ortega secures fourth term, US threatens sanctions

Biden signs bill urging Nicaragua sanctions after contested vote

 

Joe Biden rejected recent Nicaraguan elections in which President Daniel Ortega secured fourth straight term as ‘pantomime’

 

Reported by Aljazeera

 

US President Joe Biden has signed into law a bill calling for more sanctions and other punitive measures against the government of Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega, who at the weekend secured a contentious fourth consecutive term in office.

Sunday’s elections took place after a month-long government crackdown during which dozens of opposition leaders, including seven presidential hopefuls, were arrested and others were forced into exile.

The so-called RENACER Act that Biden signed on Wednesday “imposes sanctions on the government of Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega, to restrict multilateral bank lending, and to target regime corruption”, the White House said in a statement.

The bill was adopted in the US House of Representatives earlier this month after being approved by the full Senate in August.

It calls for sanctions on Nicaraguans deemed responsible for unfair elections, increased coordination of such measures with the European Union and Canada, and expanded US oversight of international lending to Managua.

Proud to see the US match Ortega’s tyrannical tactics with targeted actions & our uncompromising support for those crying out for freedom & basic rights,” the US Senate Foreign Relations Committee, chaired by Democrat Bob Menendez, who introduced the bill, said on Twitter.

The White House announcement comes as members of the Organization of American States (OAS) gathered in Guatemala for a previously scheduled meeting where the US is working with other countries on what they hope will be a strong resolution against Ortega.

The Sandinista leader, who governed Nicaragua from 1979 to 1990 before returning to power in 2007, on Monday night derided his US critics as “Yankee imperialists” and accused them of trying to undermine Nicaragua’s electoral process.

Ortega and his wife, Rosario Murillo, who also serves as vice president, secured 76 percent of the vote, the Supreme Electoral Council (CSE) said late on Monday after a preliminary tally of the ballots.

Cuba, Venezuela and Russia have offered Ortega their backing, but rights groups, as well as the US, United Kingdom, Spain, Costa Rica and other nations, rejected the elections as a sham. Biden on Sunday accused Ortega and Murillo of orchestrating a “pantomime election that was neither free nor fair”.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken also said earlier this week that the country would consider additional sanctions and other measures “to promote accountability for those complicit in supporting the Ortega-Murillo government’s undemocratic acts”.

A State Department official declined to elaborate on sanctions in the works, the Reuters news agency reported. A US government source last week said initial targets would likely be individuals, security force members and government-controlled companies.

Political analysts have questioned whether increasing isolation will force Ortega’s hand, however, or risk worsening an already dire economic situation in Nicaragua and fuel migration.

More than 103,600 people already left the country since mass anti-government protests broke out in 2018. At least 300 people were killed in the ensuing government crackdown on the demonstrations, while more than 1,600 others were arrested, according to a tally by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights.

The Ortega government has been accused of increasing authoritarianism since the 2018 protests, but the Nicaraguan president has defended his actions, accusing his opponents of being part of a US-backed effort to remove him from power.

 Starting and Scaling a Small Business as a Minority Entrepreneur

Portrait of a happy business owner opening on the door at a cafe and smiling – small business concepts

Sponsored content from JPMorgan Chase & Co.

 

Ever dreamed of owning your own business? If so, you’re not alone. In fact, you’re among more than 60% of Americans with the same aspiration.

There are plenty of resources to support you in making that dream a reality, especially as the COVID-19 pandemic continues to impact minority-owned businesses. Our team at JPMorgan Chase, for example, has set aside 15,000 loans and $2 billion in capital for Black, and Latino and Hispanic businesses. There are many other companies across the country who have also launched initiatives to support long-term recovery and economic growth in minority communities.

Small businesses have the power to boost local economies, job creation and community development. Equipping small business owners with the capital, knowledge and tools necessary to start and develop a company is critical for success.

The most important factors in a first-time entrepreneur’s journey are the initial steps to launch – a foundational understanding of what you’ll need for a successful business is a good place to start. There are a few driving factors that can help you succeed:

– A reliable network: Having a mentor – or access to someone who’s done this before – can be extremely valuable. Whether asking questions, discussing ideas, or just offering general support, there are incredible champions in your local community. You can also supplement a local strong support network with JPMorgan Chase workshops, panel discussions and summits, as well as the Chase for Business mailing list and social channels, where you’ll find regular updates on networking and available learning opportunities. The Chase for Business offerings are great for both growing your knowledge of managing a business, as well as growing your network beyond your community.

– A relationship with your banker: Banking is about relationships, so I encourage and welcome you to stop by your local Chase or set up a digital appointment to begin cultivating one. JPMorgan Chase wants to know about the experiences of Black, and Latino and Hispanic entrepreneurs in your communities, including their must-know steps to financial success.

– Knowledge of operational tools: From digital payment systems to automated billing, there are tech-based software and service offerings available to simplify many aspects of managing a business. Digital media and marketing tools have also been game-changers for many of our clients as they look to reach and engage more customers.

– Access to funding and loans: Starting, maintaining and scaling a business costs money! Initial expenses can include everything from licenses to new equipment. Luckily, there are alternatives to covering these costs entirely on your own, like loans, grants, lines of credit and other capital set aside specifically for minority entrepreneurs.

Access to Capital

Undoubtedly, funding is crucial as an aspiring small business owner and securing capital can be challenging. However, there are options available to Black, and Latino and Hispanic business owners that you should be aware of. In addition to the traditional options and types of capital, JPMorgan Chase has reserved low-cost loans specifically for minority-owned businesses. Many local small business owners are able to secure loans fairly quickly by working with the Chase team. When you visit your local branch, ask us about the process for securing funding and we’ll walk you through all of your options – ranging from loans to lines of credit – including your eligibility and the pros and cons of each. Chase strives to present you with every option – even the ones you may have not originally thought were right for you – to give you all the information you need to make the right decision for yourself and your business.

Build a Network You Trust

Building a strong network and understanding the access you have to supportive resources will help you find the tailored support you need to get your business off the ground. For example, JPMorgan Chase’s Advancing Black Entrepreneurs platform was built in collaboration with Black Enterprise, National Urban League and other organizations that understand firsthand the challenges associated with starting a business. Many existing small business owners say the site’s free educational courses, on-demand resources and networking events have been extremely helpful in building the foundation they need to successfully navigate their small business journey. You don’t even need to be a Chase customer to access these free resources.

In addition to digital support, Chase’s local community managers at branches around the U.S. are building connections with Black and Hispanic communities to increase awareness and utilization of available resources, as well as organizing neighborhood networking events and enrichment workshops to help local entrepreneurs start or grow their businesses. These events, whether in-person or virtual are great to connect and network with your local community, and to better take advantage of all the tools and options available to you.

Lastly, the Chase Chats webcast series features a session with Shark Tank’s Daymond John, who discusses how Black business owners can navigate life as a business owner and, more specifically, lingering pandemic-driven issues. That webcast, along with the educational course on the same topic, offers great advice – from the importance of bookkeeping to pivoting your business model and developing contingency plans.

If you find yourself inspired to take the leap and start a business of your own, consider stopping by your local Chase branch to find out more about the tools, resources and capital available to you.

Portrait of smiling Hispanic grocery store owners
Front view portrait of a hispanic barber in a retro style barber shop.

Immigrant victims of domestic violence still struggle to get asylum

Despite Trump’s era policies being reversed, the likelihood of finding protection in the US is lower than ever

by Jenny Manríquez

Ethnic Media Services

After escaping the abuse and persecution from an active gang member from La Mara 18 in her native El Salvador, Milagro won her asylum case in the United States last August on domestic violence grounds.
She crossed the Mexican border in 2015, escaping from her kidnapper, who repeatedly raped her and threatened to murder her family. “My life was always in danger, I filed a complaint (in El Salvador) but my case was not solved and they did not help me at all,” said Milagro during an Ethnic Media Services briefing that focused on the way domestic violence victims struggle to find protection in the United States.
The woman, who agreed that her story could be published without using her last name, was about to get married when the gang member became obsessed with her and began to harass her over the phone, saying that he would have her “whether you like it or not” .
Since then, the raping began repeatedly, including threats with weapons, blows to the entire body and burnings with an iron. Her rapist even fractured her hands.
“The last time he beat me for four hours, he wanted to kill me, he told me that he was going to cut me into pieces and leave half of my body at my grandmother’s, and half at my uncle’s.” After Milagro escaped, the gang member kept looking for her in every nook and cranny of her city, so she decided to leave the country.
“When I crossed (the border) I told them (immigration officials) that my life was in danger, that if I returned he would kill me, wherever I was he would look for me… Thanks to God and the lawyer I got it (the asylum), but it was a long struggle.”
Almost five years after presenting her case (December 2016), she received her status and with it, the path to legal residence in the country. She is the mother of a little girl, now pregnant with a boy, and although she is in a stable and healthy relationship, “there is still that trauma that one cannot remove. It is like a big burn and a scar remains, even if you want to erase it, you can’t.”
The U.S Refugee Act of 1980 allows people to apply for refugee status abroad or asylum status at the border or within the United States. They are eligible if they demonstrate what is known as “a well-founded fear,” meaning that the persecution is due to their race, religion, nationality, political opinion, or membership in a particular social group.
Marta Victoria Canossa, an immigration attorney for the Los Angeles-based firm Ortega, Canossa y Asociados, who is handling the Milagro case, stressed that it is important that those escaping domestic violence in their countries of origin present their case within the first year they enter the United States.
“It is very difficult for an abused woman to go to an American embassy and request asylum, even for those who have family already here in the United States or have an application pending,” she said. “This lack of resources at the embassy level forces women to present their claims at the Mexican border. If they don’t do it as soon as they cross, they have a year to do it.”
To support these claims, defenders have found useful reports issued every year by the State Department on the situation of the countries in Latin America, which highlight the problems faced by these abused women in finding help in their own governments.
VAWA and U Visa
For women who suffer domestic violence within the United States, they have two options: they can present their case through the Violence Against Women Act (VAWA) in force since 1984, or apply for a U visa.
“VAWA is available to people married to legal permanent residents or citizens of the United States,” Canossa said. Under this law, which also protects men, applicants are not required to submit a police report: their own declaration or a witness one, along with proof such as images and text messages, are sufficient. “Approval is taking from 21 to 28 months, but they can also apply for work permits while they wait,” Canossa said.
The application under VAWA must be made while the person is still married to the abuser or within two years of their divorce.
As for U VIsa, this relief is available to women who are victims of people who have no documents or were not married to US citizens. However, it requires a police report which “is sometimes challenging when the person is in a jurisdiction where the police don’t want to cooperate.”
The other difficulty is that the wait for the U visa exceeds 5 years, a time in which the person does not receive a work permit.
Sessions vs. Garland
The road to reaching these protections has been long. Beginning in the 1990s, guidelines were adopted on how women’s claims for domestic violence could fit into the Refugee Convention.
“In 2014 the Justice Department’s Board of Immigration Appeals issued a decision that explicitly recognized domestic violence as a basis for asylum,” Bookey said. “But in 2018, Trump’s Attorney General, Jeff Sessions, issued a decision that undid that precedent, using the case of our client, Miss AB.”
AB is a Salvadoran woman who endured 15 years of brutal domestic violence. Her partner’s brother was a police officer and he utilized that position to intimidate her, forcing her into exile, leaving behind her three young children. Although AB was eligible for asylum, Sessions rejected that decision and tried to undermine the availability of asylum for all women fleeing domestic violence and any form of harm from a non-government actor.

Six time Billboard award winner

by the El Reportero‘s news services

 

A protégé of the legendary jazz master Dizzy Gillespie, ARTURO SANDOVAL was born in Artemisa, a small town in the outskirts of Havana, Cuba, on Nov. 6, 1949, just two years after Gillespie became the first musician to bring Latin influences into American Jazz. Sandoval began studying classical trumpet at the age of twelve, but it didn’t take him long to catch the excitement of the jazz world. He has since evolved into one of the world’s most acknowledged guardians of jazz trumpet and flugelhorn, as well as a renowned classical artist, pianist and composer.

He is one of the most dynamic and vivacious live performers of our time, and has been seen by millions at the Oscars, at the Grammy Awards, and the Billboard Awards.

Sandoval has been awarded 10 Grammy Awards, and nominated 19 times; he has also received 6 Billboard Awards and an Emmy Award. The latter for his composing work on the entire underscore of the HBO movie based on his life, “For Love or Country” that starred Andy Garcia as Arturo. His two latest Grammy award winning albums, “Dear Diz “Everyday I think of you” and Tango “Como Yo Te Siento” are now available worldwide. Arturo Sandoval’s newest CD, Eternamente Manzanero. Performing the music of revered Mexican romantic pianist/singer/songwriter, Armando Manzanero, this is a true labor of love. Performing Senor Manzanero’s music with co-headliner Jorge Calandrelli, the album is a fresh, modern and pleasant take on his beautiful bolero music.

Recently released, is a new book chronicling his relationship with Dizzy Gillespie entitled “The Man Who Changed My Life” Arturo also is the 2013 recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom.

Sandoval was a founding member of the Grammy Award-winning group Irakere, whose explosive mixture of jazz, classical, rock and traditional Cuban music caused a sensation throughout the entertainment world. In 1981, he left Irakere to form his own band, which garnered enthusiastic praise from critics and audiences all over the world, and continues to do so.

At Yoshi’s, 510 Embarcadero West, Oakland, CA 94607, on Nov. 26 – 28, call (510) 238-9200 or for more information, contact Melody Lisman 818-297-4124 or melodylisman@gmail.com.

 

2021 San Francisco Veterans Film Festival

This year’s festival takes place online and in person at the Main Library

 

OneVet OneVoice and San Francisco Public Library are excited to announce the lineup for the 10th Annual San Francisco Veterans Film Festival (#SFVFF21), the Bay Area’s premier military and veteran film event. The festival, with screenings on Nov. 13 and 14 at the Main Library, is a free event showcasing unique independent films that explore the complexities of military service and the challenges of reintegrating as a civilian.

The festival, which was held online in 2020 due to COVID-19, will take place both online and in person this year. Come see selected films and panel discussions with filmmakers and local representatives of the veteran community in the Main Library’s Koret Auditorium. Following the festival weekend, films will be available for online streaming for an additional seven days.

San Francisco Veterans Film Festival

Nov. 13, 11 a.m. – 5 p.m., Nov. 14, 1 – 5 p.m.

San Francisco Main Library, Koret Auditorium, 100 Larkin St.

The event is free and open to the public.

Films will be available streaming online for 7 days after the event.

Collector returns Mayan artefact to Guatemala

A private collector has handed over a Mayan artefact to Guatemala following negotiations after plans were made to auction the piece in 2019

 

by the El Reportero‘s news services

 

The artefact depicts the head of an ancient ruler wearing a mask in the form of a bird of prey.

It disappeared from the Mayan site of Piedras Negras in the 1960s.

The piece reappeared in Paris in 2019 during an auction, but Guatemala objected and presented evidence calling for the artefact to be returned.

The sale was suspended and negotiations took place between the private collector, Manichak Aurance, the French and Guatemalan governments, and Unesco.

Ms. Aurance opted to voluntarily return the fragment – which depicts an ancient ruler who acceded to the throne in the year 729 AD – to Guatemala, Unesco said in a statement.

It was returned during a ceremony in Paris on Monday.

“The voluntary handover of this fragment of a Mayan stela to its homeland in Guatemala showcases the evolution of the international environment in favor of the return of emblematic cultural objects and artefacts to their homelands,” Audrey Azoulay, Unesco director-general, said in the statement.

The artefact will soon be sent to the National Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology of Guatemala City, where it will be on display to the public.

https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/976/cpsprodpb/18179/production/_121218689_mediaitem121218688.jpg

 

Other entertainment reports by Carlos Aguilar

 

Latino Contenders Oscar voters shouldn’t overlook

Maria Mercedes Coroy — Best Supporting Actress for “La Llorona”

Guatemalan auteur Jayro Bustamante has diligently centered Indigenous talent in his work. The lead in his debut feature “Ixanul,” young newcomer María Mercedes Coroy, returns as the title character in the acclaimed political genre film “La Llorona.” Coroy, who also recently starred opposite Julianne Moore in “Bel Canto,” becomes the ghostly figure of a woman who in the original tale wept for her dead children. Here, the apparition acts as an avenger for thousands of Mayans murdered during the Ríos Montt dictatorship. It’s a nearly silent role that relies on her ability to exude a simultaneously captivating and unnerving presence.

Juan Daniel Garcia Treviño — Best Actor for “I’m No Longer Here”

First-time thespian Daniel Garcia astounds in “I’m No Longer Here” in the role of Ulises, the leader of a small teen gang, Terkos, with an affinity for slowed-down cumbia music. Violence, however, forces him to depart from all he’s ever known, and, not unlike the hero in “The Odyssey,” to embark on a quiet reassessment of his identity while living in hostile NYC. Garcia, who learned to dance for the part and donned the singular attire and hairstyle associated with the Kolombia counterculture, gives a stoic but resolute performance. We believe both his loyalty for and disillusionment with the place he calls home.

 

6 reasons to eat more boysenberries, a tangy, tart fruit

by Rose Lidell

 

10/21/2021 / The boysenberry is a nutritious fruit with many amazing health benefits, such as improving your brain health and digestion. It’s also a versatile ingredient that can be used to make desserts, jams and smoothies.

Where did boysenberries come from?

Back in the 1920s, horticulturist Rudolph Boysen from Napa, California, experimented with various crosses between berries.

When Boysen moved to Orange County, he planted berry vines on his in-law’s farm in Anaheim, California. He then obtained the loganberry-dewberry parent from John Lubben’s farm. In 1923, Boysen’s berry hybrid was successful.

However, it wasn’t commercially viable.

As the decade neared its end, George M. Darrow from the Department of Agriculture (USDA) started hearing stories about a unique berry grown on Boysen’s farm. Darrow then asked Walter Knott, a farmer and known berry expert, for help.

Darrow and Knott discovered that Boysen abandoned his plans to grow boysenberry as a crop, eventually selling his farm after injuring his back due to an accident. Undeterred, both Knott and Darrow went to Boysen’s old farm and recovered some frail berry vines that survived in a field full of weeds.

The boysenberry vines were transplanted and cared for at Knott’s farm. The Knott family restaurant and pie business eventually turned into what is now known as Knott’s Berry Farm in Buena Park, California. The park flourished thanks to the berry’s popularity.

Knott is considered as the first person to commercially cultivate the berry in Southern California. He first started selling it in 1932 at a farm stand and he named the fruit after Boysen.

The boysenberry has a “uniquely rich, juicy, tart and sweet flavor” because of its unique history. With a tangy flavor similar to wine, boysenberries also boast of a lusciousness that comes from three native blackberry species. The floral aroma and sweetness of boysenberry come from the raspberry.

When buying boysenberries, look for fruits that aren’t bruised at farmers’ markets. Note that underripe berries are reddish and very tart. Look for boysenberries that are darker in color.

When making jams, pies and sauces, you’ll need boysenberries that are both sweet and tart.

Health benefits of boysenberries

Boysenberries contain various vitamins and minerals like:

– Calcium

– Copper

– Folate

– Iron

– Magnesium

– Manganese

– Phosphorus

– Potassium

– Protein

Vitamin A

– Vitamin B1

– Vitamin B2

– Vitamin B3

– Vitamin B5

– Vitamin B6

– Vitamin C

– Vitamin E Zinc

Boysenberries also contain vitamin K that can help prevent kidney stones. Additionally, the vitamin is good for your bone health and can help lower osteoporosis risk.

The vitamin C and vitamin A in the berries may help prevent and treat vision-related disorders.

Detailed below are six reasons to incorporate boysenberries into a balanced diet.

It can boost digestive health

Boysenberries are used to treat digestive issues like constipation. They’re also full of dietary fiber that can make it easier to manage bowel movements.

It can help regulate your blood pressure and triglyceride levels

Boysenberries promote better heart health because they are full of the antioxidant vitamin C.

The superfood also has an impressive potassium-sodium ratio, with 183 mg of potassium and 1.3 mg of sodium. Because of these nutrients, boysenberries help relax blood vessels and lowers your risk of developing high blood pressure.

In an animal study, scientists discovered that the polyphenolic compounds in boysenberry juice can help “boost nitric oxide concentration through the aortic endothelial nitric oxide synthase activation” in hypertensive rat subjects. This means boysenberry can boost heart health and lower your blood pressure.

In another study, results suggested that the polyphenols in boysenberry juice can help inhibit plasma triglyceride absorption levels in animal subjects.

It can boost immune health and prevent cancer

Boysenberries have potent anti-inflammatory properties that can help boost your immune health and protect you from different types of cancer, like malignant esophageal and colorectal tumors.

The berries contain vitamin C, which can help your fight infections and get rid of cancer-causing free radicals. Natural News.

If the virus actually existed

by Jon Rappoport

 

…and it doesn’t…

 

There would be no way to stop it.

It would have spread so far and so deep…

The only answer would be: LIVE THROUGH IT.

Period.

Have a look at the open borders of the US. Have a look at the packed football stands every weekend across the US. Have a look at Israel, where lockdowns and high vaccination rates have failed to stop the progression of cases. Of course, those cases are nothing more than false positive tests. Nevertheless, you get the idea.

The very concept of a virus and its spread implies: UNSTOPPABLE.

The war against the virus was always a losing idea. And it was never that war anyway. It was always a war against the people and against freedom.

The planners calculated that freedom had withered to such an advanced degree that it would be possible to take away what was left of it.

The war against the virus is very much like the war against freedom of speech, aka censorship. Governments are never going to be able to stop the flow of independent ideas. The seal is never air-tight.

Of course, as I’ve been proving for the past year, the virus doesn’t exist. It’s a fantasy. It’s the ghost in the dark closet at night, when the child is lying in bed thinking that random noises are a threat to his safety.

A well-known scientist with impressive mainstream credentials recently confided to me that he believes the virus (which he accepts as real) will eventually infect everyone. EVERYONE. Therefore…

There is nothing to be done. LIVE WITH IT. LIVE THROUGH IT.

Even the false premise that the virus exists implies the continuation of freedom.

The notion that a war against a virus can be won is on the level of the notion that a war against the natural flow of air on the planet can be won.

Nations that have fought a relatively mild battle against the virus—Sweden, Denmark, and Norway—have officially stated they’re ending that battle. Why? Because only small numbers of people are becoming ill. Those numbers mirror the recent years before the pandemic was declared.

In those countries, the nightmare of the ghost in the closet is over, for now.

The leading pornographer of fear in the US, Anthony Fauci, is still turning out his little movies. Every week, he “adjusts the data,” in order to bolster his claims. And every week, his sales force of media personnel put him on television to spread the message:

OBEDIENCE IS VICTORY

Fauci is the envy of sadists everywhere.

For the past year and a half, he has been the de facto president of the United States.

His style reflects the decades-long machinations of the CIA: invent endless enemies, and then attack them. All for the purpose of establishing CONTROL.

On some nights, while I’m asleep, a part of my mind that operates on entirely conventional premises calculates the odds in the war against the virus. It spins, all on its own, fragmented scenarios: the infection rate, the degree and extent of lockdowns, the barriers against the virus created by masks, the vaccinated vs. the unvaccinated, and so on. That ridiculous piece of my mind is a cameo Pentagon.

As I wake up, I realize the fantastical nature of these wartime calculations. I see them clearly for what they signify. A rooting interest, no more meaningful than sitting on the sidelines watching a contest of tiddlywinks, with a bet of a few pennies riding on the outcome.

It’s instructive to have these dreams. They convey an insane fool’s errand.

If the virus existed, there would be no way to stop it. Since it doesn’t exist, there is no “it” to stop.

However, the war against freedom is an entirely different matter. It has always existed, and it always will.

There are certain men who have lost their own vivid life-breathing creative freedom, and they have chosen, as their only substitute, the path of destroying freedom wherever they find it.

They are the virus.

(Jon Rappoport, an investigative reporter, is the author of three explosive collections, The Matrix Revealed, Exit From The Matrix, and Power Outside The Matrix.)