COMMUNITY
YOUTH
KING HOLIDAY
Family and friends remember 4-year-old Marquel Peters, who was killed by a stray bullet shortly after a Watch Night Service in Decatur. A5
An initiative at Rock Chapel Elementary in Lithonia uses chess as a vehicle to get more fathers involved with kids in a school environment. A10
Stone Mountain High’s Marching Pirates will be one of five high school bands in the annual King Holiday Parade in Stone Mountain. B1
Candles for Marquel
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Smooth moves for dads
January 9, 2010
Hometown band
Volume 15, Number 36
Let the Count Begin County, state and census officials cut the ribbon to officially open the DeKalb Local Census Office. The office is preparing for the April 1 count of DeKalb residents.
The census count is now officially on in DeKalb. After more than a year of prepping, U.S. Census and local elected officials cut the ribbons Monday on the DeKalb Local Census Office in Stone Mountain. The office will be pushing the message that the census is easy, important and secure. Manuel Landivar, the assistant regional census manager, who helped cut the ribbons, said its important to stay on message. “If we do that consistently in the next three months, come April 1 Manuel Landivar when the questionaires are delivered to the community, we should find a population that wants to make certain the Census Bureau enumerates them,” he said. The office at 5474 Memorial Drive is one of 57 local offices now open in the region as the Census Bureau embarks on its 10-year US constitutional mandate to count every American. Census results are used to determine congressional representation, redraw congressional lines, and to distribute $400 billion of federal funds annually for local services like health care, schools, transportation, social services and law enforcement. Landivar said DeKalb was chosen to be
By Jennifer Ffrench Parker
At last count, DeKalb had more than 700,000 residents. Early said that data collected for the 2010 census are critical to our community. “These numbers will determine how many representatives we have in the House of Representatives. These numbers will determine how congressional lines are drawn. These numbers will have a lasting effect on local growth, on business and industry,” he said. “They will affect our infrastructure, where schools are built, where hospitals and fire stations are built.” Census Day is April 1. A 10-question form seeking the age and number of residents living at every address in the county will be mailed in March. The completed forms must be returned by April 1. To get an accurate count, census enumerators will visit the homes of people who do not return their forms. “The more forms we get back, the less we have to go out and knock on door, and the more cost effective the census will be,” Early said Because of DeKalb’s diverse population, Early said the office will be making a big push to hire bilingual people who live in the community. “The people who will be coming to take the census are your neighbors,” he said. DeKalb’s high foreclosures which have dislocated thousands of families will be a challenge, but Early said the 2010 census is the best planned and best researched. Please see CENSUS, page A3
Please see STOKES, page A3
DeKalb Census Office opens in Stone Mountain part of the national 2010 Census launch on Jan. 4 because of its diversity. Thirty-five different languages are spoken by DeKalb’s residents. “We are part of a very important ceremony today,” he told elected officials and community leaders who attended the event. Landivar said the Census Bureau understands that no matter what new technologies it uses, or how much it improves its methodology, the ultimate success of the census will still depend largely on public cooperation. “The only and best way to obtain that cooperation is through you, the trusted voices from the neighborhood, in the community who can help us carry this message to the grass-root level,” he said. Wayne Early, manager of the DeKalb office, said the office will be working hard to get a true and accurate count of all the county’s residents. Wayne Early “We want to make DeKalb a benchmark of excellence for the 2010 census,” he said. The Memorial Drive office will cover all of DeKalb County, handling all the census’ recruiting, field operations and administrative duties. It will hire 1,200 to 1,500 temporary workers, who will be part of a national work force of nearly 1.4 million temporary employees who will count every U.S. resident.
Stokes will run for 4th District seat DeKalb Commissioner Connie Stokes says she will run this year for the 4th Congressional District seat held by Hank Johnson. Stokes confirmed last week that she plans to qualify in April to seek the Democratic nomination for the seat that Johnson has represented for two terms. “I am seriously Connie Stokes considering it,” she said. “I haven’t officially announced but I have been talking to a lot of people. I have had positive overwhelming response.” This would be Stokes’ second run for the congressional seat that includes most of DeKalb County and portions of Rockdale and Gwinnett counties. Her announcement comes in the wake of Johnson’s Dec. 7 announcement that he is undergoing experimental treatment for hepatitis C, a viral liver disease that afflicts 3.2 million people in the United States. Last year, Johnson made history in the district when he was returned unopposed for a second term. Despite his dramatic weigh loss and thinning white hair, caused by his daily treatment with the drug interferon, Johnson said he will campaign vigorously for re-election to a third term. “I’m proud of my record,” he said this week. “I will run on my record.” Stokes is the third Democrat to express interest in the seat, and the second since Johnson’s announcement. In August, Commissioner Lee May said he was mulling a run for the congress. He did return a phone call Thursday. Former DeKalb CEO Vernon Jones is now also contemplating a run for seat. B. Camille Kesler, a Jones spokeswoman, said that Jones has been approached by many people to run for the congressional seat. “He is contemplating all his options,” she said. In a holiday e-mail to supporters, Jones said the final chapter has not been written on his political endeavors. “That decision will be made soon as I continue to listen to you and your ideas as to how I can best serve Georgia and the American people,” he said. “ I intend to make my plans clear in the near future.” In 2004, Stokes was one of six candidates, along with Cynthia McKinney, who vied for the seat left open when
Jennifer Ffrench Parker / CrossRoadsNews
By Jennifer Ffrench Parker
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