Insight News ::: 02.23.15

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Faith Praise and Believe Tour Features Israel & New Breed, Martha Munizzi and VaShawn Mitchell MORE ON PAGE 10

Insight News February 23 - March 1, 2015

Vol. 42 No. 8 • The Journal For Community News, Business & The Arts • insightnews.com

Transit riders, faith and community groups call for expanded public transportation funding

Rankin joined the US Air Force in 1954 and served for two years.

Rankin forged Urban League power agenda Twin Cities Business and civic leader Leon A. Rankin Jr., died in hospice February 14, 2015. Rankin, along with veteran civil rights freedom fighters Ron Edwards, the late Nellie Stone Johnson and the late Elmer Childress formed the core leadership group of the legendary Minneapolis Urban League Board of Directors in the mid1970s. Columnist and television commentator Edwards is the only surviving member of the power group that gave rise to the MUL national reputation as audacious, relentless, progressive and effective. “We had the privilege of

L-R: Ron Edwards, Minneapolis Urban League (MUL) chair; Leon A. Rankin, Jr., MUL treasurer; Gleeson Glover, MUL executive director; Hobart Mitchell, Minneapolis NAACP; Spike Moss, The Way, Incorporated

serving with Leon Rankin and later Elmer Childress and the late Nellie Stone Johnson, and others on the Urban League Board of Directors. We all served together from 1974 – 1989. Mr. Rankin was one of the most effective organizers within the labor movement in Minnesota for African Americans and others of color,” said Edwards. Edwards said Leon Rankin was 1 only of 2 African American Certified Master Electricians in the State of Minnesota. “He was respected and often called upon within the labor movement for his advice and recommendations when the Urban League was at the forefront of changing to a positive

relationship between organized labor and the African American community.” Rankin worked closely with Nellie Stone Johnson and longtime labor leader and U.S. Commissioner of Veterans Affairs for the State of Minnesota, Elmer Childress, who was the only African American to serve as the Commissioner of Veterans Affairs in the history of Minnesota, Edwards said. Rankin, Nellie Stone Johnson, and Cecil Newman, founder and publisher of the Minnesota Spokesman-Recorder,

RANKIN TURN TO 5

Change in state purchasing policy creates more opportunities for veteran, minority, and woman-owned small businesses The Minnesota Department of Administration announced recently that it will enhance the ability of certain small businesses to compete for state contracts. Starting February 1, when small businesses owned by women, minorities, people with physical disabilities, or veterans bid for state contracts, existing preferences will apply to a larger portion of the contract’s value. This increase also applies to small businesses located in economically disadvantaged areas of the state. “This action will ensure that veterans who have honorably

Matt Massman

Insight 2 Health Fitness Challenge Destination: Self-discovery

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served our country and small businesses that have historically been under-represented in state procurement will have a more realistic opportunity to compete for state contracts,” said Commissioner Matt Massman. The State’s procurement preference programs aim to reduce disparities in state purchasing and contracting, as well as in the overall economy. Current law provides for a preference of up to six percent when qualified groups bid on state projects. But that preference has been capped at applying to only the first $500,000 of

Giving tribute and acknowledgement to family and community members who have passed on in 2014.

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a contract’s value since 1999. On February 1, that cap will increase to apply to $1 million of contract value, resulting in an increase from $30,000 to $60,000 in the maximum value of the preference. “The disparities in our economy are real and many of our citizens were hit exceptionally hard during the recession,” explained Commissioner Massman. “We have a commitment to ensuring that all Minnesotans can share in the state’s economic recovery.” More than 1,000 small businesses are currently certified

as veteran-owned or targeted group businesses in Minnesota based on the business’s ownership by woman, minority, person with a disability, or by its location in an economically disadvantaged area. The Department of Administration oversees state procurement, including more than $2 billion in state purchases each year. State law has provided for a targeted group preference program since 1990. Additional information about state purchasing programs can be found online at mn.gov/ admin.

100 transit riders from ISAIAH, Neighborhoods Organizing for Change, and other members of the Move MN coalition joined with state leaders, including Lieutenant Governor Tina Smith, State Senator Scott Dibble, Met Council Chair Adam Duininck, and State Representative Frank Hornstein in a rally outside the State Capitol, calling on the legislature to guarantee expanded public transportation as part of a comprehensive, multimodal transportation plan. People from rural, urban and suburban communities braved subzero temperatures to journey to the Capitol on public transportation to send

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Gov. Kitzhaber: Your job is not yet done By Charles Ogletree, Harvard Law School Jesse Climenko Professor of Law; Founding and Executive Director of the Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Race and Justice This post was co-authored with Rob Smith, Associate Professor of Law at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Governor Kitzhaber has given 35 years of steadfast service to the people of Oregon. His tirelessness and courage have helped to forge a State that is the envy of the nation -- a community as strong and prosperous as it is just and fair. But the job is not yet done. In his last few hours in the Capitol Building, Governor

KITZHABER 7 TURN TO

Education

Commentary

Three Armstrong athletes sign National Letters of Intent to play for Division I, II schools

Clark leads HBCU college tours

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