V&V Vol. 62 No. 9 | Thursday, March 3, 2022

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Vol. 62 No. 9

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Thursday, March 3, 2022

www.sdvoice.info

Community Responses to Superintendent Search

PUBLIC HEALTH ORDER & Covid-19 Updates SEE PG. 12

Covid-19 cases in southeast 11,251

17,676

16,966

19,309

14,106

9,117

92102

92105

92113

92114

92115

92139

SOURCE: County of San Diego a/o 2/23/22

Fivespace Shop: Hip Hop & Vinyl SEE PAGE 7

103 Years at Phillips Temple CME SEE PAGE 9

Inner City Young Life Champions SEE PAGE 8

BLACK WOMEN, LEGAL SCHOLARS PRAISE

Ketanji Brown Jackson’s SCOTUS Nomination mination By Nyah Marshall Howard University News Service Americans around the country, including legal scholars and Black women, are praising President Joe Biden’s announcement last week nominating Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson to replace Associate Justice Stephen Breyer on the U.S. Supreme Court. If confirmed, Jackson would make history as the first Black woman and the first former federal pub-

The U.S. House of Representatives has passed legislation to make lynching a federal hate crime. Named in honor of Emmett Till, the Black whose horrific murder at the hands of white men in Mississippi in 1955, the bill outlaws lynching.

Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson speaks after President Joe Biden announced Jackson as his nominee to the Supreme Court in the Cross Hall of the White House, Friday, Feb. 25, 2022, in Washington. Vice President Kamala Harris listens at right. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

lic defender to serve as a Supreme Court justice. “For too long, our government, our courts haven’t looked like America,” Biden

ing a federal hate crime, punishable by up to life in prison. The measure had faced defeat for more than 100 years, with lawmakers attempting to pass the legislation more than 200 times. The House finally passed the bill on a 422-3 vote. Many believe it will

According to the bill’s text, “Whoever conspires to commit any offense … shall (A) if death results from the offense, be imprisoned for any term of years or for life.”

said at the White House, flanked by Vice President Kamala Harris and Judge Jackson. See NOMINATION page 2

also have success in the U.S. Senate. “The House has sent a resounding message that our nation is finally reckoning with one of the darkest and most horrific periods of our history, and that we are morally and legally committed to changing course,” said C ongressman B obby Rush (D-Illinois), who is retiring at the end of his term. C ongressman Rush, who founded the Illinois chapter of the Black Panther Party, had promised to do all he could to push the legislation through before his retirement. The congressman recalled that he was 8 years old when he saw photos of Emmett Till’s brutalized corpse in Jet Magazine.

“(B) In any other case, be subjected to the same penalties as the penalties prescribed for the offense of the commission o f which was the object of the conspiracy.” Specifically, the legislation makes lynch-

San Diegans gathered at Wilson Middle School in City Heights to hear firsthand from Dr. Lamont Jackson and Dr. Susan Enfield, the two finalists contending for the top spot to replace Cindy Marten for SDUSD Superintendent. San Diego Unified serves nearly 121,000 students and is the second-largest school district in California. Photo: Voice & Viewpoint.

By Dr. John E. Warren Publisher The new Wilson Middle School provided a great in-person set-

ting for the community forum on the selection of a new superintendent for the San Diego Unified School District. With a social distance of one to two seats between persons,

the auditorium on Saturday was filled to capacity but not crowded. See RESPONSES page 2

Impact of The Pandemic on Black Workers In Southern California By Dr. John E. Warren Publisher

Anti-Lynching Bill Passes House, Expected to Clear Senate By Stacy M. Brown NNPA Newswire

Serving San Diego County’s African & African American Communities 62 Years

Image: Courtesy of NNPA

See BILL page 2

The UCLA Center for the Advancement of R acial Equity At Work has ended Black History Month with a disturbing report on the impact of the pandemic on Black workers in Southern California. Nearly 40,000 Black workers were engaged for this report and 2,000 completed the survey, sharing their work experiences, challenges, and demands for support during the COVID19 pandemic. Black workers revealed a long history of anti-Black economic issues which created Black job crisis characterized

A new report from UCLA’s Center for Advancement of Racial Equity at Work surveyed experiences of Black workers’ during the COVID-19 pandemic. Photo: via labor.ucla.edu/project.

by disproportionate unemployment, underemployment and systemic racism. The undressed Black Jobs Crisis revealed: 70% of those who experienced job loss were still looking for work at the end of surveying, over a year into the pandemic; 60% of participants reported a 2020 personal income of under $50,000, which includes those

who remained employed. Over 50% of the Black workers surveyed reported working in essential or frontline sectors pre pandemic. 50% of the Black workers surveyed experienced some form of work disruption (lay-offs), terminations, and or furloughs since the start of the pandemic. See WORKERS page 2

California, Oregon, Washington to Drop School Mask Mandates

Masked parents direct their children on the first day of school at Enrique S. Camarena Elementary School, on July 21, 2021, in Chula Vista, Calif. The governors of California, Oregon and Washington have announced that schoolchildren will no longer be required to wear masks starting March 12. The governors of the three states announced the measure in a joint statement as part of new indoor mask policies that come as coronavirus case and hospitalization rates decline across the West Coast. In all three states, the decision of whether to follow the state guidance will now rest with school districts. The new guidance will make face coverings strongly recommended rather than a requirement at most indoor places in California starting Tuesday and at schools on March 12, regardless of vaccination status - AP. Photo: Denis Poroy, AP File

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