3:19 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Immigration · 2 Comments
11 Dec 2008
The idea that Latin@s are being targeted for arrest (and deportation) under public-intoxication laws–it’s just almost too much to bear. Nothing like playing up the stereotype of the drunken Mexican to better get rid of us all.
Amid the swirling controversy over the San Jose Police Department’s practice of arresting large numbers of people — especially Latinos — under the state public-intoxication law, the department is damaging its reputation by choosing secrecy over transparency.
Before the city council hearing on Nov. 18, the American Civil Liberties Union submitted a formal request that these arrest reports be made public under the state open-records law. But days after the mayor and council said they wanted “broad-based community input” on the issue, the police department refused to publicly release the arrest records.
The council has directed the city manager to form a task force of community stakeholders to address this issue. But how will the task force members accurately identify the scope and nature of the problem if they are denied access to the most important records documenting it?
Indeed. Either way, however, I’m glad to see that the community is confronting this together and that they have the support of the media in doing so.
1:26 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · GLBT| Immigration| New York City · Comments Off
11 Dec 2008
I think it’s a question most Latin@s already know the answer to, but I was very happy to see that the mainstream news is taking the question seriously–and even allowing the voices of the LGBT community into the mix as well.
“In Suffolk County, if you don’t watch where the areas are that you’re going, are they’re whites, and they see that you’re Latino? They’re chasing you,” said Marcus Morales of the Lower East Side.
“Absolutely. I think Latinos are being targeted,” added Sandra Cruz of the Lower East Side.
But while concern is growing in Latino neighborhoods like Jackson Heights in Queens, when you look closer, the anti-Latino wave is not so “black and white.” There is a strong anti-immigrant component to what’s happening in Suffolk County. And when Jose Sucuzhanay and his brother Romel were attacked in Brooklyn, it was because the brothers were walking so close to each other, the attackers went after them because they were gay. It’s something Marcus Morales knows a bit about as a 53-year-old gay Puerto Rican.
“I’m still here. There’s a reason why: ’cause I knew how to walk, and there were just certain areas that you couldn’t be in,” Morales said. “I’m sad to see that for some reason, we’re backtracking. We’re going back in time.”
11:32 am By Maegan La Mala · Environment| Health| Immigration| Internet| Iraq War| Latin America| Politics| economy| race · Comments Off
11 Dec 2008
The Obama Transition team launched its new “Open for Questions” tool today on Change.gov. This new tool will allow anyone to ask and vote on questions they have for the transition team. Popular questions selected by the community of web users on Change.gov will be answered on a regular basis by the Obama team.
I suggest going online and asking/voting questions about immigration and hate crimes.
9:10 am By Maegan La Mala · Education| Justice| New York City| children · Comments Off
11 Dec 2008
School Safety Officers. The title implies creating a safe environment for young people to learn and engage with each other. Except that in New York City, with School Safety under the NYC Police Department, these School Safety Officers enter the public schools the same way many police officers enter our neighborhoods, with an antagonistic attitude and thinking they are walking into a jungle whose residents they need to crush. Those residents happen to be our children.
Rojan Morgan is suing Hillcrest High School after he says several school safety agents assaulted him after he brought a cell phone to school.
“They took me to a back room, inside of the school and started to beat me,” Morgan said.
“When I came to the school I was ignored and shut out and that’s how this all started,” mother Trudyann Morgan said.
7:01 am By Maegan La Mala · Immigration| Labor| Politics · Comments Off
11 Dec 2008
President Bush isn’t going to leave migrant workers empty handed as he leaves the White House. Changes to the H-2A agricultural guestworker program were released in the dark of night, in an attempt to hide their blatant disregard for the lives of others, namely a majority Latino immigrant population.
The changes are horrible. At a time when the jobless rate is at a 15 year high, they reduce obligations for growers to effectively recruit U.S. workers before applying to bring in guestworkers for these jobs. They lower the wage rates for all farmworkers by changing the program’s wage formula and, in an industry known for labor abuses, they eliminate or reduce government oversight.
So while the anti-immigrant advocates point their fingers at immigrants for the U.S.’s current economic problems, the current administration hits hard against ALL workers, in terms of wages and rights.
VivirLatino is a daily publication published by 2 Mujeres Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse and influential Latino and Latina community in the U.S.
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