VOLUME 88 - NUMBER 49 DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA - SATURDAY, DECEMBER 12, 2009 TELEPHONE (919) 682-2913 PRICE: 30 CBC Members Rebuke White House on Unemployment By Chris Levister Special to the NNPA from Black Voice News (NNPA) - In whai is being por- ira\ed as a direct rebuke of the White House's lack of response to the deepening unemployment meltdown. Rep. Maxine Waters D- California, ranking CBC member on the powerful Financial Services Committee killed a scheduled No vember 19 vote on President Ba rack Obama's financial regulation reform bill. Instead, the congresswoman from Los Angeles called on the ad ministration to do more to put the nation's most vulnerable workers back to work. *'The recession has created a unique systemic risk that threatens all parts of the African- American communitv. including the poor and the middle class." said Waters in a statement after shutting dow n the vote. I have alwav s been committed to addressing that risk and 1 w ill continue to do so. This is a critical issue." Waters led a bloc of African- American House Democrats an- giy and frustrated that the Obama administration is mired in heated paiiisan battles over healthcare re form. war troop levels and fixing Wall Street and is not doing enough to address the plight of Blacks and Brow ns on Main Street. The groups have been hit much harder than an\ other by unemployment. The Black unemployment rate is officially 15.7 percent nation wide compared to 9.5 percent for whites. Members of the Congres sional Black Caucus are troubled b\ what they believe is the lack of response to the economic situation that is confronting them on the pan of the administration and therefore do not feel that they could in defer ence to -the various constituencies that the\ resent - vote for passage of Mr. Obama's financial reforms. •This is an affront to the people we serve." said one member. "When it comes to addressing Joblessness in our poorest neigh borhoods, there are a lot of heads in the sand." said another member. Joblessness for l6-lo-24-year old Black men has reached Great De pression proponions — 34.5 percent in October, more than three times the rate for the general U.S. popu lation according to the Center for Labor Market Studies. The CBC met before Thanksgiv ing with Treasury Seci'etaiy Geith ner and expressed dissatisfaction w ith the administi'ation's response to the unemploNiwent situation particularly in Black and Brown communities. House Financial Ser vices Committee Chairman Barney Frank. D-Mass.. said the full House w ill not vote on financial ovei'haul legislation until the second w eek of December at the earliest. Fi*ank originalK wanted the House to vote on the bill when it reconvened after the Thanksgiving recess. The legislation is expected to focus on regulating systemic risk, w inding dow n failing financial firms and creating a feder'al insur ance office. Accoi'ding to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, construction, manufacturing and retail experi enced the most severe job losses in this down economy, losses that are disproportionately affecting men and >oung people who populated those sectors. Traditionally the last hired in general and first fired, young Black w orkers have taken the brunt of the difficult economy, with cost con scious employers eliminating the apprenticeship, internship and on the Job training progi'ams that gave thousands of minorities a nurturing environment and level playing field in the workplace. Unemployment continued to climb in Inland Southern California last month, but some employers in Riverside and San Bernardino coun ties - and across the state - were hir ing in October, according to a U.S. nefVTiiimmt eepnitw The Union Independent SchooL a state-of-the-art, 49,000-square-foot facility, opened across from Union Baptist Church during the summer. A formal ribbon-cutting ceremony was held Dec. 6 at the school. The school opened w ith 75-80 students in kindergarten through second grade and operate on a year-round calendar. The school will add a new kindergarten class each year mull it becomes a K-8 school. From left to right are: Dr. James H. Johnson, Jr. chairman of the Board; Rev. Kenneth Hammond, pastor. Union Baptist C hurch and inspiration for the school; Mrs. Hammond, and Charles H. Stanback. Jr. (Photo By Lawson) Related photos on page 3. Economy 101: Long-term unemployment worsens By Christophers. Rugaber WASHINGTON (AP)- Within the vast pool of 15.4 million unemploy ed workers, a split is emerging; The number of long-term Jobless - those out of work six months or longer - is growing, while the number of short-term unemployed is declining. The trend highlights a considerable challenge for the economy and poli cymakers: finding a way for the millions of Americans laid off last fall and early this year to get back to w ork. The data, buried in Dec. 4's unemploy ment report, are stark: The num ber of Americans out of work for 27 weeks or more reached 5.9 million last month, the most on records dating from 1948. That's 18 percent more than Just three months ago. w hen the total was just below 5 million. The tally of those out of w ork for 14 w eeks or less, how ever, has dropped to 6.3 million from 7.1 million in August, a decline of about II percent. Looking at it another way. the long-term Jobless now make up 38.3 percent of the unemploy ed population, not that far from the 41.1 percent accounted for by those out of work for 14 weeks or less. (The rest are in the l5-to-26 weeks'bracket.) That's a sharp change from August, when the short-term unemployed made up nearly half the total, while the longer-term Jobless were only a third. In some ways, the dichotomy is good news, in that it reflects a slow down in layotTs. The Labor Department said Dec. 4 that employ ers cut a net total of 11.000 Jobs in November, down from ! 11.000 the previous month. The unemploy ment rate dropped to 10 percent from 10.2 percent in October, the first decline since July . That gives analy sts hope the economy could begin generating Jobs in the next few months, after shedding 7.2 million in the past two years. Still, "new hiring may not be picking up all that much." said Lawrence Mishel. president of the Economic Policy Institute, a liberal think tank. "So what y ou're seeing is less people throw n into unemploy ment." And w iihout more Jobs, the long-term unemployment problem is likely to linger. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke has expressed concern that people caught in long spells of unemploy ment could see their skills atrophy. "It really is the most difficult challenge facing us." he said in testimony to a Senate panel Thursday. Here, by the numbers, are some more details you can find deep in the emplovment report. LESS THAN ZERO. BUT GETTING CLOSER II, 000: The net total of Jobs lost in November III. 000: Jobs lost in October 139.000: Jobs lost in September 691.000: Average monthly loss in first three months of this year 7.2 million: Total decline in U.S. payrolls since recession began in De cember 2007 UNEMPLOYMENT STILL HIGH 10 percent: November's unemployment rate, in double digits for only the second time in 26 years 10.2 percent: October's jobless rate, the highest since April 1983 10.8 percent: Unemployment rate in December 1982. the highest since AVorld War 11 WHERE THE JOBS ARE 52.400: The number of lemporaiy Jobs added in November, the biggest increase in fixe years I l.lOO; Jobs added in educalioii 21.000: Jobs added in hospitals, nursing and other health care sectors I. 000: Jobs added in coinpuier serxices 5.600: Jobs added in maiuigement and technical consulting 7.500: Jobs added in department stores UNDEREMPLCni.D 9.2 milliiui: Number of part-time xxorkers xxlio xvould have prefeiTed full-time xxork last month 2.3 million; People without Jiibs who xxani to xxork but have stopped looking 17.2 percent: "I nderemploymeni" rate in November ifyou include the above tw o categories 17.5 percent: Underemploy ment rate in October, the highest in records datini! to 1994 THE-HE-CESSION" 10.5 percent: Unemploy ment rate for adult men 7.9 percent: [ nemplox ment rate for adult xxomen NOVEMBER UNEMPI.OYMENT RATE BY GROUP II. 4 percent; Female heads of households 7.3 percent; Asians 9.3 percent: Whites 12.7 percent: Hispanics 15.6 percent: Blacks 26.7 percent; Teenagers ACORN prober finds no illegal pattern on videos Bv Pete Yost WASHINGTON (AP)-An inter nal investigation of the communitv- organizing group ACORN found no pattern of intentional, illegal con duct h> ACORN staffers on under cover videos shot b\ conservative critics of the group. In a 47-page assessment that for mer Massachusetts Attomev Gener al Scott Harshbarger was commis sioned b\ the oiganization to do. he criticized ACORN'S management as not moving fast enough to insti- ttite reforms after an alleged eight- sear coverup b\ ACORN founder Wade Rathke of an embezzlement by his brother. acorn's leaders are "now reaping what Rathke sowed." wrote Harshbarger. w ho was brought in to investigate. The organization's leadership has made reforms in finances and governance a priority, the Harsh barger report stated. However, it added, this focus has not yet been matched b\ similar attention to de livering services to ACORN's cli ents. The videos of ACORN staff'ers offering advice to a woman and a man posing as a prostitute and her boyfriend triggered a firestonn of criticism this fall, with some ACORN employees appearing willing to support illegal schemes involving lax advice, misuse of public funds and illegal trafficking in children. The videos "feed the impression that ACORN believes it is above the law." staled the Harshbarger report, intended as an independent examination of the issues. "We did not find a pattern of intentional, illegal conduct by ACORN staff involved: in fact, no action, illegal or othenvise. was ever taken by any ACORN employ ee on behalf of the videographers." Harshbarger said in a statement. "Instead, the videos represent tlie by product of ACORN's longstand ing management weaknesses, in cluding a lack of training, a lack of procedures and a lack of on-site supervision." Harshbarger's report says ACORN, which stands for the As sociation of Community Organiz ers for Reform Now. should return to its roots, focusing on community organizing and should hire an inde pendent ethics officer to oversee an internal governance program that is already under w ay . ACORN CEO Bertha Lewis called the report "part vindication, part constructive criticism and complete roadmap for the future" on behalf of "the interests of the communities we represent - low- and moderate-income. African- American and Latino families." Ex-GOP Chair says party can ease immigration tone By Andrew DeMillo LITTLE ROCK. Ark. (AP) - New immigration reform efforts will ott'er the Republican Party a chance to soften its tone on the issue and possibly attract more Hispanic voters, the former chairman of the Republican National Committee said Tuesday. Without naming names. Ed Gillespie said in a speech at the University of Arkansas Clinton School of Public Service that he believes some Republicans came oft'as anti-immigrant the last time Congress debated efforts to reform the nation's immigration sy stem. He said future immigration debates could give the party a chance to redeem itselfwith Hispanic voters. "1 think there's an opportunity there for Republicans to get the tone right in this debate and not come across as anti-immigration, but pro-legal immigration." Gillespie said. "As a whole. I think our party was poorly positioned on the immigration debate." President Barack Obama has promised to push for immigration legislation, including an eventual path to citizenship for some 12 million people in the countiy illegally. Gillespie did not say whether Republicans should specifically oppose offering such a path, and said what he called "a rare opportunity for a do-over." was more about the tone of the debate. Gillespie, who also served as a counselor to former President George W. Bush, declined to say who in his party he considered as coming across harshly w hen immigration refonn eft'orts failed in 2007. He said Republicans also have to do a better job of connecting with minority voters if they want to succeed in future elections. "We have to do a better job of reaching out to African-American voters. Hispanic voters. Asiatt-American vot ers. minority voters ofall kinds." Gillespie said. "We're the party of Lincoln and we have the right to compete for the African-American vole, and we should."