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By Hazel Trice Edney | SACOBSERVER.COM WIRE SERVICES
WASHINGTON (NNPA) - The 10 Black members
of the powerful House Finance Committee are still being applauded
by Black Press and other Black leaders this week for boldly
boycotting a committee meeting in order to force a $4 billion
allocation to benefit the Black community.
They have told the NNPA News Service that they plan to escalate
protests if lawmakers continue to ignore the suffering of
their constituents, including advertising discrimination against
Black newspapers.
“We’re out of the box, we’re full speed
ahead and we are not going to sit back and watch our communities
suffer in silence,” said U.S. Rep. Maxine Waters, the
ranking Congressional Black Caucus Member on the Committee,
who led the Dec. 2 boycott.
“The 10 African American members of the Financial
Services Committee have cooperated with the leadership, we
have cooperated with the administration, we have supported
the bail out and now we’re saying, 'what do we get for
all of this cooperation?' 'What are we delivering to our communities?'”
Waters asked. “And the answer is little or nothing.”
Describing horrid conditions in their districts that clearly
illustrate disparate suffering in the African American communities,
each of the 10 members – in separate interviews - described
what their constituents are dealing with and told why they
must continue to act.
“Members of the Congressional Black Caucus are being
bombarded with requests for assistance by minority businesses
that have no capital,” continued Waters. “The
banks won’t lend them any money. They’re either
closing down or threatening to be closed down. The joblessness
is off the scale. Not only do we have long lines seeking unemployment,
but on Thanksgiving Day around the country - including the
scenes that came out of Atlanta and Los Angeles – there
were thousands of people standing in line for turkeys and
turkey dinners. In Los Angeles, I walked a four-block square
place where they were giving out baskets. In that line were
the disabled. One lady was 94 years old.”
Joblessness, frustration, hopelessness – the sentiments
are synonymous from state to state.
“They’re going through a tremendous, tremendous
desperation effort,” said Rep. David Scott (D-Ga.).
“Even if you look at all of your own newspapers, advertising
dollars are not there. We sit here as Congress people with
tremendous leverage and power. It was so important for us
to use that leverage.”
Rep. Barbara Lee (D-Calif.), Chairwoman of the Congressional
Black Caucus, is supportive of the Financial Services Committee’s
stance she said in a statement, following remarks by President
Barack Obama on job creation and economic growth.
“President Obama’s speech was another sober
reminder of the important work we must do to grow our economy
and create jobs,” Lee said. “While we agree with
the president that support for small businesses, infrastructure
investment and green jobs is essential, we also believe that
much more needs to be done, particularly for those Americans
who are hurting most.”
What the 10 Black members did was boycott the committee’s
final vote on a broad-sweeping financial overhaul bill. Instead,
they were over at the White House trying to obtain greater
funding for economic advances in the Black community.
The vote passed narrowly, but the CBC group’s action
effectively forced $4 billion to the table to go directly
toward helping people keep their homes after they’ve
lost their jobs.
In addition to the needs of Black businesses, home owners
and the jobless, a news release describing the boycott specifically
cited the importance of spending federal advertising dollars
with Black newspapers.
“Like other businesses, access to capital has been
a challenge for this industry as well. With declining ad revenues,
newspapers everywhere are struggling to survive,” the
statement said.
Danny Bakewell, chairman of the 200-member National Newspaper
Publishers Association, was credited by several members for
helping to spark the protest by his firebrand lobbying around
Capitol Hill.
Publisher Bakewell said he was delighted at the stance taken
by the CBC, but much more must be done to recognize the power
of the Black Press to the nation.
“We have been the backbone and the foundation on which
America was built. And in this case, what we are realizing
is that we continue to be the foundation on which many of
these corporations make their profits and develop their brands
throughout the country and we’re not going to continue
to sit idly by and let them do that while the very fabric
of our community is crumbling from within,” the NNPA
leader said. “We’re serving notice on General
Motors, Ford, Toyota, and other automotive companies and the
automotive industry that there will be no more business as
usual.”
Bakewell, NNPA Foundation Chair Dorothy R. Leavell, Dallas
Examiner Publisher Mollie Belt and Chicago Defender Publisher
Michael House have begun a series of meetings with corporations
and stated that they have already made some inroads.
“We’ve met with AT&T. They have been very
receptive. They represent what we believe, at this point,
we can say is a good corporate citizen,” Bakewell said.
“We’re not asking for a bail-out or a hand-out,
we’re asking for reciprocity and respect.”
Bakewell explained that the Black community, Black newspapers
included, are being shortchanged for the dollars they spend
with businesses and corporations.
“We’re asking what percentage of the market
share do we represent a company’s business, their profit
margin? If we represent one percent, we don’t expect
to get anything more than one percent. But, if we represent
50 percent, we expect to have 50 percent of their resources
and their effort going to strengthen their brand and building
their brand in our community,” added the determined
Bakewell.
In order to avoid legal ramifications, the committee agreed
to target the money toward communities with the most devastating
socio-economic impact rather than by race. That includes most
of the CBC districts.
“Across the country, it is absolutely shocking,”
stated Rep. Al Green (D-Texas). “It is very unfortunate
that we have to make this commentary, but the truth of the
matter is that there are people who are suffering and who
have not been identified properly…We cannot leave these
communities behind. If it goes to the areas where the
unemployment is the highest, it covers the people who are
suffering the most.”
The Congressman said that his office has found that the
federal government spends about 5 percent of $4.3 billion
for ad-related expenditures on small business and minority
businesses.
“We can do better than that,” he related.
“These newspapers, not only do they benefit from the
ads, but the community benefits from the message that the
ads bring to the community because it goes to a corner of
the community that is not penetrated by other newspapers,”
said Congressman Green. Part of the money will come from the
TARP (Troubled Asset Relief Program).
“There’s no more troubled assets than a job
and your home,” related Congressman Scott.
“So, now we are using our muscle to address the high
jobless rates in our communities and the high foreclosure
rate,” he added.
CBC members are hoping to get even more as they continue
to use creative ways to call attention to the swelling problems
in the Black community that have shaken up the offices of
the CBC members.
“The traditional role of a member of Congress before
the economic downturn was to basically intervene with the
federal government agencies on behalf of constituents, people
didn’t get their VA checks or social security checks
or they were needing help getting their travel documents or
visas or passport,” stated Rep. Mel Watt (D-N.C.). “But,
disproportionately now, people are calling for grassroots
down in the community help. I need food, I need housing. I
need to be protected from a foreclosure. I need assistance
with mortgage modification, I need you to find me a job. Businesses
are calling saying I can’t find any loans, I can’t
get credit.”
They’re receiving the calls and emails everyday, says
Rep. Keith Ellison (D-Minn.)
“They say when’s our turn?”
“‘We need real jobs programs. We need something
to help small, minority businesses. We need to know that there
is a vibrant, historic and very strong African American business
community here in the United States and in my state of Minnesota.
It really struck me that every single industry is being severely
impacted,” stated
Watt.
Congressman Gregory Meeks (D-N.Y.) shared that his district
has been hit especially hard in homeownership.
“My district in the city of New York is number one
in foreclosures. So, more people are losing their homes and
thereby losing wealth. And so much so that I’ve had
to get not-for-profit organizations that have expertise in
helping individuals work through these problems,” he
said.
“We really can’t make a decision in trying to
save people’s homes. So they’re feeling that the
dream that they had, the American dream of having home ownership,
they had it, but they’re losing it and as result losing
their credit, which might mean they may not be able to gain
it again,” the New York Congressman added.
Rep. William Lacy Clay (D-Mo.) stated that it’s like
the life blood flowing out of
the communities.
“Missouri, like the rest of the country, is hemorrhaging,
especially in the African American community from the economic
woes of this country,” he shared.“There is no
job creation, there is no rescue or bailout for those African
Americans who have been caught in a cycle of home foreclosures,
job losses and health care benefits, all of that is precarious
to our community, unique to our community.”
Rep. Emanuel Cleaver (D-Mo.) says his constituents are wise
to the fact that they’ve been neglected while big businesses
were bailed out.
“It is not just impacting the uneducated, it’s
impacting the entire community. We gave General Motors billions
of dollars. They don’t advertising in Black newspapers.
They don’t advertise on Black radio. That’s not
right. And there’s no reason for us to remain passive
or silent as that’s happening,” related Cleaver.
CBC members have known all along about the disparate treatment
of Blacks. But recently they were enlightened to the point
of taking their consciousness to a new level of protest.
“As we worked through the process of getting to the
point where we were going to vote for the final Wall Street
bill, it became more and more difficult for the 10 members
of financial services to vote for it because it felt like
we were navel gazing,” said Congresswoman Gwen Moore
(D-Wis.) “We saw that we were presiding over the entire
collapse of the Black economy. We had to make a decision about
how to get attention on a whole sector of our economy that
was about to go under. It wasn’t like the Black community
was getting a hair cut, we were being beheaded.”
With the Black unemployment rate surpassing 15 percent while
the overall rate is at 10 percent, there is one cry above
all others for which the CBC vows to continue to stand: “Jobs,
jobs, jobs, jobs, jobs,” lamented Rep. Andre Carson
(D-Ind.).
“We’re dealing with so many contentious issues
in congress, to see people who are bold and unapologetic,
you can’t do anything but respect it whether you agree
or disagree philosophically, the boldness that comes with
that stand can’t be overlooked,” said Carson.
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