NABJ receives grant for Ford Foundation to train “minority” journalists

Multimedia training, scholarships and an organizational move to bolster journalists’ group
WASHINGTON, D.C. – June 23, 2009 – The National Association of Black Journalists (NABJ) announces that the New York-based Ford Foundation has awarded the organization a grant of $150,000 to increase educational and training opportunities for journalists of color.

The grant will be employed by NABJ in three core areas: to increase multimedia workshops and educational programs in 2009 and 2010; to create a professional scholarship program for recently laid-off members desiring professional training and networking opportunities at the NABJ Annual Convention & Career Fair; and to help facilitate NABJ’s move to a new state-of-the-art facility at the Philip Merrill School of Journalism on the campus of the University of Maryland.

“NABJ will greatly benefit from these funds in its unified effort to improve newsroom diversity and increase the competitiveness of black journalists across the country,” said NABJ President Barbara Ciara.

NABJ offers year-round webinars, teleconferences and regional conferences in addition to a broad spectrum of journalistic and communications programming over five days at the NABJ Annual Convention, the premier yearly event for journalists of color.

Sponsors and workshop leaders partnering with NABJ in 2009 include the Poynter Institute, Google, NBC News and Investigative Reporters and Editors (IRE).

“Journalists of color are disproportionately facing cuts in the workforce, and with the type of training NABJ offers, it will be harder for employers to let them go,” said Ciara, referring to a recent American Society of News Editors (ASNE) report, which determined that 13.5 percent of black newspaper journalists lost their jobs in 2008. A study by the Radio-Television News Directors Association (RTNDA) similarly shows that black TV news directors dropped from 4.2 percent to 2 percent nationwide in 2007.

“This generous gift provides an extra helping hand to members during a critical time for the industry,” said NABJ Executive Director and COO Karen Wynn Freeman. “Thanks to this grant, NABJ can continue providing valuable multimedia training and assure that members will have the resources to attend.”

The Ford Foundation is an independent, nonprofit grant-making organization. For more than half a century it has worked with courageous people on the frontlines of social change worldwide, guided by its mission to strengthen democratic values, reduce poverty and injustice, promote international cooperation, and advance human achievement. With headquarters in New York, the foundation has offices in Latin America, Africa, the Middle East, and Asia.

The NABJ Annual Convention & Career Fair in Tampa, Fla. Aug. 5-9 is the largest gathering of minority journalists in the country. For more information, go to: www.NABJ.org.

An advocacy group established in 1975 in Washington, D.C., NABJ is the largest organization of journalists of color in the nation, with more than 3,500 members, and provides educational, career development and support to black journalists worldwide.

Shawn Williams: A Beale Street model for Deep Ellum

After I wrote this article I thought, wouldn’t a Johnny Taylor themed restaurant look good in Deep Ellum (or South Dallas)? Some of ya’ll entrepreneur types should be able to take that one and run.

Anyway, here’s the article I wrote for the Dallas Morning News almost in its entirety. To see the few parts I didn’t paste, click here. Thanks to Sharon Grigsby for the space.

From DallasNews.com

To borrow a phrase from legendary musician Robert Johnson, Deep Ellum has the crossroad blues. The path toward the future may mean taking a look back.

With the possible exception of the city’s preaching tradition, the blues scene in the early part of the last century represents the biggest mark left on this city by African-Americans. But the community is letting that rich history die by allowing the place where it all went down to lose its soul.

It’s part of a trend nationwide where the African-American community neglects history that is not intimately tied to the civil rights movement. This is even more pronounced in our city, where not only is the history ignored, it’s all but forgotten.

Deep Ellum should be the same type of cultural destination as the 18th and Vine area of Kansas City, which houses the American Jazz Museum and Negro League Baseball Museum. First, that means residents would have to acknowledge – and in many cases, learn – the district’s rich history before embracing it and rallying for its revival.

Consider this: In 2003, the South Dallas/Fair Park Entertainment District Study was presented to the Dallas City Council. The document (now in the hands of a local nonprofit) proposed creating a mixed-use retail-commercial development that would market particularly toward African-American conventioneers, tourists and local residents. This concept was modeled after Beale Street, a thriving three-block section of downtown Memphis, which consists of a number of nightclubs and restaurants. Beale Street was home to a thriving blues scene at the turn of the 20th century before becoming a collection of closed shops and rundown buildings in the 1960′s.

Sound familiar? The infrastructure for this model already exists – in Deep Ellum.

The Dallas City Plan Commission recently recommended the issuance of a specific-use permit for a live music bar and lounge to open in the old Blue Cat Blues in Deep Ellum. A soul food restaurant also moved into the neighborhood in recent weeks. While every business in the area doesn’t have to be blues-themed, a nod to the heritage would go a long way toward reviving the entertainment district that seems to always teeter between “struggling” and “on the verge.”

Any plans to revisit the history of Deep Ellum should include the redevelopment of The Grand Temple of the Black Knights of Pythias Building. The Pythian Temple sits on the edge of Deep Ellum and was the first commercial building in town built by and for Dallas’ black residents. It’s also one of the few Dallas structures other than churches designed by a black architect. The building that housed the city’s first black dentist and surgeon would make a great business incubator for a new generation of professionals and entrepreneurs.

Second Avenue and a little blues music could bind two historic parts of our city.

Again, click here to see the entire article.

Eddie Griffin’s thoughts on Shawn Williams’ thoughts on Juneteenth

BY EDDIE GRIFFIN of Eddie Griffin BASG Blog

Black Bourgeoisie?

I found it interesting that Shawn P. Williams writes in
“Why” Part Two: Why I celebrate Juneteenth:

In my adult years as I began to rub elbows with the black bourgeoisies, many of them scoffed at the June 19th holiday. “Why would you celebrate slaves in Texas spending an extra 2 ½ years in bondage?” they would ask. I have to admit, it’s a pretty good question… As we’ve gotten more and more educated, we get further and further away from the wisdom born out of the struggle of our people.


Eddie Griffin Commentary-

I don’t know what “black bourgeoisie” means anymore. Back in the day, it meant something negative like that of a black person whose thinking was whitewashed, or someone going through an identity crisis, or someone who thought themselves to be more educated and elite than the common everyday Negro. We used to think that they acted and thought themselves to be better than the rest of us… maybe so.

Ignoring the French historiography and Marxist class categorizations that give meaning to the name of this group of people, I want to go straight to the psycho-sociological aspect of the issue… that self-contradictory, mismatch phenomenon of being sociologically black and psychologically alienated from an appreciation of black heritage.
“Why would you celebrate slaves in Texas spending an extra 2 ½ years in bondage?” they asked blogger Shawn Williams. Notwithstanding the writer’s thoughts, note how the question was formulated in their minds. True to its characteristic, the so-called black bourgeoisie sees the cup half empty, instead of half full.

To them, Juneteenth is not a celebration of Freedom, but rather a “black thing” to be disdained, because the very thought of slavery turns them off. After all, there are many whites who would rather not think about it, along with the guilt and shame of it. And also, how many non-Jewish Germans memorialize the holocaust? The so-called black bourgeoisie are escapists who would rather inculcate more pleasant thoughts.

It may not have ever dawned on them that Juneteenth is a celebration of Freedom, like the Fourth of July. What say, in celebrating the Passover, are Jewish people celebrating 400 years of Egyptian bondage, or the blessing of Emancipation?
The so-called black bourgeoisie sees only what it wishes to see, thinks only what it wishes to think, and choses to see no more and know no more than they already see and know. Therefore, black is an inappropriate descriptive for this bourgeoisie- thinking people. Being bourgeois is what it is… a colorless attitude of people who thinks of themselves as more highly favored than their peers and contemporaries, and thereby different, even better than they, and a little more holier than thou.
Juneteenth, with them, will probably never find merit, because they will remember only what they have been taught about it in integrated schools by teachers who were uneducated and unappreciative of black history. Hence, they will never seek to know otherwise. They even avoid contact with any knowledge that would burst the bubble of their brainwashing.

They are alienated from their common identity and estranged from their heritage… like a cow with the head of a goat. (eddiegriffin)

“We, the colored soldiers, have fairly won our rights by loyalty and bravery — shall we obtain them? If we are refused now, we shall demand them.” Sgt. Maj. William McCeslin, 29th U.S.C.T. (Source: Appomattox Court House National Historical Park)

Maynard Institute/Richard Prince: Johnson Publishing Co. Called “Under Siege”

The news regarding Johnson Publishing gets worse everytime you see them mentioned. Hat Tip to Kevin Ross of Three Brothers and a Sister who passed along an article by Richard Prince of the Maynard Instituted titled Johnson Publishing Co. Called “Under Siege.” 3 Brothers and a Sister also reports Ebony Magazine has only 1 photographer and is considering going down to six issues.

It’s a sad state for one of the greatest African-American institutions left in this country. The fate of media in general is struggling, but black media is headed towards the abyss.

Prince’s Maynard article highlights the financial troubles faced by Johnson, including mortgaging their building and liens from contractors. He also talks references comments made by Eric Easter -head of Ebony/Jet Digital- made at the Blogging While Brown Conference. Here are some of the highlights from Prince:

Also see Eric Easter of Ebony/Jet’s panel as mentioned in Prince’s article

  • “Ebony owner Johnson Publishing Co. is under siege, battered by sharp drops in advertising and circulation amid the most severe downturn in its 67-year history. In the past three months, Johnson has been hit with contractors’ liens claiming the company failed to pay for work worth nearly $500,000,” Eddie Baeb and Ann Saphir wrote Monday in Crain’s Chicago Business.
  • “In May, Johnson mortgaged its South Michigan Avenue headquarters building and parking garage to its printer, R. R. Donnelley & Sons Co. Loan documents say the deal secured previous debts to Donnelley totaling $12.7 million — another sign of financial distress for the nation’s largest black-owned publishing company.
  • “Johnson’s troubles, while not that different from other publishing companies’, fall on the shoulders of Chairman and CEO Linda Johnson Rice, daughter of founder John Johnson. Ms. Rice, 50, must remake her organization amid a downturn that is hitting African-American media especially hard. The slump compounds the challenge she faces in revitalizing magazines many still associate with the civil rights era.
  • At a panel at a “Blogging While Brown” conference in Chicago over the weekend, (Eric) Easter mentioned a deal that Johnson Publishing made last year with Google to transform the archives of Ebony, Jet, Black World and Ebony Jr. magazines into digital, searchable formats. He said that only magazines after 1960 were used, because transforming them requires a process that destroys the original copies.


South Carolina Governor Mark Sanford returns after trip to Argentina

Everyday there are scores of stories in the news that don’t deserve to be.  A missing United States governor is not one of them.

South Carolina Governor Mark Sanford doesn’t see why his 5 day disappearance has gained so much attention.  This morning, Sanford told The State (S. Carolina’s largest newspaper) that he was in Buenos Aires, Argentina, not hiking on an Appalachian Trail as his staff had originally said.

To be honest, if Sanford had gone off the grid in a more conventional manor (how do you go off the grid conventionally?) I would have applauded.  If his wife and staff -who may be in on the bit- really didn’t know where he was, then that’s news.  Had they at least said they knew, I would have chalked it up as kind of cool.

But that’s not how it works when people in the limelight are out of pocket.  Google “Orlando Brown That’s So Raven” and see what you get.  It’s the story of Brown skipping out for a few hours to clear his head which caused his people to panic.  I posted about him on Dallas South because his management team and family were concerned about his well being.  Something similar happened with Vince Young of the Tennessee Titans.

What the governor did was reckless because it brings more undo attention to his state.   His stimulus shenanigans caused enough embarrassment, now this.

CONGRESSWOMAN EDDIE BERNICE JOHNSON TO CO-HOST CBC SYMPOSIUM ON FEDERAL SENTENCING POLICY

“Rethinking Federal Sentencing Policy: 25th Anniversary of the Sentencing Reform Act” will feature Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder and many others

Washington, DC – (June 23, 2009) Congresswoman Eddie Bernice Johnson and Congressman Danny Davis will co-host a Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) symposium, “Rethinking Federal Sentencing Policy: 25th Anniversary of the Sentencing Reform Act,” on Wednesday. Congresswoman Johnson will also give opening remarks at the symposium. The symposium will feature remarks from Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer and U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, as well as Craig Watkins, Dallas County’s District Attorney.


District Attorney Watkins has led efforts in Dallas to exonerate people who have been wrongfully convicted and imprisoned. He will speak about overturning wrongful convictions and about diversion and alternative sentencing programs.

Congresswoman Johnson and Congressman Danny Davis co-chair the CBC’s Community Reinvestment Taskforce

What: CBC Symposium: “Rethinking Federal Sentencing Policy: 25th Anniversary of the Sentencing Reform Act”

Date: Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Time: 4:45 PM – 8:00 PM

Location: U.S. Capitol Visitors Center Orientation Theater South, Washington, DC

State Bar of Texas Annual Meeting and J.L. Turner Luncheon scheduled for this week

Starting on Wednesday, Dallas lawyers will have a week of activities that feature a Supreme Court Justice (scheduled to appear), a Circuit Court Appeals Judge, and two award winning journalists

Judge Carl Stewart – 5th Circuit Court of Appeals

On Wednesday June 24, The J.L. Turner Legal Association -the African-American bar association in Dallas- will host their Thurgood Marshall Luncheon starting at noon the Belo Mansion. The Keynote Speaker will be Judge Carl Steward of the United States Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals. Those scheduled to receive awards at the luncheon include:

Al Ellis – C.B. Bunkley Community Service Award

Judge Phyllis Lister-Brown – L. A. Bedford Distinguished Jurist Award

Thelma Clardy – J. L. Turner Committed Mentor Award Recipient

For questions contact JLTLA President-Elect, Karen McCloud at 214-651-6700 or kmccloud@karenmccloud.com .

On Thursday and Friday (June 25 & 26), the State Bar of Texas will host their Annual Meeting at the Hilton Anatole. Sessions include a Diversity Forum on Thursday (9:00 a.m. – 10:00 a.m.) discussing The Current State of Diversity and a 10:15 a.m. discussion titled How Are We Meeting the Challenge of Diversity In These Economic Times? David Brooks of the New York Times will be the luncheon speaker on Thursday.

Friday’s agenda is highlighted by a 9 AM session featuring Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia.  At Friday’s  luncheon the keynote speaker will be Doris Kearns Goodwin, author of  Team of Rivals: The Political
Genius of Abraham Lincoln.

For more information visit the State Bar website or click here for a full schedule of events for the annual meeting.

Dave Levinthal Leaving Dallas Morning News

I was shocked to hear that Dallas Morning News City Hall reporter Dave Levinthal will be leaving the paper.  When so many good journalists are being forced out of the paper business, its just as bad to see one leave on his on volition.

“Today is my final day in the office, reporting for the paper,” says Levinthal on the City Hall blog.  “I’ll soon head east, to Washington, D.C., where I begin a new career playing an old role: independent government watchdog,” he says.

I saw Dave working at the City Council inauguration on yesterday.  I didn’t say anything to him because I figured I’d see him at a subsequent presser or event.  Not the case this time.

Levinthal was one of my three favorite writers left at the Morning News.  His excellent writing and thorough coverage will be missed.  I wish Dave the best in his future endeavors.

Bruce Dixon: Chicago Teachers File Racial Discrimination Suit Against Obama Administration’s School “Turnaround” Plan

I was forwarded  this  entry by colleague Bruce Dixon out of Atlanta, managing editor of Black Agenda Report.  Dixon writes about  unrest in Chicago regarding  fired black teachers.   Here is a large portion of the entry, but please read Dixon’s article Chicago Teachers File Racial Discrimination Suit it its entirety.

BAR managing editor Bruce A. Dixon

“The fired teachers are disproportionately African American, and the newly hired teachers are not.”

In May, Secretary of Education Arne Duncan declared the Obama administration’s intent to close and “turn around” 5,000 “underperforming” public schools in poorer neighborhoods across the country. Duncan’s last job was CEO of Chicago’s public schools where he shut down dozens of neighborhood schools, practically all in lower income areas, and dismissed thousands of committed and experienced teachers, the vast majority of them African American women.

When the Chicago Teachers Union made no effort to reach out to parents, students or their communities, refused to organize teachers to oppose the wave of school shutdowns and privatizations, teachers organized what they call CORE, the Coalition of Rank & File Educators. CORE has now filed suit against the Chicago Board of Education, charging that the mass dismissal of hundreds of mostly black veteran teachers and their replacement with uncertified and generally underqualified white teachers is racially discriminatory.

“We looked at the number of teachers who lost their jobs in these ‘school turnarounds,’” CORE research director Carol Caref told BAR, “and we looked at the number of African American teachers who were employed in those same schools or in the charter schools which replaced them and there was a huge discrepancy which couldn’t be accounted for by chance. The fired teachers are disproportionately African American, and the newly hired teachers are not.”

“Even if it’s inadvertently discriminatory, it’s still discriminatory because the majority of the teachers wiped out in these turnarounds are African American,” offered Chicago teacher Wanda Evans. The fired veteran teachers, CORE also maintains, are being replaced by a much younger, much whiter and much less experienced corps of instructors graduated from a handful of accelerated programs funded by Boeing, the Bill and Melinda Gates, Bradley, Walton Family, Rockerfeller and other foundations, and favored by City Hall and the Commercial Club. “The new teachers are paid half or less what experienced teachers with advanced degrees were making.”

“The fired veteran teachers are being replaced by a much younger, much whiter and much less experienced corps of instructors.”

During the ten years of corporate school-busting reform, Orr was broken up into four smaller schools, only one of which remains today. That was a military academy, whose director took his institution off campus so as to escape the stigma of the parent high school’s corporate-engineered “failure.” And as it happens, turning public high schools and even middle schools over to the military was another hallmark of the Duncan regime in Chicago.

Ruled for more than 40 of the last 55 years by two men named Richard Daley, Chicago has given the nation dubious education reforms before this. The New Orleans model, in which the entire public school workforce was fired at one stroke immediately after Katrina, and nearly all the city’s public schools replaced with charter schools was implemented by Arne Duncan’s predecessor at the Chicago Board of Education, Paul Vallas. Like Duncan, whose longest period of employment before the Chicago Public Schools was as a professional basketball player, Vallas was no educator either. Vallas was an accountant. And as in New Orleans, the closing of neighborhood public schools in Chicago and their wholesale replacement with charter and other special schools has destabilized vast residential areas of the city and greatly contributed to gentrification.

“In school ‘turnaround’ operations, every teacher, food service worker, building engineer and custodial staff person is fired and the slate wiped clean.”

CORE teachers pointed out that Chicago still has laws on the books enabling elected councils of parents to veto the contracts of principals and certain portions of individual school budgets. The turnaround policies allow authorities to strip these last vestiges of democratic control over educational outcomes from those who ought to be among the primary stakeholders — parents.

Effective teaching, as one CORE teacher put it, is a performance art. You need commitment, connection and experience to pull it off, not hysteria, insecurity, mass firings and more tests. Somebody, they say, needs to tell President Obama.

Bruce A. Dixon is managing editor at Black Agenda Report and based in Atlanta. He can be reached at bruce.dixon@blackagendareport.com.

Dallas Black Dance Theater rocks Dallas City Council Inauguration

On Monday, Gloria Campus hosted the Dallas City Council Inauguration Ceremony at the Meyerson Symphony Center in downtown Dallas. The council and mayor Tom Leppert welcomed two new members and said goodbye to two former colleagues who were leaving due to term limits.

It had been a while since I had been at the Meyerson, and had kind of forgotten how great a venue it is. It made me even that much more excited about the opening of the Winspear Opera House in October.

There was nothing exciting about the inauguration (save Angela Hunt not giving the Mayor a hug as she accepted her council certificate), which continues to be the story here in Dallas. The council gets along so well -a far cry for days of near brawls in the council chambers just a few short years ago- that the drama usually associated with local politics is mostly absent.

Dallas Black Dance Theater – Night Run

The most exciting part of the ceremony was the performance of the Dallas Black Dance Theater, who performed an excerpt of “Night Run” choreographed by Christoper Huggins (2003).  It’s amazing that they were able to get so much life out of the small stage that they were left to work with.

Mayor Leppert had “remarks”  near the end of the program which were half inauguration speech, half convention center hotel victory lap.  Leppert said that we have to continue to invest in the city, even in the midst of the economic crisis.  Leppert said the hotel election was about “choosing hope over fear.”  Somebody’s been listening to the POTUS I see.

After the council was sworn in by my good friend Judge C. Victor Lander, a reception was held in the their honor in the lobby.  At their first meeting, the Honorable Dwaine Caraway was elected Mayor Pro Tem in an 11-4 vote over District 5 representative Vonciel Jones Hill.  I guess you can call that a split vote, I don’t see it as that big of a deal.

I do look for more members to break with the Mayor this term if for no other reason than to try to raise their own visibility.  On Monday, Dave Levinthal of the Dallas Morning News broke down just how often the Mayor comes out on the winning side of council votes and who is most likely to side with him.  But at the inauguration, it was smiles and hugs all around, well…..except for the Mayor and the lady (from District 14) in red.

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