Category Archives: Texas

Rep. Marc Veasey, Congressional Black Caucus ask Rick Perry to preserve African American districts

As the federal courts try to sort out to the mess that is Texas congressional redistricting, members of the Congressional Black Caucus led by Texas Rep. Marc Veasey are putting pressure on Texas Gov. Rick Perry and the Republican-dominated Legislature to protect the state’s four African American lawmakers.

fighting for fair representation of black officials in at least four of the Lone Star’s districts.

In a letter to Perry, caucus members requested that the voting rights of African Americans remain a priority in light of a special session of the state legislature that will likely be held later this summer to reshape Texas’s 36 congressional districts.

Some members of the Texas Legislature have expressed hopes to create new Latino districts around Houston and Dallas, but Congressional Black Caucus members expressed concern that such measures could marginalize the African American presence in the delegation. (Houston Chronicle)

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Obama, in Texas, presses middle-class jobs agenda

Offering a more upbeat view of the economy, President Barack Obama resurrected his jobs proposals Thursday, advancing modest initiatives as he pushed for action on more ambitious efforts that face resistance from congressional Republicans. “We’re poised for progress,” he declared.

The president chose the bustling Texas capital as a backdrop to refocus on higher wages, education and a manufacturing-driven agenda that had been eclipsed by his struggles over gun control and spending cuts and his push for an overhaul of immigration laws.

“You might not know this, because if you listen to all the doom and gloom in Washington and politics, and watching cable TV sometimes you might get kind of thinking nothing is going right,” Obama told students at a technology high school. “The truth is there’s a lot of reasons for us to feel optimistic about where we’re headed as a country.”

“Thanks to grit and determination of the American people, we cleared away the rubble of the worst economic crisis in our lifetime,” he continued.

Still, Obama said that while housing markets are improving, corporate profits are skyrocketing and the energy and auto industries are thriving, there remains a need to boost the middle class.

The president’s visit to Austin is the first in a series of field trips aimed at giving a high profile to the economy and jobs, issues still clearly at the forefront of the public’s concerns.

In addition to his appearance at Manor New Technology High School, Obama also toured an Applied Materials Inc. plant. The company provides equipment, services and software to the semiconductor, flat panel display and solar power industries.

“We want the next revolution in manufacturing to be made in America,” he told plant workers.

By traveling to Texas to begin this renewed attention to his jobs initiatives Obama chose a state represented by two of the most conservative Republican members of the Senate — John Cornyn and tea party hero Ted Cruz. Texas also has the second-highest Hispanic population in the country, an attractive demographic group for Democrats and a key audience for Obama as he also pushes for an overhaul of immigration laws.

The emphasis on jobs and on the needs of the middle class comes amid signs that the economy is continuing to recover, that the private sector is hiring, though not at an optimal rate, and that the stock market is maintaining a record setting pace. But Obama is not necessarily benefitting from those trends, and hidden behind the positive numbers are stagnant wages, reduced working hours and low-wage hiring. What’s more, with a 7.5 percent unemployment rate, nearly 12 million Americans are out of work.

An Associate Press-GfK poll last month showed that the percentage of the public that believes the country is headed in the wrong direction has been rising as has the percentage of people who disapprove of Obama’s handling of the economy.

“We’ve got to make sure that middle-class wages and incomes are also going up, because most families haven’t seen their take-home pay rise for years now,” he said.
Addressing persistent fiscal issues, including broad based budget cuts that the government is now confronting, he said: “Our deficits are falling at the fastest rate in years, but now we’ve got to budget in a smarter way so it doesn’t hurt middle-class families or prevent us from making the critical investments that we need for your future.”

The White House also used the trip as an opportunity to launch administrative initiatives to demonstrate continued action even as his bigger proposals find opposition in Congress.

Among the initiatives is a competition to create three new Manufacturing Innovation Institutes, partnerships among businesses, universities and government to help U.S.-based manufacturers and workers create good jobs. Five federal agencies — the Defense, Energy and Commerce departments, NASA and the National Science Foundation — are putting $200 million toward the effort.

“We believe that manufacturing is worthy of that priority because it punches above its weight economically,” said Gene Sperling, director of Obama’s National Economic Council.

Before his remarks, Obama toured a classroom at the technology high school, marveling at solar powered model cars. After his remarks he rolled up his sleeves and joined a nurse, a teacher, a drywall contractor and a small business owner for lunch at Stubb’s, a local barbecue restaurant.

He also stopped by a technology start-up working space in downtown Austin, where he met with entrepreneurs, several of whom were demonstrating their companies’ work. Praising their innovations, he warned that China could possibly leap ahead of the United States on research.

“So we’ve got to get our act together,” Obama told them.

It was Obama’s second trip to Texas in two weeks. He was greeted at the foot of Air Force One by Republican Gov. Rick Perry, a critic of the president’s policies. The two men chatted as they walked across the tarmac.

The attention to jobs comes amid questions about whether the second-term president has enough sway to get his agenda through a divided Congress before attention turns to the November 2014 midterm elections. Since his second inauguration, Obama has lost a bid to expand background checks for gun buyers and was similarly unsuccessful at getting lawmakers to undo the spending cuts.

His jobs proposals also have stalled in Congress, with Republicans showing no interest in job-creation plans based on new federal spending. They also argue that Obama’s regulatory regime and new health care law — the president’s signature domestic policy achievement to date — are hindering more robust job growth.

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell on Thursday ridiculed Obama’s trip as mere image-building.

“If you’re someone who’s all about the visual, then of course putting on a pair of goggles or showing up at a factory is a great way to at least look like you’re doing something about job creation,” he said. (AP)

Career education plan stirs fear of minority “tracking”

Not so long ago, some Texas public schools had a bad habit of channeling minority high school students into bricklaying and cosmetology rather than preparing them for college.

Lingering memories of those days are fresh on the minds of the many Latino and African-American state leaders who are uneasy with current legislative efforts to loosen Texas’ high school graduation standards so that students can pursue more career training.

“This notion of having a degree that is really a career-tech degree scares me, I have to admit. I am old enough and I am suspicious enough to wonder who is going to be in that career tech,” Education Commissioner Michael Williams said at a recent gathering of business leaders.

“I suspect it’s going to be people who look like us rather than somebody else,” Williams, who is African-American, said as he pointed to a high-level Latino state official in the audience. “That scares the bejeebus out of me.” (Austin American-Statesman)

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Austin tries to raise its profile among African-American professionals

Austin is on the cover of another national publication.

The cover of the March technology issue of Black Enterprise magazine, however, does more than add to Austin’s traffic jams. Austin, similar to many other technology centers, has trouble attracting black professionals.

Five local African-American professionals appear on the March cover of Black Enterprise —a goal of Natalie Cofield, president of the Capital City African American Chamber of Commerce.

“Austin is on the map,” Cofield announced at a Saturday afternoon party to unveil the cover and celebrate the chamber’s new Black Technology Council. “I wanted to be sure African-Americans got it.”

Austin and its technology community doesn’t lack for exposure, but the African-American population has been dwindling for years and the lack of a critical mass of African-Americans has attracted the attention of the Greater Austin Chamber of Commerce and several of the region’s largest tech employers. (Austin Statesman)

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Study for Dallas ISD finds majority of black male students think race, gender affect how teachers treat them

A 2011 consultant’s study that questioned several hundred black male students about their schooling in Dallas ISD found the majority believe their race and gender influence how they are treated by teachers.
Some of the students believe they are stereotyped and are expected not to succeed.

Despite those findings and other insight gleaned from 520 black middle school and high school boys, the report was never presented to the DISD board of trustees or made public. District administrators provided no clear reason last week why dozens of copies of the report were found in a trash bin behind a district building.

The report was not included in information The Dallas Morning News received from DISD in a freedom-of-information request for reports focusing on black students after Jan. 1, 2010. The News obtained the report independently of the school district.

DISD spokesman Jon Dahlander said that staffers who were around when the report was compiled think it was used only for internal purposes. He said those asked to fulfill the News’ record request may not have been aware of the report. (Dallas News)

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