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Gas Explosion In Baltimore Destroys Three Homes

1 dead, 4 rescued after gas explosion levels Baltimore homes

BALTIMORE (AP) — A natural gas explosion has leveled three row houses in Baltimore, killing a woman and trapping others. Four people have been hospitalized with serious injuries, and rescuers are trying to reach at least one more survivor in the wreckage. A fourth row house was ripped open by the blast, which shattered windows around the neighborhood. The Baltimore Gas and Electric Co. was called in to shut off gas around the immediate vicinity. The cause of the explosion wasn’t immediately clear, but leaky pipes are a growing problem in Baltimore. The utility estimated that replacing aging pipes would cost nearly $1 billion and take two decades.

Howard University Fall Re-opening Update

Contributed by Howard Newsroom Staff

Dear Howard University Community,

After consultation with our public health faculty experts, District of Columbia officials, University leadership, and monitoring the status of the COVID-19 pandemic locally, regionally and nationally, we have made the very difficult decision to move all undergraduate courses for the Fall 2020 semester fully online, and non-residential. The residence halls will be closed, with the exception of The Axis, which is apartment living.

When I formed the Re-opening Taskforce several months ago, we stated that the paramount consideration for re-opening would be the health and safety of our students, faculty, staff and entire campus community. This has remained the most significant consideration. Nationally, we continue to see COVID-19 cases rise, with an increasing infection rate among young people. We have also grown more painfully aware of the disparate impact of COVID-19 infections, hospitalizations and deaths among people of color, with particular devastation on the Black community. Unfortunately, the stark realities of the current state of the pandemic, District requirement that students from hot spot states would fully quarantine for 14 days, and challenges to safely get students to campus from throughout the nation and around the world without creating additional exposure and risk, have proven overwhelming. While the DMV region has generally fared better than other areas around the country, more than 40% of our undergraduate students come from a state that is currently listed as a hot spot state, thus requiring 14 days of quarantine upon arrival to campus. This is already a difficult challenge to manage, but is additionally complicated as the list of hot spot states is updated frequently. We are rescinding all housing assignments for students who were planning to reside in our residence halls this Fall. In recognition that some of our students have hardships that do not allow them to be successful in an online academic setting, we will provide assistance to them on a case by case basis. The Axis, an apartment living complex close to campus will remain open. We will continue to stand up the on-site, CLIA certified testing laboratory for the free use of the campus community.

I want to especially thank the members of the Re-opening Taskforce who have worked assiduously to create a plan that was comprehensive, thoughtful and detailed. Indeed, District officials praised the thoroughness of the plan, which is a compliment to the work of the entire Taskforce. In fact, it is the elements of that plan that have highlighted the challenges that we would face in bringing a significant number of students safely back to campus. We have required that all students present to campus with a negative COVID-19 test within the seven days prior to return to campus. Many students and families have indicated their inability to either obtain a COVID-19 test in their area, or are in states where results are taking up to 14 days to obtain. As noted previously, we have established our own internal COVID-19 laboratory which will be fully operational next week. However, the 200 rooms that we have identified as isolation rooms for any students who have a positive test result could quickly be filled if we are unable to identify positive cases prior to their arrival on campus. We have also considered the recent decisions of other academic institutions in the Consortium who have likewise opted to offer undergraduate instruction fully online, as their availability of course offerings and facilities impact our students also.

We will focus our efforts on assuring that the online experience for undergraduate students remains rich and continues to prepare our students for leadership in various fields. Our faculty have continued to participate in online training and course development. Further, we have hired additional staff, and are incorporating software that will aid in the implementation of a fully virtual academic experience for undergraduate students. As the District approved our Re-opening Plan earlier this week, we will plan to slowly return key staff and researchers back to campus in a phased, responsible manner. Mandatory online COVID-19 training is currently available, and we will continue to require that all faculty and staff who will be on campus must have a negative COVID-19 test result within seven days of their return to campus.

Many of our graduate and professional programs and courses will also be provided online, either primarily, or fully. While many of our health professional didactic courses will be online, the clinical training components will be conducted face-to-face, secondary to accreditation and licensure requirements. Students in those programs will be provided additional details by the deans of the health professional schools regarding the program requirements, safety protocols and other advisement. A decision regarding the format of instruction for Spring 2021 will be made at a later point in the Fall semester, as we receive additional data and information.

Thank you again for your patience as we have made every effort to be flexible and accommodate the needs of our students, faculty, and staff. We ask for your continued patience, flexibility and support as we continue to prioritize the health and safety of our most precious asset, the lives of all members of the Howard University Community.

Excellence in Truth and Service,

Wayne A. I. Frederick, M.D., MBA

President

No Arrests In Shooting of 20 People In DC

Mass shooting in SE DC leaves 20 injured and 1 dead over the weekend.

Washington, D.C. (Monday, August 10, 2020) – More than 24 hours after nearly two dozen people were shot in the District of Columbia, police still have made no arrests in the case.  Police say 100 bullets were fired just after 12:30am Sunday along Dubois Place in SE as hundreds of people packed the street for a block party.

Police believe three gunmen opened fire following some kind of dispute, killing 17-year-old Christopher Brown, critically injuring an off-duty police officer and hurting as many as 20 others.  “I really don’t understand how my child’s life is just gone,” said Artecka Brown, Christopher’s mother.

The officer is said to be a 22-year-old who was apparently attending the party.  Her identity has not been released.  The block party was in violation of the District’s coronavirus guidelines.  Mayor Muriel Bowser says police will begin cracking down on such activities.

Coronavirus Cases Spike Among Kids

Nearly 100k youth tested positive for the coronavirus in the last two weeks of July. That’s a 40% increase.

Washington, D.C. (Monday, August 10, 2020) – It’s news many parents and health officials feared as children begin to head back to playgrounds, parks, camps, schools, and daycare.  Coronavirus cases among children are spiking.  A new report by the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Children’s Hospital Association say more than 97k children tested positive for COVID-19 in the last two weeks of July.

That number accounts for more than a quarter of all the number of children diagnosed with the coronavirus since March.  The findings come as health officials continue to understand the effects of the virus on children and the role they play in its spread.

Overall, the total number of COVID-19 cases in the United States now top five-million.

Searching To Find A Vaccine For Covid-19

George Washington University are looking for participants for their clinical trial

The race is on to come up with a COVID-19 vaccine and I have information today on how you can take part in the effort.  George Washington University is participating in a clinical trial for an investigational vaccine and they are looking for participants.  My guest is Dr. David Diemert – Professor in the Departments of Medicine and Microbiology, Immunology and Tropical Medicine at George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences.   GW is participating in a clinical trial for an investigational COVID-19 vaccine. Researcher aim to enroll 500 participants.  For more information, google “GW Vaccine Research Unit, or call 202-994-0047 or go here: 

Tune in to Taking it to the Streets, weekday mornings at 6:15, 7:08 and 8:40 on the Steve Harvey Morning Show on 96.3 WHUR.

Follow me on facebook and twitter at @bobbygailes for updates and to stay connected.

Listen to this mornings segment here:

Part 1

Part 2

THE JOURNEY: “Howard University’s Community Health Initiative”

Dr. Wayne Frederick talks to Dr. Reed V. Tuckson, Chair of the Health Sciences Committee of the Board of Trustees at Howard University.

ABOUT

The public health emergency has been tragic for all of us. Howard University has been at the forefront of caring and advising communities in the District of Columbia. Howard University has recently announced the new Howard University Community Health Initiative and how the initiative will be impactful for those in underserved areas. On this episode of “The Journey,” Dr. Wayne Frederick talks to Dr. Reed V. Tuckson, Chair of the Health Sciences Committee of the Board of Trustees at Howard University.

Air Date: May 24, 2020

Oprah Winfrey Places Breonna Taylor Billboards

Billboards demanding justice for Breonna Taylor will go up in her hometown of Louisville, Kentucky thanks to Orpah Winfrey.

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — First, Oprah Winfrey put Breonna Taylor on the cover of O, The Oprah Magazine. Now the media mogul is spreading her message with billboards demanding justice for the Kentucky woman shot to death during a police raid.

Twenty-six billboards displaying a portrait of Taylor are going up across Louisville, Kentucky, demanding that the police officers involved in her death be arrested and charged, according to social justice organization Until Freedom. That’s one billboard for every year of the Black woman’s life.

The billboards, funded by the magazine, showcase the magazine cover dedicated to Taylor, the Courier Journal reported. Also displayed is a quote from Winfrey: “If you turn a blind eye to racism, you become an accomplice to it.”

Until Freedom thanked the Oprah magazine for its work on the billboards.

“Together, we will make sure no one forgets #BreonnaTaylor’s name and recommit to the fight for justice for her and her family,” the group said in a tweet.

Taylor, an emergency medical tech studying to become a nurse, was shot multiple times March 13 when police officers burst into her Louisville apartment using a no-knock warrant during a narcotics investigation. The warrant to search her home was in connection with a suspect who did not live there and no drugs were found.

Kenneth Walker, Taylor’s boyfriend, was originally charged with attempted murder after he fired a shot at one of the officers who came into the home. Walker has said he didn’t know who was entering the apartment and was firing a warning shot. The charge was later dropped.

Global protests on behalf of Taylor, George Floyd in Minnesota and others have been part of a national reckoning over racism and police brutality. Tensions have swelled in Taylor’s hometown and beyond as activists, professional athletes and social media stars push for action while investigators plead for more patience.

The decision whether to bring state-level criminal charges against the Louisville officers rests with Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron. He took the Taylor case after a local prosecutor recused himself from reviewing the matter. One of the officers has been terminated and two other officers are on administrative reassignment.

Cameron, the first African American elected to the attorney general’s job in Kentucky, has declined to put a timetable on his decision since taking over the case in May.

“We remain committed to an independent and thorough investigation into the death of Ms. Breonna Taylor,” Cameron said Friday on his official Twitter account.

“The investigation remains ongoing, and we currently await additional testing and analysis from federal partners, including a ballistics test from the FBI crime lab,” the tweet said.

The FBI field office in Louisville said Friday that a “significant amount of ballistic evidence” was collected when investigators returned to Taylor’s apartment in June.

“This evidence is being tested and analyzed at the FBI Laboratory in Quantico, Virginia,” the FBI’s Louisville office said in a statement. “Once the FBI Laboratory has completed its findings, FBI Louisville will promptly share our results with the attorney general’s office.”

Christopher 2X, an anti-violence activist in Louisville, told reporters this week that he’s encouraged by the commitment that FBI officials locally and nationally have shown to the case. He commented after participating in a meeting at the FBI’s Louisville office.

MD Health Officer Reverses Private School Decision

Travis Gayles, Montgomery County’s Health officer now says private schools can decide on their own how students will return to school. It is a reversal of his previous position.

Montgomery County’s Health officer has reversed his order that restricted private schools from holding in-person classes until October 2nd.  Travis Gayles’ order was countered by Governor Larry Hogan who issued an executive order giving private schools the option to decide for themselves how they would hold classes.  Just yesterday, Gayles stood behind his original order.  Today, he said he still believes all schools in the county should begin the school year on-line only, but again, will allow county private schools to decide for themselves.  Meantime, Montgomery County’s Board of Education made official last night that county public schools will start the year all-virtual.  The Board also announcing the cancellation of all fall and winter sports.

NY Attorney General Seeks To Shutdown NRA

Lettia James, States Attorney for New York has filed a lawsuit against the National Rifle Association for fraud.

NEW YORK (AP) — New York’s attorney general sued the National Rifle Association on Thursday, seeking to put the powerful gun advocacy organization out of business over claims that top executives illegally diverted tens of millions of dollars for lavish personal trips, no-show contracts for associates and other questionable expenditures.

Attorney General Letitia James’ lawsuit, filed in Manhattan state court, highlighted misspending and self-dealing claims that have roiled the NRA and its longtime leader, Wayne LaPierre, in recent years — from hair and makeup for his wife to a $17 million post-employment contract for himself.

“It’s clear that the NRA has been failing to carry out its stated mission for many, many years and instead has operated as a breeding ground for greed, abuse and brazen illegality,” she said at a news conference. “Enough was enough. We needed to step in and dissolve this corporation.”

Simultaneously, Washington D.C. Attorney General Karl Racine — like James, a Democrat — sued the NRA Foundation, a charitable arm of the organization that provides programs for marksmanship and firearm safety, accusing it of diverting funds to the NRA to help pay for lavish spending by top executives.

In a statement, NRA President Carolyn Meadows labeled James a “political opportunist” pursuing a “rank vendetta” with an attack on its members’ Second Amendment rights.

“You could have set your watch by it: the investigation was going to reach its crescendo as we move into the 2020 election cycle,” said Meadows, who announced a countersuit in federal court in Albany that could set the stage for a drawn-out legal battle lasting well past November’s election.

The New York lawsuit made only civil claims, but James said the investigation was ongoing and any criminal activity discovered would be referred to prosecutors and the Internal Revenue Service.

The NRA’s financial troubles, James said, were long cloaked by loyal lieutenants but became public as deficits piled up. The organization went from a nearly $28 million surplus in 2015 to a $36 million deficit in 2018.

The organization’s prominence and cozy political relationships, James said, enabled a culture where nonprofit rules were routinely flouted and state and federal laws were violated. Even the NRA’s own bylaws and employee handbook were ignored, she said.

Though headquartered in Virginia, the NRA was chartered as a nonprofit in New York in 1871 and is incorporated in the state.

Republican Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson defended the NRA, tweeting that if New York doesn’t want it, the organization should “move south, where people respect and value the Second Amendment. Arkansas would be a natural home.”

The Washington, D.C., attorney general has been investigating the NRA Foundation for more than a year. It said its investigation determined that low membership and lavish spending left the NRA with financial problems and so it exploited the tax-exempt foundation to remain afloat.

“Charitable organizations function as public trusts — and District law requires them to use their funds to benefit the public, not to support political campaigns, lobbying, or private interests,” Racine said in a statement.

His lawsuit sought not to have the NRA destroyed, but to have a court-appointed monitor supervise its finances and a trust created to recover money diverted from the foundation.

The New York lawsuit also named LaPierre — the NRA’s CEO — and three other current and former executives as defendants, including general counsel John Frazer, retired treasurer and chief financial officer Wilson Phillips, and LaPierre’s former chief of staff Joshua Powell. The lawsuit accuses all four men of wrongdoing and seeks fines and remuneration.

LaPierre, who has been in charge of the NRA’s day-to-day operations since 1991, is accused of spending millions of dollars on private travel and personal security, accepting expensive gifts such as African safaris and use of a 107-foot (32-meter) yacht from vendors and setting himself up with a $17 million contract with the NRA, if he were to exit the organization, without board approval.

The lawsuit said LaPierre, 70, spent NRA money on travel consultants, including luxury car services, and private jet flights for himself and his family, including more than $500,000 on eight trips to the Bahamas over a three-year span.

Some of the NRA’s excess spending was kept secret, the lawsuit said, under an arrangement with the organization’s former advertising agency, Ackerman McQueen.

The advertising firm would pick up the tab for expenses for LaPierre and other NRA executives and then send a lump sum bill to the organization for “out-of-pocket expenses,” the lawsuit said.

The lawsuit comes at a time when the NRA is trying to remain relevant and a force in the 2020 presidential election as it seeks to help President Donald Trump secure a second term.

An ongoing schism within the organization is pitting some of its most ardent gun-rights supporters against one another.

The internal battles reached a pitch in 2019, when NRA President Oliver North was ousted amid a tussle with LaPierre as he sought to independently review the NRA’s expenses and operations. He accused LaPierre of exerting “dictatorial” control.

James’ lawsuit portrayed the NRA as the victim of its leaders, and she was asked during a news conference why she would victimize it further by shutting it down, rather than removing or fining its officers.

James said the “breadth and the depth of the corruption and the illegality” justified the organization’s closure.

She took similar action to force the closure of Trump’s charitable foundation after alleging he used it to advance business and political interests.

The appearance of a Democrat trying to bring down the NRA for good could create “a sense of ‘Is this politics or is this real?’” said Philip Hackney, a University of Pittsburgh law professor and former IRS attorney.

But Hackney added: “I think it’s more real and I think she was right to bring this complaint. … In a strange way, the NRA’s behavior almost forces her hand. There’s essentially a fraud on all its members.”

Heavy Rain And Strong Winds Expected For The DMV

Severe thunderstorms could be on the way to the DMV with strong winds.

Tonight, our region bracing for heavy rains and what could come with it.  A flash flood warning is in effect for our region until 6 am tomorrow.  Scattered thunderstorms in the forecast through tonight and into tomorrow. Those storms could come with strong winds.  Southern Maryland most susceptible to flooding following the large amount of rain that hit the area with Tropical Storm Isaias.

Student Told Not To Wear ‘BLM’ Mask At Graduation

Was the student denied his first amendment rights?  Was it racial insensitive on the school’s part?

Recently, at York Catholic High School, a private school in York Pennsylvania, student Dean Holmes was set to walk across the graduation stage.  All normal.   Except, Holmes wanted to wear a face mask with Black Lives Matter written across it.  But school officials told him to remove it because school policy forbade the wearing of anything with messaging on it.

Was the student denied his first amendment rights?  Was it racial insensitive on the school’s part?

Recent graduate Dean Holmes and his dad, John, join us for this edition of HUR@Home.

Historic Amendments And What They Mean For African American Voters

African American voters and the 15th and 19th Amendments.

How many of us, as we prepare to go to the polls, give thought to the 15th and 19th amendments to the Constitution?  This year marks the 150th and 100th anniversary of the historic amendments.  Both profoundly affected voting for African Americans in the United States.   Tonight, we’re talking about that history and what it means for African American voters today.

Guest:

Dr. Valethia Watkins – Associate Professor, Department of Afro-American Studies, Howard University

Dr. Niambi Carter – Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, Howard University

Knowing Your Rights If Facing Eviction

What are your legal rights if eviction is right around the corner? We discuss on Insight.

Your rent is due, but the economic impact of the coronavirus has hit your purse strings hard.  Now you are on the verge of being evicted from your home.  What do you do?  Where do you turn? Is the government offering any help?

We discussed that and more with a focus on knowing your rights if you are facing eviction.

AUDIO:

Guest:

Julian Ivey  –  Maryland State Delegate

Kayla William – Staff Attorney, Community Legal Services of Prince George’s County

 

Moco Health Officer Stands Firm on Private Schools Decision

Private schools in Montgomery County must remain closed to in-person instruction through October 1st and provide distance learning to their students. The county health officer clamped down again on his message despite protests against the decision.

Rockville, MD (Wednesday, August 5, 2020) – Despite protests, Montgomery County’s Health Officer is holding firm with his decision to keep private schools closed.

Reemphasizing the need to protect the health and safety of Montgomery County residents as well as parents, students, teachers and staff from the spread of COVID-19, County Health Officer Dr. Travis Gayles today issued a new Health Officer Directive and Order that continued to direct nonpublic schools in Montgomery County to remain closed for in-person instruction until at least Oct. 1, 2020. Today’s order, citing the Maryland Code Annotated Health General § 18-208 and COMAR 10.06.01.06, rescinds and replaces the Health Officer Directive and Order Regarding Private and Independent Schools dated July 31, 2020. The new order, which is effective immediately, remains valid until Oct. 1, 2020, or until rescinded, superseded, amended, or revised by additional orders.

County officials continue to base their public health decisions on data and the data and science and at this point, the data does not suggest that in-person instruction is safe for students, teachers and others who work in a school building. There have been increases in transmission rates of COVID-19 in the State of Maryland, the District of Columbia and the Commonwealth of Virginia, particularly in younger age groups, and this step is necessary to protect the health and safety of Montgomery County residents.

Nonpublic schools are defined as any school located in Montgomery County, Maryland that are not public schools. This includes, but is not limited to all private pay schools, schools affiliated with religious institutions, or schools that are otherwise considered to be independent schools. The Order does not apply to programs licensed or regulated by the Maryland Office of Childcare. Those programs were reopened effective July 19, 2020 pursuant to County Executive Order 082-20.

Based on CDC best practices for the reopening of schools, County health officials will continue to monitor the epidemiological surveillance data and that will guide the decision as to when it is safe to reopen nonpublic and public schools.

Put the “count” in Montgomery County! Be sure to complete the Census online, by phone, or by mail. It’s safe, confidential, easy, and important. #2020Census #EveryoneCountsMCMD

For the latest Reopening Montgomery updates, visit the County’s website and follow Montgomery County on Facebook @MontgomeryCountyInfo and Twitter @MontgomeryCountyMD.

Former Officer Who Killed Rayshard Brooks Files Lawsuit

The former Atlanta policemen who shot Rayshard Brooks sues over his firing.

ATLANTA (AP) — The former Atlanta police officer who fatally shot Rayshard Brooks is suing the mayor and interim police chief, saying his firing violated his constitutional rights and the city code. Meanwhile, prosecutors have asked a judge to revoke his bond.

Garrett Rolfe was fired June 13, the day after he fatally shot Brooks outside a Wendy’s restaurant in Atlanta. In a lawsuit filed Tuesday in Fulton County Superior Court, he says he was fired “without an investigation, without proper notice, without a disciplinary hearing, and in direct violation of the municipal code of the City of Atlanta.”

Rolfe, 27, faces 11 charges, including felony murder. He was granted bond June 30.

Also Tuesday, prosecutors filed a motion to revoke Rolfe’s bond, saying he had traveled to Florida without permission. The bond order “expressly states that the Defendant is only allowed to leave home for medical, legal, or work related obligations,” the motion says.

Police body cameras showed Rolfe and another officer, Devin Brosnan, having a calm and respectful conversation with Brooks for more than 40 minutes after complaints that the 27-year-old Black man had fallen asleep in his car in a Wendy’s drive-thru lane on June 12.

But when officers told him he’d had too much to drink to be driving and tried to handcuff him, Brooks resisted. A struggle was caught on dash camera video. Brooks grabbed one of their Tasers and fled, firing the Taser at Rolfe as he ran away.

An autopsy found Brooks was shot twice in the back.

Brosnan, 26, is charged with aggravated assault and violating his oath and is also free on bond.

Rolfe’s lawsuit, which was first reported by the Daily Report, argues that Rolfe used deadly force “within the scope and course of his duties” in response to “Brooks’ violent, unlawful, aggressive resistance to a lawful arrest.”

The lawsuit says that Rolfe could only be disciplined or terminated for cause and that he has a right to due process. The proper steps, outlined in the city code, were not taken before Rolfe was fired by then-Chief Erika Shields, who resigned the same day.

The lawsuit also notes that Brosnan and many other Atlanta police officers who have been charged with crimes have remained employed while their criminal charges were pending.

Rolfe “has suffered irreparable injury to his personal and professional reputation as a result of his unlawful dismissal,” the lawsuit says, adding that he “has become a public spectacle and object of ridicule.”

The lawsuit asks a judge to hold a hearing and to order that Rolfe be immediately reinstated with back pay and other benefits.

Atlanta police on Wednesday declined to comment, citing the pending litigation. The mayor’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Prosecutors received an email Monday afternoon from one of Rolfe’s attorneys notifying them that Rolfe had traveled to Florida for vacation, according to the motion to revoke his bond. A location report from the company that owns the ankle monitor Rolfe is wearing shows that he left home early Sunday and was in Daytona Beach, the motion says.

Prosecutors aren’t aware of him having been granted permission to travel and they argue that Rolfe “has clearly shown that he will not abide by the conditions of bond imposed by the Court.”

Lawyers for Rolfe did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment Wednesday.

Virginia Seeks Rapid Testing, Offers COVID-19 App

Virginia partners with states to get rapid testing kits. If offers residents coronavirus apps.

If getting coronavirus test results quicker is possible, Maryland and Virginia want in.  The two jurisdictions have joined a group of states to get 3-million rapid testing kits. That would mean people could know their status within 15-20 minutes after testing.  Currently it can take days or weeks for results.  Virginia governor Ralph Northam also announcing that Virginia has also rolled out a smartphone app to automatically notify people if they might have been exposed to the coronavirus.  The app is free and is available in Apple and Android app stores.

Outdoor Pools Will Remain Closed In DC

Summertime will come to an end with no outdoor swimming in DC. The city announced today that COVID-19 is keeping the pools off-limits.

WASHINGTON, DC (Wednesday, August 5, 2020) – There will be no dipping in outside public pools in the District of Columbia this Summer.  DC Mayor Muriel Bowser announced today that outdoor pools will not open this summer due to coronavirus (COVID-19).

“We understand residents look forward to escaping the summer heat at our pools. Out of an abundance of caution, and in consultation with the District’s public health experts, we have decided to prioritize the health and safety of residents,” said DPR Director Delano Hunter.

DC Department of Parks and Recreation (DPR) operates 21 outdoor pools throughout the District, which have been closed since a public health emergency was issued on March 16, 2020 and will remain closed for the summer season.  The pools will undergo the winterization process which includes draining and covering.

All spray parks and all indoor aquatic centers will remain closed until further notice.

As the District continues its phased reopening, many DPR facilities, services, and programs have come back online with restrictions and social distancing guidelines in place.

All DPR parks, athletic fields and courts, playgrounds and other outdoor spaces are open to the public. Organized and high-contact sporting activities, such as football, wrestling, and boxing are prohibited.

DPR is accepting permit applications for outdoor amenities to accommodate groups of no more than 50 persons. To apply and pay for a permit today, click here.

To find out more about DPR’s offerings, visit DPR.DC.gov.

COVID-19 Reshapes And Reduces Back-To-School Spending

“It’s going to be a difficult back-to-school season,” Saunders said. “It’s retailers’ first big test. I don’t think the outcome is going to be good at all.”

NEW YORK (AP) — For Michelle Lynn England, back-to-school shopping always meant heading to Target and the local mall with her two girls and dropping about $500 on each of them for trendy outfits.

Not this year.

The Charlotte, North Carolina, woman cut her spending on clothing in half for her 10-year-old and 14-year-old and instead spent more on masks and other supplies as a surge in coronavirus cases forced her school district to extend online learning through the fall.

“The kids always looked forward to getting something new,” said England, who spent $500 in total this time around. “It didn’t make any sense to buy any extra clothes that won’t be worn.”

As the pandemic drags into the new school year, it is wreaking havoc on reopening plans and the back-to-school shopping season, the second most important period for retailers behind the holidays.

Parents are buying less dressy clothing and more basics for their kids, while stepping up purchases of masks and other protective equipment as well as electronics. They’re also holding back on spending amid uncertainty over what the school year will look like. The back-to-school season typically kicks off in mid-July and peaks in mid-August. This year, experts predict the peak will hit in late August and spill into most of September.

“We are definitely seeing a delay,” said Jill Renslow, senior vice president of the Bloomington, Minnesota-based Mall of America, which reopened in mid-June with social-distancing protocols. “People just don’t know what they need.”

Renslow said the most popular purchases are electronics like laptops and headphones. For clothing, shoppers are focusing on comfortable items like yoga pants. She’s also seeing increased sales of home decor for kids’ rooms as they spend more time doing online learning.

The National Retail Federation, the nation’s largest retail trade group, is pinning its hopes on parents who splurge on pricey items such as computers and other electronics to help their kids learn from home. The trade group predicts that parents of elementary and high school students will spend a total of $33.9 billion this year. That’s up from $26.2 billion last year and would break the record of $30.3 billion set in 2012.

College students and their families are expected to spend a total of $67.7 billion, up from $54.5 billion last year and potentially breaking the record of $55.3 billion set in 2018, according to the trade group.

But others foresee a weak season for retailers.

Neil Saunders, managing director of research firm GlobalData PLC’s retail division, projects $26.4 billion in spending for elementary and high school, down 6.4% from 2019. Back-to-college spending should fall even more, with sales down 37.8% from last year as many students will be living at home and not buying dorm furnishings, he said.

“It’s going to be a difficult back-to-school season,” Saunders said. “It’s retailers’ first big test. I don’t think the outcome is going to be good at all.”

Another factor depressing sales: Amazon’s Prime Day, which for five years was in mid-July, has been postponed until the fall. Marshal Cohen, chief industry adviser of market research firm The NPD Group, said that the shopping event helped jump-start back-to-school sales.

John Fleming, interim CEO at Warrendale, Pennsylvania-based Rue21, says sales now look like a “COVID map.” Stores in states that have experienced surges in new coronavirus cases report sales declines, while the Northeast, where infections have flattened or declined, has seen sales increases.

As more schools shift to virtual lesson plans, retailers are pivoting too. Walmart Inc. has developed designated areas for teachers and virtual learning tools on its website. The discounter’s Sam’s Club division is offering webcams and more headphones and adding lap desks for kids learning at home. Best Buy, the nation’s largest consumer electronics chain, is adding new services, including a tool called Parent Hub, which provides tips and resources to parents to help with distance learning.

J.C. Penney, which filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in May, is marketing room decor aimed at students who aren’t decorating dorm rooms but can decorate their bedrooms instead. Kohl’s, whose message on its website reads, “Heading back, or logging in,” is promoting educational toys and desk accessories as part of its back-to-school campaign.

Andrea Tortora said her sons, ages 14 and 11, have everything they need for hybrid learning in the fall after she loaded up on school supplies last spring. She said she will probably just buy two pairs of shorts, but she’s not in any rush.

“I am not planning any specific shopping trips for back-to-school,” the Peoria, Illinois, woman said. “We have enough.”

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Follow Anne D’Innocenzio: http://twitter.com/ADInnocenzio.

WEtv To Honor Tamar Braxton’s Request To End Future Work

“Tamar Braxton has been an important part of our network family for more than a decade,” the statement said. “As she focuses on her health and recovery at what is clearly a difficult and personal time, we will work with her representatives to honor her request to end all future work for the network.”

LOS ANGELES (AP) — WEtv will honor Tamar Braxton’s request to end future work together, but the network expects to premiere the singer’s reality show next month.

The network wished Braxton “nothing but the best” in a statement Monday. Her reality series called “Tamar Braxton: Get Ya Life!” was expected to premiere last week, but the show has been postponed to Sept. 10.

“Tamar Braxton has been an important part of our network family for more than a decade,” the statement said. “As she focuses on her health and recovery at what is clearly a difficult and personal time, we will work with her representatives to honor her request to end all future work for the network.”

Braxton’s request to end her future working relationship with WEtv comes after police confirmed they responded to a medical emergency July 16 at the downtown Los Angeles high rise that she calls home. She wrote about her career demands on the reality series being “excessive and unfair” in a recent social media post.

The R&B singer posted a lengthy message that she was grateful for her boyfriend David Adefeso who found her “lifeless” in her home. She did not provide details about her hospitalization.

A representative for Braxton had no comment on the matter.

Braxton made a splash in pop culture when she and her sisters, including Grammy-winning singer Toni Braxton, launched their reality series “Braxton Family Values” on Wetv in 2011. The series was an instant hit with Tamar Braxton, shining as the show’s breakout fan favorite.

The series helped propel her music career. She had the R&B hit “Love & War” soon after and even earned three Grammy nominations for her music, two for the song and one for the album of the same title.

The success led to a WEtv spinoff “Tamar & Vince” with her then husband-manager Vincent Herbert, a music executive who played a role in Lady Gaga’s career. She filed for divorce from Herbert in 2017.

From 2013 to 2016, Tamar Braxton was one of the co-hosts of the daytime talk show “The Real,” earning two Daytime Emmy nominations alongside the other hosts for outstanding entertainment talk show host. She competed on “Dancing with the Stars” during her daytime TV stint.

Her 2015 album, “Calling All Lovers,” helped her nab a fourth Grammy nomination, and her last album was 2017’s “Bluebird of Happiness.” Her music has won her a BET Award and three Soul Train Music Awards.

She most recently appeared on VH1’s “To Catch a Beautician,” a series about hairstylists who wrecked their clients’ hair.

Chip, Joanna Gaines Return To ‘Fixer Upper’ For New Network

“These past few years, we’ve continued tackling renovations and projects, doing the work we’re passionate about, but I don’t think either of us anticipated how the show would become such a permanent fixture in our hearts,” they said in a statement.

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Chip and Joanna Gaines are returning to “Fixer Upper” as they build their new network.

The series, which made the couple do-it-yourself celebrities, will be part of their Magnolia Network set to launch next year. The series aired for five seasons, until April 2018, on HGTV.

“These past few years, we’ve continued tackling renovations and projects, doing the work we’re passionate about, but I don’t think either of us anticipated how the show would become such a permanent fixture in our hearts,” they said in a statement.

Two others shows were announced Tuesday for the Magnolia lineup. One showcases interior designer Brian Patrick Flynn, and the other features Texas entrepreneur Jonathan Morris telling the stories of “inspiring” small business owners nationwide, the network said.

The Flynn project is untitled, with the working title “Self Employed” attached to Morris’ show.

Previously announced Magnolia series include “Bespoke Kitchens,” “Family Dinner” and “Restoration Road with Clint Harp.”

Magnolia Network, a joint venture between Chip and Joanna Gaines and Discovery Inc., will replace the DIY Network when it debuts in 2021. The launch date is dependent on the easing of a coronavius-forced production halt that has delayed most TV and film projects.

 

Roc Nation Partners With Brooklyn’s LIU To Launch New School

Roc Nation CEO Desiree Perez called the new partnership with LIU “a true investment in our community and young people in Brooklyn, in New York City, and beyond.”

NEW YORK (AP) — Jay-Z’s Roc Nation entertainment company is partnering with Brooklyn’s Long Island University to launch the Roc Nation School of Music, Sports & Entertainment.

The new school will begin enrolling students for the fall 2021 semester, and 25% of the incoming freshmen class will receive Roc Nation Hope Scholarships. Hope Scholars will graduate without any debt.

Jay-Z, a 22-time Grammy winner and entertainment mogul, was born and raised in Brooklyn. He launched Roc Nation in 2008 and the company has worked with some of the top players in music, including Rihanna, Alicia Keys, DJ Khaled, J. Cole, Megan Thee Stallion, Lil Uzi Vert and more. The company also partnered with the NFL and co-produced this year’s Emmy-nominated halftime show with Shakira and Jennifer Lopez. Roc Nation Sports was founded in 2013 and has worked with many athletes.

Roc Nation CEO Desiree Perez called the new partnership with LIU “a true investment in our community and young people in Brooklyn, in New York City, and beyond.”

“We’re excited that The Roc Nation School of Music, Sports & Entertainment will provide unique insight, knowledge and experiences for students and introduce the world to the next generation of unmatched talent,” Perez continued in her statement Tuesday.

The Roc Nation School of Music, Sports & Entertainment will offer undergraduate degrees in music, music technology, entrepreneurship and production, and sports management. The school will begin accepting applications this fall for the fall 2021 semester and Roc Nation Hope Scholarship recipients will be selected from a group of academically competitive, need-based first-time freshmen from New York.

“Our proximity in and around New York City’s epicenter of music and sports clearly positions us to offer unparalleled experiential learning and access to professional opportunities that will launch students to success,” LIU President Dr. Kimberly Cline said in a statement. “We look forward to joining with Roc Nation to offer an unprecedented educational resource that opens up the entertainment and sports world to a new and eager generation.”

In addition to learning from professors, students will also engage with guest artists and lecturers and will gain hands-on experience through internships.

The school will also offer resources to high school students and those younger: Starting in spring 2021, the school will launch summer residential camps for high schoolers and Saturday programs for students ages 10-18 that focus on music and sports management. Those programs will begin in spring 2021 and scholarships will be available for need-based students.

Finding The Entrepreneur In You

This month is “Black Business Month”. It couldn’t be a more perfect time for you to start yours!

Contributed by Diamond Sydnor

Let’s face it, financial hardships have been a topic of discussion since the Covid-19 pandemic began. People have been let go, laid off, and fired which has also played a huge role in creating stressors that affect our mental health. Along with being laid off, people around the world have been trying to cope with anxiety and depression, which can make life more challenging. Although, being laid off is unfortunate, let’s talk about things to be grateful for because quarantine has made a lot of us tap into our gifts and use them for financial profit.

Quarantine has definitely come with a lot of rain, but it has also brought sunshine. What do I mean by that you might ask? Well, being in quarantine has slowed down the pace of life, which gives us the opportunity to hone in on the talents, ideas, and dreams we didn’t get much time to focus on while life was moving at a faster pace. Any kind of business you can think of from hair to press on nails that are mailed to your door have been created. People are tapping into trading and art. Covid-19 has made nearly everything virtual, which has caused for an increase in creativity. This has allowed so many people to tap into the creativity they didn’t think existed.

For those that may not have found their lane as of yet, this article is for you too! I hope this encourages you to meditate on your talents and even if you have them, but fear is making you hold back, DON’T. There’s plenty of room for all of us to benefit and profit. How do I do that you may ask? Let me help you! Think of your hobbies, think of your passions, or think of something you’ve always wanted to do but did not get the chance to. Start from there, write it down, make the vision plain, and then begin to do the proper steps to fulfil that dream, goal, or aspiration. You’d be surprised at how much money your talent can bring you especially when you’re passionate about it!

Since quarantine has become black businesses and even small businesses have seen an increase in sales, which have helped them to keep their lights on. People who took the risk and offered their talents as services or whom perfected a craft since the world has shut down have been blessed with so many opportunities of financial gain, why can’t you? I say this to say, how many different brands of bread do you see when you walk down the bread aisle at a grocery store? Several right? So what are you waiting on? Take the leap and jump, you never know where it can take you! Oh, by the way this month is “Black Business Month,” it couldn’t be a more perfect time for you to start yours!

2020 Census Data Collection To End Early

The Census Bureau announced it will stop collecting 2020 census data at the end of September.

The U.S. Census Bureau is cutting short its schedule for collecting data for the 2020 census.

Legislation that would extended the collection deadline from the end of September to the end of October has stalled in the U.S. Senate.  Census experts and civil rights activists worry the sped-up count could hurt its thoroughness and produce inaccurate data that will have lasting effects through the next decade since it determines how $1.5 trillion in federal spending is distributed and how many congressional districts each state gets.

Isaias Wreaks Havoc On East Coast

One woman was killed in our region from the effects of the Isaias tropical storm.

Tropical storm Isaias did not hit the DMV as hard as expected.  Still it packed a deadly punch. A woman in Mechanicsville killed when a tree fell on her car.

Isaias turned into a tornado in North Carolina, killing two people there in a trailer park.  One person was killed in New York City when struck by a fallen tree.  Three-million people are without power along the eastern seaboard.

Power outages in the DMV region, along with flooding.  Reports of tornadoes touching down in Southern MD with many fallen trees.  St. Mary’s county hit hard with reports of as much as 9 inches of water in some areas.  A coastal flood warning is in effect in our region until 3 a.m. tomorrow.  The National Weather service says “The unprotected area on the Southwest Waterfront at the DC Seafood Market is expected to flood.”

Building Generational Wealth Through Real Estate

Investing in the housing market helps families with housing and in achieving the dream of home ownership.

Homeownership remains one of the key tools to building and sustaining generational wealth.  My guest today helps low income families achieve the dream of homeownership.  My guest is Dr. Joseph Asamoah – Real Estate Investor

Dr. Joseph Asamoah is a Real Estate Expert Investor who helps people learn how to purchase homes and invest in the housing market to build generational wealth.  He also assists low-income families with housing.  More information here: 

Tune in to Taking it to the Streets, weekday mornings at 6:15, 7:08 and 8:40 on the Steve Harvey Morning Show on 96.3 WHUR.

Follow me on facebook and twitter at @bobbygailes for updates and to stay connected.

Listen to this mornings segment here:

Navy Investigates Kaepernick Stunt

A Kaepernick look-a-like doll attacked by dogs at Navy Seal Museum demonstration.

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) — The U.S. Navy is investigating an incident in which dogs attacked a “Colin Kaepernick stand-in” during a K-9 demonstration during a 2019 fundraiser at the Navy SEAL Museum in Florida.

The Navy said in a statement posted on Twitter that officials became aware of the video on Sunday.

Kaepernick is a former San Francisco 49ers quarterback who began kneeling during the playing of “The Star Spangled Banner” before games to protest social injustice and police brutality. He played his final NFL game in January 2017. He offered support to those protesting the death of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police officers in May, and the NFL’s commissioner has apologized for not listening earlier to players’ concerns about social injustice.

The videos show four dogs attacking a man, who is wearing a red Kaepernick football jersey over heavily padded gear as people stand nearby watching. In a second video, the man is laying on the ground when he’s approached by men wearing fatigues and holding rifles, saying, “On your belly.” The man replies, “Oh, man, I will stand,” as he rolls over, followed by laughing from the crowd.

The videos were apparently posted on Instagram last year and resurfaced over the weekend.

“The inherent message of this video is completely inconsistent with the values and ethos of Naval Special Warfare and the U.S. Navy,” the statement said.

The Navy said the “initial indications” are that no active duty personnel or equipment were used in the demonstration at the “independent organization’s event.”

The Navy SEAL Museum is located in Fort Pierce, Florida, which is north of West Palm Beach on the state’s Atlantic Coast. According to its website, the National Navy UDT-SEAL Museum is the only museum dedicated solely to preserving the history of the U.S. Navy SEALs and their predecessors.

The museum’s stated main objective is the promotion of public education, with events for both children and adults. Children between the ages of 10 and 15 were recently given firsthand demonstrations on the care and training of working dogs as part of the museums “Frogman Foundry” program. The museum is not officially connected to the Navy. It was designated as a National Museum by an act of Congress and signed into law in 2008.

Hogan Says Private Schools Can Reopen

Governor Larry Hogan overruled Montgomery County health officials on the reopening of county private schools.

Maryland’s governor has come down on the side of private schools in their bid to reopen.  Today, Larry Hogan amended and clarified his executive order that allows private schools, along with public school systems in the state, to decide for themselves how and when they can reopen.  Last week, Dr. Travis Gayles, Montgomery County’s top health officer, said that private schools in the county could not reopen for in-person classes before October 1st. The governor says as long as schools develop plans in line with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and state guidelines, they should be able to use their best judgment.

AAA Offers Driving and Insurance Tips to Prepare for Isaias

AAA says there are some key things we all need to do to prepare our vehicles and homes for Isaias.

WASHINGTON, D. C. (Monday, August 3, 2020) ––It is here. The National Weather Service (NWS) has issued a Tropical Storm Warning for much of central and southern Maryland, Washington, D.C., as well as portions of northeastern Virginia along the I-95 corridor, as Tropical Storm Isaias approaches the area. “Driving conditions will be dangerous in places where surge water covers the road,” warns the NWS. As a result, “emergency plans should include the potential for major flooding from heavy rain. Evacuations and rescues are likely.”

“This is a potentially dangerous situation for Washington metro area residents, and a particularly treacherous scenario for area motorists and commuters,” said John B. Townsend II, AAA Mid-Atlantic’s Manager of Public and Government Affairs. “In addition to coping with and navigating through roadways inundated with three to six inches of flooding rain, there is also the matter of tropical-storm-force wind gusts. ‘Exercise extreme caution in place where flood waters may cover escape routes,’ as the NWS is forewarning. “Streets and parking lots can easily become rivers of moving water with underpasses submerged.’”

Area residents should brace themselves for and prepare/plan for dangerous wind of equivalent strong tropical storm force. “Move to safe shelter before the wind becomes hazardous,” warns the National Weather Service (NWS). AAA Mid-Atlantic offers facts and tips to drivers and homeowners to help them cope with Tropical Storm Isaias.

AAA Driving Tips:

  • Sign up for emergency alerts – Alerts are often provided by agencies like the National Weather Service and can help notify you when there is a risk of flooding.
  • Turn Around, Don’t Drown! As little as six inches of water can cause you to lose control of your car and potentially stall your engine. Do not attempt to drive through flooded roads. Turn around; find another way to get to your destination. Pull over to a safe location if needed.
  • Seek higher ground – If your vehicle stalls or is suddenly caught in rising water, leave it immediately.
  • Never drive through standing water – Standing water can be deceiving and motorists should avoid it. No matter how shallow it may appear, water may be concealing downed power lines, be deeper than it appears, or have significant force from flooding, etc.
  • Standing water may also be hiding potholes –Another good reason not to drive through it!
  • Watch for hydroplaning – No car is immune from hydroplaning on wet surfaces, including four-wheel drive vehicles. Even if brakes work under normal conditions that doesn’t mean they will react the same on slippery roads where tires roll with less traction. Also, turn off cruise control as it can cause hydroplaning.
  • Take the nearest exit – If conditions worsen to the point where there is any doubt about your safety, take the nearest exit. Don’t just stop on the shoulder or under a bridge. If your visibility is compromised, other drivers may be struggling too.

AAA Tips on Auto Insurance Coverage:

  • Physical damage to a car caused by heavy wind, flooding, or fallen tree limbs is covered under the optional comprehensive portion of an auto policy.
  • Car owners should contact their insurance company to determine the extent of coverage before seeking repairs.

 

AAA Tips on Auto Insurance Claims:

  • Take photographs of any visible damage.
  • Any vehicle sustaining flood damage should be fully inspected before being allowed back on the road. Mechanical components, computer systems, engine, transmission, axles, brake system and fuel system impacted by water contamination may render the vehicle unfit to drive and in many cases vehicles sustaining significant water damage will be determined to be a total loss.

 AAA Tips on Home Insurance Coverage

  • Wind-driven rain that causes an opening in the roof or wall and enters through this opening is covered under standard homeowner’s insurance policies. Water that seeps into a home from the ground up is considered flooding and would be covered by flood insurance, which is provided by the National Flood Insurance Program and a few private insurers. Flood insurance is available to both homeowners and renters. Flood damage is not covered by standard homeowners or renters insurance policies.
  • Homeowners policies also include additional living expenses—In the event a home is severely damaged by an insured disaster, this would pay for reasonable expenses incurred by living elsewhere while the home is being fixed or rebuilt.

AAA Tips on Homeowners Insurance Claims 

  • The first step to recovery is inspecting your home for damage and then notifying your insurance company as soon as possible.
  • Prepare an inventory and take photographs of damaged property.
  • Store undamaged property in a protected place if possible.
  • If carpet is soaked, remove the carpet and the carpet pad. Keep a two-foot square piece for the claims adjuster.
  • Look for hazards such as broken or leaking gas lines, flooded electrical circuits, submerged furnaces or electrical appliances and damaged sewage systems.
  • Proceed with extreme caution as you inspect your basement. There may be hazards from electrical lines and heating units. If your basement has flooded, do not pump it out all at once. Remove about one-third of the water per day. The wet ground surrounding your basement may cause the floors to buckle and the walls to collapse.
  • Remove contaminated materials from the home. Be aware of exposure to mold.
  • Carpeting, mattresses and upholstered furniture should be disposed of or cleaned and disinfected by a professional cleaner.
  • Cover broken windows and other holes to prevent further damage.
  • Test drywall for moisture softness. If soft, cut holes at base to help dry out.
  • If possible run AC, dehumidifier and fans constantly.
  • If power is out, disconnect all computers and appliances from electrical sources.
  • Open cabinet doors and elevate furniture allowing air to circulate.
  • Save wet books or photo albums by putting them on edge in a frost free freezer.
  • Be present when the adjuster inspects your damage.

Frank Ski: ‘You Know You’re In The DMV When…’

“The Frank Ski Show with Nina Brown” will be entertaining, humorous, informative, and inspirational. You won’t want to miss the up-to-date commentary on the headlines, breaking, and entertainment news topics, as well as what’s essential to Black Culture. From 3 pm to 7 pm every day, the Frank Ski Show will be presented in an edgy, fun, and socially interactive and digital format. Yes, the DMV will be a big part of the live show as the listeners will be our co-stars! Expect Frank and Nina to clash as they have a 15-year work relationship built upon respect, but not precisely the same viewpoints. At times they butt heads, and it will be up to the listeners to weigh in and give their own opinion on who’s right and who’s wrong. The result is something hilarious, relatable, transparent, and vulnerable. From Frank Ski’s Inspirational Vitamin to unforgettable interviews– from the biggest newsmakers to your favorite celebrities, this is a fun show with edge and an attitude, and will be daily can’t miss programming in the DMV!

YOU KNOW YOU’RE IN THE DMV WHEN…

WHAT TO EXPECT FROM FRANK SKI AND NINA BROWN ON 96.3 WHUR

THE DMV IS VERY IMPORTANT TO THE CULTURE

Tamar Braxton Pays Tribute To Boyfriend For ‘Saving My Life’

“I love you. You love me. We love Logan. Together forever,” he said with emojis including one of a diamond ring.

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Tamar Braxton is thanking her boyfriend for “saving my life” after her hospitalization last month.

Braxton posted a lengthy message on social media late Saturday that paid tribute to David Adefeso being her “angel on earth.” She said she is grateful for Adefeso who found her “lifeless” in their home, saying it “couldn’t have been easy” for him.

The R&B singer did not provide details about her hospitalization. Police only confirmed they responded to a medical emergency July 16 at the downtown Los Angeles high rise that she calls home.

“Through this entire time, you have held my hand, heard my cries, held me when I have been weak. You have had my ENTIRE back‼️” she said in the post.

Braxton, 43, shared the post along with an older video of the couple talking about getting engaged. She called Adefeso and her 7-year-old son Logan, whom she shares with former husband Vincent Herbert, a priority.

“Although I been said yes in this old video… now and then, I couldn’t imagine what life would be like if you weren’t by my side,” she wrote. “Thank God I’m here and thank God for you.”

Adefeso replied to Braxton’s post with a short message.

“I love you. You love me. We love Logan. Together forever,” he said with emojis including one of a diamond ring.

Though Tamar Braxton released her debut album in 2000, she made a splash in pop culture when she and her sisters, including Grammy-winning icon Toni Braxton, launched their reality series “Braxton Family Values” on WEtv in 2011. It was an insta-hit, with Tamar Braxton shining as the show’s breakout fan favorite.

The series helped propel her music career. She had the R&B hit “Love & War” soon after and even earned three Grammy nominations for her music, two for the song and one for the album of the same title.

The success led to a WEtv spinoff “Tamar & Vince” with her then husband-manager Vincent Herbert, a music executive who played a role in Lady Gaga’s career. She filed for divorce from Herbert in 2017.

From 2013 to 2016, Tamar Braxton was one of the co-hosts of the daytime talk show “The Real,” earning two Daytime Emmy nominations alongside the other hosts for outstanding entertainment talk show host. She competed on “Dancing with the Stars” during her daytime TV stint.

Her 2015 album, “Calling All Lovers,” helped her nab a fourth Grammy nomination, and her last album was 2017’s “Bluebird of Happiness.” Her music has won her a BET Award and three Soul Train Music Awards.

She most recently appeared on VH1’s “To Catch a Beautician,” a series about hairstylists who wrecked their clients’ hair. Her WEtv reality series called “Tamar Braxton: Get Ya Life!” was expected to premiere last week, but has been postponed to Sept. 10.

Pandemic Parody Of `Goodnight Moon’ To Be Released In Fall

“COVID-19 is a difficult topic, especially for young children,” Rechler said in a statement. “I wanted to tell my children a relatable story — a story that would help them become familiar with their new everyday lives and within that story, touch upon what was happening in the outside world. I thought a lot about the contrast between quarantining safely inside versus what was happening outside my window.”

NEW YORK (AP) — A popular online spoof of the children’s favorite “Goodnight Moon,” reworked for the coronavirus, will be published by Penguin Random House this fall.

The Penguin imprint Philomel Books announced Monday that “Good Morning Zoom,” written by Lindsay Rechler and illustrated by June Park, is scheduled for Oct. 6. Currently self-published, “Good Morning Zoom” takes Margaret Wise Brown’s beloved bedtime story and turns it into a narrative about Zoom, bread baking, home schooling and other familiar parts of life during the pandemic.

Rechler is a banking executive and mother of two who lives in Manhattan. Park is a graphic designer and illustrator who lives in Brooklyn. All author net proceeds will be donated to coronavirus relief charities.

“COVID-19 is a difficult topic, especially for young children,” Rechler said in a statement. “I wanted to tell my children a relatable story — a story that would help them become familiar with their new everyday lives and within that story, touch upon what was happening in the outside world. I thought a lot about the contrast between quarantining safely inside versus what was happening outside my window.”

Review: Beyoncé’s ‘Black Is King’ Is Supreme Black Art

The voyage feels even more special during the current state of the world, as the Black experience has been looked at closely in the wake of the many deaths of Black people, and the Black Lives Matter movement that continues to protest racism and inequality. And for those of us who have been stuck in place for months because of the coronavirus pandemic, the voyage and escapism are welcomed.

King Beyoncé’s new film takes you on a journey of Black art, music, history and fashion as the superstar transports you to Africa to tell the story of a young man in search of his crown, matched to epic songs she created while inspired by “The Lion King.”

The voyage feels even more special during the current state of the world, as the Black experience has been looked at closely in the wake of the many deaths of Black people, and the Black Lives Matter movement that continues to protest racism and inequality. And for those of us who have been stuck in place for months because of the coronavirus pandemic, the voyage and escapism are welcomed.

In “Black Is King,” which debuted Friday on Disney+, Beyoncé continues to dig deep into her roots and share her discovery with the world, like she did on the sweet masterpiece “Lemonade.” Black pride is the center of the film, with African artists strongly represented, as Beyoncé shares her stage with Tiwa Savage, Wizkid, Mr Eazi, Busiswa, Salatiel, Yemi Alade, Moonchild Sanelly and more.

They add a great deal of energy and beauty to the film — through lyrical delivery, eye-popping and sharp choreography, and bright and elegant costumes — bringing the songs from “The Lion King: The Gift” to life.

That album was inspired by the time Beyoncé spent voicing the character of Nala in the latest version of “The Lion King.” Audio from the animated film are included, but it’s the newer passages that truly resonate.

“When it’s all said and done, I don’t even know my own native tongue. And if I can’t speak myself, I can’t think myself. And if I can’t think myself, I can’t be myself. And if I can’t be myself, I will never know me,” a man says. “So Uncle Sam, tell me this, if I will never know me, how can you?”

Powerful.

Later in the film, Beyoncé says: “We have always been wonderful. I see us reflected in the world’s most heavenly things. Black is king. We were beauty before they knew what beauty was.”

That leads into “Brown Skin Girl,” as Naomi Campbell, Lupita Nyong’o and Kelly Rowland — queens that Beyoncé name-drops on the song — make appearances alongside other black and brown women and girls in a deep celebration of melanin, diversity and sisterhood. Beyoncé singing “because you’re beautiful,” face-to-face with Rowland, could induce tears.

“Black Is King” also highlights music’s royal family: The Carters. Jay-Z makes a stunning appearance on “Mood 4 Eva,” while 8-year-old Blue Ivy steals the spotlight every time she appears on screen. Tina Knowles as well as Sir and Rumi Carter — who the film is dedicated to — are also present.

It’s a family affair, with musical cousins — both familiar and on the verge — part of the safari ride.

“Black Parade” plays as the credits scroll at the end of “Black Is King,” and the song title could be the best way to describe the film: a procession into Beyoncé’s black liberation.

OK, now let’s get in formation.

“Black Is King,” a Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures release, is rated TV-14 by the Motion Picture Association of America. Running time: 85 minutes. Four stars out of four.

Parents Struggle As Schools Reopen Amid Coronavirus Surge

As the bus pulled away from the curb in Adamus’ Dallas, Georgia, neighborhood, the tears finally began to fall.

DALLAS, Ga. (AP) — Putting your child on the bus for the first day of school is always a leap of faith for a parent. Now, on top of the normal worries about teachers and lessons and adjusting to new routines, there’s COVID-19.

Rachel Adamus was feeling those emotions at sunrise Monday as she got 7-year-old Paul ready for his first day of second grade and 5-year-old Neva ready for the start of kindergarten.

With a new school year beginning this week in some states, Adamus is struggling to balance her fears with her belief that her children need to go to school for the sake of their education. The death toll in the U.S. from the coronavirus has reached about 155,000, and cases are rising in numerous states.

As the bus pulled away from the curb in Adamus’ Dallas, Georgia, neighborhood, the tears finally began to fall.

“I tried not to cry. I’m usually not like this on the first day of school,” said Adamus, who said her aunt died from COVID-19 in Alabama and her husband’s great uncle succumbed to the virus in a New Jersey nursing home. “This is the hardest it’s been.”

The Adamus children are among tens of thousands of students in Georgia and across the nation who were set to resume in-person school Monday for the first time since March.

Both youngsters were wearing masks, although that is not mandatory for the 30,000 students in Paulding County, about 25 miles northwest of Atlanta.

Nine districts were starting face-to-face classes in Georgia, all also offering parents a stay-at-home virtual option. That’s in addition to three districts that started face-to-face classes last week. Five more Georgia districts were starting all-online classes on Monday.

Parents in Louisiana and Tennessee will also be among those navigating the new academic year as schools open up in parts of those states this week. Schools in Hawaii were supposed to reopen Tuesday, but the teachers union led a move to delay that until Aug 17.

Many schools are planning a hybrid approach, with students alternating between in-person classes and online instruction. Some schools will have full in-person instruction for lower grade levels only.

Many school districts around the country had offered parents a choice of at least some in-person classes or remote instruction. But an uptick in COVID-19 cases in many states has prompted districts to scrap in-person classes at least for the start of the school year, including Los Angeles, Philadelphia and Washington.

Adamus lives near North Paulding High School, where the principal sent a letter over the weekend announcing a football player tested positive for the coronavirus after attending practice. The Georgia High School Association, in a memo sent last week, said it has received reports of 655 positive tests since workouts for football and other sports started on June 8. Mandatory practices began statewide last week.

In Mississippi, where the virus is spreading fast, 44 districts begin classes in person this week, starting Monday with the rural 1,700-student Newton County system east of Jackson. The 2,700-student Corinth district was the first traditional district to begin class in Mississippi last week. By week’s end, one Corinth High student had tested positive and a dozen or more classmates were in quarantine.

In Indiana, where schools reopened last week, a student at Greenfield-Central Junior High School tested positive on the first day back to class.

School Superintendent Harold Olin said the student was tested days earlier and attended class before receiving the results. The student was isolated in the school clinic, while school nurses worked to identify others who may have had close contact.

“This really does not change our plans,” Olin said. “We knew that we would have a positive case at some point in the fall. We simply did not think it would happen on Day One.”

One student who won’t be starting at North Paulding on Monday is Aliyah Williams. Her mother, Erica Williams, said she was keeping the 14-year-old freshman home because two of her younger sons have cystic fibrosis and she can’t risk their being exposed. Williams said she thinks her daughter will be OK academically with online classes. But she’s worried about Aliyah’s inability to see her friends.

“She’s a social butterfly. That’s a big part of her personality,” Williams said.

Aliyah has been participating in color guard with the school band, but Williams said she is now “conflicted” about that too, considering the football player’s positive test.

Other parents have to balance their job with schooling decisions. Shannon Dunn has to report to her job this week as a cafeteria manager at an elementary school in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, but she has no idea what she will do when her daughter starts kindergarten with online-only instruction.

Dunn’s East Baton Rouge Parish district has asked employees to begin work this week, while students are set to begin virtual classes next week. School officials have said they hope to begin in-person classes after Labor Day.

“My family works. I have no one I can take her to and say, `OK, at 12 o’clock you are going to have to start working online with her for school,’” Dunn said.

Dunn said she hopes her daughter will be able to attend in-person classes at her school after Labor Day. But even if she does, that will not ease Dunn’s mind completely.

“I’m definitely going to worry,” she said. “I will send her to in-person classes, but if I hear of the spread of COVID at the school, then I’d have to rethink it all over again.”

‘If Not Now, When?’: Black Women Seize Political Spotlight

Now Black women are mobilized and demanding an overdue return on their investment. Over the last several years and across America, Black women ran and won elections in historic numbers, from Congress to county school boards.

MARIETTA, Ga. (AP) — The little girl ran up to her, wide-eyed and giddy.

“Are you Charisse Davis?” the fourth grader asked.

Davis was stunned. A former kindergarten teacher and librarian, she was more accustomed to shuttling her two sons to basketball practice than being seen as a local celebrity. But now she had been elected the only Black woman on the Cobb County School Board, gaining office in a once conservative suburban community where people who look like her rarely held positions of power.

Something had changed in this place, and something had changed in her.

“I love your hair — your hair looks like my hair,” the girl squealed, calling friends over.

It was a moment both innocent and revealing: Not just a child seeing herself in an elected leader, but also a reflection of the rapidly building power of Black women. It’s a momentous change that could make history on a national ticket and determine the outcome of the presidential race.

___

EDITOR’S NOTE — Americans are preparing to choose a leader and a path through a time of extraordinary division and turmoil. Associated Press journalists tell their stories in the series “America Disrupted.”

___

Black women have long been the heart of the Democratic Party — among the party’s most reliable and loyal voters — but for decades that allegiance didn’t translate to their own political rise. There have been zero Black female governors, just two senators, several dozen congresswomen.

And the people representing them instead have not met their needs: Disparities in education and opportunity resulted in Black women making on average 64 cents for every dollar a white man makes. Long-standing health inequities have caused Black people to die disproportionately from COVID-19.

And countless cases of police brutality have left many Black women terrified every time their children pulled out of the driveway, fearing that they might not make it home alive.

Now Black women are mobilized and demanding an overdue return on their investment. Over the last several years and across America, Black women ran and won elections in historic numbers, from Congress to county school boards.

This transformation is taking place in once unlikely places, suburban counties in the South. Places like Cobb, a rambling expanse of strip malls and subdivisions just north of Atlanta that doubled in population midway through the last century as white people fled the city. Then, slowly, families of color followed, also seeking bigger yards and better schools.

The year Charisse Davis was born, 1980, Cobb County was 4.5% African American. Now it’s more than 27% Black and 13% Hispanic. Its politics caught up with its demographics: In 2016 Hillary Clinton was the first Democratic presidential candidate to eke out a win in Cobb County since Jimmy Carter, a Georgian, in 1976.

President Donald Trump’s presidency, which has fueled racial divisions and appealed to white grievance, unleashed for some here an overwhelming urgency. They added their names to down-ticket ballots; they canvassed; they knocked on doors.

When Stacey Abrams, a Black progressive Democrat, ran for governor in 2018, she focused her campaign on women of color. In that election, more than 51,000 Black women in Cobb County cast ballots — 20,000 more than voted in midterm elections four year earlier.

Although Abrams lost narrowly statewide, she won Cobb County handily. Meanwhile, Lucy McBath, a Black mother whose 17-year-old son was killed by a white man who thought his music was too loud, won a congressional seat that includes part of the county, a district once held by conservative firebrand Newt Gingrich.

Charisse Davis looked at the school board members and saw no Black women, so she ran and won. Another Black woman became the chair of the county’s young Republicans. Two joined the Superior Court bench. A teenager ran for class president, and she won, too.

“We’ve been watching from the sidelines and allowing other people to take their turns, and take these positions of power,” Davis said. “Now here we are to essentially fix it.”

___

The first county Democratic Party meeting after Trump’s election was standing room only.

“It was almost like a support group. We had to be together, we had to grieve and yell,” Davis said. “What happened?”

Across the county, there was soul searching over how Clinton lost white, working-class voters, but much less on why Democrats also lost some of the support of this core constituency.

Historically Black women vote in extraordinary numbers, and they don’t vote alone: They usher their families, their churches, their neighbors to the polls.

But in 2016, African Americans did not turn out in the numbers the party had come to expect. For the first time in 20 years, their turnout declined in a presidential election. About 70% of eligible Black women voted in 2012 when President Barack Obama, the first Black president, secured a second term. But in 2016 that number slipped to 64%, its pre-Obama level.

Women’s turnout at the polls on Election Day

While there were multiple reasons for Clinton’s loss, including a large defection of white voters, some saw the drop-off as a sign that Black voters had been taken for granted. Organizations sprang up across the country to motivate Black women to organize, run and win.

“We have never been at this moment,” said Aimee Allison, who in 2018 founded the network She the People, which is working to turn out a million women of color across seven battleground states. “For us as a group to recognize our own political power means that we also are demanding to govern.”

The power of Black voters was demonstrated when they overwhelmingly backed Joe Biden in the South Carolina primary, giving him a staggering victory that rescued his campaign and set him on a path to the nomination. Black women made up about one-third of the Democratic voters in the state and roughly two-thirds voted for Biden, according to the AP VoteCast survey.

Biden has pledged to pick a woman as his running mate, and at least six of the contenders are Black — including California Rep. Karen Bass, who said, “I think what we’re looking for is representation, acknowledgement, inclusion.”

Those who advocate for Black women in politics say the stakes have never been higher.

They emphasize that Trump’s administration has failed to contain the coronavirus that has killed more than 154,000 Americans, a disproportionate share of them African Americans. He has responded to mass demonstrations over police violence by calling protesters thugs and encouraging law enforcement to beat them back with force.

“Given how directly Black women have been impacted by the incompetence and the malfeasance of the Trump administration, Black women are going to be at the forefront, not only giving rise to voter turnout, but also shaping the conversations that we will be having in this election season,” said Abrams, whose name has also been widely circulated as a possible Biden running mate. “It has been a sea change in how vital our voices have been.”

Black women can meet this moment in a way no one else can, they say: The world watched the video of George Floyd begging for his mother has he was dying under a police officer’s knee.

Charisse Davis’ sons, 10 and 14 years old, asked her: Why won’t the officer just let him get up?

When she looks at her own sons, she sees her babies. But the older boy is now taller than she is. He likes hoodies. She worries a stranger might see him as a menace, not a boy whose mother still has to remind him to floss his teeth.

“That is the reality of being a Black mother in this country,” she said.

She gets messages after school board meetings: “People like you are the problem,” one said. “She’s a racist,” a man wrote. Another described her as “defiant,” and said he had his son watch school board meetings “to see how he shouldn’t behave.”

She hears: You don’t belong there.

“You are dismantling the machine, rocking the boat, and all of those things are the way that they are by design,” she said, and added that one of the high schools in the district she represents is named after a Confederate officer.

“That is what the county is built on, that is racism, that is systemic racism, that is white supremacy. It’s all these things we don’t talk about. But if not now, when?”

When Chinita Allen’s 20-year-old son was home from college earlier this year, he and a friend went to work out at their old high school in the affluent, predominantly white part of the county where they live. He had been a football star there. But someone saw two Black men and called the police to report suspicion.

She posted her son’s story on Facebook, and it rocketed around this community.

In the not-so-distant past, she might not have spoken up. A soccer mom and educator, she had long avoided talking about race, rocking the boat — until Trump won. Now she’s the president of Cobb Democratic Women and leading the charge to try to turn the county totally blue.

“It’s all about knowing your worth,” she said. “We’ve always been here, like the Underground Railroad. But it’s surfaced now. In a big way. It’s a rail train.”

Black women powered the civil rights movement, but rarely became its stars. Women like Fannie Lou Hamer, Diane Nash, Myrlie Evers, Ella Baker and Dorothy Height never held political office, but they played a critical role, said Nadia Brown, a Purdue University political science professor.

Only occasionally did their work lead to elective office, as it did when Shirley Chisholm became the first Black woman elected to Congress, in 1968, and a candidate for president in 1972.

But the landscape changed dramatically over the last several cycles. Just two years ago, five Black women were elected to Congress, four of them in majority-white districts, according to the Higher Heights Black Women in American Politics 2019 survey. Congress now has more Black women than ever before: 22 congresswomen and one senator, Kamala Harris, who is just the second to serve in that chamber and a prominent contender to be Biden’s running mate.

The change has extended to state and local offices. Two black women are running for governor in Virginia, and if either of them win, she would become the nation’s first Black female governor.

In Cobb County, Kellie Hill made history in June as one of two Black women elected to the Superior Court bench. When she first moved to Georgia 30 years ago, fellow lawyers assumed she was her secretary’s assistant.

“I said for years, ‘Maybe one day they’ll be ready for me,’” Hill said. “And as exciting as it is to be the first, it’s a little unbelievable that we’re having a conversation about being the first in the year 2020.”

Congress now has more Black women than ever before

Although they make up about 7.5% of the electorate, less than 2% of statewide elected executive offices were held by Black women as of November 2019. They account for less than 5% of officeholders elected to statewide executive offices, Congress and state legislatures, according to the Higher Heights survey.

“Black women have done everything that America told us was going to make us successful and we’re still at the bottom in terms of our return,” said LaTosha Brown, co-founder of Black Voters Matter.

Black women are posting faster educational gains than any other demographic group in the U.S. — seeing a 76% jump in the number of college degrees earned over the past 20 years, but they aren’t reaping the promised economic benefits. On average, Black women made 64 cents for every dollar a white man makes. But that drops to 55 cents for Black women with a professional degree compared to white men with the same level of educational attainment.

“People told us that education is key to being successful,” Brown said. “What did Black women do? Black women, out of any constituency group in this country, we enter college more than any other group in this country. Then why does the wealth not reflect that?”

As a result, said Bev Jackson, chair of the Democratic Party’s Cobb County African American caucus, Black women have a special resiliency: They have no safety net, so Black women just learn to walk the tightrope better.

Jackson thought about how much she wished her parents had lived to see a Black woman come so close to the Governor’s Mansion. Her family’s roots in Cobb County go back more than 100 years. Her parents went to segregated schools and sipped out of separate water fountains.

Once, when Jackson was a little girl, she sat down at a lunch counter because she wanted a cherry Coke. The waitress just passed her by, refusing to serve her.

Now Black women around her are daring to run, to win and to demand their leaders fix the broken system that maintains disparities in policing, health care, education, economics.

“You have taken our votes for granted for years. But guess what?” she said. “It’s payback time: What are you going to do for us?”

___

Republicans aren’t immune to this awakening.

DeAnna Harris was recently elected chair of the Cobb County Young Republicans, the first Black person in the post. To highlight local Black Republicans — the district attorney, deputy sheriff, a former state representative — she held her inaugural event at the historic African American church she attends. The crowd was diverse, she said, and she was proud of that.

She tries to make a conservative pitch to other Black voters by touting the ideals she believes in: small government, gun rights, religious freedom, anti-abortion. The response is generally something along the lines of, “but I don’t like Trump.”

“He’s never served the role of politician, who gets up there and smiles and says all the right things and winks at the camera, and then when you turn around they stab you in the back,” Harris said. Though she doesn’t like his tone or his tweets, she supports Trump because of his conservative policies.

But she also believes it’s imperative that Republicans broaden their base. The party should look like America, she thinks, and right now it doesn’t.

Read the full article here…

 

Dr. Dant’e King’s Pop-Up Church; Earnest Pugh Talks Book ‘Abiding in the Place of Worship’

Dr. King will be releasing his new book, “Drop, Damaged and Deliver” and Earnest Pugh’s new book will be titled “Abiding in the Place of Worship.”


Dr. Dant’e King, Pastor of Forward Church in Clinton, Maryland, and Stellar award-winning Gospel artist Earnest Pugh joined me on HUR@HOME Inspiration.

Dr. King talked about the power of the Pop-Up Church events he has in the community and what it means to minister to mission-minded millennials. Dr. King was the first minister to have Earnest Pugh perform in his church in the DMV.

Dr. King will be releasing his new book, “Drop, Damaged and Deliver” and Earnest Pugh’s new book will be titled “Abiding in the Place of Worship.”

Helping To Keep Families From Going Without Food

The challenges facing the Capital Area Food Bank during the Covid-19 Pandemic.

Keeping families in the DMV fed during one of the most challenging times in our history.  The Capital Area Food Bank has been answering the call to address hunger and they have a new partner to keep their mission going strong.  My guests are  Radha Muthiah – President of the Capital Area Food Bank and Lisa Dewey – DLA Piper Pro Bono Partner

The Capital Area Food Bank turned to DLA Piper. Drawing upon their policy expertise, the DLA Piper team is helping Capital Area Food Bank adapt by:

  • Providing advice on navigating pandemic-related legal challenges posed rapidly changing circumstances
  • Analyzing Capital’s contract with the Washington, DC local government for the procurement of emergency food supplies
  • Developing waivers for COVID-19 volunteers to enable operational continuity and protect against liability risks
  • Supporting Capital Area Food Bank’s Payroll Protection Act application to secure staff wages and benefits
  • Participating in the food bank’s annual legal community fundraising campaign as a leading supporter

 

This partnership will ensure that hundreds of thousands of Washingtonians are able to feed themselves and their families through this unprecedent period. It also provides an effective model for other food banks nationwide that are navigating similar issue

 

Tune in to Taking it to the Streets, weekday mornings at 6:15, 7:08 and 8:40 on the Steve Harvey Morning Show on 96.3 WHUR.

Follow me on facebook and twitter at @bobbygailes for updates and to stay connected.

 

Listen to this mornings segment here:

What You Need To Know About Clinical Trials

Clinical trials have begun in a search for a vaccine for the coronavirus. And why aren’t persons of color more represented in clinical trials?

Medical professionals across the world are learning more about the coronavirus. Research and clinical trials are assisting in that knowledge.  People are needed for trials, but some groups are reluctant participants, specifically African Americans.  Tonight, we discuss the importance of trials and creating more diversity in participation of trials. Joining us tonight:

AUDIO:

Dr. Carla Williams   –  Associate Professor of Medicine and Public Health with the Howard University Hospital

Dr. Lisa Fitzpatrick –  Infectious Disease Physician & Founder & CEO of Grapevine Health

Utility Bill Relief For Marylanders

Utility companies cannot cut off service to Marylanders late on payments, at least until September 1.

Residents in Maryland having trouble paying their utility bills will get a little more time before their lights might be cut-off.   Today, Governor Larry Hogan barred utility providers from shutting off service or charging late fees until at least Sept. 1.  The governor’s order applies to companies providing electric, water, gas, phone and internet service. Hogan’s mandate was first imposed in March in order to offer economic relief following layoffs and business closures due to COVID-19.

Bodycam Video Of DC Police-Involved Deaths Released

Body camera video of three DC officer-involved deaths released.

The new law in the District says it must be done, with exceptions, and today the District released police body-camera video of three police officer related deaths dating back to 2018.

The DC Council recently passed legislation requiring the release of police body-cam video within of 72 hours of an incident.  Today’s release involves the deaths of Marqueese Alston, D’Quan Young and Jeffrey Price.   As part of the new law, the family of a victim an officer-involved incident can demand that the police body cam video not be released to the public.

Everything Legendary Offers Delicious Vegan Offerings

To maintain a healthy lifestyle, you have to eat healthy, along with exercising and rest.

To maintain a healthy lifestyle, you have to eat healthy, along with exercising and rest.

Derrick Rutledge invited a few of his friends from Everything Legendary to talk about the benefits of a vegan lifestyle. The best part is that they brought us delicious burgers to sample, along with the secret sauce. Whew, it was delicious.

Catchin’ Up With BET Alumnus Rachel Stuart-Baker of ‘Caribbean Rhythms’

Her proudest moments from BET include letting the world know about the many treasures in the Caribbean.

BET is celebrating 40 years. I’m talking to a few of my former colleagues who were also apart of the rich history.

Tonight, we visited with the beautiful, intelligent, former Beauty Queen, Rachel Stuart-Baker. She hosted “Caribbean Rhythms” and “Planet Groove”. I had forgotten about all the contributions that show made to bring awareness of many talented West Indian artists to the U.S.

Rachel is still as gorgeous as ever. It’s as if time stood still for her.

@whurfm @angelastribling

Getting Books In The Hands of Our Kids At An Early Age

The Books from Birth program provides free books to parents for their young children

Giving children the love for reading and learning from birth and beyond.  That’s the goal of the Ready to Read Books from Birth Program by the Prince George’s County Memorial Library System.  This morning I have details of how you can get free books monthly for your little ones.  My guest is Nicholas Brown – Chief Operating Officer for Communication and Outreach, Prince George’s County Memorial Library System for the Prince George’s County Memorial Library System

Share the gift of free books.  Prince George’s County Memorial Library System provides free books to youth monthly from birth to age five.  Register here:

 

Listen to this mornings segment here:

Three Former Presidents Honor John Lewis

John Lewis eulogized by three former presidents. He was laid to rest today in Atlanta.

ATLANTA (AP) — Hailed as a “founding father” of a fairer, better United States, John Lewis was eulogized Thursday by three former presidents and others who urged Americans to continue the work of the civil rights icon in fighting injustice during a moment of racial reckoning.

The longtime member of Congress even issued his own call to action — in an essay written in his final days that he asked be published in The New York Times on the day of his funeral. In it, he challenged the next generation to lay “down the heavy burdens of hate at last.”

After nearly a week of observances that took Lewis’ body from his birthplace in Alabama to the nation’s capital to his final resting place in Atlanta, mourners in face masks to guard against the coronavirus spread out across pews Thursday at the city’s landmark Ebenezer Baptist Church, once pastored by the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.

Former President Barack Obama called Lewis “a man of pure joy and unbreakable perseverance” during a fiery eulogy that was both deeply personal and political. The nation’s first Black president used the moment to issue a stark warning that the voting rights and equal opportunity Lewis championed were threatened by those “doing their darnedest to discourage people from voting” and to call for a renewal of the Voting Rights Act.

His words came as the country has been roiled by weeks of protests demanding a reckoning with institutionalized racism — and hours after President Donald Trump suggested delaying the November election, something he doesn’t have the authority to do.

“He as much as anyone in our history brought this country a little bit closer to our highest ideals,” Obama said of Lewis. “And some day when we do finish that long journey towards freedom, when we do form a more perfect union, whether it’s years from now or decades or even if it takes another two centuries, John Lewis will be a founding father of that fuller, fairer, better America.”

Former President George W. Bush said Lewis, who died July 17 at the age of 80, preached the Gospel and lived its ideals, “insisting that hate and fear had to be answered with love and hope.”

Former President Jimmy Carter sent written condolences, and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi recalled how the sky was filled with ribbons of color in Washington earlier this week while Lewis’ body was lying in state at the U.S. Capitol.  “There was this double rainbow over the casket,” she said. “He was telling us, ‘I’m home in heaven, I’m home in heaven.’ We always knew he worked on the side of angels, and now he is with them.”

Lewis was the youngest and last survivor of the Big Six civil rights activists, led by King. He was best known for leading protesters in the 1965 “Bloody Sunday” march across the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, where he was beaten by Alabama state troopers.

During the service, the arc of Lewis’ activism was once again tied to King, whose sermons Lewis discovered while scanning the radio dial as a 15-year-old boy growing up in then-segregated Alabama.

King continued to inspire Lewis’ civil rights work for the next 65 years as he fought segregation during marches, “Freedom Rides” across the South, and later during his long tenure in the U.S. Congress.

“Get in good trouble, necessary trouble, and help redeem the soul of America,” Lewis said of his run-ins with the law. The phrase was repeated several times during the funeral.

“We will continue to get into good trouble as long as you grant us the breath to do so,” one of King’s daughters, the Rev. Bernice King, said as she led the congregation in prayer. She later paused and laid her hand atop Lewis’ flag-draped casket at the front of the church.

Ebenezer’s senior pastor, the Rev. Raphael Warnock, called Lewis “a true American patriot who risked his life for the hope and promise of democracy.”

Outside the church, with temperatures in the upper 80s, hundreds gathered to watch the service on a large screen; some sang the civil rights anthem “We Shall Overcome.” Pharrell Williams’ joyous tune “Happy” played as a closing song while a military honor guard loaded Lewis’ flag-draped coffin into a hearse; many congregation members clapped along.

The service ended days of remembrance for Lewis, who spent more than three decades in Congress representing most of his adopted home of Atlanta. In addition to the U.S. Capitol, his body lay in the Georgia and Alabama Capitol buildings, and events also were held in the Alabama cities of Troy, Lewis’ hometown, and Selma.

To the many tributes Thursday, Lewis managed to add his own words. His essay in The New York Times recalled the teachings of King:

“He said we are all complicit when we tolerate injustice,” Lewis wrote. “He said it is not enough to say it will get better by and by. He said each of us has a moral obligation to stand up, speak up and speak out.”

“In my life I have done all I can to demonstrate that the way of peace, the way of love and nonviolence is the more excellent way,” he wrote. “Now it is your turn to let freedom ring.”

No Charges Against Officer Who Killed Michael Brown

CLAYTON, Mo. (AP) — St. Louis County’s prosecutor announced Thursday that he will not charge the former police officer who fatally shot Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, a dramatic decision that could reopen old wounds amid a renewed and intense national conversation about racial injustice and the police treatment of people of color.

Prosecuting Attorney Wesley Bell’s decision marked the third time prosecutors investigated and opted not to charge Darren Wilson, the white officer who fatally shot Brown, a Black 18-year-old, on Aug. 9, 2014. A St. Louis County grand jury declined to indict Wilson in November 2014, and the U.S. Department of Justice also declined to charge him in March 2015.

Civil rights leaders and Brown’s parents had hoped that Bell, the county’s first Black prosecutor who took office in January 2019, would see things differently.

“My heart breaks” for Brown’s parents, a somber Bell said during a news conference. “I know this is not the result they were looking for and that their pain will continue forever.”

Describing the announcement as “one of the most difficult things I’ve had to do,” Bell said that his office conducted a five-month, unannounced, review of witness statements, forensic reports and other evidence.

“The question for this office was a simple one: Could we prove beyond a reasonable doubt that when Darren Wilson shot Micheal Brown he committed murder or manslaughter under Missouri law? After an independent and in-depth review of the evidence, we cannot prove that he did,” Bell said.

But, he said, “our investigation does not exonerate Darren Wilson.”

Wilson’s attorney, Jim Towey, said it was clear after three investigations that Wilson did nothing wrong.

“We all had the same conclusion: There was no crime,” Towey said.

“I am just hoping that everybody gets to have some closure, particularly the Brown family,” he said.

The shooting touched off months of unrest in Ferguson and made the St. Louis suburb synonymous with a national debate about police treatment of minority people. The Ferguson unrest helped solidify the national Black Lives Matter movement that began after Trayvon Martin, a Black 17-year-old, was shot to death by a neighborhood watch volunteer in Florida in 2012.

The issue has taken on new life since George Floyd’s death in Minneapolis in May after a white police officer pressed his knee into the handcuffed Black man’s neck for nearly eight minutes. Ferguson is among the cities around the world that has seen protests since Floyd’s death.

“This is a time for us to reflect on Michael’s life, to support Michael’s family and to honor a transformative movement that will forever be linked to his name,” Bell said.

Brittany Packnett Cunningham, a Ferguson protester and educator who has become a national voice in the Black Lives Matter movement, said she is pained “that there is still a gaping wound” for Brown’s family. She said she knows that the system must change.

“I’m not disappointed — I’m fed up and ever more committed, truth be told,” Cunningham said.

The Rev. Darryl Gray, a leading St. Louis activist, agreed that the system is at fault, not Bell’s investigation.

“What came out of this is a recognition that the system is set up to protect police officers. We now need to begin to address the legislation the police hide behind,” Gray said.

Scott Roberts, senior director of criminal justice campaigns at Color Of Change, a national racial justice organization, said in a statement that Bell’s announcement “perpetuates a criminal justice system that fails Black communities by allowing police to operate with impunity.”

Bell — who ran as a reform-minded prosecutor promising to eliminate cash bail for nonviolent offenders and to increase the use of programs that allow defendants to avoid jail time — faced no restrictions in re-examining Brown’s death. Wilson was never charged and tried, so double jeopardy was not an issue. There is no statute of limitations on filing murder charges.

As the news conference drew to a close, an activist who said he is a friend of Brown’s father erupted in anger.

“It’s over! One term!” Tory Russell, 36, of St. Louis, screamed at the prosecuting attorney. Police officers gently led him from the room.

Russell later told The Associated Press that he had just spoken with Michael Brown Sr. “He is hurting, and he’s not accepting of this.”

The shooting happened after Wilson told Brown and a friend to get out of the street as they walked down the middle of Canfield Drive. A scuffle between Wilson and Brown ensued, ending with the fatal shot. Wilson said Brown, who was not armed, came at him menacingly, forcing him to fire his gun in self-defense.

Brown’s body remained in the street for four hours, angering his family and nearby residents.

Bell’s predecessor, longtime prosecutor Bob McCulloch, was accused by critics of swaying the grand jury to its decision not to indict Wilson — an accusation he emphatically denied. Wilson resigned days after McCulloch’s Nov. 24, 2014, announcement that the grand jury would not indict the officer.

The Justice Department also declined to charge Wilson, but issued a scathing report citing racial bias in Ferguson’s police and courts. A consent agreement calls for sweeping reforms that are still being implemented.

Bell, a former Ferguson councilman, upset McCulloch, a staunch law-and-order prosecutor, in the 2018 Democratic primary and ran unopposed that November.

Bell, who, like McCulloch, is the son of a police officer, formed a special unit to look into officer-involved shootings like the one in Ferguson, as well as cases of potential wrongful convictions.

Brown’s mother, Lesley McSpadden, asked Republican Gov. Mike Parson to reopen the investigation of Wilson in 2018, but Parson’s office said it had no legal authority to appoint a special prosecutor.

‘THE FRANK SKI SHOW WITH NINA BROWN’ Takes Over WHUR Afternoons

“Now more than ever, it’s crucial to have knowledgeable trustworthy voices on the air. Frank and Nina have a proven track record of success and adding them to the WHUR team is a huge win for us,” said WHUR General Manager Sean Plater.

WASHINGTON, D.C. (Thursday, July 30, 2020) – Legendary radio personality Frank Ski is bringing his widely popular radio show to the DMV taking over afternoons at 96.3 WHUR. “The Frank Ski Show with Nina Brown” airs weekdays from 3 pm to 7 pm starting Monday, August 3.

“The Frank Ski Show with Nina Brown” show will deliver up-to-date commentary on trending headlines, entertainment news, and all things important to the Black culture while providing fun, edgy, and interactive engagement. Known for their ability to connect with the audience on relevant issues with transparency, Ski and Brown are a force to be reckoned with on-air. The pair promises to provide just the right mixture designed to inform, inspire, and entertain.

“Connecting to the Washington, DC listeners is extremely important to me during this challenging time in our history,” said Ski.

Ski is no stranger to the DMV. He began his radio career in the District in the early 1990s before moving on to Baltimore and then to Atlanta and back to DC for a stint at WHUR in 2013. Brown has worked in radio and television for nearly two decades and has produced several of Ski’s #1 rated radio shows.

“Frank Ski has dominated ratings and has an incredible legacy of community enrichment wherever he is on the air. He is a media icon and adding his name to WHUR once again completes our DMV Dream Team,” said WHUR Program Director Al Payne.

The addition of the “Frank Ski Show with Nina Brown” to WHUR’s weekday line-up takes the programming line-up to a whole new level. WHUR’s weekday programs also include, “The Steve Harvey Morning Show” from 6 am to 10 am, “Autumn Joi’s Live Squad” from 10 am to 3 pm, “The Daily Drum with Harold Fisher” from 7 pm to 7:30 pm, and “The Original Quiet Storm with John Monds” from 7:30 pm to midnight.”

“Now more than ever, it’s crucial to have knowledgeable trustworthy voices on the air. Frank and Nina have a proven track record of success and adding them to the WHUR team is a huge win for us,” said WHUR General Manager Sean Plater.

Trump Suggests Delaying Election

In another series of Tweets, Trump is again attacking mail-in voting. He floating idea of delaying Presidential election.

Washington, D.C. (Thursday, July 30, 2020) – Even though he doesn’t have the power to do so, President Trump is suggesting the possibility of delaying the November election.  Today, he floated the prospect of pushing back the election as he continued his attacks on mail-in voting.

In a morning tweet, Trump said “With Universal Mail-In Voting (not Absentee Voting, which is good), 2020 will be the most INACCURATE & FRAUDULENT Election in history.”  The tweet went on to say “It will be a great embarrassment to the USA.  Delay the Election until people can properly securely and safely vote???”

Under the US Constitution, the president is not granted such power and only the US House and Senate have the authority to regulate the time, place, and manner of elections.

Democrats quickly seized on Trump’s latest tweet, saying it shows he’s facing the reality of losing to presumptive Democratic nominee Joe Biden.

Black Women In DC Wage Gap

New report finds Black women in DC make 51 cents for every dollar a White man makes.

Washington, D.C. (Thursday, July 30, 2020) – It’s probably not something that surprises most Black women.  It’s a reality many see daily.  But a break down of the new numbers on the wage gap between Black women and White men is eye-opening.

A new report by the National Women’s Law Center finds that in the District of Columbia Black women make 51 cents for every dollar a White man makes.  That amounts to a nearly $2 million wage gap over a 40-year career for a Black woman in DC.  According to the report, a Black woman would need to work until she is 98 to make what a White man makes by age 60.

The new report comes just days before what is known as Black Women’s Equal Pay Day, which is August 13th 2020.  That marks the date for Black women’s 2019 pay to catch up with what White men made by December 2019.

Too Many Issues Facing Maryland for Lawmakers To Take A Break

Calling for a special session of the Maryland General Assembly

A Maryland State Delegate says now is not the time for the Maryland General Assembly to be in recess.  He wants lawmakers to come back to the table to tackle some of the critical issues facing the state.  My guest is   Julian Ivey – Maryland State Delegate – Prince George’s County

Prince George’s County Maryland State Delegate Julian Ivey is calling for a special session to address a range of issues like the COVID-19 pandemic, evictions, foreclosures, and police brutality.  For more information contact Julian Ivey via email at: Julian.ivey@house.state.md.us

 

 Tune in to Taking it to the Streets, weekday mornings at 6:15, 7:08 and 8:40 on the Steve Harvey Morning Show on 96.3 WHUR.

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