nî«-3 p Time grows short for Haitian refugees in U.S. Concern »*«* ***** C oncern is risino rising over the fate **• of over 50,000 Haitian refugees who are seeking asylum in the United Stales. Unlike the Cubans who are arriving daily in southern Florida, these retugees are receiving little at­ tention. Because the U.S. government has determined that they are coming for economic rather than p o litic a l reasons, there is no welcome for the Haitians. They do not qualify for work permits or fo r government aid. A group o f Miami city officials recently told the federal government that "starvation, not malnutrition is becoming the major problem among Haitian refugees in south Florida.” The Im m ig ra tio n and Naturalization Service has been for­ ced by a court order to stop depor­ ting Haitians refugees. A federal judge also told INS to issue work permits but, according to an attor­ ney representing Haitians in a class action suit, Im m igration o fficia ls are defying that order. Because un­ der existing law persons designated as "e co n o m ic” refugees are not eligible to reamin in the U.S. only 61 persons have been granted political asylum. The remainder remain in legal limbo, under constant threat of deportation. Several organizations including the Am erican Friends Service Com m ittee, the N A A C P , and O peration PUSH and church organizations have asked President Carter to grant political asylum to the Haitians. It is imperative that the action be taken before May 15th, when the law changes. After that date the new law w ill allow Congress and the Attorney General to grant asylum, which will be much more difficult process. A m ajor problem is that after May 17 the new Refugee Act o f 1980 terminates the President’ s parole authority to grant political asylum to refugees on a group basis. According to U nited Nations statistics Haiti is the poorest country in the western hemisphere. Illiteracy is 90 percent and infant mortality 20 percent. Approximately 50 percent ot the work force is umemployed. •he hie expectancy is less than 45 years. While the U.S. refuses to accept H aitian exiles, it helps keep the regime in power by providing arms and police training. Assistance other than military came to J28 million in I • M g PORTLAND OBS Velum«' M ay«.' W pui U SPS98M » Civil Rights Bureau suit goes to court •he C ivil Rights suit o f Walter W illiam s and James Amaya has come to tria l, six years after the com plaint was file d . The suit is being heard by Judge Owen M . Panner. James Amaya testified that in 1973 he was hired by the Burea o f Labor to be its affirm ative action officer. He said he was informed by Gayle Gemmer and others that the funds fo r the position had not arrived and that he should "take it easy for a while and learn as much as you can.” After weeks o f inac­ tiv ity he asked fo r cases to in ­ vestigate and was given several. He testified that during several conver­ sations with Labor Commissioner Nilsen he was introduced as "m y af­ firmative action m onitor," as iden­ tified as a Chicano, in a negative manner and was asked about things pertaining to Chicanos. He testified that at one point the Labor Commissioner asked him if a certain C hicano activist was his triend. A fte r he said he was, the Commissioner said he didn’ t like the man or his " m ilit a n t ” friends. Amaya percieved this remark to mean that in the interest o f his job he had better stay away from some o f his friends, so he did. Amaya said that "a fte r 1 told him 1 was a Chicano who identified with Chicanos,” the attitude toward him became unfriendly. Amaya said he was not provided training as an in­ vestigator, the position he found him selt. He was assigned some cases, but never more than eight, while others had twenty or more. Eventually a white man was hired as the a ffirm ative action o fficer, with an Argentine woman as assistant. Amaya stayed on as an in­ vestigator. His first evaluation said he was not when he was hired by the Bureau of providing the quantity or quality of Labor in 1971 there were no other w ork expected, but he said Ms. Blacks working there. During his Gemmel indicated there was no period o f work there - from 1971 problem, that he would receive a u n til 1975, he was subjected to raise anyway, he said he constantly frequent racial slurs by staff mem­ requested more cases so he could bers and to repeated conversations achieve the expected work goals but about racial inferiority o f Blacks. that he was given no answers. ^He testified that at a staff meeting Amaya said that when Lee Moore the s ta ff was inform ed that sex became Acting Adm inistrator the discrim in a tio n cases w ould be atmosphere became more hostile. pushed and race discrimination put Moore called him into his office and aside because “ Oregon is not ready asked, "D o you consider yourself for cases dealing with race, color or the leader o f Chicanos in Oregon?” national o rg in .” The explanation He was told all ot his cases would was that the Judges in Oregon could have to be redone. more easily understand and deal I wo days later he gave Moore his with sex discrimination. When he resignation. He testified that Moore complained, he was intormed by the told him that was what Nilson want­ director, Gayle Gemmel that he was ed. The next day Amaya attempted too sensitive. to take back his resignation but that In 1972, he told the court, he went right was denied. to a concilliation meeting with Tri- W alter W illiam s testified that (Pleaseturn to P 2 Col 1) Proby heads Washington minority program Nathan Proby, founder and for­ for- mer director ol the United M inority Workers, is the director o f the newly organized Southwest Washington Association o f M in o rity Contrac­ tors, In c., funded by the Washington State Highway Depart­ ment. SWAMC will serve six coun ties in Southwest W ashington, assisting m in o rity contractors to participate in federally funded road related projects. Proby’s job is to identify minority contractors, have them certified by the Highway Department, arrange fo r technical assistance and negotiate tor them. Additional o f­ fices have been established in Spokane, Bellevue, Tacoma and Seattle. The project will identify areas o f pending contracts that can be per­ formed by m in o rity contractors, and have that stipulated before the project is put out for bid by general contractors. "T he idea is not to have a per­ centage set-aside, but to identify The beach at Cathedral Park offers relief from Sunday's heat for Marco. Paul and Tracy Parks, and Nick Campbell. (Photo by: Richard J. Brown) projects that can be done by hv minorities,” Proby explained. "F o r example, it we have one or more m inority contractors who can do guard rails or pavement striping, we w ill identify jobs for them. Then our agencies w ill look at the jobs ind see what it takes in equipment, supplies, time and help the contrac­ tor decide whether he can do it and make a profit. "The idea is to supply the work a minority contractor can reasonably do and make money, which w ill allow him to develop his company. "W e ’ re not trying to just grab a lot o f contracts and not know whether we have anyone to perform them.” The program identifies the por­ tion ot the job that will be done by minority contractors before it goes to the general contractor. "W hen the general contractor bids the job he knows what is expected of him .” In set-aside programs the contractor decides what areas he wants to sub­ contract to minorities and this has not always been successful. “ They h .v . „ h i- ... . . have been able to set-aside a job that no minority is qualified or available to do, so it is o f no benefit to us.” Proby said the atmosphere for m inority contractors is much d if­ ferent in W ashington than in Oregon. " T h e H ighway D epart­ ment here in Washington is very cooperative. They have let the general contractor know that they mean business. The Associated General Contractors also have a bet­ ter attitude They are working with us and are anxious for the program to w ork.” W ith few m inority owned com­ panies in Southern W ashington, many P ortland businesses are looking North where they find their services are wanted and needed. 0 C om m unity U nity Day The Black U nited F ront w ill sponsor day-long activities fo r “ Community Unity Day,” on Sun­ day, M ay 18 at the King Neigh­ borhood Facility and King School Grounds, one day p rio r to the scheduled, BUF-organized, boycott o f Portland Public Schools. According to the Front, the theme o f "C o m m u n ity U n ity D ay” is comunity unity, quality education and a tribute to Malcom X. May 19, day o f the boycott, is the birthday o f the late civil rights activist. Speakers, music, food, artistic displays and exhibits w ill highlight the "C om m unity U nity Day” ac­ tivities and w ill take place from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Why America's prisons are Black, Hispanic Bv Joseph Kelly and Frank Fiviano I wo statistical milestones were passed by U.S. prisons between 1975 and 1980. For the firs, time in the n a tio n ’ s h is to ry , the in c a r­ cerated po p u la tio n exceeded 300,000, marking a 50 per cent in­ crease in the to ta l number o f prisoners in jus, five years. And also for the firs, time in U.S. h isto ry, the non-w hite prison population became a substantial majority. Today, 55 per cent o f the men and women behind bars in the United States are " T h ir d W o rld ” Americans: Blacks, Hispanics and Indians. The consequences may be social dynamite. The recent bloody uprising in New M exico’ s state penitentiary is viewed by some as the opening salvo in wha, could be a decade o f Third W orld revolts in­ side the U.S. prisons. Since then, riots have erupted at prisons in New Jersey and Indiana. “ Tensions within the system are b u ild in g ra p id ly ,” concluded a C a lifo rn ia Bar Association study which found five state penitentiaries "u n fit for human habitation.” The study warned " th a , explosions comparable to what occured at A t­ tica in New Y ork can be an­ ticipated.” N ationally, Blacks are put into prison at a rate eight times tha, o f whites, according to a survey com­ pleted last summer by the National Institute o f Corrections, par, o f the Federal Bureau o f Prisons. In New York and C alifornia, nearly 50 o f every 10,000 Black citizens are im­ prisoned, which is some ten times the incarceration rate for whites. In states w ith large H ispanic populations, the pattern is repeated. Chicanos are three times as likely as whites to be incarcerated in C alifor­ nia, and four times as likely in New Mexico. The imprisonment rate for Puerto Ricans in New York is eight times the state-wide average. to 30 per cent o f Black men in their Com pared to other western early twenties w ill spend time in nations, white incarceration prison. The rate for white men in statistics in the United States are not that same age group is ap­ unusual. But because o f its extraor­ proximately seven per cent. dinary number o f Blacks and But, m aintains crim in o lo g ist H ispanics, A m e rica ’ s inmate M ichael H indelang, " T o o many population is proportionately the people for too long have said that third larges, in the w orld - sur­ the only thing tha, accounts for the passed only by the Soviet Union and higher arrest rate o f Blacks is South Africa. discrimination.” Hindelang believes Why this appalling imbalance? that Blacks simply commit more o f­ The reason begin with economics. fenses — and he has completed a After dropping 28 per cent in the study o f more than eight million in­ Sixties, the number o f Blacks o f­ cidents o f robbery, rape and assult fic ia lly classified as poor began which shows them to be dis­ growing once agin in the Sixties, the proportionately involved in nearly number o f Blacks o ffic ia lly all categories o f personal crimes. classified as poor began growing Others claim discrim ination is once again in the Seventies. The central to that very problem . group most severely hi, by the com­ “ Crime is a matter o f opportunity,” b ination o f in fla tio n and unem­ observes W illiam Nagel, a former ployment -- young Black men — is prison o ffic ia l who heads the also the one most responsible for the American Foundation Institute o f large increase in the prison Corrections. "Bankers and people population. In 1973, criminologist with large expense accounts do no, Flagwoman Bonnie Thomaa helps control tha flow of traffic thru Erik Olin Wright estimated that 25 (Please turn to P 9 Col 4) tha Union Avenue construction site. »* a « 1