•k K W BANK 0/fi.Tji ¡Jut V Uu CoaJn/l Cuui African American Festival 1990 PORTI. Volume X X , Number 20 ERVER "The E yes a n d E ars o f The Com m unity" Science! Are Blacks Still Driving Miss Daisy? by Professor McKinley Burt Many years ago in the ghetto of urban cities African Americans frequently ex­ changed a cynical greeting passing, “ Hi man, still drivin’ Miss Ann?” Ann Daisy - W hat’s in a name? What the short, cursory query signified was that all of the populace of color thoroughly understood a basic American truism that was equally as often voiced, “ Yeah! White folks still in the lead.” The allusion to Blacks doing the chauffer- ing while others leaned back, relaxed in relative comfort and status, had the literal meaning of supporting a large sector of the infrastructure with ones labor, commitment or genius without ever receiving just due, compensation or recognition. It is just such a denigrating role that conceals the true and massive contribu­ tion of African Americans to the “ sci­ ence and technology” that created the nations industrial might-as well as its strides in the health sciences, transpor­ tation, space exploration and other fields that are deemed to require the highest level of cognitive abilities. And it is not just that lack of a fair compensation, but the denial of ‘ ‘just due and recogni­ tion” that has made it so difficult to find minority role models. This is ter­ ribly important as we come upon the year 2000 and what we are told will be an age where only the scientifically literate or the technically proficient will be able to “ make it.” While an immediate consideration is our youth and developing/demanding an educational structure that will equip them to compete (even smile) in such a “ brave new world” - Blacks can no longer avoid confrontation with the threat to their economic welfare posed by the conversion of relatively unskilled jobs to “ automation.” This point can best be made by referring to historical model- not too long ago. For many, many decades the nation’s railroads were close to being the largest employers of Afri­ can Americans in the nation; In the sup­ porting structures of track maintenance and in locomotive and car repair; In the service ranks where Blacks almost ex­ clusively were the pullman porters, dining car waiters and cooks; In some parts of the country they were the fireman on the locomotives (until the backbreak­ ing job of shoveling coal to the boilers was eliminated by the new technology of the diesel). The same can be said for the meat packing industry, for the vegetable oil refining industry and for the vast river barge transportation networks of the mid-south and delta. New techniques of welding, the introduction of “ con­ tainer shipping,” new materials were developed through advances in metal­ lurgy and ceramics, scientific program­ ming and production control-all of this worked to displace fairly unskilled members of America’s workforce. Some how African Americans * ‘appeared” to have survived the massive dislocations and have made a credible transition within the framework of economic sur­ vival. But, given the present economic situation of the majority of their chil­ dren and grandchildren-what we euphem­ istically refer to as that vast “ under­ class” living at or below the “ poverty line” -can we really say that there was a successful transition, or are we looking at the inevitable consequence? Obviously, it is absolutely necessary that we immediately assess the current situation in terms of this recent past. As more and more of the “ smoke stack industries” close down (where large numbers of Blacks are employed in automotive and steel production), and increasingly consumer goods manufac­ turing is transferred overseas, and the domestic workforce is assailed from every quarter as “ educationally unpre- Drugs , Deaths and Oregonians The report Deaths Due to Drugs and Alcohol. 1988 has been published by the Oregon Health Division and is now available. While the report represents just one small facet of alcohol and other drug abuse in Oregon, the report quan­ tifies the most serious consequence of substance abuse-death. During 1988, 495 Oregonians were reported to have died as a direct result of the immediate or long term physical effects of alcohol or other drugs. While the number o f deaths and death rate (18.1 per 100,000 population) are rec­ ord highs, these values are only margin­ ally above those recorded for the previ­ ous high in 1981. One in 50 Oregonians who died in 1988, died directly as a consequence of alcohol or other drug use. (Abuse of these substances also contributed to many unintentional and intentional injury deaths.) While the rates of alcohol and other drug deaths were little changed during 1980-1988, two important counter-trends have continued to evolve. Deaths due to alcohol have declined while those due to other drugs have increased. In 1980,65.3 percent of all drug and alco­ hol-caused deaths were attributed to al­ coholic liver disease or cirrhosis but by 1988 the percentage declined to 46.9; the death rate fell from 11.2 to 8.5 per 100,000 population. At the same time the non-alcohol drug death rate increased two-fold. The 37 page report lists individual deaths by cause, age, sex, and county of residence. To obtain a copy of the report, write to the Oregon Health Division’s Center for Health Statistics, POBox 116, Portland, Oregon 97207. Hearings on Welfare Reform Scheduled The public will have an opportunity to voice its opinion about the state’s new welfare reform plan during a series of public hearings scheduled for four cities. “ These hearings will provide a fo­ rum for the public and advocate groups to get a full explanation of how welfare reform will be implemented,” stated Sandie Hoback, welfare reform man­ ager, Adult & Family Services Divi­ sion. “ This is a complex program that will make a number of important changes in how the welfare system functions. We urge the public to attend the meet­ ings, and provide us with feedback on our plan for the program’s operation and its budget.” The hearings will be held in the fol­ lowing cities, beginning at 7 p.m.: Salem May 29 Room 116 Bldg. 3 Chemeketa Community College Bend May 31 Hitcock Auditorium Central Orc. Community College M edford June 4 Courthouse Audito­ rium 10 S. Oakdale P ortland June 5 Terrell Hall, Cascade Campus, Portland Community Col­ lege One hearing has already been held in Eugene. According to Hoback, people attending that meeting expressed con­ cerns over budget constraints for the program and presented alternative methods for handling budgetary deci­ sions. Welfare reform is required by a fed­ eral law passed in 1988. Oregon’s welfare reform program, dubbed “ JOBS For Oregon’s Future,” will be imple­ mented in October 1990. It provides education and training for welfare re­ cipients, to prepare them for jobs which lead to financial independence. The program will be tailored to communi­ ties across the state, with local planning boards making many decisions about the local program content. The state’s welfare system is admini­ stered by the Adult & Family Services Division of the Department of Human Resources. pared” to compete in this brave new world of science and technology-can African Americans once again “ play it by ear’ ’ and assume that somehow they will muddle through, and that a be­ nevolent government will design and implement all of the economic and social structures upon which survival will depend? Or is it more likely that they will be driven (at last) to develop their own educational, scientific and tech­ nology structures in order to compete with others in America's pluralistic society; that "melting pot" never did materialize, did it? At least not for people of color. If we accept that such "self-direc­ tion" is the only meaningful objective for a people serious at last about their survival, then, early on, the mission has to be about education, training, and motivation. Earlier here we have said that the disparaging role of “ driving Miss Daisy” served to conceal “ the true and massive contribution of Afri­ can Americans to the science and tech­ nology that created the nation’s indus­ trial might.” So, where I described the many key areas of industry where Afri­ can Americans had a substantial role, keep in mind that it is from these ranks (and frequently unlettered) that the Black Inventors of America Sprang-the men and women of color whose innovative contributions to the world’s science and technology changed the industrial and human landscape for all time to come! But Blacks did not develop any parallel structure to exploit these accomplish­ ments. We may suppose that they thought they had been “ integrated,” and that the benefits would trickle down in equal proportion. Next week we will examine institu­ tions needed to combine these histori­ cal lessons into a mode of education, economics and motivation that could ensure African American survival. No more “ Miss Daisy.” TH-Met Seeks Fare Increase Tri-Met fares will go up a nickel next September, if the Tri-Met Board of Di­ rectors approves an ordinance due to be introduced at its meeting next week. Action on the proposal is scheduled for June 27. Tri-Met General Manager James E. Cowen said the proposed increase, which would yield an additional $950,000 per year, would reflect inflation since the last Tri-Met price increase. Most discount tickets and cash fares would increase a nickel, with monthly passes increasing $2, except the Hon­ ored Citizen monthly pass for seniors, which would increase $1 from $7.50 to $8.50. “ There has not been an across-the- board fare increase in five years,” Cowen said. “ It’s impractical to raise transit fares a penny at a time; we’re pretty much limited to increases o f at least a nickel.” He said the proposal would help catch up with inflation over the last five years. Cash fares were last increased in September 1985. Tri-Met raised the price of discount tickets and passes in September 1987. A new simplified fare system, introduced in September 1988, left most fares unchanged, but extended senior citizen discounts, lowered fares for some long-distance travelers and levied a nickel increase for 20 percent of Tri-Met’s passengers. “ We need to get to a program of pe­ riodic fare increases,” Cowen said. “ It shouldn’t come as a surprise to anyone that transit operating costs increase, justas the costof everything else docs. ’ ’ Tri-Met’s Citizen Advisory Committee on the Budget recommended to the board last month that Tri-Met adopt a fare policy that included periodic ad­ justments. Cowen said he would rec­ ommend a fare policy study to the board in July. 25