A ugust 10, 1994 • T he P ortland O bserver P age A2 R aimbo W p e r s p e c t i v e C O A L I T I O N N orth Carolina Plan Upheld--Not Neces­ sarily A Victory A redistricting plan that created tw o black m ajority congressional districts in NC was acknow ledged to be "racial gerrymandering" by a three judge appeals court—but it was held to be constitutional! The 2-to-l rul­ ing turned back a challenge by live white voters who sued the state, say­ ing its redraw ing o f congressional districts should be declared uncon­ stitutional. The Court said. "W e find that the plan’s lines were deliber­ ately drawn to produce one or more districts o f a certain racial com posi­ tion and that it is thus a ' racial gerry­ m ander’ subject to strict scrutiny, but we none the less conclude that the plan passes constitutional muster under that standard because it is nar­ rowly tailored to further the state's com pelling interest in com plying with the Voting Rights Act..." The language in this decision is a source o f great concern. The law ­ suit was initially dismissed, but upon appeal the Supreme Court revived it in Shaw v. Reno, saying the shapes o f the districts resembled racial ger­ rym andering or political apartheid. The panel’s decision approvingly uses the terms ‘racial gerrym ander', which the High Court opposes; and uses the term s ‘deliberately draw n', which is another way o f saying the VRA encourages intentional racial gerry mandering. Such language may in fact be a setup to virtually insure that the Supreme Court will, it not invalidate the Voting Rights Act, at least make it ineffective. In the Louisiana case, the court said racial gerry mandering was un­ constitutional. In a state 30% black, only two congresspersons have been elected since Reconstruction. The first Louisiana plan. 65° o Black and 35% White, was drawn in 1992 and thrown out in December, 1993. The second plan. 55% Black and 45% W hite, was redrawn in April 1994. and thrown out last Thursday . The third plan, created by a federal ju d i­ cial panel dom inated by Reagan and Bush appointees last week, created a new 4th district, 70% White and 30% African American. The new map effectively elim inates Cong. Cleo Fields (D -LA -4th) and insures the election o f a Republican. The tw o conflicting opinions insure ap­ peals. t ■ >• Advertise In (Tltc ^ o r tl a n b (ftbseruer call 288-0033 .31 s Minority Business Still "Show Busi­ ness"? T hat’s the question a feature writer for a national weekly news magazine asked me last week. It seems that a major article this w in­ ter will be along the lines o f"W h at­ ever Happened To Minority Busi­ ness?" I addressed that question in these very pages several years ago- -particularly Portland. In a w id e - ranging conversa­ tion we had an ex­ c e lle n t in te r ­ change and were able to intimately explore some sub­ ject matter not fre­ quently addressed. He had been di­ rected to me by a fellow m em ber o f the ‘Association o f Oregon Indus­ tries’ with whom I serve on a com ­ mittee; an industry CEO w ho in the 1970s had served with me on the Business School faculty at Portland State University. It was interesting that no Afri­ can American had suggested me as a relevant contact, though many are involved in "M inority Business” , took my classes and/or received counseling in real tim e' enterprise formation. As a matter o f fact, the two must visible practitioners o f this commercial art form took ev­ ery class 1 taught in the field. I can understand it. for there is no telling what 1 might say -th o u g h my ob­ servations will certainly be valid and experienced-based. The magazine w riter had al­ ready made contact with local white m edia and was aw are o f a forthcom ­ ing article on "Korean-American En­ trepreneurs" (see The O regonian for 8 4/94, E6). He com m ented on a scenario he found consistent across the c o u n ty -a sometimes violent an­ tipathy betw een the Asian m erchants and their black clientele (include Vietnamese in some areas). I have written extensively on this subject, but have never gotten the response that I desired or expected. This may very well be because I did not address the issue in fiery m a n - th e - b a r ri- cades o r"S ice m ” Professor rhetoric. W hat I Mckinley ¿ ¡ j w as m ake B urt clear that the busi­ ness organization and financing structure em ployed by the Asians at this level has been available to American blacks in many areas for well over a hundred years; generations before m any A sians heard o f America-level some blacks have developed and exploited the lower-level economic opportunities p erm itted ’ them (m ostly in the south), there has been a miserable and obvious failure to pursue the cooperative modes described in the O regonian article. 1 expect immediate wails and excuses: "W e d o n ’t have that kind of m oney th e y m e n tio n , $ 4 0 ,0 0 0 , $90,000". That is a lie! We have always had it. W hen I came to Port­ land in 1945 African Americans had millions in businesses and real es­ tate. Much o f it had been assembled over time in "southern style”, now called "A sian Style” . Organizations o f black w orker like the pullman porters, dining care waiters, red cups, post office em ployees, etc. pooled their m oney five and ten dollars a week until they could pay down on various properties and equipment. 1 handled the account­ ing for most o f these organizations so I know these to be the tacts. Today the Koreans call this type o f cooperation and mutual support “ Keh”-b a s e d on trust and friend­ ship. So what has happened some younger people may ask? W here are the black cleaners, full-service contractors, coin machine vendors (cigarettes-Juke boxes), apartm ent complexes, etc.—what happened to them? It is interesting that, now, younger blacks (and w hites) in Northeast are asking pointed ques­ tions; they are no longer accepting, “well whitey cam e up with Urban Renew al’ like he did other cities to wipe out black progress.” They ask in turn, "D idn’t w e have any black lawyers who could be m arshalled against th is -o r at least negotiate a r e a s o n a b le c o m p e n s a tio n ? Couldn’t they have brought in some people with backbone?" A lot o f the northeast populace are tired hearing the old U ncle Tom tune, “T here’s N o Business Like Show Business” They ask, “who buys the leaders, how could the Fred M eyer and other properties have gotten away? What happened to the Alberta Street Developm ent Plan—w hat’s the net dollar invest­ ment todate? The youth have no success stories or role models. They are in the street dying, w hile rascals prosper. To Be Continued. better ^ 0 Ute <3udit0r Send your letters to the Editor to; Editor, PO Box 3137, Portland, OR 97208 am a physician who 'll works full-time within the Oregon Depart­ ment of Corrections. I am appalled at the unnecessary expense associated with the present policy which allows smoking by prisoners. The Supreme Court ruled that there is no constitutional right for prisoners to smoke. They have also ruled that the prison system must provide medical care to all inmates, and that withholding treatment is equivalent to cruel and unusual pun­ ishment. Finally, they have ruled that prisoners have a right to a smoke free environment. Smoking is well known to cause illness. Prisoners are allow ed to smoke even when they have signifi­ cant conditions potentially com pli­ cated by smoking; asthm atics con­ tinue to smoke, know ing that they can dem and ever more expensive treatm ents, even hospitalization; heart attack victims can continue to smoke, even if they may then be able to demand open heart surgery; the w o m e n ’s p riso n a llo w s p re g n a n t p ris o n e rs to sm o k e , th o u g h a sin g le p re m a tu re in fa n t can c o st w ell o v e r $ 1 0 0 ,0 0 0 in th e first w eek s o f life. G iv en th e p re se n t $26 m illio n b u d g e t fo r p riso n m e d ic a l c a re , even a sm all p e r­ c e n ta g e re d u c tio n in illn e ss could sav e m illio n s I have discussed the issue with Mr. Hall, head o f the O regon D epart­ ment o f Corrections, along with Mr. Maas and Mr. Zenon, the superin­ tendents o f the prisons w here I pres­ ently work. They agree that many county jails in O regon have gone to no-smoking status without difficulty; Mr. Hall took his previous facility to no-sm oking status. However, they do not want to make any immediate changes at the prisons where smok­ ing is now the greatest problem. I feel that when sm oking by prisoners is prohibited, there will be an addi­ tional incentive to avoid incarcera­ tion for those eligible for parole, and decreased medical expenses for the aging population w ho are not candi­ dates for parole. Help me question every elec­ toral candidate about their position in this matter? —Robert Ingle, MD, MPH C iv il "R ig h ts J o u r n a l Jobs, Welfare And America by B ernice P owell J ackson She was an easy target. Poor, uneducated, powerless, she couldn’t fight back. J So when Ronald Reagan turned the wrath o f A m erica on m others on welfare by labeling them “w elfare queens” and pointing only to the infrequent cases o f w elfare fraud and abuse, the w elfare m other and her dependent children could not fight back Portrayed as people who were free-loaders, lazy, irresponsible women with low morals, mothers on welfare could not fight back. Now, fifteen years later, the m other who supports her fam i ly with A id to Fam i- lie s w ith D e p e n d e n t C h ild re n (A FD C) still has not been able to overcome that stereotyping and that scapegoating. Let me be very clear. There is som ething wrong with the w elfare system as we have com e to know it in America. W hole families should not spend tw o or three generations on welfare And contrary to some be­ liefs, being on welfare is not easy. Being on w elfare only ensures that a child will be able to survive in pov­ erty. It is dem eaning and dem oraliz­ ing to the m other and does not give her children an equal chance. Let it also be clear that there is som ething wrong with the jo b m ar­ ket as we have come to know it in America. M anufacturing and low skill jo b s have all but disappeared as skilled, technological jobs have in­ creased. Welfare mothers, many o f whom are high school drop-outs, will need extensive job training to qualify for such jobs. The service sector jobs and low-paying fast food jobs which w elfare m others might qualify for rarely include health care and retirem ent benefits. Every American should be guar­ anteed the right to a real, productive job which pays enough to support this or her family. Indeed, the reality is that unless this country creates a massive number o f good-paying jobs and com prehensive em ploym ent training which provides m arketable skills, tinkering with the w elfare sys­ tem w ill respond to the political rheto­ ric, but will only cause extrem e hard­ ships for families already poor and further alienation o f that growing sector o f our population conveniently labeled the "underclass." The reality also is that unless we pass universal health care bill and guarantee m oth­ ers on welfare day-care for their chil­ dren, there can be no w elfare reform In recent weeks the Clinton Ad­ m inistration has put forth a welfare reform proposal which includes some job training and does include child care provisions. It includes increased child support enforcem ent efforts which require parents to help sup­ port their children. It includes the Earned Income Tax Credit, already passed by Congress, which already has helped poor families cope by subsidizing low -paying jobs. But it also lim its women to a lifetime maxi­ mum o f 24 months cash assistance. Even disabled mothers or mothers with disabled children must develop “em ployability plans” that eventu­ ally lead to work. A recent Time m agazine poll show ed that 74 percent o f Ameri­ cans agree that we should replace w elfare with a system o f guaranteed public jobs The A dm inistration pro­ posal does this. After tw o years o f receiving AFDC, m others would be required to w ork in public service jobs But they would not be guaran­ teed the same em ployee rights, com ­ pensation or benefits as regular gov­ ernm ent workers. Indeed, ifw e think about the fact that most Americans also do not want to see the size of governm ent increased, and many believe that governm ent is inept and unresponsive to citizens, the ques­ tion must be asked why would we want to put welfare mothers into dead-endjobs with little or no future And what will happen to the w elfare reform act if universal health care is not passed by Congress? It is important to know that many fami­ lies on welfare ended up there be­ cause o f health-related reasons and many women are trapped on welfare because the current w elfare system offers them Medicaid coverage, while most o f the part-tim e or temporary jobs they can qualify for do not in­ clude health care benefits. And if w e're going to talk about ending governm ent subsidies for not working, let’s be fair. L et’s also talk about ending farm subsidies which the governm ent pays to farm ers not to work. Part o f the debate on C ap ital H i 11 about welfare is about the num ber of single mothers in A m erica and it’s about choice. It's about how Ameri­ cans, including teenaged Americans, make choices to have families. But with all the talk about w elfare re­ form, too little o f it has included real dialogue with m others and children on welfare. Too little has included focusing on the success stories - those women who got o ff and find­ ing out what they had or what they did to enable them to escape The w elfare system needs to be changed. But let's not expect fami­ lies on welfare to walk that tightrope with absolutely no safety net. If they fall, it will reflect on each one o f us. THIS WAY FOR BLACK EMPOWERMENT Clinton Conference On Africa Ignored CBC V resident Bill Clinton d 14 appears to go out of 'Tj his way to disrespect the African American com­ munity. After a year and a half o f ignor­ ing Africa - from the brutal dicta­ torship in Zaire to the genocide in Rwanda - the Clinton A dm inistra­ tion hastily called a tw o-day con­ ference on Africa on June 26-27, without consulting at all with the Congressional Black Caucus. “ I d o n 't think there has been a focus on Africa ever in any A dm in­ istration, including this one," C on­ gressman Donald Payne o f New Jersey, a m em ber o f the A frica Sub­ com m ittee o f the House Foreign Affairs Com m ittee and the chief foreign policy spokesperson for the Congressional Black Caucus, told the New York Times. “ I have no idea what the focus o f the confer­ ence is or what its intended goals I are.” Since he as not invited to par­ ticipate in the conceptualization and planning o f the conference. C on­ gressman Payne, like m ost m em ­ bers o f the Congressional Black Caucus, did not attend. The Clinton adm inistration apparently d o esn't think that the views o f people o f African descent in this country need be taken into account in shaping U.S. policy tow ard Africa. O ne c le a r e x a m p le is the a d m in istra tio n ’s p o licy tow ard Zaire. There is grow ing support within the African American com ­ munity for the dem ocracy m ove­ ment led by Etienne Tshisekedi. The Clinton adm inistration, on the other hand, has been, in effect, do­ ing what it can behind the scenes to support the 27-year-old CIA-in- stalled dictatorship o f M obuto Sese Seko, w hich has left the country brutalized and in a state o f eco­ nomic and social collapse. O n Ju n e 16, the S ta te D e­ p a rtm e n t re le a se d a sta te m e n t ‘ta k in g n o te ” o f Ju n e 14 “ e le c ­ tio n ” o f a new p rim e m in iste r, K en g o w a D o n d o , by Z a ir e ’s H igh C o u n c il o f the R e p u b lic . T he sta te m e n t re fe rs to K engo as c o m in g “ from th e o p p o s i­ tio n ,” and e x p re sse s th e hope th a t his e le c tio n w ill lead to a ‘c re d ib le g o v e rn m e n t o f n a ­ tio n a l u n ity ,” th e re b y im p ly in g th a t the a d m in istra tio n c o n s id ­ ers his ele c tio n le g itim a te . The statement is misleading on two counts. First, Kengo is not "from the opposition.” He was M obutu’s prime minister in the days before the Sovereign Confer­ ence -- the current government, w h ic h is a tte m p tin g , d e sp ite M obutu’songoingsabotage.to lead the nation’s transition to dem oc­ racy -- was created. Kengo has emerged as a favorite ofthe Clinton a d m in is tr a tio n a n d in t e r n a ­ tio n al fin a n c ia l in stitu tio n s, but the Z a iria n p e o p le h a v e n ’t fo r­ g o tte n him as the ru th le ss p e r­ se c u to r o f the p o litic a l o p p o s i­ tio n u n d e r the M obutu d ic ta ­ to rsh ip . M o re o v e r, K engo w as c ite d by the S o v e re ig n C o n fe r­ en ce as h a v in g used his p u b lic o ffic e to d iv e rt state p ro p e rty in to h is ow n p o ck et. Secondly, the June S e le c tio n in the High Council o f the Repub­ lic was illegal because it violated the Transitional Constitution, the "P rotocol d ’A ccord" and other docum ents governing the transi­ tion to democracy which were re­ cently signed by Mobutu and the democratic opposition forces in the presence o f the United States and its allies. Article 78 o f the Transi­ tional Constitution requires that the prim e minister be designated by the opposition. The opposition met in accordance with the law and e le c te d the d e m o cracy lead er Tshisekedi as prime minister with 89% o f the vote. Mobutu has re­ fused to honor his agreements, and through his stacking o f the High Council, orchestrated the June 14 “election” in which Kengo, his crony, was chosen. T he C lin to n a d m in istra tio n c a n n o t ho p e to a v e rt p o litic a l a n a rc h y in Z a ire — or th e rest o f A fric a - if it c o n tin u e s to ig n o re th e d e m o c ra tic w ill o f th e p e o p le o f A fric a an d the p ro -d e m o c ra cy view s o f th e A f­ rican A m erican p e o p le and our re p r e s e n ta tiv e s in C o n g re ss. W e m ust urge the C lin to n a d ­ m in is tra tio n to sto p p la y in g p o litic s w ith A frican liv e s. W e m u st urge him to w ith h o ld re c ­ o g n itio n from th e K engo g o v ­ e r n m e n t, a n d to a f f ir m h is a d m in is tr a tio n ’s c o m m itm e n t to a ssistin g Z a ire in its e ffo rts to e sta b lish d e m o c ra c y an d the ru le o f law . (The ^ o rtla n b (©bseruer (USPS 959-680) OREGON’S OLDEST AFRICAN AMERICAN PUBLICATION Established in 1970 by Alfred L. 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