urban pro weekly
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The CSRA 's free weekly - featuring entertainment, arts, news, sports, and political commentaryTRANSCRIPT
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vPersonal and Business Income Tax Preparation
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The Wise Choice2664 Tobacco Rd., Ste A,Hephzibah, GA 30815www.taxwize.net
Movie Review: Free Angela & all political prisonersCommentary: Progressives push back at Obama
The CSRA’s
Photo by V
incent Hobbs
NEWS • COMMENTARY ARTS ENTERTAINMENT
Newspaper
FREEWEEKLYUrban WPro
APRIL 11 - 17, 2013
VOL.2 NO.18
BuildingCommunity
The CSRA’s FREE WEEKLYNewspaperVOL.2 NO.30eekly
Angela Davis in the 1960s • The quintessential American radical has her story told in a new documentary
Business Profile: Fyne Foot Care Center • Latanya P. Fyne, Podiatrist
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Marian T. Ebron, M.D. Internal Medicine and Esthetic Medicine
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URBAN PRO: Can you tell us why you decided to pursue your medi-cal studies with a concentration on the foot and ankle?
DR. FYNE: I have been interested in the medical field for most of my life. After much research, I decided to become a Podiatrist because of the great demand for foot and ankle specialists, and my desire to have a well-balanced family life, as well as a great career, free of constant medical emergencies.
URBAN PRO: Who or what inspired you to become a doctor?
DR. FYNE: Actually, my late sister, Patricia did. After many years of my professing to have a desire to become a nurse (just like my Mom was), my oldest sister stated to me, “why not become a doctor?” I then proceeded to tell her of my desire for family and career, and she encouraged me through several case scenarios to “go all the way”, stating that many women have successful careers as doctors, and are still able to spend quality time with their family.
URBAN PRO: Foot or ankle prob-lems can be a major concern of athletes, diabetics and the elderly – what sorts of injuries/concerns do you treat on a daily basis?
DR. FYNE: I treat many patients with problems such as ingrown and fungal toenails, heel spur syndrome (plantar fasciitis), corns and calluses, bunions, hammertoes, foot and leg ulcers, diabetic neuropathy (nerve damage), PAD (peripheral arterial disease), athlete’s foot, warts, flat feet, sprains, fractures, and many others.
URBAN PRO: Tell us where you
received your training and educa-tion.
DR. FYNE: I attended Dillard University, in New Orleans, Louisiana for 3 years, majoring in Biology, Pre-Medicine, and then Kent State Podiatric Medical School (Ohio College of Podiatric Medicine) for 4 years. After completion of my first year at Kent State, I graduated from Dillard University with a Bachelor of Science degree from Dillard University. In June of 1988, I gradu-
ated from Kent State with a Doctor of Podiatric Medicine (D.P.M.) degree. I then did a two-year surgical residency at Physicians & Surgeons Hospital in Atlanta, Georgia, in which I was chief resident.
URBAN PRO: How important is it to buy the proper-fitting pair of shoes? What should we look for when deciding on a shoe purchase?
DR. FYNE: It is more important than most people realize. When
deciding on a shoe purchase, keep the following in mind: 1.Try on shoes toward the end of the day; 2. Tie shoe laces when trying on shoes; 3. Always try on both shoes, and choose the size based on comfort of your largest foot; 4. Always stand and take a few steps in the shoes before making a purchase; 5. You should be able to wiggle your toes upwards in the shoes; 6. The heel counter should be firm; 7. If you have flat feet, you need a stiff, less flex-
BUSINESS PROFILE FYNE FOOT CARE CENTERUrban WeeklyPro
Continued on next page
In some cases, a simple problem that could have been easily treated in the office becomes a serious problem that requires hospitalization, and possible loss of a limb, Dr. Fyne says. All photos by Vincent Hobbs
Stay a step ahead at Fyne
Foot Care Center
Dr. Latanya P. Fyne, Podiatrist
1710 Central Ave. Augusta, Ga 30904
706-373-4402
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Harold V. Jones IIATTORNEY AT LAW
SHEPARD, PLUNKETT, HAMILTON & BOUDREAUX, LLP
429 Walker StreetUpper Level
Augusta, GA 30901
Phone 706-722-6200Fax 706 722-4817
Criminal Law • Divorce • Personal Injury • Employment Law
WE TAKE:•Georgia medicaid•Insurance plans•Charge cards•WIC vouchers
MEDICAL VILLA PHARMACY
Marshall Curtis,Pharmacist/Owner
Baron Curtis, Pharmacist
FREE DELIVERY SERVICE
706-722-7355
PublisherBen Hasan
706-394-9411
Managing EditorFrederick Benjamin Sr.
706-836-2018
UrbanProWeekly LLC
Mailing Address:3529 Monte Carlo DriveAugusta, Georgia 30906
Urban WeeklyPro Sales & MarketingPhone: 706-394-9411
New Media ConsultantDirector of Photography
Vincent Hobbs
email:Ben Hasan
Frederick Benjamin [email protected]
Vincent [email protected]
FYNE FOOT CARE CENTER from page 3ible shoe; 8. If you have high arches, you need a well-cushioned shoe to improve shock absorption; 9. Shoes should be comfortable from day one, and should not have to be “broken in”; 10. Some people may need custom orthotics (arch supports) when the over-the-counter inserts do not relieve symptoms. These custom devices can be prescribed by your Podiatrist.
URBAN PRO: Do you find that women are more prone to foot and ankle problems, due to the types of shoes they wear?
DR. FYNE: For the most part, this is a true statement, although I see many males with similar problems. Keep in mind that many foot and ankle prob-
lems are hereditary, and some are attrib-uted to improper care of the feet. For instance, one can develop an infected ingrown toenail by improper cutting of toenails. Also, some conditions, such as flat feet and bunions, are hereditary.
URBAN PRO: What can we do to take better care of our feet?
DR. FYNE: The main concerns are: 1. Proper cleansing and moisturizing; 2. Proper shoe wear based on activity, ie don’t wear high heeled shoes when standing or walking for several hours; 3. Immediate medical attention (pref-erably by a foot and ankle specialist) at the first sign of a foot or ankle problem; 4. Diabetics should see a Podiatrist at least 3-4 times per year.
URBAN PRO: What are some of the challenges you face as a podiatrist?
DR. FYNE: A major challenge that I face is education of my patients and members of the community concern-ing the importance of seeking medical treatment for foot and ankle prob-lems. People tend to think that they can self-treat these problems, and they find that this only leads to worsening and prolongation of the problem.
In some cases, a simple problem that could have been easily treated in the office becomes a serious problem that requires hospitalization, and pos-sible loss of limb.
There are 50,000 lower extremity amputations every year in the United States, many of which could be avoided
with proper foot care. Many of these are related to untreated or improperly treat-ed diabetic foot ulcers, which occur as a result of Diabetic Peripheral Neuropathy.
The direct cost of a single lower extremity amputation is estimated at $30,000 to $60,000. In my practice, I focus on treating the signs and symp-toms of Diabetic Peripheral Neuropathy in order to reduce the risk for Diabetic Foot Ulcers. I also aggressively treat patients who present to my office with foot and leg ulcers. I see most of my patients with diabetes every two to three months, and each time I see them, I examine their feet for any new prob-lems, such as discoloration or deformity of toenails, skin lesions or areas of dis-coloration, soft tissue or bony promi-nences, and other problem areas. I also advise my patients to look for changes in the feet by regular self-examination.
URBAN PRO: Tell us about the services you offer at your offices for foot and ankle problems.
DR. FYNE: We offer in-office proce-dures to get rid of ingrown toenails, deformed toes, warts and other skin lesions, treatment of corns and cal-luses, foot and leg ulcers, athlete’s feet, infections, fungal toenails, flat feet, sprains, fractures, tendinitis, and other problems. We offer out-patient surgi-cal procedures for bunions, hammer-toes, bone spurs, flat feet, and other conditions. We also offer testing for Neuropathy (nerve damage), vascular testing for PAD (Peripheral Arterial Disease), and custom orthotics and dia-betic shoes, We treat ALL ages!
URBAN PRO: Doctors are known for staying constantly busy with their patients. What do you do to relax or what sort of hobbies do you partici-pate in during your downtime?
DR. FYNE: During my down time, I enjoy spending time with my husband of 21 years and our 3 kids. I also enjoy reading, singing, line dancing, fishing, and exercising.
Dr. Fyne, at her Augusta office, studies patient files. Photo by Vincent Hobbs
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AUGUSTARepresentatives from the City of
Augusta, including Commissioners William Fennoy and Bill Lockett and Director of Housing & Community Development, Chester Wheeler, are slat-ed to be in Chicago the week of April 15 to accept a National Planning Excellence award from the American Planning Association for the Laney Walker/Bethlehem Revitalization Project.
The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) and the American Planning Association (APA) recognized the Laney Walker/Bethlehem Revitalization Initiative (Laney Walker/Bethlehem) in Augusta, Georgia, as one of two recipients of the 2013 HUD Secretary’s Opportunity and Empowerment Award.
“It is with great pleasure that I share with you the latest national recognition of our Laney Walker/Bethlehem revi-talization initiative,” comments Mayor
Augusta officials to travel to D.C. to receive award for Laney-Walker revitalization projects
Will Smith, Jada Pinkett Smith, Jay Z produce a documentary about radical intellectual Angela Davis.
Free Angelaby Ashley Calloway
When filmmaker Shola Lynch appeared in the December 2006 issue of Black Enterprise, her Angela Davis documentary, Free Angela & All Political Prisoners, then in the works, only warranted a one-sen-tence mention at the very end of the article. Fast forward to the present, and Free Angela—which has been eight years in the making—seems to have taken on a life of its own. Marquee names such as Jada Pinkett Smith and Jay-Z are attached to the film, and on Friday it is being released inselect theaters nationwide.
Lynch, who made her directo-rial debut with the award-win-ning Chilshom ’72: Unbought & Unbossed, says that Free Angela & All Political Prisoners was inspired by the questions she had surrounding the world-famous activist.
“She was a 26-year-old philoso-phy professor. How and why did she become an international political icon? How is that possible?” asks Lynch, who wrote and directed the film.
Lynch admits that while she had an Angela Davis T-shirt, she had heard
Davis speak at an event, and knew that Davis was once chased by the FBI, that was the extent of her knowl-edge of the political icon.
“This is an experience that hun-dreds of thousands of people have had,” Lynch says. “I realized that we couldn’t really tell you why we knew her. We knew she was important, but what’s the story?”
Free Angela & All Political Prisoners opens with a silhouette of Davis’ iconic afro, and goes on to show her rise to an international political figure through interviews, old footage, recordings, photography, sketches, letters, files, and reenact-ments. The film follows Davis’ story through the early seventies, from the controversy surrounding her appoint-ment as a philosophy professor at the University of California to being on the FBI’s 10 Most Wanted list to standing trial for murder, kidnap-ping, and criminal conspiracy.
“It actually turned out to be a politi-cal crime thriller with a love story in the middle of it,” Lynch says. “Who knew?”
The love story, one of several sur-prising aspects of the film, shows
the romance that formed between Davis and George Jackson, one of the “Soledad Brothers” (Davis was an out-spoken advocate for the release of the Brothers, three unrelated California inmates who were being charged with the death of a prison guard, and whom she considered political prisoners). George’s younger brother, Jonathan, who was a friend of Davis, led a botched kidnapping of a judge that left four people dead. The guns used in the kidnapping attempt were registered in Davis’ name, setting off a chain of events that indubitably changed the course of her life—and making for a very complicated love story.
Lynch says that Davis’ relationship with George was central to the story because the prosecutor in Davis’ trial, the late Albert Harris Jr., then assistant
district attorney, built his case around it.“His whole theory of the crime
was that she was a woman in love, almost crazily in love,” Lynch says. “So she masterminded a plot to kidnap a judge, in exchange for her lover, who was in prison.”
Lynch stops short of describing George as Davis’ boyfriend or saying that they were in love, but the docu-ments in the film, including love letters between the two, speak for themselves.
For all the insights that the film offers—including Davis’ surpris-ingly limited involvement with the Black Panther Party—there is one question that remains unanswered: How did Jonathan get his hands on Davis’ guns? Lynch finds the ques-tion interesting, as she says audiences haven’t really fixated on that detail. She says there are two theories, and one was the prosecutor’s suggestion that Davis was the mastermind who gave Jonathan the guns. The defense’s argument was that Davis would not be so dense as to plan a kidnapping and then give someone guns that were registered in her name.
Because no one could say they wit-nessed Jonathan taking the guns, it’s up to audiences to look at the evidence and come to their own conclusions.
“You have two competing theories of the crime, and it’s left to the jury to decide which is true,” Lynch says. “I present it in the way that the jury would have been presented with the information.”
Lynch says there are many details to the story, but “as filmmaker, as a his-torian, and as a storyteller, there’s not one detail left out that would change the narrative.”
Deke Copenhaver. “This initiative con-tinues to become a model for the rest of the nation to follow and we should all be very proud of it. I would like to thank Chester Wheeler and his staff at the Augusta Housing and Community Development Department, APD Urban Planning and Melaver McIntosh as
their groundbreaking initiative con-tinues to evoke a sense of civic pride throughout our community”
Laney Walker/Bethlehem is employ-ing a multi-phased approach to guide redevelopment, growth and sustain-ability in a historic community.
The HUD Secretary’s Award, pre-
sented jointly by HUD and APA, rec-ognizes a plan, program, or project that has been in effect for at least three years and improves the quality of life for low- and moderate-income com-munity residents. Emphasis is placed on how creative housing, economic development, and private investments have been used in or with a compre-hensive community development plan to empower a community.
“The impetus for and success of this project is a direct result of a few brave community leaders who actively engaged all members of the community and insisted that inner-city quality of life issues be addressed,” said Ann C. Bagley, FAICP, 2013 APA Awards Jury chair. “It is not surprising that the Harvard Student Journal on Real Estate cited it as a potential ‘game-changing’ model for public-private partnerships.”
The HUD Secretary’s Award from APA is especially gratifying for Augusta’s housing and community development director, Chester A. Wheeler, III.
“Our careful planning efforts laid the groundwork for the renaissance now taking place in Laney Walker/Bethlehem. To be recognized by two leading organizations that are so inte-gral to improving our urban neighbor-hoods is truly an honor.”
The film follows Davis’ story through the early seventies, from the controversy surrounding her appointment as a philosophy professor at the University of California to being on the FBI’s 10 Most Wanted list to standing trial for murder, kidnapping, and crimi-nal conspiracy.
MOVIE REVIEW
AWARDS PREVIEW
Augusta’s Laney Walker/Bethlehem Revitalization Initiative receives prestigious National Planning Award.
The Laney Walker/Bethlehem Revitalization Initiative, involving two his-toric African American neighborhoods in Augusta, Georgia, is a pioneer-ing effort to reverse decades of blight and disinvestment and regenerate nearly 1,100 acres of Augusta’s urban center. Photo by Vincent Hobbs
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3 PEOPLE & organizations making a difference
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Spring into the season with my 6 week Boot Camp just $99! Drop those winterpounds and slim down for summer. I help ordinary people get extraordinary results!
Boot Camp starts on April 8!
Twenty-five Georgia Regents University students competed among more than 5,000 college students from across the world at the National Model United Nations Conference in New York City last month and received awards in every possible category. The conference meets each spring to allow students to discuss current global issues on 20 selected committees. This year’s theme was “Change Your World.”
Three GRU students won individual awards: Heather Ross, a junior, received a position paper award for her commit-tee; and both Casey Ratliff, a sopho-more, and Fady Tawadrous, a senior,
received the Best Delegate Award in their committee. The GRU team also received honorable mention as an over-all delegation.
The students attended the confer-ence as part of the Model United Nations class, a semester-long politi-cal science course open to all majors. Students learned about the Islamic Republic of Iran, which they repre-sented in mock debates at the con-ference, and received three hours of credit. Coursework included research papers, book summaries and week-ly readings and practiced debates throughout the semester.
“Making Your Feet Feel Like Your First Steps”
Fyne Foot Care Center
Ingrown Toenails • CornsCalluses • Spurs • Injuries
Hammertoes • Diabetic Foot Care • Foot Ulcer/Wound Care
Other Foot/Ankle Conditions
“Do you think you might have P.A.D. (Peripheral Arterial
Disease)? Not sure? Why not GET TESTED?!”
We now feature Vascular testing;
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1710 Central AvenueAugusta, GA 30904
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Dr. Latanya P. FynePodiatrist
706-373-4402
Fax: (706) 364-8628
NEW LOCATIONMost major insurance accepted
Including Medicare& GA Medicaid
All Major Credit Cards Accepted
GRU students travel to The Big Apple to attend the National Model United Nations Conference and bring back honors.
GRU students receive awards at National Model United Nations Conference in New York City
The Georgia Regents University Alumni and Friends Lauderdale Golf Tournament will be held Friday, April 19 at the Forest Hills Golf Club.
The entry fees for individuals are $100 for the senior or women’s divi-sions and $187.50 for the open divi-
sion. The entry fees for teams are $400 for the women’s and senior division and $750 for open division teams. The price includes lunch, golf cart, drinks and a gift.
To register, go to giving.gru.edu/Lauderdale, or call 706-721-2699.
GRU to host alumni golf tournament
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7UrbanProW
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CSRA Economic Opportunity Authority, Inc.
Inaugural Annual Golf TournamentFriday, April 19, 2013
Pointe South Golf Club
Three Man Captain’s ChoiceFees: 70.00 per golfer; 200.00 per teamEntry fee includes: 18 holes, green fees, cart fees, range balls, and lunch.Onsite registration: 7:30 a.m. Tee Time: 8:00 a.m. Shotgun Start Walk-ups Welcome
4324 Peach Orchard Road, Hephzibah, Ga 30815706-592-2222
For more information call: Conan Sanders 706-267-1302;Norris Rouse 706-836-1439Gloria B. Lewis 706-722-0493
Checks payable to CSRA EOA,Inc.1261 Green Street, Augusta, Ga 30901
Prizes1st and 2nd First Flight1st and 2nd Second Flight1st and 2nd Third FlightClosest to Pin Male and FemaleLongest Drive Male and Female Under 60Longest Drive Male and Female 60+
Unique BasketsGift Baskets for all Occasions
2450 Windsor Spring Rd., Suite B, Augusta, Ga.,
Sabrina Brown, owner(706) 832-5397
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Daily Operating Hours Monday - Saturday: 11am 7pm.
Jaden S. Jenkins, a second grader from Lake Forest Hills Elementary in Augusta, Ga., shared a stage with Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle recently in honor of Georgia’s manufacturing industry.
Jenkins took first place in his division of the 2013 Manufacturing Appreciation Week (MAW) student design contest. He received a $500 scholarship check, presented by Lt. Gov. Cagle at the MAW Governor’s Awards Luncheon held at the Georgia International Convention Center.
“These young students are our best and brightest, and our future in manu-
facturing depends on them,” said Larry Callahan, CEO of Patillo Industrial Real Estate, as the awards were presented.
Students from around the state sub-mitted design entries featuring Georgia manufacturers and their products. Winners were named for grades 9-12, 6-8, and K-5 and will be posted online at www.georgiamaw.org with their winning artwork for this year.
Co-hosted by the Technical College System of Georgia and the Georgia Department of Economic Development, the awards luncheon is the highlight of MAW, celebrated this year April 1-5.
Augusta Second-grader places first in statewide design contest
Jaden S. Jenkins, a second grader from Lake Forest Hills Elementary in Augusta, Ga., shared a stage with Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle.
AUGUSTAThis week, the Augusta-Richmond
County Public Libraries join libraries in schools, campuses and communi-ties nationwide in celebrating National Library Week, a time to highlight the value of libraries, librarians and library workers.
Libraries today are often the heart of their communities, campuses or schools, libraries are deeply committed to the places where their patrons live, work and study. Libraries are trusted places where everyone in the community can gather to reconnect and reengage with each other to enrich and shape the com-munity and address local issues.
Whether through offering e-books and technology classes, materials for English-language learners, programs for job seekers or those to support early literacy, librarians listen to the commu-nity they serve, and they respond.
The Augusta-Richmond County Public Library serves county residents by pro-viding books, e-books, digital maga-zines, children’s programming, GED and ESL classes, computer classes, online
practice tests for SAT, GRE, ASVAB and many other standardized/professional tests, meeting spaces for groups, online reference/research databases, commu-nity outreach services, and more!
“Service to the community has always been the focus of the library,” said library director Darlene Price. “While this aspect has never changed, libraries have grown and evolved in how they provide for the needs of every member of their community.”
Next week, the library will be offer-ing: overdue fine forgiveness, educa-tional and fun programming for all ages, and library card sign-up at local businesses. And, on Tuesday, April 16th at 12:30 p.m., Mayor Copenhaver will present a Proclamation to the Headquarters Library downtown des-ignating this week as “Library Week in Augusta.” The press and the com-munity are welcomed to join our local librarians and staff celebrate.
For more information, visit any of the six public libraries in Richmond County, call 706-821-2600, or see the library web site at: www.ecgrl.org.
Communities Matter @ Your Library National Library Week • April 14-20
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#JazzLives Collective Culture + Soul Celebration
April 21, 2013 @ 7pm Julian Smith Casino
Augusta GA
Live music, art and movement hosted by Garden City Jazz, Humanitree House and Soul Center GA; open jam with
local rising stars, visual artists interpreting the music; dance and spoken word; Snarky Puppy brings the heat!
Info: (706) 495-6238
Tix: www.gardencityjazz.com
On April 21, 2013, Live Music, Art and Movement will be hosted by Garden City Jazz, Humanitree House and Soul Center Georgia.
This collaboration will feature local rising stars, visual artists inter-preting the music; dance and poet-ry; recording artists Snarky Puppy closes the show. Snarky Puppyhas one of the freshest sounds in the world of instrumental music today. This convergence of different cul-tures, races, ages, and musical back-grounds has birthed a sound that is setting trends and defying boundar-
ies worldwide. It is a delicate mix-ture of real American music, from jazz to funk to R&B to rock, and seasoned heavily with the sounds of Brazil, Puerto Rico, Africa, the Middle East, and the Balkans. While exotic, virtuosic, and laden with musical depth, Snarky Puppy has the ability to “go in multiple direc-tions while remaining imminently listenable and ultimately, danceable. The music is completely uncompro-mised, unorthodox, and unmistak-ably unique.
Join us as Julian Smith Casino is
transformed into a Soulful, Jazzy, Funky Paradise that is sure to engage your senses on every level. This is a family friendly event and all are wel-come. You don’t want to miss this evening of EXPLOSIVE music, beau-tiful people and celebration.WHEN: Sunday, April 21, 2013 6:00 p.m. @ Julian Smith CasinoTICKETS: $12 adv., $15 door or PURCHASE ONLINE @http://jaz-zlives.bpt.me/ CONTACT: [email protected] • www.gardencityjazz.com • www.humanitreehouse.com
FIRST FRIDAY REVERIE • An Arts Calvacade of Sights / Sounds
Top: A jazz performer soaring; Left: Eastern Star Dance Company performer; Above: Augusta artist Desmond Fletcher exhbits some of his artwork during First Friday fes-tivities on Broad Street.All photos by Vincent Hobbs
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11UrbanProW
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Commentary
by John Nichols
President Obama’s plan to include Social Security cuts in his bud-get plan is well summed up by Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders as a “bitter dis-appointment.”
Obama closed his 2012 campaign with a populist flourish that seemed to suggest he was finally coming to believe his own rhetoric about the need for growth, as opposed to auster-ity. The strength of his message earned the president a mandate: a popular vote margin of almost 5 million, a land-slide win in the Electoral College and significant gains in Senate and House races.
But, now, he proposes to squander that mandate in pursuit of a “grand bargain” with House Republicans – a bargain that would replace the current approach to calculating cost-of-living increases for Social Security recipients with a “Chained-CPI” scheme. The change will harm not just seniors, chil-dren and people with disabilities but a fragile economic recovery.
Additionally, the president is reported to be prepared to propose some means testing for Medicare.
This is not Paul Ryan privatization. But it is a classic austerity cut.
It is wrong economically, and politi-cally.
“Social Security is not driving the deficit; therefore it should not be part of reforms aimed at cutting the defi-cit. The chained CPI, deceptively por-trayed as a reasonable cost of living adjustment, is a cut to Social Security that would hurt seniors,” says former
Secretary of Labor Robert Reich. “There are several sensible reforms to Social Security that should be considered to help make it sustainable, including lifting the ceiling on income subject to Social Security from $113,700 to $200,000 or more, as well as institut-ing a 1 percent raise in the payroll tax rate, a rate that hasn’t changed in over 20 years.”
Reich, a Democrat, warns that the president’s plan abandons a historic partisan commitment.
“(Ever) since Social Security’s incep-tion in 1935 and Medicare’s 30 years later, Republicans have been trying to get rid of them. If average Americans have trusted the Democratic Party to do one thing over the years, it’s been to guard these programs from the depredations of the GOP,” explains the former Clinton administration Cabinet member. “Why should Democrats now lead the charge against them?”
The president’s pursuit of a “grand bargain” was quickly rejected by House Speaker John Boehner.
Yet, despite the record of Republican obstruction, the White House has
placed a major Social Security cut on the table.
“Social Security is too important to the economic security of the American people to be used as a bargaining chip. The president’s own Secretary of the Treasury and former Director of the Office of Management and Budget has written about the budget,” says Nancy Altman, a founding co-director of Social Security Works. “The problem is not Social Security; the problem is the mismatch between outlays and revenues in the rest of the budget.’ Applying the so-called chained CPI to Social Security cuts the benefits of every single Social Security beneficiary, now and in the future. The very groups who worked the hardest and voted in the highest percentages to re-elect the president -- working families, women, people of color, young Americans -- will be the ones hurt the most by the cuts the president is reportedly includ-ing in his budget.”
That’s a message that was echoed fre-quently Friday, as progressives pushed back against the president’s plan.
“What the president is proposing
is going to hurt a lot of people,” said Sanders.
The senator from Vermont is not going to let that happen without a fight. He has launched a petition opposing the president’s approach. It reads:
At a time when the middle class is disappearing, poverty is increasing and the gap between the rich and everyone else is growing wider, we demand that the federal budget not be balanced on the backs of the most vulnerable people in our country.
A federal budget that reduces the deficit by cutting cost-of-living adjust-ments for Social Security and disabled veterans, raising the Medicare eligibil-ity age and lowering tax rates for the most profitable corporations in this country is not a grand bargain. It is a bad bargain.
We oppose the chained-CPI, a new way to measure inflation and con-sumer prices designed to cut benefits for Social Security recipients, disabled veterans and their survivors.
We are strongly opposed to ben-efit cuts to Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, education, and the needs of our veterans.
We demand a budget that puts mil-lions of Americans back to work in decent paying jobs.
We demand a budget that makes sure that the wealthiest Americans and most profitable corporations pay their fair share.
Within hours of the White House confirmation of the president’s plan,
Progressives push back against Obama’s Social Security, Medicare austerity budget
by Gary Younge
On Saturday evening, a large num-ber youths (by one account, as many as 500), most of them black, ram-paged through downtown Chicago’s Magnificent Mile, fighting each other and generally creating mayhem. The ruckus had been planned ahead of time on social media.
A mounted Chicago police officer was assaulted. There were more than 20 arrests but no reports of rob-beries, property damage or injuries. Community activist Andrew Holmes commented:
“I caution those parents if their child has been arrested … You need to think about your child. Just don’t say the Chicago police picked on your child, when we watched all the assault going on, especially by teen women.”
A couple days later, in a hearing on the NYPD’s controversial “stop-and-frisk” tactic in Manhattan fed-
eral court, State Senator Eric Adams explained how New York Police Commissioner, Ray Kelly, told him of his policy of terrorising black and Latino neighborhoods:
“[Kelly] stated that he targeted and focused on that group because he wanted to instill fear in them that every time that they left their homes they could be targeted by police.”
Causally, the two events are unre-lated. They took place in different cities, several hundred miles apart, on different days, completely inde-pendently of each other. There can be no excuse for either. Both are reprehensible.
Contextually, however, they repre-sent two sides of America’s mutual-ly-reinforcing urban dysfunction. In which the inequalities of class and race are compounded by the ineq-uities of police discrimination. The result is an environment in which potential for empathy, let alone soli-darity, crashes on the rocks of institu-
tional neglect and social alienation, in which violence, be it systemic or episodic, are both chronic and inevi-table. What Holmes doesn’t seem to understand is that black parents in American cities are thinking about their children precisely because the police do keep picking on them. In Hannah Arendt’s words:
“As citizens, we must prevent wrongdoing because the world in which we all live, wrong-doer, wrong-sufferer and spectator, is at stake.”
The problem starts with pover-ty. Infant mortality rates for black families in Pittsburgh are worse than in Vietnam; male life expectancy in Washington, DC is lower than it is the Gaza Strip.
Poverty rates in some black and Latino neighborhoods in almost every city are higher than 50%. In some, violence is rampant. By one estimate, between 20% and 30% Chicago school children have wit-nessed a shooting. The US now has
more people in its penal system than the Soviet Union did at the height of the gulag system.
“The law,” wrote James Baldwin, “is meant to be my servant and not my master, still less my torturer and my murderer.” Yet, in the absence of even a partial plan, let alone a comprehen-sive one, to improve the economic lot of people in these areas, the state’s response is simply to contain the chaos engendered by this neglect as though they are occupied territories subject to collective punishment.
To live there is to be suspect. “You’re working in Bed-Stuy, where everyone’s probably got a warrant,” Lt Jean Delafuente told officers at a roll call in 2008, insisting that mak-ing the arrest quota should be easy in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn. To look like you live there suffices if you are in a certain demographic. Stop “the right people at the right
Law and Disorder: The destructive dynamic of our segregated citiesPolicing tactics like NYC’s stop-and-frisk amount to punitive racial profiling.
Continued on next page
“Ever since Social Security’s inception in 1935 and Medicare’s 30 years later, Republicans have been trying to get rid of them. If average Americans have trusted the Democratic Party to do one thing over the years, it’s been to guard these programs from the depredations of the GOP . . . Why should Democrats now lead the charge against them?”
Continued on next page
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13UrbanProW
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Law and disorder from page 12
Notice to Lower Income Families
Augusta Housing Authority
This notice is to advise that effective Tuesday, April 9, 2013 the Augusta Housing Authority will open the waiting list for the Project Based Voucher Programs for The Legacy at Walton Oaks and Maxwell House Apartments. The waiting list for the Public Housing Program is open. The waiting list for the Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher Program and Moderate Rehabilitation Program is currently closed. The Augusta Housing Authority will accept updated information from persons who have previously applied for the Section 8, Moderate Rehabilitation, Project Based and Public Housing Programs.
Walton Communities provides a quality living environment in a “Breathe Easy, Smoke Free Community” for low income adults ages 55 and up. Special rental assistance will be provided with respect to 26 of the 75 apartment homes through the project based vouchers provided by the Augusta Housing Authority. Applications for the Section 8 Project Based Voucher Program for The Legacy at Walton Oaks will be accepted by applying in person at the Augusta Housing Authority located at 1435 Walton Way, Augusta, Georgia between the hours of 9:00a.m. to 4:00p.m. and completing an on-line application at www.augustapha.org. The Legacy at Walton Oaks will access a $14 application fee to process your application. Eligible applicants will be placed on the site-based waiting list and will be ranked by date and time.
Maxwell House, LLC provides 44 1-bedroom units of permanent supportive housing at Maxwell House Apartments. The Project Based Vouchers are used to provide rental assistance for 44 extremely low to lower income families. Maxwell House, LLC offers quality affordable housing while providing essential supportive services to assist special needs families to move successfully from dependency to self-sufficiency. Applications for the Section 8 Project Based Voucher Program for Maxwell House Apartments will be accepted by contacting Maxwell House Apartments at (706) 724-1927 and completing an on-line application at www.augustapha.org. Walk-in customers wanting to apply will not be seen during the open application period.
This notice is also to advise that effective May 8, 2013 at 6:00p.m., the Augusta Housing Authority will close the waiting lists for the Project Based Voucher Programs for The Legacy at Walton Oaks and Maxwell House Apartments.
The Augusta Housing Authority does not discriminate in admission or access to its federally assisted programs. Any potentially eligible individual who has a visual or hearing impairment will be provided with information necessary to understand and participate in the Augusta Housing Authority’s programs. Richard Arfman has been designated as the responsible employee to coordinate the Augusta Housing Authority’s efforts to comply with the nondiscrimination based on handicap regulations.
Equal Housing Opportunity
The Housing Authority of the City of Augusta, Georgia
By: Jacob Oglesby, Executive Director
Mission Statement: To promote adequate and affordable housing, economic opportunity and a suitable living environment free from
discrimination.
COUNTY BOARD OF EDUCATION
OF RICHMOND COUNTY
The Richmond County School System will accept bids and request for proposals until 3:00 p.m. on Wednesday, May 15, 2013, for the following:
1. Kitchen Exhaust Hood System Cleaning RFP #13-632
2. Ambulance Service for Football Games RFP #13-637
3. Small Kitchen Equipment Bid #318
Bid specifications may be obtained by contacting Amy Bauman in the Business Office at 706-826-1298, on our web site at www.rcboe.org, or at the Richmond County School System, Central Office, 864 Broad Street, 4th Floor, Augusta, Georgia 30901.
The Richmond County School System reserves the right to reject any and all bids and to waive technicalities and informalities.
COUNTY BOARD OF EDUCATION OF RICHMOND COUNTY
By: Dr. Frank G. Roberson, Secretary
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at your local Circle K store
In Augusta
is going to hurt a lot of people,” said Sanders.
The senator from Vermont is not going to let that happen without a fight. He has launched a petition opposing the president’s approach. It reads:
At a time when the middle class is disappearing, poverty is increasing and the gap between the rich and everyone else is growing wider, we demand that the federal budget not be balanced on the backs of the most vulnerable people in our country.
A federal budget that reduces the deficit by cutting cost-of-living adjust-ments for Social Security and disabled veterans, raising the Medicare eligibil-ity age and lowering tax rates for the most profitable corporations in this country is not a grand bargain. It is a bad bargain.
We oppose the chained-CPI, a new way to measure inflation and con-sumer prices designed to cut benefits for Social Security recipients, disabled veterans and their survivors.
We are strongly opposed to ben-efit cuts to Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, education, and the needs of our veterans.
We demand a budget that puts mil-lions of Americans back to work in decent paying jobs.
We demand a budget that makes sure that the wealthiest Americans and most profitable corporations pay their fair share.
Within hours of the White House confirmation of the president’s plan,
time, the right location”, and focus stop-and-frisks on “male blacks” between 14 and 21, Deputy Inspector Christopher McCormack of a South Bronx precinct, told one of his under-lings.
In one testimony, Reginald Bowman, the president of a public housing resident leadership group, compared life in the public housing projects to a “penal colony”, where police question parents going to the store to get milk and cookies for their children.
According to the Center for Constitutional Rights, which brought the class-action lawsuit currently being heard in Manhattan, claims that many of the stop-and-frisks in the past decade, mostly of black and Hispanic men, were made without cause. Whatever this is for, it is not about preserving order or efficient policing. According to the NYPD’s own reports, nearly nine out of 10 stopped-and-frisked New Yorkers have been completely innocent of any violation, let alone a crime.
Yet, thanks to segregation, these mass infringements on civil liberties take place beyond the shadows of
the downtown skyscrapers and out of sight of the mostly white and affluent residents of the city who fund politi-cal campaigns. All American cities are different. And yet, all share most of these basic issues. Many children in their poorest areas have never been downtown. Like Willy Wonka’s choco-late factory, “nobody ever comes in and nobody ever comes out” of the most blighted neighborhoods – that are known to the rest of the city only through crime reports.
That sense of alienation from one’s immediate environment is both contagious and reciprocated. When some do emerge en masse, deter-mined to cause mayhem, as they did in Chicago this weekend, it leaves the well-heeled shoppers and office workers from wealthier climes under-standably resentful, unsettled and in shock. What they can’t or won’t grasp is that if wealth is not distrib-uted evenly and fairly, then chaos will spread randomly and episodically.
© 2013 The Guardian
Gary Younge is a Guardian colum-nist and feature writer based in the US
Continued on next page
the petition had already attracted more than 33,000 signatures.
John Nichols is Washington corre-spondent for The Nation and associ-ate editor of The Capital Times in Madison, Wisconsin. His most recent book is The “S” Word: A Short History of an American Tradition. A co-found-
er of the media reform organization Free Press, Nichols is co-author with Robert W. McChesney of The Death and Life of American Journalism: The Media Revolution that Will Begin the World Again and Tragedy & Farce: How the American Media Sell Wars, Spin Elections, and Destroy Democracy.
Obama’s budget from page 12
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Urban WeeklyProTHE CITIZENS AND BUSINESSES THAT
APPEAR ON THIS DISPLAY SUPPORT OUR COMMUNITY-ORIENTED MISSION
Abdul & Janice El-AminDylan Walker
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ARTHUR L. PRESCOTTPRESCOTT INDUSTRIES, INC.
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Kreative MindsChildcare and Learning Center, Inc.
2542 Milledgeville Rd.706-364-5627 Fax: 706-364-5628
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706-364-4237706-814-6634
GALLOP & ASSOCIATES706-495-3796
ARTHUR L. PRESCOTTPRESCOTT INDUSTRIES, INC.
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Kreative MindsChildcare and Learning Center, Inc.
2542 Milledgeville Rd.706-364-5627 Fax: 706-364-5628
Dr. FAYE HARGROVEHargrove Leadership Services
706-364-4237706-814-6634
GALLOP & ASSOCIATES706-495-3796
Emergency Notification System
Fire Department offers emergency alert notification for mobile devices
Augusta Emergency Management
Free CERT Training Offered
The Augusta Fire Department/Emergency Management Division has implemented a system to alert residents of vital information affecting your area if there is an emergency. You can receive emergency alerts through your “land line” phone, cell phone, and email. Each Richmond County address can have as many phone numbers attached as you need; however phone numbers can only be connected to one address. If you have a “land line” phone, you’re already in the system, register your cell phone number and email address today! Notifications will be sent out using a recorded message or a written message based on the situation. We’ll leave a message if you don’t answer!
STEP 1: Go to www.augustaga.gov and click “Emergency Notification Sign-Up” under Quick Links on the right side of the page
STEP 2: Click the link for “Emergency
AUGUSTAPaine College mourns the pass-
ing of a local high school student. The student was a member of the Paine College Upward Bound Program and fell ill during an Upward Bound activity. She was transported to Georgia Regents Health Center where she later passed on April 3, 2013.
The family will release addition-al information at a later time about the student.
For all inquiries, please contact Brandon Brown, Vice-President of Institutional Advancement at Paine College at 706.821.8233.
Paine College mourns the death of an Upward Bound participant
Notification Public Sign-up Page” in the first paragraph to be connected to the provider’s website
STEP 3: Enter your first and last name, street address, city, state, zip code, and primary contact number
Citizens without Internet access may
call the Emergency Management Office at (706)821-1155, Monday through Friday from 8:30am-5:00pm to provide their information over the phone to sign up. A password is required for sign up; one will be created for you and pro-vided at the time of the call.
The CERT training empowers citi-zens in Richmond County to help in their neighborhood until profes-sional responders arrive. Participants learn team organization, basic first aid skills, light search and rescue techniques, how to extinguish a small fire, and they receive an introduction to terrorism and how it’s handled. Members participate in a county pre-paredness drill to put their skills to
use and are recognized at a gradu-ation ceremony where they receive their CERT kit.
Classes are held on Tuesday nights for 7 weeks from 6:00pm to 9:00pm.
Next class starts May 7, 2013. Training is free.
To register contact: Sharon Bennett (706)821-1156 or email at [email protected]
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15UrbanProW
eekly • APRIL 11 - 17, 2013
Debra H. McCordDebra H. McCord
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3 THE LAW OFFICE OF
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
Experienced Representation
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Frails & Wilson
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706-733-5000
2045 Central Avenue, Augusta, Ga 30904EssentialCleansingCenter.com
Specializing In Colon Hydrotherapy
Shanta Johnson
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