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DEAR BLACK PEOPLE: “STOP RUNNING FROM THE POLICE” — AN OPEN LETTER TO UNARMED AFRICAN AMERICANS

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DEAR BLACK PEOPLE: “STOP RUNNING FROM THE POLICE” — AN OPEN LETTER TO UNARMED AFRICAN AMERICANS

By Orrin Hudson, former police officer-turned-community activist

Black person running from police

Nationwide (BlackNews.com) — I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again: In a situation with the police, its not immediately about who is right or wrong, its about staying alive. If the police are making a wrongful arrest, this can be corrected later at a safer time.

Too many unarmed African American men are losing their lives to white police officers, and most of the time justice is not being served. But even if justice is served, a valuable life has already been lost.

I served as a state police officer in Alabama for 6 years from 1986 to 1993, and I have some very helpful, life-saving advice to share with both young ones and adults. Every move you make has consequences, and you can make one move, and never recover.

Here are 5 things to keep in mind when interacting with the police:

1) Don’t run. Although running from the police should not be a death sentence, if often ends up this way. So don’t do it! Doing so will heighten the aggression of an officer, especially if he/she is not sure if you are armed. It also puts them in a position where they have to make spur-of-the-moment decisions, which increases the chance of an officer deciding to end your life. So stay put!

2) Show respect at all times. A police officer’s duty is to serve and protect, but if he/she is out of line or bullying you, continue to be respectful. Say “sir” and “no sir”, and “may I” and “thank you”! These will keep the situation from escalating. If the officer is violating your rights in any way, you can fight this matter at a later and safer time.

3) Keep your hands where they can be seen. Do not make the officer feel threatened in any way. At all times, keep your hands visible. Many police officers, especially white police officers, will feed into stereotypes. They may be assuming that you have a weapon just because you are Black or because they feel you look like you are up to no good!

4) You have the right to remain silent. If you feel that you are being wrongfully arrested, you do not have to speak on it as this likely will not change the officer’s mind. Keeping quiet protects you legally, and also keeps the situation calm and peaceful.

5) Sign the ticket and leave. If you are being pulled over for speeding, simply sign the ticket and leave. Signing the ticket does not mean that you are admitting guilt; its only a promise to appear in court on the date listed on the ticket. Arguing with the officer about it will only make the situation worse, and perhaps raise his level of aggression.

Orrin Hudson is a former Alabama state trooper, but is now the founder of Be Someone – a non-profit organization that trains urban youth and adults on how to be make better decisions in life. He does workshops at schools, churches, and community centers all across the country, and has been recognized by CNN, Good Morning America, and People Magazine.


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Rep. Sewell Condemns Dismissal of Battery Charges Against Judge Fuller

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Rep. Sewell Condemns Dismissal of Battery Charges Against Judge Fuller
The Congresswoman renews her call for Fuller’s impeachment
Washington, D.C. – Congresswoman Terri Sewell issued the following statement after a judge dismissed a misdemeanor battery charge against U.S. District Judge Mark Fuller. Judge Fuller was arrested last August after attacking his wife in an Atlanta hotel room.
“I am deeply disturbed that the charges against Judge Mark Fuller have been dismissed. There should never have been an agreement to expunge his record, nor should he be allowed to remain on the federal bench.
“Our society is sending the wrong message about domestic violence to perpetrators by allowing a federal judge – who has sworn to uphold the values we hold dear – to continue to serve in any capacity. His punishment must reflect the seriousness of the crime, and any recommendations to the 11th Circuit Judicial Council that fall short of impeachment are inexcusable. 
“I am again calling on the House Judiciary Committee to initiate impeachment proceedings should the Judicial Council decline to make such a recommendation. Judge Fuller must be immediately removed from the bench. He has irrevocably violated the sacred trust placed in him, and Congress must send a strong message that his actions are beneath the seat he holds.”

 

AG ANNOUNCES COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS UPHOLDS LEE COUNTY CAPITAL MURDER CONVICTION

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AG ANNOUNCES COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS  UPHOLDS LEE COUNTY CAPITAL MURDER CONVICTION 

 

(MONTGOMERY)— Attorney General Luther Strange announced that the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals on Friday upheld the capital murder conviction and attempted murder conviction of Thomas Franklin May III.  May, 39, of Auburn, was convicted in Lee County Circuit Court in March of 2014 for the murder of his mother-in-law, Brenda Watson, and the attempted murder of his estranged wife, Bethany Lynn Mitchell.  The following evidence was presented at trial.  In April of 2011, Bethany Lynn Mitchell was living apart from her husband, May.  Mitchell was attending classes at Southern Union State Community College and did not have a vehicle. On April 6, 2011, Mitchell’s mother, Brenda Watson, drove her van to Southern Union to pick up Mitchell.  Also present in the van were Mitchell’s grandmother, Maude Mitchell, and the four–year-old daughter of Bethany Mitchell and Thomas May.  After Bethany Mitchell’s class, she was entering the van and before she could close her door, May pulled up beside them in a white sport utility vehicle and began shooting at them with a pistol. Bethany Mitchell testified that as May was shooting, he said that she “can’t keep [his] daughter from him.”  After the shooting, May drove away from the scene.   Bystanders to the shooting immediately ran to the van and began administering first aid to the occupants while others telephoned 911 for assistance. Bethany Mitchell’s mother, Brenda Watson, was shot several gunshot wounds to her left arm and was treated at East Alabama Medical Center.  Her grandmother, Maude Mitchell, was airlifted to a nearby hospital and treated for shrapnel wounds.  The child sustained minor cuts from the shooting, presumably from broken glass. Bethany Mitchell’s mother, Brenda Watson, was shot several times and died as a result of multiple gunshot wounds.   May returned to the scene and was taken into police custody. May gave a detailed statement to police admitting to the shootings.  In his confession, he stated he was upset that he was under a restraining order which denied him access to his daughter.  The case was prosecuted at trial by Lee County District Attorney Robbie Treese’s office.  May was sentenced to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole for the capital murder conviction and to an additional consecutive life imprisonment sentence for the attempted murder conviction. He subsequently sought to have his convictions reversed on appeal. The Attorney General Criminal Appeals Division handled the case during the appeals process, arguing for the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals to affirm the conviction. The Court did so in a decision issued on Friday, April 10.   Attorney General Strange commended Assistant Attorney General John J. Davis of the Attorney General Appeals Division for his successful work in this case.

EQUATORIAL GUINEA’S MINISTER OF SOCIAL AFFAIRS AND GENDER EQUALITY DISCUSSES GOVERNMENT’S EFFORTS TO COMBAT VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN AND PROMOTE GENDER EQUALITY

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EQUATORIAL GUINEA’S MINISTER OF SOCIAL AFFAIRS AND GENDER EQUALITY DISCUSSES GOVERNMENT’S EFFORTS TO COMBAT VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN AND PROMOTE GENDER EQUALITY

MALABO, Equatorial Guinea – April 13, 2015  Equatorial Guinea has made ending gender-based violence and promoting gender equality a policy priority, according to the country’s Minister of Social Affairs and Gender Equality, Mari Carmen Ecoro.  

Minister Ecoro discussed in a recent interview the efforts the government and the Ministry have undertaken to create awareness programs against violence and in favor of gender equality. During the interview, Minister Ecoro said the government has established legal mechanisms and developed awareness programs aimed at reducing—and eventually eliminating–violence against women.

The minister said that the country has made huge strides in gender equality since the overthrow of the Macias dictatorship in 1979. “When we look at women during the years of dictatorship, we saw that the woman did not have her own identity. But since 1979… the first call made by the President was to rebuild and provide our knowledge towards a better Guinea. He made an emphasis on women, for the woman to be trained and educated. When a woman is trained and educated, she can give more than when she is not.”

Today, she said,  women are graduating from high schools and universities—in Equatorial Guinea and abroad on scholarships—in record numbers. “We used to lose girls in primary and secondary education,” Minister Ecoro said, “but today with a change in the law, girls can choose careers that were traditionally man dominant. That is a great advancement. In the business world, we see many women entrepreneurs.”

She said her government’s experience could serve as a model for the rest of Africa.
 “The countries of the African continent should take the example that is leading our country in the sense that we must continue to support women, but putting an emphasis on their education and training from an early age,” she said.

About Equatorial Guinea
The Republic of Equatorial Guinea (República de Guinea Ecuatorial) is the only Spanish-speaking country in Africa, and one of the smallest nations on the continent. In the late-1990s, American companies helped discover the country’s oil and natural gas resources, which only within the last five years began contributing to the global energy supply. Equatorial Guinea is now working to serve as a pillar of stability and security in its region of West Central Africa. The country hosted the 2011 Summit of the African Union. For more information, visit http://www.guineaecuatorialpress.com.

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This has been distributed by Qorvis Communications, LLC on behalf of the Republic of Equatorial Guinea. More information on this relationship is on file at the United States Department of Justice, Washington, D.C.

 

ONE OF THE NATION’S MOST PROLIFIC PREACHERS TRANSITIONS

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Press Release

 

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                       ONE OF THE NATION’S MOST PROLIFIC PREACHERS TRANSITIONS
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Philadelphia PA. April 7, 2015 – Grand Polemarch (CEO) William “Randy”Bates,  Jr., Esq. of Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity, Inc. ® has announced that Rev. (Dr.) Gardner Calvin Taylor, one of the most prolific theologians in the nation transitioned April 5, 2015. Dr. Gardner Dr. Gardner was a native of Baton Rouge, Louisiana, born June 18, 1918, studied at Oberlin College, and Cleveland State University where he was initiated into the Alpha Omega Chapter of Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity, Inc. ® May 5, 1939 and is a Life Member of the fraternity.
Dr. Taylor was known as “the dean of American preaching” and noted for his eloquence and deep understanding of Christian faith and theology. He went on to help found the Progressive National Baptist Convention with Dr. King, providing an important base of support for Dr. King’s civil rights work.
Rev. Taylor preached the pre-inauguration sermon in January 1993 for President Bill Clinton who awarded him the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2000.  According to Rev. Al Sharpton who knew Dr. Taylor; “His regal bearing held a most fertile mind and silver tongue that earned the adulation of thousands of preachers and millions of people all over the world.”
Dr. Taylor accepted the call to pastor Concord Baptist Church in Brooklyn, New York, and immediately faced challenges such as the fire that burned the church to the ground. Taylor also had the experience of traveling to Copenhagen and later Australia, where he spoke with Australian Aboriginals about their mutual obstacles to equality.
As pastor emeritus of the 14,000-member Concord Baptist Church of Christ, Taylor labored as shepherd and prophet in Brooklyn’s rugged Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood for 42 years until his retirement in 1990. Taylor was called upon to fill pulpits, give lectures, and provide keynote addresses at churches and educational institutions throughout the country after he retired. He retired to Raleigh, North Carolina.
The world has lost a magnificent civil rights icon and theologian extraordinaire. It can only be hoped that those who had the opportunity to learn from his teachings, will share all they can with the rest of us.

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Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity, Inc. is an international organization founded on the campus of Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana on January 5, 1911. Since its inception, it has trained over 150,000 men, particularly undergraduates, for leadership roles in their communities and the attainment of a high degree of excellence in their academic pursuits. The International Headquarters is located in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Former Community Health Clinic CFO Agrees to Plead Guilty in Scheme to Defraud Millions from Government

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Former Community Health Clinic CFO Agrees to Plead Guilty in Scheme to Defraud Millions from Government
 
        BIRMINGHAM — The former financial officer of two non-profit health clinics in Alabama for the poor and homeless has agreed to plead guilty to multiple federal charges related to a scheme to defraud millions of dollars from the clinics and the federal government health agencies that provide most of their funding.
       
        Prosecutors today filed a plea agreement in U.S. District Court with TERRI McGUIRE MOLLICA, 48, of Birmingham. U.S. Attorney Joyce White Vance, FBI Special Agent in Charge Roger C. Stanton, Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigation Special Agent in Charge Veronica Hyman-Pillot, and U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Inspector General, Atlanta Regional Office Special Agent in Charge Derrick L. Jackson, announced the agreement.
 
        As part of the agreement, Mollica agrees voluntarily to forfeit $938,211 that the government seized last year from her investment and credit union accounts. Mollica acknowledges those funds are proceeds of illegal activity.
 
        A federal grand jury indicted Mollica late last year on 74 counts related to the scheme to defraud the government through the two health care clinics, Birmingham Health Care and Central Alabama Comprehensive Health Inc., five counts of filing false tax returns, and three counts related to her scheme to defraud a life insurance company.
 
        In her agreement with prosecutors, Mollica agrees to plead guilty to 19 counts related to the fraud against the government — six counts of wire fraud affecting a financial institution, eight counts of mail fraud affecting a financial institution and five counts of money laundering. She also agrees to plead guilty to four counts of filing false tax returns and to one count of mail fraud and one count of aggravated identity theft related to the insurance fraud. Mollica’s plea hearing is scheduled April 27.
 
        Mollica’s crimes, as outlined in her indictment and plea agreement, are as follows:
 
        Mollica was the chief financial officer of the non-profit Birmingham Health Care from April 2005 through November 2008. She also performed fiscal duties for Central Alabama Comprehensive Health Inc. CACH is a non-profit clinic in Tuskegee intended to provide primary and preventative health care to people in east Alabama, regardless of their ability to pay. BHC’s chief executive officer served for a time as the chief executive officer of the Tuskegee clinic and, in 2008, BHC took over fiscal responsibility of CACH.
 
        Between January 2008 and March 2012, Mollica aided others in diverting about $11 million in federal grant money, assets and property of BHC and CACH to numerous private entities using “Synergy” in the name. Mollica and others retained authority over the affairs of BHC and CACH as they operated the Synergy entities. Mollica then conducted financial transactions to transfer money from the private entities to herself and others, illegally receiving about $1.7 million through the scheme.
       
        BHC began receiving grants from the Health Resources and Human Services Administration, an arm of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, more than 20 years ago. Federal grants administered by HRSA and HHS constitute the overwhelming majority of BHC and CACH funding.
 
        Mollica and others misrepresented and concealed information from HRSA to ensure the agency would continue to grant money to the Birmingham and Tuskegee community health clinics.
 
        The maximum penalties for the offenses charged are as follows:
 

 

  • mail and wire fraud, 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine;
  • money laundering (counts 56, 60 & 68), 20 years in prison and a $500,000 fine, or twice the value of the property involved;
  • money laundering (counts 70 -73) involving criminally derived property valued at more than $10,000, 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine;
  • aggravated identity theft, mandatory two years in prison added to any sentence imposed for the underlying felony and a $250,000 fine;
  • filing a false tax return, three years in prison and a $100,000 fine.

 

 
        The FBI, IRS and HHS-OIG investigated the case. Assistant U.S. Attorneys Tamarra Matthews Johnson and Melissa Kay Atwood are prosecuting the case.

 

Man Tries to Avoid Child Support by Saying He ‘Died’ in Car Accident

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Man Tries to Avoid Child Support by Saying He ‘Died’ in Car Accident

By Eurweb.com

He may not look like an idiot, but a Milwaukee man sure acted like one. I mean, how else would you describe someone who told a news reporter the reason why he couldn’t pay the $100-a-month child support ordered by the court is because he had “died in a car accident.”
People go to unbelievable extremes to get out of paying their bills. But rarely do you hear about a parent, a person who is at least half responsible for bringing another human being into the world, going to such lengths to avoid taking care of that child.
Well you haven’t met John McCroy, a father who faked his own death to get out of paying child support.
Known by his rap name, “Jakitdown,” McCroy was busted and sentenced to 60 days in jail once authorities determined that he’d avoided paying support for his daughter. He also faces three years probation from a felony charge of failure to pay child support.
Although the man is unemployed and lives at home with his parents, he has managed to cough up $10,000 in outstanding child support.
McCroy has three children by three different women. He allegedly doesn’t pay support for any of them; but only one mother is taking him to court.
FOX6 news originally profiled McCroy because…IDIOT ALERT… he flashed money online that he said he had made from mix-tapes. But it didn’t take long to find out, dude has a site where his mixtapes are “sold” for free.
Then, when he was interviewed by the news station (in that photo above), he told the reporter that he IDIOT ALERT #2…couldn’t pay child support because he’d died in a car accident.
McCroy had been ordered to pay $100 dollars a month for his 5-year-old daughter. He made one payment when the little girl was born and only because he had to be up-to-date on child support payments to purchase the car he wanted.  But then he never paid again. Watch the youtube video below.

Seven Things Great Employers Do (That Others Don’t)

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Seven Things Great Employers Do (That Others Don’t)
Unusual, innovative, and proven tactics to create productive and profitable working environments
by Peter Flade, Jim Harter, and Jim Asplund

For most people, paid work is unsettling and energy-sapping. Despite employee engagement racing up the priority list of CEOs (see, for example, The Conference Board’s CEO Challenge 2014), our research into workplaces all over the world reveals a sorry state of affairs: Workers who are actively disengaged outnumber their engaged colleagues by an overwhelming factor of 2:1.
The good news is that there are companies out there bucking the trend, and we’ve discovered how. We studied 32 exemplary companies (collectively employing 600,000 people) across seven industries, including healthcare, financial services, hospitality, manufacturing, and retail. At these companies, the engaged workers outnumber actively disengaged workers by a 9:1 ratio.
To understand what drives that tremendous advantage, we looked for contrasts between these businesses and a much larger set of companies we know to be struggling to turn around bland and uninspiring workplaces. We found seven elements in place at the companies with spirited employees that are notably lacking in the others. Are all of the seven causes of high performance? No doubt at least some of them involve virtuous circles. But as a recipe for an engaged workforce, these are ingredients we feel confident in recommending.

Have involved and curious leaders who want to improve. Leaders’ own attitudes, beliefs, and behaviors have powerful trickle-down effects on their organizations’ cultures. Leaders of great workplaces don’t just talk about what they want to see in the management ranks – they model it and keep practicing to get better at it every day with their own teams. By displaying a little vulnerability and visibly working on improving themselves, they signal that such engagement is how one gets ahead.

Have cracking HR functions. The best HR people have a gift for influencing, teaching, and holding executives accountable. This is important because many executives rise through the ranks despite not being very good managers. HR experts teach leaders and managers to stretch and develop employees in accordance with their natural capabilities. By the way, when you find cracking HR leaders, hold on to them for dear life. They are as rare as hen’s teeth.

Ensure the basic engagement requirements are met before expecting an inspiring mission to matter. When employees know what is expected of them, have what they need to do their jobs, are good fits for their roles, and feel their managers have their backs, they will commit to almost anything the company is trying to accomplish. Conversely, if these basic needs are not met, even the most exalted mission may not engage them. People simply don’t connect with proclamations of mission or values – no matter how inspiring these might sound in the head office.

Never use a downturn as an excuse. The excuse we hear the most to explain away a lousy workplace is the state of the economy; in periods of belt-tightening, engagement inevitably takes a hit. The experience of the 32 exemplary companies we studied calls this rationalization into question. With few exceptions, they have also had to respond to flat or declining top lines – with structural changes, redundancies, and declining real pay and benefits – and yet not only have they maintained their strong cultures, they’ve improved them. They have achieved this by being open, making changes swiftly, communicating constantly, and providing hope. The truth is that employee engagement is one of the few things managers and leaders can influence in times when so much else is out of their control. Great employers recognize this, and they go about managing it in the right way.

Trust, hold accountable, and relentlessly support managers and teams. The experiences that inspire and encourage employees are local. Strong teams are built when the teams themselves size up the problems facing them and take a hands-on approach to solving them. Exemplary companies lavish support on their managers, build their capability and resilience, and then hold them and their teams accountable for the micro-cultures they create. There is an important corollary here: The good intentions of a CEO can backfire if he or she charges all over the company trying to fix things personally.

Have a straightforward and decisive approach to performance management. The companies in our study with the highest engagement levels know how to use recognition as a powerful incentive currency. Indeed, a hallmark of these great workplaces is that they are filled with recognition junkies. These companies see recognition as a powerful means to develop and stretch employees to new levels of capability. Meanwhile, they see tolerance of mediocrity as the enemy. Any action or inaction that doesn’t produce appropriate consequences adds to workplace disillusionment and corrodes commitment.

Do not pursue engagement for its own sake. As it becomes increasingly possible to measure and track engagement accurately, some companies start “managing to the metric.” Great employers keep their eyes on the outcomes they need greater engagement to achieve. One of the best examples we can cite is
the Hospital for Special Surgery (HSS) in Manhattan. Ranked number one in the U.S. for orthopedics by U.S. News & World Report, this hospital needs a high-octane culture to meet patients’ demands. Senior Vice President of Patient Care and Chief Nursing Officer Stephanie Goldberg told us that patients expect miracles, and her nurses would struggle to get through a single day if they themselves did not feel that they mattered to the hospital. HSS’ nurse turnover is lower than the industry average, let alone the average in hospital-rich New York.

There they are, then: the magnificent seven. Now note how different this list is from the tactics most companies are pursuing as they try to create great working environments. Many make the mistake of prioritizing the easy, shiny stuff – hip office space, remote work arrangements, and inventive benefits – over the elements that will strengthen emotional ties and connect employees more deeply to their managers, teams, and companies. Pity them. If they manage to survive and compete, it will be despite their miserable and confused staff.
Pity their employees more. Our research in more than 106 countries shows that a job has the potential to be at the heart of a great life, but only if its holder is engaged at work. Copious amounts of prose have been devoted to how to make this happen – by making work more fun, funky, and even meaningful – but companies still fail. The exemplary companies we studied have figured out how to establish emotional connections with their staff. It isn’t easy, but if you focus on the magnificent seven, you too can create a company where people love their work.

Methodology
The results in this article are based on an analysis of qualitative and quantitative research involving 32 Gallup Great Workplace Award winners. These 32 companies were among hundreds of companies that administered Gallup’s employee engagement metric, the Q12, to all employees in 2012; they were selected based on evidence of outstanding employee engagement and its impact on the company’s business outcomes and demonstrated best practices. These companies span the globe and represent many industry sectors, including healthcare, financial services, hospitality, manufacturing, and retail. Employee engagement results from these companies were compared with those of other companies in Gallup’s three-year rolling employee engagement database, which includes 7.8 million respondents from 352 companies in 179 countries and 13 major industries.
A version of this article first appeared in the HBR Network.

Magic City Agriculture Project Releases 10-Year Strategic Plan For Developing a Sustainable Democratic Economy in Birmingham

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Magic City Agriculture Project Releases 10-Year Strategic Plan For Developing a Sustainable Democratic Economy in Birmingham
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. – Founded in 2012 by Dr. Zac Henson, a Birmingham native and current professor at Auburn University, and Ms. Virginia Ward, a Bessemer native and civil rights foot soldier, Magic City Agriculture Project (MCAP) was established as a community development nonprofit in Birmingham, Alabama. The focus is addressing racial, economic, and environmental justice through helping communities of color and cash poor communities organize cooperative businesses and democratic institutions in their communities, with a focus on developing sustainable agribusinesses.
 Over the past year Magic City Agriculture Project’s board and community leaders have collaborated to establish a 10-year strategic plan for addressing racial and economic disparities through developing a large-scale democratic economy and local sustainable food system across Greater Birmingham.
 The strategic plan focuses around the creation of three anchor institutions. The first is a Cooperative and Agricultural Training Center. The focus of The Center is to educate and train residents interested in developing their skills to organize worker-cooperatives, with a focus on agricultural cooperatives. The Center will include a 6,000 square foot aquaponics greenhouse. Aquaponics combines hydroponics, growing plant produce in water, such as squash or beans, with aquaculture, breeding seafood such as tilapia or catfish. This age old farming technique reduces the hard labor while increasing the economic viability, environmental sustainability, and productivity. The second is a community development financial institution (CDFI), to establish a capital fund for worker-cooperatives and community-based businesses to take out microloans up to $250,000. The third is establishing community land trusts (CLT) to build affordable democratic home-ownership and access to affordable land for cooperative businesses.
 By supporting cooperative businesses and democratic economic institutions we can develop a sustainable agricultural system, address the racial and economic segregation in Birmingham generative from our racial and economic disparities, and develop a just and democratic economy.
 
The time to create the Birmingham of the future, democratic and sustainable, is now.

13-Year-Old James Strong Named as 2015 Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals Alabama Champion

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13-Year-Old James Strong Named as 2015 Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals Alabama Champion

BIRMINGHAM – Thirteen-year-old James Strong, a 7th grader at Berry Middle School has been named this year’s Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals Alabama Champion. James will serve as a fundraising and awareness ambassador for Children’s of Alabama and all children treated at the North American charity’s 170 member hospitals.
“James is a fighter, and he has always been a fighter,” says his mother, Kim Mitchell. “I taught him at a very young age that ‘he can do all things through Christ that strengthens him’ and now the kid feels as if he can do just as much as any able-bodied child.”
When Kim was five months pregnant, she learned her baby would have hydrocephalus and would need a shunt placed in his brain immediately after birth. In addition to hydrocephalus and a spinal cord tumor, James also suffers from Dandy-Walker Syndrome, mild cerebral palsy, cranio-cerebral disproportion and Chiari malformation.
To date, James has had more than 20 surgeries to replace his shunt and to address some of his other conditions – and the 9th Floor at Children’s of Alabama has become a second home to him and his mother. “The nurses on the neuro floor have taken care of James since his first shunt revision at age 3 and on through his most recent spinal cord surgery,” Kim says. “They know him, not as a patient, but as a member of the Children’s ‘family.’”
But James does not focus on his disability. He is determined to live large despite the fact that he is wheelchair bound and suffering from an inoperable spinal cord tumor. He plays basketball and tennis, loves to swim and is passionate about his Alabama Crimson Tide football team. He works to raise awareness and funds for children who struggle with life-threatening medical conditions, and he is a mentor to younger children. He also inspired his mother to achieve her dream of being a teacher who holds a master’s degree in collaborative
special education.  James’ mother says, “He is literally a one in a million kid, and I’m glad that God chose me to take care of such a delicate angel who is determined to be a light without even knowing he is shining.”
Every year, the Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals Champions program identifies a child with a remarkable medical story from each state.  These Champions serve as ambassadors for the millions of children treated at Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals annually.  The Champions and their family will travel to Washington, D.C., and Orlando, Fla. for one week in October to meet with media and delegates to highlight the vital work taking place at Children’s Hospitals.