Author Archives: Jose Calderon

About Jose Calderon

Jose Zapata Calderon is Emeritus Professor in Sociology and Chicano/a Latino/a Studies at Pitzer College and President of the Latino and Latina Roundtable of the Pomona Valley and San Gabriel Valley.

Your invitation to zoom Latino/a Roundtable Mtg. this Saturday, June 27 at 1 PM

The Latino and Latina Roundtable will be holding its membership meeting this Saturday, June 27 from 1 – 3 PM.  You can connect in at link: 
https://pitzer.zoom.us/j/99643954583.   The meeting will be interpreted in English and Spanish and urge our Spanish-speaking members to join in. 
Attached is the agenda. 
 

La Mesa Redonda Latino y Latina llevara acabo su reunion de membresia este Sabado, Junio 27 de la 1 a las 3 de la tarde.  Puede

conectar con su computador en el enlace de zoom:  

https://pitzer.zoom.us/j/99643954583.  La junta sera interpretada en ingles y Español.

Jose Calderon is inviting you to a scheduled Zoom meeting.
Topic: LRT Membership Meeting
Time: Jun 27, 2020 01:00 PM Pacific Time (US and Canada)
Join Zoom Meeting
https://pitzer.zoom.us/j/99643954583
Meeting ID: 996 4395 4583
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Meeting ID: 996 4395 4583
Find your local number: https://pitzer.zoom.us/u/aKq88uKL7
Jose Zapata Calderon
Emeritus Professor of Sociology and Chicano/a and Latino/a Studies
1050 North Mills Avenue
Claremont, CA 91711-6101
(909) 952-1640
 Jose_Calderon@pitzer.edu
Website:  www.josezcalderon.com

LRT Membership agenda (draft) for 6 27 2020

LRT Membership Meeting on June 27th and two events on June 20th: Poor People’s Digital March and Million Mothers Rally

The Latino and Latina Roundtable membership meeting will be next Saturday, June 27th from 1 -3 and a zoom link will be sent out in the next few days .  For this weekend, we urge you to support two important events to support: both the People’s Assembly and Moral March on Washington (Digital) and The Million Mothers Rally (Saturday, June 20th – 10 am – beginning at 110 E. Foothill Blvd. in Pomona.  Here are the two announcements:

There’s still time to register for the Poor People’s Assembly and March digital event. Please join us to watch the livestream on our on our Facebook page this Saturday, June 20th for this timely, impactful and powerful event!

website: june2020.org
• • • • •
Broadcast time 7:00 AM PT

See More

Urgent: Your invitation to a noon Celebratory Rally in Support of DACA Decision at Pomona City Hall

The Latino and Latina Roundtable will be holding a celebratory rally in support of DACA and continuing the call for fair and just legalization of our immigrant families, support for our Temporary Protective Status families, and an end to unjust detention centers at 12 noon at Pomona City Hall (505 S. Garey Ave).  The Supreme Court decision upholding DACA is an important victory for our undocumented youth and immigrant families.  We are asking people to wear masks, practice safe distancing, and bringing signs in support of DACA and supporting speedy legalization.

LLRT logo

Jose Zapata Calderon
President of the Latino and Latina Roundtable 
on Behalf of the Latino and Latina Roundtable board
(909) 952-1640
 Jose_Calderon@pitzer.edu

Invitation to LRT for 2020 Virtual Week of College for All Advocacy June 15th-19th

We are pleased to invite you to this year’s 2020 VIRTUAL WEEK OF ADVOCACY from Monday June 15th – Friday, June 19th. In lieu of of COVID-19 , the College for All Coalition will be hosting a Virtual Week of Advocacy instead of our typical June Advocacy Day. Similar to June Advocacy Day, we will haveLegislative Appointments available for those who want to speak with their representatives and Social Media Campaigns in which everyone can participate in. You are welcome to invite community members and partners to join us in advocating for important bills which will further promote education equity.
If you are interested, we are asking all participants to attend ONE training in advance to the Virtual Week of Action (June 15th-19th). You can sign up here for your preferred date.

TRAINING SCHEDULE

  • Friday 06/12 @6PM-8PM (Bilingual English & Spanish)                                       
  • Saturday 06/13 @2PM-4PM (English only)
Last day to RSVP for training is Thursday, June 11th @ 5PM.
**Once registered, you will receive a Zoom Link  a few days before the training date.
We will be going over the College for All Coalition’s Top 5 Bill priorities which include:
AB 1930 Ensures that CSU and UC engage stakeholders before implementing admissions requirements that could disparately impact students of color
AB 1835 Annually, requires LEAs to identify unspent Supplemental and Concentration funds (in LCFF) and keep those fund’s designation to be spent on low-income, foster, or EL students.
ACA 5 If passed, allows the repeal of Prop. 209 to go to the November ballot for CA voters.
SB 1130 Helps build out broadband connections to rural and low income communities using the CASF program (digital divide)
Prop 13 Closes commercial property tax loopholes
and puts $12 billion dollars per year back into schools and communities
Whether it’s your first or fourth time joining us, we are so excited to have you! Feel free to reach out if you have any questions.

Donna Tang
SHE/HER
Education Equity Coordinator
Asian Americans Advancing Justice | Los Angeles

1145 Wilshire Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90017
T: (213) 977-7500 X245
F: (213) 977-7595
advancingjustice-la.org
Building upon the legacy of the
Asian Pacific American Legal Center

Another Big Step Toward Racial Equity

Advancing Equity with Race Conscious Policymaking

Today, the Assembly Appropriations Committee took an important step toward equality for all Californians by advancing ACA 5, which would give voters the opportunity to end the state’s counterproductive ban on affirmative action.

The past week has been a painful reminder that racism and discrimination continue to eat away at progress toward equal opportunity, especially for communities of color who have been disproportionately impacted by harmful systems for far too long. I am more resolved than ever that our collective work to advance equity requires race conscious policymaking – this is one path forward to directly address structural racism.

When Proposition 209 was passed almost 25 years ago, it forced our state leaders to turn a blind eye to discrimination and inequality. We cannot overcome the barriers to equal opportunity if we pretend they do not exist.

In recent days, I have been grateful to see so many allies and young people speak out against injustice. Those words matter, and their true power is in their ability to spur action and enact change. No single policy or program will reverse centuries of oppression, but repealing Prop 209 would end an era of willful ignorance and start to level the playing field.

This chance to vote our values now moves to the full Assembly which takes place in the coming weeks. We all have a role to play in this moment. If you are a legislator who has spoken out against inequality, California is counting on you to put your power behind your words. If you lead an organization that has reaffirmed its commitment to diversity and inclusion, now is the time to join us in the Opportunity for All coalition. If you’re an advocate, this is a chance to exercise your voice by contacting your representatives.

It’s time to stop the cycle of history repeating. Prop 209 was a misguided effort that resulted in the spread of racial disparities in California. Today, the impact of these missteps are on full display, but California has a chance to choose a different direction.

Please join the Education Trust-West and over one hundred civil rights, education equity, labor, business and community organizations across California in strong support of ACA 5.

In Community,

Dr. Elisha Smith Arrillaga
Executive Director
The Education Trust–West
@ESArrillaga

LRT board solidarity statement on the unjust killing of George Floyd

Solidarity Statement of the Latino and Latina Roundtable Board on the Unjust Killing of George Floyd.

The Latino and Latina Roundtable stands in solidarity with all those who are outraged with the brutal murder of George Floyd and the many others in our communities who have unjustly lost their lives to police brutality. 

We stand with Black Lives Matter and our African American communities in our common fight for equality and multi-racial solidarity against systemic racism and white supremacy.  We have a common struggle in opposing the school to prison pipeline, unjust detention centers, voter suppression, and acts of genocide that are seeking to keep our communities from using their growing political power. We stand against the normalization of police brutality, violence, and the use of the military by a President of the United States who, rather than coming out against the conditions which have created the mass of protests throughout the country, insists on promoting more violence and division.  The disproportionate numbers from our Black and Latino communities who have died from COVID-19 has further exposed the economic and racial inequalities that have historically existed in our communities.  In this context, the responses to the killing of Floyd have not just been about his unjust murder but are the result of years of racial and economic disparities.  As Darnell Hunt, Dean of Social Sciences at UCLA proposes from his years of research: “The George Floyd case was not the cause … the police killings are the symptoms … the underlying cause is white supremacy, racism, and things the U. S. has not fundamentally dealt with.”

In this light, we stand against the divisions being created by this administration in scapegoating everyone from our Asian American communities to undocumented immigrants and refugees for his failures.  We commit ourselves to build multi-racial unity and to turn around the sources of these disparities around through advancing transformative policies that are in the interests of providing a quality of life for all and not just profit for a few. 

We stand with the protestors who are calling to turn these conditions around and who are committed to remember the spirit of Floyd by fighting for justice, not only for his family, but for future generations.  We stand with Darnella Frazier, the 17-year old who courageously documented the murder of George Floyd.  We stand with the families and communities who have faced the loss of life of family members and friends.  And we commit to join in helping to build a nation where Black Lives Matter. 

In Solidarity,

 

Jose Calderon, President

On behalf of the Board of the Latino and Latina Roundtable of the San Gabriel and Pomona Valley

Congratulations to LRT member Melanie Andreo – 2020 Pitzer Student Leadership Award

Congratulations to Melanie Andreo for receiving a Pitzer College Student Leadership Award. Melanie Andreo, now a second-year student at Pitzer College, first got involved with the Latino and Latina Roundtable during her first year at Garey High School and has been organizing ever since.  In addition to helping organize the annual Cesar Chavez Pilgrimage march and festival, Melanie has helped in clean-up projects at Pomona’s Cesar Chavez Park.  At Pitzer College, she has been an exemplary leader in connecting her studies and learning to community engagement by being part of the Rural and Urban Social Movements class and helping to  organize an annual Alternative Spring Break where students carry out service-learning projects with the United Farmworkers Union in the San Joaquin Valley. Melanie has served as an intern with the Latino and Latina Roundtable and the College for all Coalition in helping to advance college readiness plans and in traveling to Sacramento and testifying in support of educational legislative bills for low-income, foster youth, and English learners.


Jose Zapata Calderon
President of the Latino and Latina Roundtable
Emeritus Professor of Sociology and Chicano/a and Latino/a Studies
1050 North Mills Avenue
Claremont, CA 91711-6101
(909) 952-1640
 Jose_Calderon@pitzer.edu
Website:  www.josezcalderon.com