Category Archives: Uncategorized

Supreme Court Justices Are Not Neutral

The reality is – and we know it – that Supreme Court Justices are not neutral – and their political allegiances align with who has appointed them. They interpret the law much like how we can use statistics – to bolster particular positions – under the guise of objectivity and neutrality. Another reason, although difficult to decipher by some, why the outcome of the next election is so important.

http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2016/07/ruth-bader-ginsburg-donald-trump-supreme-court-politics-history-214044?cmpid=sf

Hilda Solis Field Office Grand Opening Clelebration this Saturday

This is your reminder that the Latino and Latina Roundtable will have a table at the Hilda Solis opening this Saturday.  We will distribute our brochure, voter registration information, membership applications, etc..  Melissa, Maura, I, and Claudia have agreed to be there to set-up the table at 8:30.  The opening ceremony starts at 10 A. M. and we urge our Latino and Latina Roundtable members to participate.  We are looking forward to seeing you there! 

East San Gabriel Valley Field Office

Grand Opening Ceremony & Community Resource Fair

 

EXHIBITOR CONFIRMATION

 

Saturday, June 25th, 2016

2245 N. Garey Avenue

Pomona, CA 91767

                           Arrival and Set-up          8:30 am – 9:30am

Parking is open and on a first come first serve basis

Tables will be assigned – Please check in at 2245 N. Garey

One table and two chairs under a canopy will be provided

                                                                       

                        Opening Ceremony          10:00am

Booths will be closed during ceremony and exhibitors asked to sit in audience                           

                           Resource Fair          11:00 am – 1:00 pm

Free lunch will be provided

Jose Zapata Calderon

Emeritus Professor of Sociology and Chicano/a and Latino/a Studies

LLRLogo

PUSD School Board Supports SB-1050 and Community Schools

Latino and Latina Roundtable, NAACP, and other supporters Get a Supportive Vote on 2 Resolutions from PUSD School Board

“SB-1050”

The Community Development Committee of the Latino and Latina Roundtable has been meeting for quite some time with involvement from parents and some staff from the school district, students from colleges in the region, local government representatives, and members from community-based organizations – in being part of – and supporting the efforts of the College for All Coalition, a statewide coalition of over 50 organizations and labor unions that are committed to reinvesting in public higher education and increasing equity and inclusion.  As a condition of the UC receiving funding from the legislature to increase enrollment slots from the 2015-2016 baseline, UC must develop a plan for increasing the admission of California resident students and LCFF plus students (students who attend high schools that have a 75% – or greater – student enrollment of low-income, English learners and foster youth) of which the Pomona Unified has three high schools that are LCFF plus (Ganesha, Pomona, and Garey) with a total student enrollment of 4,371 students and with a diversity of students (90% Latino; 5% African American; 3% Asian American; 1% Filipino; and 1% White.

After presentations from members of the Latino and Latina Roundtable, the NAACP, and the College for All Coalition, the Pomona School Board voted in support of a bill SB 1050, Senator Kevin de Leon’s college readiness bill, to provide more funding for college readiness resources, expand college enrollment slots, and expand educational opportunity for LCFF plus students and students from first generation backgrounds.

“Community Schools”

After the Latino and Latina Roundtable, NAACP, and other supporters spoke in support of a resolution on the implementation of the concept of “community schools,” the Pomona Unified School Board  voted its support unanimously.There are 51. Million children enrolled in approximately 5,000 community schools in the United States.  They are developed t with the same objective of addressing inequities at both the school and community levels. Some of the aspects that community schools share in their strategic plans include: 1) culturally relevant and engaging curricula; 2) an emphasis on high-quality teaching, not high-stakes testing; 3) wraparound supports, such as health care and social and emotional services; 4) positive discipline practices, such as restorative justice; 5) parent and community engagement; and 6) inclusive school leadership committed to making the transformational community school strategy integral to the school’s mandate and functioning.  Community schools develop   strategic partnerships with businesses, nonprofits, universities, hospitals, and other community-based organizations.

Reminder: Meeting of the Latino and Latina Roundtable this Saturday, June 11th from 1 -3 PM at the Pitzer College Broad Center Room 208 (1050 N. Mills ave.) in Claremont.  We will discuss the implementation of plans regarding LRT website and newsletter, immigrant rights, voter registration, candidate and initiative forums, support of community schools concept, pipeline legislation to higher education, park restoration and murals, our ongoing collaboration with coalition efforts, and other new business.

 

Jose Zapata Calderon

President of the Latino and Latina Roundtable

Emeritus Professor of Sociology and Chicano/a and Latino/a Studies

Muralist and Artist Paul Botello in class on Wednesday

Muralist and artist PAUL BOTELLO will be part of a class, Rural and Social Movements, this next Wednesday, April 27th at 3:15 PM at Pitzer College Broad Hall 210 where he will make a slide show historical presentation pertinent to our Mexican-origin immigrant/working class communities and discuss the development of murals and art that he has been part of in East Los Angeles and the region.  As part of the class, he will take students on a tour of the murals that he worked on (with students) at the Pitzer College campus.

Paul Botello was born and raised in East Los Angeles. He earned a BA and an MFA from Cal State University, Los Angeles. He teaches art in the LAUSD school system and has taught, in the past, at the Claremont Colleges. In 1994 he traveled to Berlin, Germany where he collaborated on a giant mural titled “Global Chessboard.” Other recently completed murals include “Citizens of the World” at Esperanza School, and “In Unison” at the Maravilla Housing Facility. He also completed a large-scale mural on the Metro Gold Line construction fence that was located at First Street and Soto. Portions of the mural can now be found at the Pueblo del Sol Community Center in East Los Angeles. He has painted a number of murals in the Inland Empire region where he has collaborated with Pitzer students including five murals on the Pitzer campus and two murals (of collaboration with Pitzer students and day laborers): a mural at the Pomona Day Labor Center and one at Vina Danks school in Ontario. Botello lives and works in East Los Angeles, and exhibits his work in Los Angeles and abroad.

p9121329

Jose Zapata Calderon

Important Decision: Supreme Court Upholds one person, one vote

The Supreme Court Upholds One Person, One Vote:

An important decision today in the Supreme Court that helps to stultify the efforts to stop the growing political power of our communities..  The Latino and Latina Roundable held a well-attended forum in Pomona a few months ago and brought attention to the significance of this case, Evenwel vs. Abbott, and how we had to be vigilant of its intent at changing how electoral districts are drawn across the country (revamping who comprises electoral districts) and reshaping who is ultimately represented by elected officials.  The challengers in the Texas case, represented by the conservative legal group Project on Fair Representation, argued that the practice of drawing Congressional districts should no longer use total population from census figures as a marker for creating electoral districts – but that it should exclude those ineligible to vote , such as undocumented immigrants, felons, and young people below the voting age.

If the Supreme Court would have decided otherwise, it would have meant that, in areas where there are a large number of noncitizens – those districts would have had diluted representation – because the districts would have been drawn just on the basis of the numbers of voters and not based on the total population.  This is a big victory against the conservative right-wing forces  who are seeking to suppress the growing political power potential of our Latino and Latina communities – our immigrant communities — and the potential of the political strength of the diverse people of color, women, LGBTQ, labor, faith-based, and community-based coalitions – that have manifested themselves more than ever in recent years.

http://www.latimes.com/nation/la-na-court-voting-districts-20160404-story.html

vote

Jose Zapata Calderon

Latino And Latina Roundtable Retreat, Saturday, February 13th

To members and friends (who have indicated becoming members of the Latino and Latina Roundtable:

This is your invitation our annual Latino and Latina Roundtable retreat that will take place on Saturday, February 13th (beginning with Cafecito and Registration at 9:30 A. M. and with the retreat business starting promptly at 10 A. M.) and ending at 4 PM at the Pitzer College Broad Center, Room 208 (1050 N. Mills Ave. in Claremont.  Morning refreshments and a noon lunch will be available for participants.  As we have done in the past, the members will summarize what was accomplished in the year 2015 and develop priorities/plans and a calendar for 2016.  We are looking forward to having your participation at this most important meeting.  The agenda is as follows:

 

LRT- Membership Planning Retreat Agenda:  Saturday, February 13   9:45 4 PM

 

Objectives

         Evaluate 2015 work/accomplishments.

         Establish Priorities for 2016

         Strengthen the Collective Work of the LRT

 

Proposed Agenda

 

9:30am            Cafecito  and Registration

10- 10:30         Welcome/Dinamica (Name. Something that inspired you in 2015)

10:30- 11         Evaluation by Committees – What were our 2015 tasks?  What was

                        accomplished?

11 – 11:15       Open Discussion by Members –  What worked and did not work?  What could

 have been done better?

11:15-12:15     SWOT Exercise

                        Strengths of the LRT (Internal)

                        Weaknesses of the LRT (Internal)

                        Opportunities (External)

                        Threats (External)

12:15-12:30     Summary of Threats and Opportunities (1 person: internal and 1 person: external) 12:30-1              Lunch (members convivio – lunch will be available in roon)             

1 – 1:45           Review Committee Priorities for 2016

1.   Fundraising/Organizational Development

1.     Political Action Committee

2.     Immigration Committee

1:45-2:30         Report Back by Committee to Plenary (10 mins each)

2:45-3:15         Prioritizing Work on 2016 Priorities

                        Include alliance work

3:15- 3:30        Break

3:30-4              Review Calendar of Events for 2016

                        End with Ceremony

 

Sincerely,

Jose Zapata Calderon

President of the Latino and Latina Roundtable of the San Gabriel and Pomona Valley

LLRT logo

Events in next few weeks

Join the Pitzer College Student Senate in welcoming Former California State Assembly Speaker Hon. Fabian Nuñez back to his alma mater! Fabian graduated from Pitzer College in 1997 and went on to become an influential Latino leader in California. Fabian will be speaking about his experiences in politics and will be answering questions from members of the audience during a Q&A session.

 

Fabian Núñez was recognized as the “Public Official of the Year” by Governing Magazine in 2004 and authored Assembly Bill 32, a landmark climate change legislation that has become a blueprint for other states and the U.S. Congress in addressing environmental challenges. He currently serves on the U.S. Soccer Federation Board of Directors and previously served on the University of California Board of Regents. To learn more about Fabian Nuñez, visit his profile at www.mercuryllc.com.


This special event is part of “Student Voice Week” and the “Mindful of the Future” Speaker Series sponsored by the Student Senate. The event is open to the public and will be held in the Founder’s Room in McConnell Center on Monday, February 1st at 4:15pm. 
See the Facebook event for more details.

 

A.  Immigration Forums & Assistance Committee of the PUSD -“Know Your Rights” forums on Tuesday, February 9, 2016 at 5:00 PM and Wednesday, February 10, 2016 at 8:00 AM – Village Academy Conference Center (1460 W Holt Blvd. Pomona, CA 91766 – Entrance 1)

 

B.  Latino/a Summit on Elections – 1/28, 2016, 7- 9 PM, Hutton Center, 660 Colton Avenue, Colton

 

C.  Fabian Nunez – 4:15 PM, Feb. 1, Pitzer Founder’s Room McConnell Center

 

D.  Comm. Dev. Comm. At PUSD – 2/3 7 PM – Parent’s Room 

 

E.  Pilgrimage Mtg. at Garey – 3:30 on 2/5 F.  URBAN 2/20, 10 A. M. – UCLA Labor Center

F.  Latino and Latina Roundtable Retreat – 9 – 3; Pitzer College Broad Center Room 208 (1050 N. Mills Ave., in Claremont

 

Action Alert: #ProtectionNotDeportation

Call President Obama and ask him to STOP the raids! 

Join us in calling President Obama to 

“Support and Protect, NOT Detain and Deport.”

Central American children and families are fleeing violence. President Obama should grant Temporary Protected Status (TPS) or other forms of class-wide administrative relief to these children and families. 

See our full press statement HERE

JOIN OUR FIGHT!

TAKE ACTION NOW.

Help us take one or all of the following actions: 

1. Call the White House at (202) 456-1414 (sample script below)

2. Sign the petition asking President Obama to STOP the raids

3. Download our graphics and repost our updates via Facebook 

4. Tweet the following messages to @DHSgov @POTUS & tag us @NALACC_ORG

5. Make a donation to our Protecting Children Across Borders campaign

Use these messages & hashtags: 

Protect Central American children and families who seek safe haven. 

DO NOT raid and deport Central American children and families.

President Obama, grant Central American children & families TPS.

#ProtectionNotDeportation #ProtectChildrenAcrossBorders

Sample Script: 

“Hello, I am calling to ask President Obama to speak out immediately and direct the Department of Homeland Security to STOP the raids and deportations of Central American children and families fleeing violence. Children and families fleeing for their lives must be protected and supported, not apprehended and deported.”

133ae88b-0540-4661-b26f-7301d13c7c76

cb13d5dd-cf97-4f60-a663-d46981fbe1e8