Among the 50.7 million Hispanics in the United States, nearly two-thirds (65%), or 33 million, self-identify as being of Mexican origin, according to tabulations of the 2010 American Community Survey (ACS) by the Pew Hispanic Center, a project of the Pew Research Center. No other Hispanic subgroup rivals the size of the Mexican-origin population. Puerto Ricans, the nation’s second largest Hispanic origin group, make up just 9% of the total Hispanic population in the 50 states and the District of Columbia.
Overall, the 10 largest Hispanic origin groups—Mexicans, Puerto Ricans, Cubans, Salvadorans, Dominicans, Guatemalans, Colombians, Hondurans, Ecuadorians and Peruvians—make up 92% of the U.S. Hispanic population. Six Hispanic origin groups have populations greater than 1 million.
http://www.pewhispanic.org/2012/06/27/the-10-largest-hispanic-origin-groups-characteristics-rankings-top-counties/
Thursday, June 28, 2012
Tuesday, June 26, 2012
Thursday, June 21, 2012
Recession Widens Wealth Gap Between Races
White Americans have 22 times more wealth than blacks -- a gap that nearly doubled during the Great Recession.
The median household net worth for whites was $110,729 in 2010, versus $4,995 for blacks, according to recently released Census Bureau figures.
The difference is similarly notable when it comes to Hispanics, who had a median household net worth of $7,424. The ratio between white and Hispanic wealth expanded to 15 to 1.
The gap between the races widened considerably during the recent economic downturn, which whites weathered better than blacks, Hispanics and Asians.
http://money.cnn.com/2012/06/21/news/economy/wealth-gap-race/
The median household net worth for whites was $110,729 in 2010, versus $4,995 for blacks, according to recently released Census Bureau figures.
The difference is similarly notable when it comes to Hispanics, who had a median household net worth of $7,424. The ratio between white and Hispanic wealth expanded to 15 to 1.
The gap between the races widened considerably during the recent economic downturn, which whites weathered better than blacks, Hispanics and Asians.
http://money.cnn.com/2012/06/21/news/economy/wealth-gap-race/
Tuesday, June 19, 2012
Nine of 26 Battle Creek Area School Districts have No Minority Teachers or Administrators
Nine of the 26 local school districts counted zero minority teachers or administrators last fall, according to recently released state data. (Another 11 of the 26 had no minority administrators, but one or more minority teachers.)
All of the combined 55 administrators and 372 teachers counted at Athens, Mar Lee, Tekonsha, Quincy, Union City, Bellevue and Galesburg school districts, as well as the Battle Creek Area Learning Center and Marshall Academy, were white.
But 15 percent of those schools’ combined 6,398 students were minority.
That means the combined 31 American Indian, 33 Asian, 95 black, two native Hawaiian, 141 Hispanic and 103 mutliracial students counted at those schools have no one who looks like them to look up to at school.
Monday, June 18, 2012
Catholic nuns bringing anti-budget cutting message to Michigan this week
Presumptive Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney isn’t the only one with a bus tour passing through Michigan this week.
A group of Catholic nuns will be touring the state to criticize Republican plans to cut federal spending.
The Nuns on the Bus tour started over the weekend in Iowa and will reach Michigan by Friday. The bus tour has stops planned in Grand Rapids, Jackson and Detroit.
While in Michigan, the group plans to demonstrate outside the offices of two Republican congressmen who voted to turn Medicare into a voucher program, and cap non-defense spending.
Sunday, June 17, 2012
Report finds almost 1 in 4 local kids at risk of hunger
Battle Creek’s Amanda Sellers said she’s trying to build a better life for her and her three kids, ages 7 to 10.
The 32-year-old mother said she’s going to school in Delton, trying to get her high school diploma. She has some experience at a Sears store, and she wants to be a manager there.
For now, Sellers said she’s a stay-at-home mom, and she sometimes struggles to make sure her kids have enough to eat. That’s why she came to St. Thomas Episcopal Church on Wednesday morning for the free pancakes, sausage, fruit and cereal offered during the summer.
“Sometimes I run low on food,” she said. “Especially breakfast, because I have three growing kids and they want two to three bowls of cereal. We run low.”
The Sellers aren’t alone.
http://www.battlecreekenquirer.com/article/20120616/NEWS01/306170003/Report-finds-almost-1-4-local-kids-risk-hunger
The 32-year-old mother said she’s going to school in Delton, trying to get her high school diploma. She has some experience at a Sears store, and she wants to be a manager there.
For now, Sellers said she’s a stay-at-home mom, and she sometimes struggles to make sure her kids have enough to eat. That’s why she came to St. Thomas Episcopal Church on Wednesday morning for the free pancakes, sausage, fruit and cereal offered during the summer.
“Sometimes I run low on food,” she said. “Especially breakfast, because I have three growing kids and they want two to three bowls of cereal. We run low.”
The Sellers aren’t alone.
http://www.battlecreekenquirer.com/article/20120616/NEWS01/306170003/Report-finds-almost-1-4-local-kids-risk-hunger
Thursday, June 14, 2012
Michigan Finally Eyeing Changes To Lawyers For Poor
Lawyers on all sides agree the system enshrined nearly 50 years ago
that gives all defendants the right to a lawyer is not working. The
Justice Department calls it a crisis — such a big problem that it's been
doling out grants to improve how its adversaries perform in criminal
cases.
Consider Michigan: Five times since the 1980s, independent groups have called on Michigan to change the way it pays lawyers for the poor. Each time, state officials have done nothing. And a 2008 study by a legal nonprofit association said the state's indigent defense system had reached a "constitutional crisis."
But a lawsuit and a growing number of exonerations may be starting to change that.
35 Years For Someone Else's Crime
On a sticky afternoon along Detroit's riverfront plaza, children jump through chutes of water in a fountain. Nearby, Edward Carter sits on a park bench and talks about his life behind bars.
"I was 19 years old when I went in, and I got out on my 55th birthday," Carter says.
http://www.npr.org/2012/06/14/154849477/michigan-finally-eyeing-changes-to-lawyers-for-poor
Consider Michigan: Five times since the 1980s, independent groups have called on Michigan to change the way it pays lawyers for the poor. Each time, state officials have done nothing. And a 2008 study by a legal nonprofit association said the state's indigent defense system had reached a "constitutional crisis."
But a lawsuit and a growing number of exonerations may be starting to change that.
35 Years For Someone Else's Crime
On a sticky afternoon along Detroit's riverfront plaza, children jump through chutes of water in a fountain. Nearby, Edward Carter sits on a park bench and talks about his life behind bars.
"I was 19 years old when I went in, and I got out on my 55th birthday," Carter says.
http://www.npr.org/2012/06/14/154849477/michigan-finally-eyeing-changes-to-lawyers-for-poor
Tuesday, June 12, 2012
New Study: Michigan Early Childhood Efforts Produce Startling Results
Children who attended a public pre-K school program had greater
success throughout their K-12 career, including graduating at a higher
rate, according to a first-of-its-kind study that followed more than 500
Michigan children for 14 years.
That study to be discussed today at a meeting of the State Board of Education, provides fuel to growing calls for increased funding for early childhood education in the state.
Michigan’s public pre-K program, called Great Start Readiness Program, provides early childhood education to about 30,000 poor and at-risk children. The study followed 338 children from Detroit, St. Clair County, Kalamazoo, Muskegon, Wyoming and Roscommon who attended Great Start as 4-year-olds in 1995-96, and 258 demographically similar children who qualified for Great Start, but didn’t attend any type of pre-school before entering kindergarten.
The results were startling.
http://bridgemi.com/2012/06/study-on-michigan-early-childhood-efforts-provides-startling-results/#.T9dV1pj4J7c
That study to be discussed today at a meeting of the State Board of Education, provides fuel to growing calls for increased funding for early childhood education in the state.
Michigan’s public pre-K program, called Great Start Readiness Program, provides early childhood education to about 30,000 poor and at-risk children. The study followed 338 children from Detroit, St. Clair County, Kalamazoo, Muskegon, Wyoming and Roscommon who attended Great Start as 4-year-olds in 1995-96, and 258 demographically similar children who qualified for Great Start, but didn’t attend any type of pre-school before entering kindergarten.
The results were startling.
http://bridgemi.com/2012/06/study-on-michigan-early-childhood-efforts-provides-startling-results/#.T9dV1pj4J7c
Sunday, June 10, 2012
Detroit Representative Asks: If Welfare Recipients are Drug Tested, Should Legislators be Subject to Tests Too?
Michigan lawmakers are considering a suspicion-based drug testing
program for some welfare recipients, and it's raising questions about
who else should be subject to that type of monitoring.
Rep. Rashida Tlaib, D-Detroit, opposes the plan that passed the House last week and is now pending in the Senate. But Tlaib says if the state is going to require drug testing for cash assistance recipients, lawmakers also should be screened for illegal substances.
"We're all being paid through public, taxpayer dollars – just like the taxpayer dollars that are paying for public assistance for needy families," Tlaib said. "I think that we should be held to the same standards that we ask from some of our poor families."
Tlaib's amendment to the welfare bill, which would have required state lawmakers to be tested for illegal drugs as a condition of holding office, was dismissed without a vote.
http://www.mlive.com/politics/index.ssf/2012/06/drug_test_lawmakers_draft.html#incart_river_default
Rep. Rashida Tlaib, D-Detroit, opposes the plan that passed the House last week and is now pending in the Senate. But Tlaib says if the state is going to require drug testing for cash assistance recipients, lawmakers also should be screened for illegal substances.
"We're all being paid through public, taxpayer dollars – just like the taxpayer dollars that are paying for public assistance for needy families," Tlaib said. "I think that we should be held to the same standards that we ask from some of our poor families."
Tlaib's amendment to the welfare bill, which would have required state lawmakers to be tested for illegal drugs as a condition of holding office, was dismissed without a vote.
http://www.mlive.com/politics/index.ssf/2012/06/drug_test_lawmakers_draft.html#incart_river_default
Friday, June 8, 2012
A Michigan Mom With a Disabled Child Talks About the Importance of the Earned Income Credit
- Courtesy of the Michigan Earned Income Coalition and Michigan League for Human Services
Tuesday, June 5, 2012
West Michigan Farmer's Markets
Courtesy of Feeding America West Michigan and the Greater Grand Rapids Food Systems Council, the following web site has a listing of the farmer's markets in West Michigan including days, hours of operation, and whether or not they may accept Bridge Cards.
Several listings for Kalamazoo, Battle Creek, Allegan, and other Southwest Michigan towns are listed.
http://www.foodshed.net/farmersmarkets.html
Several listings for Kalamazoo, Battle Creek, Allegan, and other Southwest Michigan towns are listed.
http://www.foodshed.net/farmersmarkets.html
Sunday, June 3, 2012
Local Sikhs Emphasize One God, Equality for All
In this place of worship, the men sit on the floor along one side, with their uncut hair placed in turbans or their heads otherwise covered.
Sitting on the other side are the women, their heads also covered, their feet bare.
Someone waves a "chaur sahib" -- yellowish yak hair gathered into a handle -- over the "granth," a book containing the writings of 10 gurus.
Spiritual messages are sung to the music of a harmonium and drums, with slides interpreting the words in Gurmukhi, an Indian language, and English.
It might look and sound a bit different from the Sunday services in other houses of worship, but in the "gurudwara" of the Sikh Culture Society of Indiana, the overriding belief is common to many; the first line in the holy book compiled by the 10 gurus is translated, "There is but one God."
http://www.southbendtribune.com/news/sbt-local-sikhs-emphasize-one-god-equality-for-all-20120602,0,506520.story
Sitting on the other side are the women, their heads also covered, their feet bare.
Someone waves a "chaur sahib" -- yellowish yak hair gathered into a handle -- over the "granth," a book containing the writings of 10 gurus.
Spiritual messages are sung to the music of a harmonium and drums, with slides interpreting the words in Gurmukhi, an Indian language, and English.
It might look and sound a bit different from the Sunday services in other houses of worship, but in the "gurudwara" of the Sikh Culture Society of Indiana, the overriding belief is common to many; the first line in the holy book compiled by the 10 gurus is translated, "There is but one God."
http://www.southbendtribune.com/news/sbt-local-sikhs-emphasize-one-god-equality-for-all-20120602,0,506520.story
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)