Sent to you by Tee via Google Reader: Urban League asks Obama to
address black issues via Black Politics on the Web by The Admin on
3/24/09
President Barack Obama should specifically address disparities in black
unemployment, foreclosures, education and health care, the National
Urban League says in its annual “State of Black America” report.

Despite the progress represented by the election of the first black
president, blacks are twice as likely to be unemployed, three times as
likely to live in poverty and more than six times as likely to be
incarcerated, says the report, which was being released Wednesday.

Obama has said that the way for government to help minorities is by
improving things like education, employment and health care for all
Americans.

But “we have to be more specific,” said Marc Morial, president and CEO
of the 99-year-old Urban League.

“The issue is not only (blacks) doing better, but in closing these
persistent gaps in statistics in this country,” Morial told The
Associated Press. “Our index shows that the gap in African-American
status is about 71 percent that of white Americans. We will not rest
until that number is at 100, and there is no gap.”

The 288-page report includes policy discussions and essays from
academics, elected officials and average citizens. Among its 31
specific recommendations:

_ Ensure that the stimulus package’s green job creation includes poor
urban communities.

_ Increase funding for job training and placement for disadvantaged
workers.

_ Guarantee full-day schooling for all 3 and 4 year olds.

_ Expand the school day to account for working parents and families
without nearby relatives to help with after-school care.

_ Fund mortgage counseling and education programs for minorities.

_ Implement universal health care and a “comprehensive” system to
provide blacks with health education, prevention and intervention.

Morial acknowledged the role self-responsibility must play in improving
the lives of blacks.

“We have some things in our own community where we have to step up,
when it comes to focusing and emphasizing the basic value of
achievement and accomplishment in our children, and doing it in a very
young age,” he said. “We have to not be afraid to say, ‘Turn off the
TV, shut down the Internet. SpongeBob, Dora, all these folks need to
take a little break.’”

But public policy is a crucial ingredient, he said.

“It matters if your high school biology class has a biology lab. It
matters if your second-grade classroom is air conditioned if it’s in
South Carolina or Florida or Alabama.

“Public policy matters, and we have to recognize too that it does
require additional and extraordinary investments when it comes to
children, to lift up children that are disadvantaged,” Morial said.

As a presidential candidate, Obama sidestepped the minefield of race
and politics whenever possible, instead focusing on a message of
American unity. And in his two months as president, the financial
meltdown has left Obama little time or political capital to spend on
anything besides rescuing the economy.

But in 2007, as the junior senator from Illinois, Obama wrote the
foreword to the “State of Black America” report, which focused on the
problems facing black men.

“This sad story is a stark reminder that the long march toward true and
meaningful equality in America isn’t over,” Obama wrote. “We have a
long way to go.”

Jesse Washington, AP

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