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FAME Church In Turmoil

by 11/15/2013
written by

 

First African Methodist Episcopal

First African Methodist Episcopal

In recent years, First African Methodist Episcopal (FAME) church has endured struggles regarding their now ex-pastor and incidences of financial mismanagement.

FAME is the oldest church founded by Afrikan Americans in Los Angeles. It is widely known for its large church congregation and influential presence in the surrounding communities.

After a dedicated 27 years of service, beloved Rev. Cecil Murray stepped down as head of FAME after helping the congregation grow to over 19,000 members with a $25 million budget.

Lately, FAME’s presence in the public eye has been due to negative circumstances. Problems began arising once Rev. Murray’s successor, Rev. John J. Hunter, took his place as head of the church in 2004.

After pastoring the church for eight years, Hunter was removed from his position as a result of numerous allegations against him. According to the LA Times, critics of Hunter’s were pleased to see him leave and expressed that he was inaccessible, lived far from his community, and overspent on personal security.

Before the incidents of financial mismanagement were brought to light, Hunter was also involved in a sexual harassment lawsuit involving former church assistant Brenda Lamothe. LA Times reports that the harassment case was settled outside of court for an unknown amount.

Regarding financial affairs, in 2008 the IRS initiated a tax investigation against Hunter after it was discovered that he had been using church credit cards to make personal purchases on items such as vacations and suits. The charges amounted to at least $122,000 reported LA Times. Hunter did issue an apology to the congregation and proposed a repayment plan.

More recently, it was discovered that a reserve with $13.5 million was depleted and the church’s debts are over $500,000.

Just as Rev. John Hunter has been under scrutiny, so has his wife Denise Hunter. According to the LA Times Denise severed the ties between the church and the nonprofits by filing paperwork under her name. As a result of Denise’s actions the church no longer legally owns FAME Assistance Corporations, which focuses on building up community programs and addressing inequalities in underserved areas.

The LA Times notes that the church has filed multiple lawsuits in an attempt to once again have ownership of the nonprofits, which have “seen revenue drops from $4.4 million in 2004 to $2.4 million in 2010.”

In an interview with NBC4, Denise Hunter claimed that her and her husband never misused church funds and that the allegations against them are false. Considering the amount of evidence against them, one would be skeptical to believe that the Hunter’s were involved in no financial issues whatsoever.

The church is also trying to remove Denise Hunter from her current position as president and CEO of FAME Assistance Corp. Hunter believes that she should be allowed to hold her position because according to her, the church and the corporation are “separate corporate entities.”

Last year Rev. J. Edgar Boyd replaced Hunter as head of FAME church. Thus far, it seems that he has a grasp on initiating a positive turn around. “I’m here to help, I’m here to serve, I’m here to heal,” said Boyd in a press statement.

These instances of misconduct bring into question whether there needs to be more checks and balances present in the church. Even if an individual is the head of a church, instances like these demonstrate that absolute power over certain matters can be detrimental to more than the church community.

What are your thoughts on the matter? Do you think that there needs to be more accountability in the church?

 

Author: Colleen King

Nommo Staff

11/15/2013 46 comments
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MTA Produces Hope for Positive Future in Crenshaw District

by 11/11/2013
written by
Source: LA Sentinel

Source: LA Sentinel

On Monday, October 28, METRO held the Metro to Crenshaw Business Opportunity Summit, an event where many local business owners, independent contractors and job seekers came together to discuss the vision for the new railway construction in the Crenshaw district of South Los Angeles. There are currently 13 rail and 15 highway projects that are planned, including the well known Crenshaw to LAX train, which in the past has caused much controversy within the community.

Regardless of the involvement of many well-known community figures, such as Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors Chairman Mark Ridley-Thomas and Metro Transportation Authority (MTA) CEO Art Leahy, many residents of the Crenshaw district have opposed the construction of the above ground train through Crenshaw Boulevard. Damien Goodmon, the Executive Director of the Crenshaw Subway Coalition, countered supporters by highlighting the negatives of the construction process, “Basically you’re looking at two-and-a-half miles of destructive construction that would decimate the regions last Black business corridor. We can’t let that happen.” In 2009, there was much opposition from residents of the area who were concerned with the safety hazards for high school students.  The Crenshaw to LAX train would be routed right through the vicinity of both Crenshaw High School and View Park Prep High School.

The opposition to the Crenshaw to LAX train was derailed by the main argument for the new railway: more jobs and job traffic in the Crenshaw District. The hope for the train system is that it will “Empower [small businesses] and encourage entrepreneurship for all business owners especially minority and women owned businesses. We must harness the economic opportunity that the Crenshaw to LAX transit project will bring to our region,” Chairman Ridley-Thomas said. The train system is seen by most in the community as an opportunity to improve their surroundings.

Eric Bratton, a first year at the University of California, Los Angeles and also a native of the Crenshaw district area, gave his opinion on the construction and what he feels will happen as a result of it. “There’s nothing wrong with the train, I think it’s very beneficial especially if it’s running from Crenshaw to LAX, and it will save a lot of people a hassle. Of course it’s going to be dangerous, but it’s equally as dangerous as cars and other things.” When asked about the measures that have been taken to ensure safety around the trains and in the community holistically he replied, “I think that they’ll construct it in a way that is more safe for the area, but I do think that they should increase security and other safety regulations.”

Overall, politicians and residents welcome the Crenshaw to LAX. There are high hopes for economic and cultural growth in the district, especially with the inclusion of a Leimert Park stop, and more traffic for small and privately owned businesses in the area.

 

Author: Altagracia Alvarado

Nommo Staff

11/11/2013 824 comments
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Death of Unarmed Black Woman Reignites Anger Over “Stand-Your-Ground” Laws

by 11/11/2013
written by
stand your ground

Source: U.S. news

On November 2, Renisha Mcbride, 19, was shot dead on the porch of a homeowner whose help she sought following a car accident.  Her body was found in the early hours of the morning with a fatal gunshot wound to the head.

According to reports, around 2:30am Mcbride crashed her car when driving through Dearborn Heights, Michigan, where she then knocked on the door of a house for assistance.  It is unclear what exchange, if any, occurred before Mcbride was shot dead by the homeowner.

The police have identified the shooter but are yet to release details.  The homeowner is believed to be a male in his fifties although it has not been confirmed.

Renisha Mcbride’s death is being compared to that of Trayvon Martin’s last year and has reignited anger surrounding “stand-your-ground” laws.  Since Michigan, like Florida, has a stand-your-ground law, Mcbride’s shooter may well go uncharged.  The homeowner is currently claiming self-defense, but it is unknown if he has yet cited stand-your-ground in his defense.

Stand-your-ground laws allow individuals to use deadly force if they feel they are faced with physical assault or that their life is danger.  Clearly, such laws are susceptible to abuse.  A racist homeowner can violently attack somebody and then argue that it was self-defense even though the only threat to their life was an imagined one based on racial profiling.

Afrikan American Mcbride, who lived in an 83 percent Black neighborhood in northwest Detroit with her mother, was unarmed when she knocked on the door of her shooter in an 86 percent white Detroit suburb in Dearborn Heights.

Mcbride’s aunt Bernita Spinks told The Detroit News that she believes her niece’s death is a case of racial profiling saying, “He shot her in the head … for what? For knocking on his door.”  Spinks described the suspect’s decision to shoot Mcbride as inexcusable.  “If he felt scared or threatened, he should have called 911…. She went looking for help and now she’s dead,” said Spinks.

Treva Lindsey, Assistant Professor of Women’s Gender and Sexuality Studies at Ohio State University, referred to the disproportionate number of minority victims of stand-your-ground killings in an interview with The Huffington Post, “Who is always the victim of these stand-your-ground laws?”

In September, 24-year-old Jonathan Ferrell, an Afrikan American former Florida A&M University student, died after the police shot him 10 times for reportedly seeking help at a woman’s home after he had been involved in a car crash.

The woman who answered the door, thinking it was her husband, closed the door when she saw Ferrell and dialed 911.

Ferrell’s mother described her son, who was engaged to be married when killed, as a “very uplifting, happy person” who “wouldn’t hurt anyone.”

Police Officer Randall Kerrick, who shot at Ferrell 12 times, was charged with voluntary manslaughter after turning himself in.

Questions are also being raised as to why so little media coverage has been given to Mcbride’s death, with many arguing that it is because of her race.

 

Author: Greta Tugwell

Nommo Staff

11/11/2013 133 comments
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L.A. Celebrates the 8th Annual Taste of Soul Family Festival

by 10/21/2013
written by
TOS2

People in line for food.

Crenshaw Boulevard was temporarily closed this past weekend to celebrate the 8th Annual Taste of Soul Family Festival. An estimated 300,000 people were in attendance, a record-breaking total for one of the largest street festivals in the Los Angeles area.

Creator and founder, Danny J. Bakewell, Sr., started Taste of Soul in 2005, which has since grown into a massive family-friendly event spanning nearly a mile from Stocker Street to Rodeo Road. Bakewell commented on the event stating that, “It allows us to come together to demonstrate our self-determination about our own community…[Taste of Soul] is about self-help…empowerment [and] economic development.”

The festival welcomed over 300 vendors, providing an outlet for Black-owned businesses in South Los Angeles to display their products to the community. Commenting on the economic opportunity that this festival has to offer, project manager Veronica Hendrix stated, “Taste of Soul [promotes] economic empowerment and development of the Afrikan American community.”

TOSFood, however, has always been one of the primary focuses of the festival. One of the event’s main goals is to highlight Black food vendors and to provide them with ample exposure long after the festival ends. Festival-goers had the opportunity to purchase food from several Black-owned restaurant vendors including popular creole favorite, Harold and Belle’s.

Over the years, the rapid growth of the festival has attracted several sponsors. Radio stations such as, 94.7 The Wave and Radio Free 102.3FM KJLH have been loyal partners of the festival and provided a variety of live performances. The performances ranged from Latin conga player, Poncho Sanchez, to popular boy band, Mindless Behavior.

Taste of Soul Family Festival will return next year for it’s 9th annual event. “Just come share the love, enjoy the music, enjoy the food,” Bakewell pronounced, “we’re amazing together!”

TOS3

Author: Amanda Washington

Nommo Staff

10/21/2013 178 comments
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Black L.A. Leaders Meet in Support of Affirmative Action

by 10/16/2013
written by
la sentinel

Danny Blackwell, owner of the L.A. Sentinel at the press conference

Black Los Angeles leaders came out in a show of solidarity yesterday morning at the Los Angeles Sentinel headquarters in an effort to persuade the Supreme Court to “do the right thing” in regards to Affirmative Action.

The U.S. Supreme Court heard arguments yesterday that could potentially overturn Michigan’s 2006 state voted Proposal 2—the sister initiative to California’s Proposition 209—which effectively banned Affirmative Action.

Danny Blackwell the director of the L.A. Sentinel states, “We need the Supreme Court to be mindful of how important this day is in terms of giving life to future generations to equal education that all of us are paying for. We have the burden of paying for education, but we don’t have the right to participate in education.”

According to UCLA Today, in 1998, the first year California’s Proposition 209 went into effect, UCLA saw a drastic drop in Afrikan American, Latino, and American Indian enrollment by, 33 percent, 42.6 percent and 46 percent decreases respectively. UCLA’s Afrikan American enrollment crisis came less than a decade later in 2006 when Afrikan Americans made up only two percent of the incoming freshmen class.  According to UCLA’s Admissions data as of fall 2012, UCLA’s Black population was at 3.88 percent, Latino at 17.18 percent, and American Indian at .56 percent,.

According to Leon Jenkins, head of Los Angeles NAACP, Proposal 2 and Proposition 209 stifles diversity, “Diversity is where you have [enough] of any group of people… [to reach] a critical mass. A critical mass is when you have enough people—enough students in that university so that when that student looks around [they] don’t feel alone. That that person is not [made]… the spokesperson for the whole race or the whole ethnic group.”

Access to the most prestigious state universities is disproportionately accessible to those students coming from affluent high schools that offer the most advanced placement classes, and excludes the vast amounts of students of color from competing. Educational opportunities create economic opportunities, which in turn create political opportunities that, ultimately, become the equity of power. According to Senator Kevin de Leόn, “Affirmative Action is not just about the color of your skin, it’s about economic opportunities. I would not be a State Senator today, or a head of the Appropriations Committee of the California State Senate—the only Latino to head the Appropriations Committee in the history of the California State Senate… if it wasn’t for Affirmative Action.”

To speak of Affirmative Action without accounting for its history and its impact on people of color in the United States, is not simply to be ahistorical, but to be disingenuous and insincere. Affirmative Action began as a result of Dr. Martin Luther King and organized communities of color throughout the nation challenging the hegemonic systems of control that limited their access in a myriad of ways.

When President Johnson gave the commencement address at Howard University in 1965, he commented on the very issue of equal access and what fair competition consists of, “’You do not take a person who, for years, has been hobbled by chains and liberate him, bring him up to the starting line of a race and then say, ‘you are free to compete with all the others,’ and still justly believe that you have been completely fair.”

Mandla Kayise, former president of UBAA and the head of Alliance for Equal Opportunity in Education, addresses the history of inequality, “The proponents of Proposal 2 and Proposition 209 want to say that racial injustice and inequality has ended; that it no longer exists. But moreover, they want to deny us the right to make the case that there is a legacy and history of inequality in this country.”

It appears that the nation is at a critical stage in which change is inevitable. Regardless of the Supreme Court’s ruling in favor of Affirmative Action or not, socially conscious leaders and activists of all colors will continue to fight for the rights of all people to have equity of education.  Despite the Court’s decision, Senator Kevin de Leόn states, “We will send [our children] to Cal State LA or UCLA, not to Folsom, Chino, or Pelican Bay!”

Black Los Angeles leaders discussing the Supreme Court hearing.

Black Los Angeles leaders discussing the Supreme Court hearing.

Author: Abraham Hardaway

Nommo Staff

10/16/2013 393 comments
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