Friday, March 17, 2017
Standing with Standing Rock
By Reginald Johnson
HARTFORD --- About 60 people rallied on the steps of the State Capitol last week to protest plans to build the Dakota Access Pipeline as well as the Keystone XL pipeline.
Sponsored by the grassroots group CT Stands with Standing Rock, the event saw speakers stress the importance of protecting our environment, particularly our water, and the need to support the Lakota people in their struggle to prevent DAPL from ruining the tribe's water supplies and sacred sites.
Natives and their supporters were camped out for months in protest of the pipeline at a site near the Standing Rock Sioux reservation in North Dakota. Earlier this year, authorities forcibly removed the protesters, and President Trump gave the go-ahead for both the DAPL and Keystone pipelines.
"If we don't change the way we're living on this earth now, we don't know if there will be a seventh generation to be able to be born, when you talk about what's going on with the water," said Carol Blodgett, a New Hampshire resident who is Lakota descent.
Zahir, a representative of a mosque in Meriden, said the Koran teaches that humans have to respect nature. Decrying the widespread damage done already to our air, land and water, Zahir said, "We have to work with nature, not against it, otherwise it will cause us harm and harm to future generations."
Christine Brooks said she organized the event after watching in horror when the police attacked protesters at the campsite.
"I couldn't stand being silent," she said.
Several other rallies on behalf of indigenous right took place around the country, most notably one in Washington, D.C. where thousands marched in the streets of the nation's capital.
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Labels:
DAPL,
Hartford,
indigenous rights,
Keystone pipeline,
Natives,
Standing Rock,
Trump
Saturday, March 4, 2017
City School Funding in Crisis
By Reginald Johnson
BRIDGEPORT REPORT
BRIDGEPORT --- The city’s 21,000 school kids are getting shortchanged again.
Despite a court ruling last fall that found
that school systems in Connecticut’s poorer cities like Bridgeport are being inadequately funded, city schools
this year are due to receive even less money from the state than last year.
According to Bridgeport Board of Education member Maria
Pereira, Bridgeport schools will get $4.6 million less from the state this
year, when you figure in the changes in funding formulas for different
programs.
“This is what we get after nine years of a
lawsuit,” said Pereira at the Feb. 27 school board meeting.
Since the financially-strapped city
government in Bridgeport is unlikely to make up the gap in state funding, it
looks like the board will have to make a number of painful cuts in services. Shortening
school bus routes, cutting social workers and guidance counselors, ending the
program to deter drop-outs and truancy, and closing the Parents Center, are all
being considered, Pereira said.
A number of people came out to the meeting to
blast the board for considering the idea of shortening bus routes, saying
children will be put in danger by having to walk longer distances on city
streets.
“These streets are dangerous even for adults,”
said one speaker. “People are driving while they’re on their cell phones or they’re
texting.”
Under a state
budget plan recently unveiled by Gov. Dannel P. Malloy, Bridgeport at first
blush would seem to be doing better than last year. ECS and special education funding
are both being raised. But with the state now insisting that local municipalities
pick up one-third of the cost of teacher pensions, together with cuts in other
programs, the increases are wiped out and Bridgeport is actually coming out behind, explained Pereira.
“It’s outrageous. We’re the most underfunded
district in the state,” she said.
Pereira and other board members like
chairman Joe Larcheveque urged the public to lobby their state legislators to
increase state funding.
“Please let them know our funding is in
dire straits and they need to make sure the funding is equitable,” said
Larcheveque.
Pereira doesn't buy the idea that Connecticut --- one of the wealthiest states in the country --- "can't afford" to be more generous with school funding.
She noted that last year Gov. Malloy saw fit to steer $22 million in "aid" to Bridgewater Associates --- one the world's largest and most successful hedge funds --- to help them keep their headquarters in Connecticut.
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