Tuesday, December 13, 2016

Today’s short takes: Trump, wolves, crime, and art

National: The national news media let Donald Trump off the hook so many times during the just-concluded presidential campaign. It was extraordinarily frustrating to see interviewers fail to pin the candidate down on his slogan to make America great again. He used that phrase, borrowed without attribution from Ronald Reagan, repeatedly without being required to identify even a time frame, much less any measurable yardsticks.  A general consensus seemed to emerge, without help or direction from the candidate, that Trump most likely was referring to the 1950s, a decade when white male egos were unchallenged. White men controlled everything and Father Knew Best. Civil rights were openly suppressed, in many cases with the authority of law. Gays were in the closet, women had healthier relationships with home appliances than husbands, and the throwaway culture was perhaps at its zenith. 

That consensus appears to have been wrong. As the nominees of the Trump administration are rolled out, it’s becoming increasingly clear that the era Donald Trump has in mind when he talks of making American great again is pre-modern, perhaps even Paleolithic. The presumptive Secretary of Energy is … Rick Perry, the former Texas governor who wanted to abolish the Energy Department.

The foxes are no longer in charge of the hen house. Wolves are replacing them.

• • •

Tavis Smiley
National talk show host Tavis Smiley was in Cleveland last week for a forum, "Courting Justice," that among other things highlighted the harmful effect the high cost of fines, fees and bail have on the criminal justice system. The forum, which was filmed before a live audience at WVIZ/PBS ideastream, will be shown in two 30-minute segments, tonight and tomorrow at 11:30 p.m. on public television. Readers outside the Cleveland viewing area should check PBS.org their local viewing times.

The show’s panel included Ohio Supreme Court Chief Justice Maureen O'Connor, Cleveland Municipal Court Administrative Judge Ronald Adrine, Lakewood Municipal Court Judge Pat Carroll and former Ohio Supreme Court Justice Yvette McGee Brown.

Nothing against the chief justice or the Lakewood judge, but we can vouch from personal experience that Judge Adrine and former Justice McGee Brown are exceptionally thoughtful and knowledgeable.

The forum was part of a nationwide series. Previously aired segments were in Los Angeles [June] & Little Rock [Sept.] and are likely available online through Tavis Smiley show archives at PBS.org. Local sponsors included the City Club of Cleveland and the Cleveland Foundation.

• • •

Speaking of ideastream, we attended a spirited public meeting there yesterday afternoon that addressed the way Cuyahoga Arts and Culture, the agency that determines which arts organizations get funded from the county’s dedicated 30-cents-a-pack cigarette tax, may change a core program.

Meeting of Cuyahoga Arts & Culture Board of Trustees
at Playhouse Square, December 12, 2016
At CAC’s November 14 meeting, held at the Mandel Jewish Community Center in Beachwood, where more than $14.5 million in grants was announced, public comments from two outspoken members of the local arts community, helped focus concerns on CAC’s proposed shift in how individual artists are funded. The comments, by CAC board member Gwendolyn Garth and Donald Black Jr., addressed perceived inequities in the administration of the

Joseph Gibbons chairs the Board of Trustees,
Cuyahoga Arts and Culture; Karen Gahl-Mills is CAC
executive director.
individual artists awards process, which is separately handled by the nonprofit Community Partnership for Arts and Culture.

Tension and concern over proposed changes being considered by CAC as to how individual artists awards may be handled in the future led to yesterday’s meeting being attended by an SRO crowd of nearly 200. The normal 15 minutes reserved for public comment at each board meeting had to be extended to nearly 90 minutes as a series of speakers, almost all of whom were disciplined enough to stay within their allotted three minutes, voiced support for the current system, decried proposed changes that would replace the current Creative Workforce Partnerships [aka individual artists awards] and replace it with new awards that would be managed by an entity based outside the state.


CAC trustee, Steve Minter
Of equal concern, judging from how the audience regularly responded with applause to the public comments, were sentiments expressing concern over how artists of color seemed not to find favor in the awards process, and how some neighborhoods, including Glenville, Hough, and Mt. Pleasant, were left out in the cold when public projects were considered.

It seemed clear that the trustees wanted to hear from the artist’s community, and that this was a dialogue that should have been routinely occurring during the decade CAC has existed. Board members announced even before the public comment that no decision on changing the Creative Workshop Partnership program would be taken at yesterday’s meeting. Following the public comment period, each board member addressed the crowd, and the prevailing sense was that the board would be doing its homework over the holidays before the next meeting.

While several artists of color spoke about their frustrations or questions regarding the distribution of funds, it was illuminating to see a significant number of nonminority artists also speak to inequities and process issues that disproportionately hinder black and brown artists. This first time visitor to a CAC session left with an appreciation for the robustness of Cleveland’s artistic community, its energy and sense of fair play, and the under appreciated role that public support of the arts must play in any genuine civic renaissance.


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This last point was underscored by the attendance of both former Gund Foundation president David Bergholz and former County Commissioner
Dave Bergholz,
former Gund Foundation President
Peter Lawson Jones. Bergholz, who arrived more than an hour early and led off the public comment period, set the tone when he spoke strongly in favor of maintaining and strengthening the CWP awards and challenged the trustees to find more money to support artists. Jones, who is now perhaps the area’s busiest actor, did not speak; during his tenure as a public official he was a vocal and committed champion of the arts and a prominent spokesman for the tax that created what is now a strong contributor to the Cleveland arts scene.


The next regular meeting of the Board of Trustees is scheduled for February 13, 2017 at the Idea Center, 1375 Euclid Ave.
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Wednesday, December 07, 2016

Civics, Political Theater, Music all on tap this evening

With the sun out and a wintry blast on the way this weekend, Clevelanders should probably make a point of getting out this Hump Day. And there is no shortage of choices, whether you want to wear either your civic hat or your favorite foot tappers.

Rev. Dr. Stephen Rowan,
pastor of Bethany Baptist Church and
chairman of the Cleveland Foundation,
is UBF keynote speaker.
For starters, there are the annual meetings of the United Black Fund and the Phillis Wheatley Association we wrote about here

Then today we received word of an important discussion taking place tonight from 6-8PM at John Adams HS, where Cleveland councilman Zack Reed is hosting a follow up session on the search for solutions for violence. Speakers include Cleveland Chief of Police Calvin Williams, Deputy Chief Deon McCauley and county sheriff Clifford Pinkney. Students from Adams and Warrensville Hts. HS will also participate.

Reed continues to be looked at askance for his past troubles and his thirst for publicity, but few of his peers work as hard to engage constituents and city residents in the civic space. Reed appreciates that chronic violence is a public health issue. We are glad that he keeps beating that drum.


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Finally, if you care for unpredictable theater, you might want to attend the regularly scheduled meeting of the East Cleveland City Council, starting at 6:30pm. In the wake of yesterday’s vote recalling both Mayor Gary Norton and Council President Thomas Wheeler, who knows who will show or what will happen. It seems to us they are both entitled to stay in place until the Board of Elections certifies the results later this month, but some folks are sure to want them to have vacated the premises by last midnight. East Cleveland City Hall, 14340 Euclid Ave.

After all that civic engagement, treat yourself to cool music and hot beverages at Coffee Phix, 4485 Mayfield Road, where you can enjoy the reggae vibes of Carlos Jones. You might be used to him as a member of I-Tal and First Light, or as the leader of Carlos Jones & the P.L.U.S Band, but tonight he will be doing his solo acoustic thing.

Coffee Phix is a place you should know about. Stop in and let owner Jackie Larkins know you heard about her spot from The Real Deal! Jones plays from 7:30p-9p. Coffee Phix is at 4485 Mayfield, just east of Green. Free parking in the rear.

Tuesday, December 06, 2016

BULLETIN: East Cleveland voters recall mayor, council president


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East Cleveland citizens today recalled Mayor Gary Norton by a margin of twenty votes, 548-528. A recount is likely.

Council President Thomas Wheeler was also recalled by Ward 3 voters, 229-211.

If upheld, these results likely mean Brandon King will be the next mayor of East Cleveland. King is currently vice president of the city’s five-person council. Had Wheeler survived the recall, he would have been in line to become mayor.

If King becomes mayor, the remaining three council members — Barbara Thomas, Joie Graham, and Nathaniel Martin — would select two residents to fill the vacancies.

Looking Back, Forward & Around


Our astute regular readers, whom we appreciate beyond our capacity to state, are likely aware that we like to keep our eyes on leadership in Northeast Ohio’s black community, and that from time to time we experiment with formats to help us do a better job of reporting.

Today’s post is one of those experiments, a first in what we excitedly expect to be a major transformation of how we deliver news and opinion. We’ll have more to say about that as we move into the New Year. But for today, we are offering a quick look at some of what happened around here last week, and a head’s up for what’s on tap this week.

Looking back
We noted in a prior post the Cleveland NAACP’s town hall meeting that was to offer an innovative feature. As we understood it, a clinical psychologist was to address the important topic of the psychological impact the election of Donald Trump as our 45th president might be having on our community. Properly used, psychology is a most valuable lens for understanding human behavior at both individual and group levels. Its importance is too little understood in society, especially by those Americans who just want “the facts” and dismiss any analysis of the “mumbo jumbo” that actually holds the keys to understanding why people do the things they do. Those who don’t pay attention to psychology on both the micro and macro levels have no chance to understand either the President-elect or the people who voted for him or against Hillary Clinton.

So, as Fareed Zakaria would say, that’s our take, now let’s get started.

I showed up late for the NAACP town hall event after attending a recruitment reception downtown for the National Urban Fellows program. NUF is a wonderful under the radar program that supports and equips public service professionals. The program is geared to people more or less between 5-12 years into their careers who believe that government or civic service is their passion and who are ready to commit to an intense 15 month experience that will place them with a top-rank organizational internship while they earn a master’s degree in public administration from Baruch College at City University of New York. Cleveland is a favorite NUF site, given the committed institutional support from The Cleveland Foundation, the Neighborhood Leadership Institute among other organizations, and a strong alumni network of champions, including such folk such as Natoya Walker Minor and Darnell Brown of the Jackson administration, and Sylvia Perez, who will be moving from the Cleveland Foundation to a top position at United Way early next year. If you or someone you know might be a candidate for this program, you or they should immediately reach out to Miguel Garcia, NUF’s president and CEO to explore joining NUF’s 2018 class, which will convene next summer.

NAACP town hall
When I left the NUF reception I headed over to St. James AME Church to see what I hoped might be a positive discussion on healthy community responses in the wake of the election. Board president Michael Nelson had invited clinical psychologist Natalie M. Whitlow to speak to address questions and concerns about community mental health in the wake of Trump’s victory. This was a useful idea since the Trump campaign has heightened insecurities in many communities, especially communities of color and other groups less generally favored by mainstream America. When black people, for instance, weren’t being ignored or targeted we were being ridiculed or used as props in the Trump campaign.

As I entered the hall in the basement of St. James, several things struck me at once. The attendance was much higher than for any NAACP gathering I had attended in years.  Perhaps 200 people were there, including a number of whites. I thought of this as a positive. Civil rights is not the responsibility only of black and brown people.

The overriding sensation I picked up on when entering the room was one of tension. One of the challenges of public meetings is their tendency to become platforms for the expression of raw emotions. Open wounds are on display, and it can be hard even for skilled facilitators to maintain order. This is especially true in the black community.

It’s a difficult thing for many outsiders to appreciate how devastating America’s racial caste system has been on millions of human beings. The United States has never honestly embraced its fundamentally unfair treatment of its black citizens, continually finds ways to perpetuate that unfairness, and in fact blames the victims of that mistreatment, so a town hall meeting called to discuss the resulting discomfort is almost sure to tilt towards bringing out those who are most wounded. More heat than light gets generated and even a late arrival could feel that disorder immediately upon entering the room.

Despite the challenges, continuing to provide a forum to address important issues is a role that the local NAACP should be encouraged to continue. Mike Nelson said later in the week that the branch would be making some changes aimed at minimizing the disruption caused by the unruly few.


Cuyahoga County Progressive Caucus
A couple of nights later I found myself in the tiny village of Newburgh Heights, where just over 2,000 of the county’s roughly 1.1 million residents live closely packed into a community sitting just south of Cleveland. Newburgh’s mayor is a self-declared progressive who is quite proud that his burg provides extended family leave for all its public employees. Last Thursday, its village hall was home to a gathering of the Cuyahoga County Progressive Caucus, a group of citizen activists formed in the wake of the presidential campaign, and initially assembled by a core of Bernie Sanders followers.

The meeting was planned as a sort of TEDx seminar, with a series of speakers each having 15 minutes to address a critical public issue. A Lakewood teacher talked impressively about the conservative assault on public education; despite his apparent sympathy for our current president, he called Obama most anti-public education president in American history, a label the president will likely deserve until at least day for 47 of the incoming administration.



Tish O'Dell, Community
Environmental Legal Defense Fund

Tish O’Dell of Broadview Heights, representing the Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund, decried the increasing corporatization of America and warned the Dakota Pipeline conflict would soon find its counterpart in Ohio. There were also speakers who addressed the fight to increase Cleveland’s minimum wage to $15/hour; restoring the federal Glass Steagall Act [New Deal legislation that kept bankers focused on banking and prevented their dalliance in the kinds of speculative finance that caused the 2008 mortgage meltdown]; and climate change.
CuyCo Progressive Caucus
meeting, Dec. 1, 2016

But truth to tell, what drew me to the Newburgh boondocks that night was the fact that one of the speakers was a representative of Black Lives Matter, Cleveland. As I waited for his turn, my curiosity was heightened as I surveyed the audience: it was 90% white, its members phenotypically and sartorially indistinguishable from a Trump campaign rally audience.

Kareem Hinton
Black Lives Matter, Cleveland
The BLM representative was Kareem Henton. I didn’t know him but I had seen him at a number of social justice events over the past year. Speaking in a low-key, direct, logical, non-threatening manner, Henton said BLM was not connected to partisan politics or politicians or anybody’s old guard and that they did not feel obliged to play by the long-established rules of political engagement that marginalized their concerns. He said that BLM Cleveland would focus in 2017 on seeking small victories, specifically citing Cleveland city council races.

Henton undoubtedly surprised many in the audience when he said, “We are not of the mindset that all Trump voters are racist.” He said he thought that for many of them concerns about personal finance had submerged all other issues, and driven them to vote for Trump.

More surprising to this observer than that observation was the response of his listeners. They wanted to know, “how can we best support you?” and “how can we be your allies?”

Henton encouraged caucus members to be visible in their support, stressing that visible white support grossly reduced the ability of BLM critics to marginalize their protests and initiatives.

“One of the most important things a person can do is show up. All are welcome.” Your presence “defies the image” that BLM is a racist one-issue fringe group and “gives us legitimacy” because “we can’t be relegated.” And in this modern age, he urged people to follow BLM Cleveland on Facebook.
• • •
Looking forward
Two local nonprofits with notable pedigrees are holding their annual meetings this week, unfortunately at the same time. This Thursday at 5:30p, the United Black Fund will meet in the new Veale Center on the campus of Case Western Reserve University. UBF provides funds to nearly one hundred area nonprofits each year. Founded in 1981, it was an outgrowth of Blacks Organized for Social Service [B.O.S.S.], an effort founded by George White, who later became the presiding judge of US District Court for Northern Ohio; attorney and quiet philanthropist Roosevelt Cox; and the Rev. Thomas Chapman of Avon Baptist Church in Mt. Pleasant.

Rev. Dr. Stephen Rowan, pastor of Bethany Baptist Church and chairman of the Cleveland Foundation, will be the keynote speaker.

• • •

Starting just 30 minutes earlier is the annual meeting of the Phillis Wheatley Association, established by the remarkable Jane Edna Hunter in 1911 as the Home for Colored Working Girls.  Phillis Wheatley was once the center of civic and cultural life for aspiring black Clevelanders. Hundreds of Greater Clevelanders have attended its Camp Mueller, which at one time occupied more than 200 pristine acres in Cuyahoga Valley National Park.

PWA’s meeting will take place at its landmark Midtown headquarters, located at 4450 Cedar Ave.

Faith and Finance Also Noteworthy
Also on tap this week is the Christian Business League’s quarterly Faith and Finance Breakfast. This Friday’s program will feature Darrell McNair, CEO of MVP Plastics. McNair is the public-spirited businessman who recently purchased the headquarters building of the Urban League of Greater Cleveland and leased it back to them, thereby greatly easing the financial burden the building had become for the League.

The breakfast costs $15, runs from 7:30am to 8:59am, and will take place at Mt. Zion Congregational Church, 10723 Magnolia Dr. in University Circle.

 Also Noteworthy
 The City of East Cleveland could serve as poster child for our observation above regarding the devasting consequences of America's racial caste system. Once again, the insolvent city is spending money to recall its political leadership. Mayor Gary Norton is the target this time. We'll post the results here; they should be available by no later than 9pm tonight.

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