Professional Documents
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9-1-1 Center Receives 6th Accreditation from the Commission for Accreditation of Law Enforcement Agencies
pg 6
Travelers cast wary eye as storm moves eastward pg 5
The RTS Holiday Express will carry shoppers to area malls
local news
world News
pg 5
Urban League of Rochesters Give Thanks for Education 5K Run Deportations to Haiti continue after killings
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NOVEMBER
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LOCAL
Urban League of Rochesters Give Thanks for Education 5K Run
By Delani Weaver The Urban League held its first annual Give Thanks for Education 5K Run/ Walk Saturday morning at Wegmans Lodge in Seneca Park. One hundred and sixty people participated in the event from ages one to over 60 years old. Jamie Beedham-Rada, marketing and fundraising director for the Urban League said, This is the first Urban League 5K run and everything went smoothly. It actually went so well, its something that we will continue to have every year going forward. The race was sponsored by several businesses and organizations including radio station WDKX, Wegmans, Phu Concepts and Fleet Feet Sports. Beedham-Rada said the race promotes the Urban League, health, exercise, and community involvement. He also said the organization needs unrestricted funding for its education programs due to government funding being cut short. Runners showed up at the park to register at 8:30 a.m., were greeted by Urban League staff, and given a t-shirt and a number. Inside the lodge, runners and their families warmed up by the fireplace and spoke with several health vendors and sponsors attending the event. Children attending the event were able to explore the animals and activities from Wegmans Zoo Mobile. We couldve had the event in September or October but didnt want to compete with any other races going on around the city, Beedham-Rada said. But we want to get the Urban League out there in the community more. If you make a good name for yourself throughout the community, people will show up to your events. The race began promptly at 10 a.m. The first runner completed the 5K race in 18 minutes and 18 seconds. Medals were awarded to winners of each age group and the overall male and female winners. Bagels, fruits, donuts and water were provided to everyone attending. Ajamu Kitwana, one of the runners, said, I wanted to support the Urban League. I recently moved here from Boston. Im trying to stay in shape and this was a great way to start doing that here. Its definitely something that I would like to continue participating in. My dad is running in the race, and I wanted to help support too, 11-yearold Darius Johnson said. I run track at Spry Middle School in Webster, and Im really proud of my time in this race. President and chief executive officer of the Urban League, William G. Clark, participated in the race as well. Clark, who has held his position for almost 20 years said, Todays run was a run for our education program. We offer our after school academy that we operate at the Urban League, we are operating inside the schools, and we also host the Black Scholars program. One of the things that we constantly need to do is to raise the funds to make sure that we are able to provide those services to the young people in Rochester. Todays race was a fundraiser we had, for number one, to expose the Urban League to people in the community, and number two, to raise funds. This is our first, and it will be an annual event, and something we will continue in the future.
Photos by Delani Weaver
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LOCAL
9-1-1 Center Receives 6th Accreditation from the Commission for Accreditation of Law Enforcement Agencies
The Emergency Communications Department (ECD), which operates the 9-1-1 Center, has been awarded its sixth Award of Accreditation from the Commission on Accreditation for Law Enforcement Agencies Inc. ECD has maintained CALEAs three-year accreditation period every year since 1998. I want to congratulate director Merklinger and all the men and women of the Emergency Communications Department for once again earning this very rigorous and significant accreditation, said Mayor Richards. Our 9-1-1 Center is a source of pride for our community and we are a national leader when it comes to making sure that when citizens call for help, their message is received and delivered. The accreditation process is designed to assure the public that its 9-1-1 Center is meeting and exceeding 218 recognized standards for public safety. CALEA assessors examined all aspects of the ECDs policies and procedures including administration, operations, training, direction and authority, organization, critical incidents and homeland security. Part of accreditation is to invite an outside organization in to scrutinize the work we perform every day, said ECD Director John M. Merklinger. I am exceedingly proud of the people at the Emergency Communications Department who continually strive to provide internationally-accepted best practices, and to meet or exceed the ever-changing standards set by CALEA as we have for over 15 years. The 9-1-1 Center was the first emergency communications center in New York State to obtain CALEA accreditation. It has also holds accreditations from the National Academy of Emergency Dispatch in Emergency Medical Dispatch and from the New York State Sheriffs Association. Working together with the city of Rochester, we have created a sustainable, collaborative partnership that provides top-quality emergency dispatching services for our communitys first responders, said County Executive Maggie Brooks.
This certification speaks to the professionalism and expertise demonstrated by the team at our citycounty 9-1-1 Center, and the great work these men and women do each and every day.
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statistic during the holiday weekend, he said. Worst comes to worst, it will be an eight-hour trek down Interstate 90. Ninety percent of travelers this week will drive, according to AAA, and an estimated 38.9 million people 1.6 percent fewer than last year are expected to drive 50 miles or more from their home. Gas is about 15 cents cheaper than last year, AAA said Monday, with a gallon of regular selling for $3.28. The car-lobbying group and travel agency says Wednesday will be the busiest travel day, a forecast based on a formula that factors in consumer confidence, stock market performance, unemployment and a survey of 418 people that has a 6 percent margin of error. Air travel will be busier and more expensive than usual this Thanksgiving.
This holiday will likely see the most air travelers since 2007, according to Airlines for America, the industrys trade and lobbying group, with the busiest day being Sunday, an estimated 2.56 million passengers. Wednesday is expected to be the second-busiest with 2.42 million passengers. The average domestic airfare is up 9.5 percent from last Thanksgiving to $313, according to the Airlines Reporting Corp., which processes tickets sold online and by traditional travel agencies. Meanwhile, Amtrak prices in September the most recent month for which data is available were up more than 4 percent from last year. Adding to the usual stress of holiday travel, though, is the weather thats ahead for much of the country. Already, the storm system dropped several inches of snow last week in
New Mexico, Arizona, Oklahoma and West Texas. Rick Farquer, manager of Oasis Truck Stop in the Texas Panhandle town of Canadian, said traffic was moving slowly but that roads had largely cleared. Parts of the Panhandle saw snow and freezing rain over the weekend, and temperatures were in the 20s on Monday morning. Its something you dont like to see but you have to live with it, Farquer said. In Dallas, temperatures edged above freezing on Monday, but rain kept the roads treacherous and slick. The storm system left nearly 44,000 homes and businesses without power, most of them in Dallas-Fort Worth, though people in the West Texas cities of Midland and Odessa could be without electricity for a couple of days.
PUZZLES
Across 1 Wood cutters 5 60 Minutes network 8 __ Robinson Simon song 11 Glow, in a way 12 Quaint dance 13 Saturate 14 Spanish for house 15 Earlier 16 Small rabbit 17 Book keeper 19 Stringed toy 21 Big fuss 23 60s fashions, for example 26 Mint family member 30 Good looker 31 Its a wrap 32 BYOB part 34 __ now brown cow! 36 Auspices 39 Spy novelist, John (2 words) 42 Wheeled transporter 44 Roll of dough 45 Rhone river city 47 Sacred song 51 What ___ can I say? 54 Outfit 56 Hodgepodge 57 Four quarters 58 Direction 59 Civil Rights heroine, Parks 60 Oval shaped item 61 Shepherds locale 62 Lick
Down 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 13 18 20 22 24 25 26 27 28 29 33 35 37 38 40 41 43 46 judges 48 49 50 51 52 53 55
Instants Female servant in India Knowing Prison camp in Russia Dance, when doubled Unidentified aircraft Animal trail Farm noise Governed Vanilla ___ movie Party Down star, Adam Govt. agency Agreement word Kim follower? European coal area Stench Joan __ Arcadia Felt sorry about Thus in Latin Night bird Fresh, in terms of paint __ , the people River in Bavaria Elusive Limit Collect on a surface Country guy Number of Supreme Court Cream additive A Simpson Water barrier Evaluating quality Shake a ___! Hang Leaves in a bag
Test again at
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OPINION/EDITORIAL
policy goal was to get unemployment down to 4 percent. Arthur Okun, a CEA senior economist at the time, understood the cost of unemployment in terms of lost output. His rule: A 1 percent increase in unemployment costs, 2 percent in lowered output. This was an era when full employment was considered important. We began this year with the Congressional Budget Office estimating the size of our lost output from unemployment at close to $1 trillion-larger than our current fiscal deficit. If our economy was that much bigger, we would be receiving a lot more in tax revenue, and spending far less on unemployment insurance (UI) and Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) support, so the fiscal deficit would be a lot smaller. But this month, people receiving SNAP assistance saw benefit cuts, just in time for Thanksgiving; and, some will face Christmas with the threat their unemployment benefits will end Dec. 31. This misguided attempt to balance the budget by reducing customers for grocery stores can only make unemployment worse, moving us further from balancing the budget. Five years after Lehman Brothers collapsed, the high-flying financial sectors effect on Main Street, Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard and Csar Chvez Way remains. Our policy gridlock protecting demand while unemployment stays stuck above 7 percentage points to the need for a new set of policies that can avoid politics. Policies like UI came from the lessons of the Great Depression. This downturn shows holes in what we are protecting. The demands for public services dont fall because local revenues collapse. We still need good schools and police officers on the beat. Yet we have hundreds of thousands of fewer teachers and police officers. If we want to avoid fights over how to pay for these things in downturns, we must come to new realizations. We cannot privatize the benefits of economic risktaking without also creating policies that mitigate the costs of economic failures; so if financial gambling can boost our investment and growth, a financial transactions tax must cover the costs of economic collapse. We must have automatic programs funded from that tax to keep our schools performing, our streets safe and people employed. Would a government of the people, by the people and for the people put so little emphasis on employment and so high an emphasis on the tax rates of the top 1 percent?
Many want to treat that tragedy as Americas loss of innocence, but innocence was already lost. Earlier that year, Medgar Evers, a World War II veteran, was assassinated for his work on voters rights in Mississippi. And that fall, four young girls were murdered by a bomb set off during Sunday services at the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Ala. The Pew Research Center says in 1963, 69 percent of Americans were aware of the march and 63 percent of them thought poorly of it. Kennedys approval rating dropped from 70 percent in February to 59 percent in October, in large part because of his June speech introducing a Civil Rights Act. This summer, the AFL-CIO hosted a March for Jobs and Freedom symposium to discuss and assess where we are today. My contribution to that was released this week by the Economic Policy Institute. In August 1963, the unemployment rate was 5.7 percent. It has been more than five years since America had an unemployment rate that low. Recalling our selective memory problem for 1963, I wondered how the 5.7 percent rate created such a huge demand for jobs and addressing unemployment. Our policy frame shifted to tilt our sense of the possible. Kennedys Council of Economic Advisers (CEAs)
James clIngman
American Dream.
On Nov. 22, we noted two historic events. One is the 1863 dedication of the Gettysburg National Cemetery 150 years ago by President Abraham Lincoln, during which he also gave a new vision for America. Lincolns address clearly incorporated slaves into the American Dream by citing Americas founding documents proclaiming all men are created equal, and therefore government of the people, by the people and for the people could not be reconciled with slavery. Dr. King highlighted those same words as a promise America makes to its citizens. A promise, he said, that was broken to African Americans. They both spoke of failures in democracy. We also note the tragedy of President John F. Kennedys assassination 50 years ago. His death gives us a moment to reflect on our selective memory.
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OPINION/EDITORIAL
injured no one has been in prison 3 years, had her case overturned by a Court of Appeals, and is still in prison! Suffering in their grief for the unjust killing of their sons are the mothers of Trayvon Martin and Jordan Davis. Sabrina Fulton has had to watch the psychotic bully who killed her son escape punishment and, then, proceed to flaunt his perceived invincibility while violating laws and abusing others. Jordan Davis mom, Lucy McBath, has not yet seen the murderer of her son have his day in court. Sadly, no outcome will return their sons to them. Some acts in this war are so egregious that even mainstream media criticize them! Oriana Farrell in New Mexico fled to escape the fury of the police, yet for a simple traffic stop, fell victim to officers threatening her family, savagely breaking out her car window and firing shots at her car endangering her children. Since airing the dash-cam video, all law enforcement consultants have criticized the impropriety of this act. Ive not seen the lives of a white mother and her children endangered in such a callous manner. In DC, without the benefit of due process, JC Hayward was denied an opportunity to practice her craft by WUSA-9. Instead of being able to demonstrate her expertise developed in a distinguished 40+year TV career, WUSA-9 has allowed rumor and innuendo to serve as the basis for her absence from the airwaves. Black women come out strongly in favor of our partys candidates every election, but others get credit for the victories--with a rare mention that it was the strong support of Black women who help candidates cross the finish line. What do we have to do to end this war and receive justice? We must never give upnever stop fighting until victory is finally won. ---------------------(Dr. E. Faye Williams is Chair of the National Congress of Black Women, Inc. 202/678-6788. www. nationalcongressbw.org)
e. Faye wIllIams
Weve heard a great deal about the War on Women. This conflict features government intrusion in the affairs of women and their doctors, such as legislated invasive medical procedures, pay-inequality and a host of other inequalities that tilt the scales of fairness against women. The facts of this war are irrefutable. I dont minimize the impact of this violent campaign on my white sisters, but think of how much greater the impact of this war has on Black women. Too often, despite our best efforts, the good we do goes unrecognized, and the negative things we experience from society are often trivialized. We are rarely seen as the victims of
WORLD
Deportations to Haiti continue after killings
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) More than 100 additional people have been deported to Haiti from neighboring Dominican Republic after an elderly Dominican couple was killed, a spokesman for a Haitian migrant advocacy group said Monday. The number of Haitians and people of Haitian descent whove been expelled has reached 354, said Josue Michel, a spokesman for the Group for Repatriates and Refugees. Authorities had reported at least 244 people expelled as of Sunday. The expulsions follow violence that engulfed the town of Neiba in the southwestern corner of the Dominican Republic. The couple was slain last week during an apparent burglary near the border between the two countries and a Dominican mob retaliated by killing a Haitian man. Migrant advocates say many of the deported people went to a police station seeking refuge, and that some of them volunteered to leave the country because they feared being victims of mob violence. Others left because the Dominican authorities rounded them up in the streets, migrant advocates added. Dominican police issued a statement saying the people werent expelled from the country, but rather went to the police station because they feared reprisals and asked authorities to escort them to the border so they could cross it themselves. There have been no additional reports of people being killed in Neiba. Haiti and the Dominican Republic have had a long and volatile relationship as neighbors on the Caribbean island of Hispaniola. The Dominican Republic was among the first countries to respond after the devastating 2010 earthquake in the Haitian capital, and has helped with reconstruction by securing contracts on major infrastructure projects since then. But relations between the two have soured since September when a Dominican court threatened to revoke citizenship for residents of the Dominican Republic of Haitian descent, which could affect 200,000 people. The Dominican government announced last week that it has developed a plan to resolve the legal status of people who could lose their citizenship because of the ruling.
Details are to be released once a decree is signed and takes effect in the coming days. Caribbean leaders will hold a special emergency meeting in Trinidad on Tuesday to discuss the Dominican court ruling and issue a response to the move. St. Vincent and the Grenadines
Prime Minister Ralph Gonsalves has been an outspoken critic of the ruling and will attend the special session of the Caribbean Community. Haitian President Michel Martelly is also expected to be there.
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Notice of Formation of a Limited Liability Company (LLC) 1. Name of the Limited Liability Company is ADVANCED AIRPORT TRANSPORTATION SERVICES, LLC 2. Articles of Organization were filed with the Department of State of New York on 10/17/2013. 3. County of office: Monroe 4. The Company does not have a specific date of dissolution. 5. The Secretary of State has been designated as agent upon whom process against the Company may be served. The address to which process shall be mailed: 131 CAVE HOLLOW DRIVE, WEST HENRIETTA, NEW YORK, 14586.
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Notice of Formation of a Limited Liability Company (LLC) 1. Name of the Limited Liability Company is PARK AVENUE TAXI, LLC. 2. Articles of Organization were filed with the Department of State of New York on 10/10/2013. 3. County of office: Monroe 4. The Company does not have a specific date of dissolution. 5. The Secretary of State has been designated as agent upon whom process against the Company may be served. The address to which process shall be mailed: 504 HUMBOLDT ST, Rochester, NY 14610.
has some real competition if she ever sets foot on the stage! Tierras singing has earned her star status among her peers. She has made some wonderful life choices, taken a few missteps (as we all do), and has been misled by those she trusted most. Unlike a reality talent show, Tierra is hoping to discover the family who has what it takes to be her leading light. She would benefit from a family who values education, appreciates the arts and is proud of their African-American culture. Families being considered for Tierra should be able to provide her with unconditional love, structure and support. Her forever family will need to provide her with the skills on how to be a part of a family and show her that commitment daily. Tierra has siblings with whom she would like to maintain contact. Photograph by Lori Griffith If youre interested in learning more about Tierra or other waiting children, visit: www.ChildrenAwaitingParents.org or call 585-232-5110.
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