A passionate ‘genius’

" There is a sense that there is a 'rapeability' factor that comes from a product of the United States' long history of anti-Indian and anti-woman policies, which have become part of the fabric of our society."  -- Sarah Deer  Photo courtesy of the John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. Creative Commons license.

“There is a sense that there is a ‘rapeability’ factor that comes from a product of the United States’ long history of anti-Indian and anti-woman policies, which have become part of the fabric of our society.”
— Sarah Deer
Photo courtesy of the John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. Creative Commons license.

Profile: Law professor Sarah Deer – now a MacArthur fellow – is a tireless advocate for Native victims of sexual assault [Published in Minnesota Women’s Press, 10/28/2014]

Volunteering at a rape crisis center in college changed Sarah Deer’s life. She worked with rape victims, heard their stories, accompanied them through trials. The crisis center was “grass-roots, tiny,” Deer says, but its influence was huge. Her work there set her on the road to becoming a lawyer and, this year, winning the prestigious MacArthur Foundation fellowship commonly known as a “genius grant.” Continue reading

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Al Jazeera: US college students face high debt, shattered dreams

I’m writing regularly on Al Jazeera — click here for my latest.

While Germany makes university tuition free, the US allows for-profit colleges to prey on low-income students

October 27, 2014 2:00AM ET

On Oct. 1, Germany’s Lower Saxony became the last German state to make college free to all, including international students. Briefly breaking from a national tradition of free universities, Germany began charging a small amount of tuition in 2006, but that experiment failed. German leaders now say the tuition-based education is unjust and unfairly privileges students from affluent backgrounds. “Tuition fees degrade the educational opportunities for bright young people from low-income families,” Gabriele Heinen-Kljajic, state minister for science in Lower Saxony, told the state parliament in September. … MORE

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Connecting health, equity and transportation

Factors contributing to healthThe increase in the minimum wage is the biggest public health legislation passed in the last legislative session, according to Minnesota health commissioner, Dr. Ed Ehlinger. Moving from lowest twenty percent income level to the second-lowest twenty percent income increases life expectancy by three years. Public health is also closely tied to transportation, said Ehlinger in his keynote address to the October 25 St. Paul Healthy Transportation for All forum. His insights offer a lot of food for thought.  Continue reading

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Subverting Obamacare — watch out for dirty tricks

© Maxim_Kazmin - Fotolia.com

© Maxim_Kazmin – Fotolia.com

The weekend brought news of two dirty tricks that could cheat people out of the health care coverage they need.

Dirty trick #1: Deceptive dot.com packaging Continue reading

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Ebola and E. Coli

© Jonathan Stutz - Fotolia.com

© Jonathan Stutz – Fotolia.com

Ebola has killed one person in the United States, and two more are infected and being treated. E. coli killed two children in Oregon in September, and at least one more child is in serious condition. The CDC estimates that every year almost 48 million Americans get sick, 128,000 are hospitalized and 3,000 die from food-borne illnesses, including E.coli, salmonella, campylobacter and others.

The U.S. responded to the threat of Ebola by training medical personnel, setting up secure hospital facilities, and screening airline passengers from countries where the disease is epidemic.

The U.S. response to the reality of foodborne illnesses? Continue reading

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Key questions: Choosing your family’s health insurance

© Rob - Fotolia.com

© Rob – Fotolia.com

The package of information came in the mail. It covered just one part of the Medicare plan choices: the Part D prescription drug coverage. It weighed two pounds. Health insurance decisions are weighty questions! Every year, you need to make those decisions. If you do nothing at all, you are choosing to continue with last year’s insurance, even if the premium or coverage has changed. What do you need to know to make a good decision?

Two pounds is a lot of paper, but you don’t need to read that much. The key is figuring out the important questions. Just four questions will give most people all the information they need to make a decision: Continue reading

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Staying poor in America

rich or poor © kikkerdirk - Fotolia

rich or poor © kikkerdirk – Fotolia

Start poor, stay poor — there are exceptions, but that’s pretty much the rule in America. From last week’s depressing news cycle, some insights on how it works —

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#BringBackOurGirls — now?

Today’s news reports claim the Nigerian government and Boko Haram have reached a truce, and that the girls kidnapped six months ago will be returned. I want to believe. I want this to be true. And as much as I want to believe, I know that parents and families of 200+ girls want so immeasurably more for this to be true, for their girls to return. Continue reading

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If you can’t afford health insurance … three ways to get help

© Sherry Young - Fotolia

© Sherry Young – Fotolia

Health insurance costs a lot — family coverage costs more than $1300 per month. Most people can’t afford that. In other countries, the government provides health insurance. Not here. So what can you do to get help paying for health insurance? Continue reading

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Cheating schools, students and taxpayers

© nikkytok - Fotolia.com

© nikkytok – Fotolia.com

What’s next after Minneapolis Public Schools terminated its $375,000 contract with Community Standards Initiative? The Star Tribune’s Alejandra Matos reported in detail on the story back in September, and nothing has happened since then to make MPS or CSI look any better.CSI, led by Clarence Hightower and Al Flowers, still has the first $46,000 payment — so the taxpayers are out that money. Going back a few years and looking at other contracts makes MPS look event worse.

In an open letter, a new group named Black Advocates for Education last week asked “how many other similar contracts have been approved over the last several years behind closed doors and without a transparent process.”

Quite a few, would be my guess.

Donald Allen has been charging for years that MPS gave the Urban League and Front Street Marketing a sweetheart deal in 2008. That $103,000 contract awarded while Clarence Hightower was president of the Minneapolis Urban League. That contract also didn’t turn out so well.

Allen knows about sweetheart deals, because MPS awarded him a no-bid contract in 2011, which was another fiasco.

I know how difficult MPS made it to get any information on their contracts back in 2011, because I was the editor for Sheila Regan’s 2011 series in the Daily Planet. Perhaps in response to the criticism back then, MPS rolled out a new contract policy — which provided for less oversight and less transparency, making it even harder to track who was getting contracts. Here’s how Regan described it:

Under the new system, as described by [Chief of Policy and Operations Steve] Liss, the school board is only responsible for approving contracts over $100,000, or building contracts for over $500,000. Previously, they needed to approve contracts over $5,000. These were typically included in each month’s consent agenda, which the district staff presents to the board for approval without discussion.

Under the new system, the managers of the various departments will be responsible for seeking RFPs for any contract over $50,000.

It’s possible that the policies have changed since 2011, but shouldn’t a $375,000 contract require an RFP and competitive bidding? Especially when the contractor — Community Standards Initiative — had no track record at all?

As Regan reported back in 2011, contracts are typically put on the consent agenda and approved by the school board without scrutiny or question. The contract approval process is confusing, contradictory and not at all transparent.

Chris Stewart, who was a school board member back in 2011, tried at that time to get some accountability and to block at least one bad contract. Instead, MPS did a sneaky end run and got it approved under another name. It’s all there in the Daily Planet series — Strange bedfellows and Contracts and transparency in Minneapolis Public Schools and Foot-dragging on public information.

Stewart and University of St. Thomas law professor Nekima Levy-Pounds were among the eight people signing the open letter from Black Advocates for Education. They also asked for an investigation of “disturbing allegations about our elected, appointed, and self-appointed leadership in Minneapolis.” That’s got to include the MPS administration, MPS school board, Senators Bobby Joe Champion and Jeff Hayden, as well as Flowers and Hightower.

As the letter points out, there’s an even bigger issue here than adult shenanigans and wasting taxpayer money:

“It is a crying shame that while adults play political games for self-enrichment and to increase their personal influence, Minneapolis students are suffering and their potential is being stifled.”

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