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The Chicago Community Trust Announces New Fellows

PRESS RELEASE Contact: Eva Penar evap@cct.org 312.616.8000 x 161 The Chicago Community Trust Announces New Fellows The Trust Fellowship offers professional development opportunities for both emerging and experienced leaders in the not-for-profit and public sector. January 27, 2009, Chicago – The Chicago Community Trust, metropolitan Chicago’s community foundation, today named eight Trust Fellows – five emerging leaders and three experienced leaders – for 2009. All Fellows were selected for their demonstrated leadership and commitment to their field. The new class of Fellows are leading organizations spanning the not-for-profit sector that include education, housing, science and theater. The Trust Fellowship is a significant investment in the leadership talent for not-for-profit organizations and supports excellence in the sector. The experienced leaders receive up to $60,000 and emerging leaders receive up to $30,000 to fund their professional development plans. The Fellowship is designed to elevate the careers of Chicago leaders and increase their future impact on the Chicago metropolitan area. “At this time in history when Chicago is showcasing its talent and innovation to the world in so many fields, each of these Trust Fellows represents our next generation of not-for-profit leadership,” says Terry Mazany, president and chief executive officer of the Trust. “Each Fellow has enormous talent and potential in his or her field. We are excited to see the leadership that they bring to their field and to the Chicago metropolitan area.” All were selected for their creativity, originality, and potential to make important contributions in the future. The Trust Fellowship offers the opportunity for Fellows to take a leave from work or continue to work while engaging in professional development activities. The Fellowship provides financial resources which can cover current salary and benefits for time off, costs related to academic courses, coaching, learning from other practitioners and other associated expenses. Recipients this year include: • Jaime de Leon is new communities program director for Enlace Chicago, previously known as the Little Village Community Development Corporation. (Emerging) • Juan Dies is executive director of Sones de Mexico Ensemble. (Emerging) • Liz Drapa is associate director for the Corporation for Supportive Housing. (Emerging) • Malik Gillani is co-founder and executive director of Silk Road Theatre Project. (Emerging) • Christian Greer is senior director of education at The John G. Shedd Aquarium. (Experienced) • Gabrielle Lyon is co-founder and executive director of Project Exploration. (Experienced) • Sylvia Puente is director of The Latino Policy Forum. (Experienced) • Sandra Wilkniss is director of the Thresholds Institute, the research and training arm of Thresholds Psychiatric Rehabilitation Centers. (Emerging) “From a large field of applicants from the region, the Trust selected these eight because of their enthusiasm and exuberant energy toward their career and field,” says Maria Bechily, chair of the fellowship selection committee and an executive committee member for the Trust. “Their passion for their job and how it touches the community was evident in the proposals that we received from this new group of Fellows. This new era of leadership will be a tough act to follow.” The Trust Fellowship program, while in its inaugural year, builds on a history of Trust fellowships that have contributed in significant ways to increase the quality and diversity of Chicago’s not-for-profit leaders. The selection process began with an online application process. Nearly 100 applications were received in the summer of 2008. An 11 member selection committee chaired by Maria Bechily met to review proposals, conduct interviews and make the final decision. The next application process will start in late spring of 2009. About The Chicago Community Trust For 93 years, The Chicago Community Trust, the region’s community foundation, has connected the generosity of donors with community needs by making grants to organizations working to improve metropolitan Chicago. In 2008, the Trust, together with its donors, granted more than $100 million to not-for-profit organizations. From strengthening community schools to assisting local art programs, from building health centers to helping lives affected by violence, the Trust continues to enhance our region. To learn more, please visit the Trust online at www.cct.org.
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California's community colleges near the breaking point

Facing yawning budget gaps, California's public universities are shifting thousands of applicants into a community college system already swamped by newly unemployed adults and students priced out of other schools. By holding down enrollment, the shift would help balance budgets at UC and CSU campuses. But officials say the move seems likely to worsen problems at the state's 110 two-year campuses, many of which already face budget shortfalls that have them chopping courses, laying off part-time faculty and cramming classrooms so full that students have to perch on windowsills. READ FULL STORY
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Immigrants: Big Political and Economic Powerhouse

A new study shows immigrants, Latinos and Asians are a political and economic powerhouse in Florida. Research done by the Immigration Policy Center shows that Latinos in Florida bring in over $100 million in consumer purchasing and own 1-in-6 businesses. The study also shows Florida's Immigrant workers pay an estimated annual average of 20 billion dollars in taxes and Asian owned businesses generate roughly $11.2 billion in sales annually. READ FULL STORY
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When it comes to closing the achievement gap, Palo Alto schools Superintendent Kevin Skelly says educators are deluding themselves. And he dares to say what's become almost unspeakable publicly: "It's just not possible for the average kid who comes to this country in seventh or eighth grade, or even third grade, without a word of English and parents with little formal education, to match the achievement levels of kids whose mom has a Ph.D. in English from Stanford and can afford to stay home and spend time supplementing the education of her kids." READ FULL STORY
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Military struggles to recruit Hispanics

The military and Congress want the ranks to roughly mirror the racial and ethnic makeup of America. But the services can’t seem to recruit enough Hispanics — even though that community tends to view the military positively. A new study by the Rand Corp. think tank says that’s because Hispanics, more than other racial and ethnic groups, typically come up short in high school graduation rates, test scores and in meeting military weight standards. READ FULL STORY
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$50,000 grant given to Hispanics United of Buffalo

For the last three years, Lourdes Iglesias has seen scores of clients come through the doors of Hispanics United of Buffalo — all eager to work, most unprepared to do so. The community outreach organization hopes a recent $50,000 grant from the Community Foundation for Greater Buffalo will change that by funding an employment center to fill job preparedness and English language gaps in the Spanish-speaking population. READ FULL STORY
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Sen. Gillibrand meets with Hispanics on immigration

New York's new senator, Kirsten Gillibrand, who has drawn fire from Hispanics over her views on immigration and gun control, says she's willing to listen and perhaps even change her positions on some subjects - but isn't ready to make any commitments. "We need to recognize the heritage that the immigrant community has provided to this country and put policies in place that will reflect that core value," Gillibrand, who recently assumed Hillary Clinton's old Senate seat, said after a two-hour meeting on Sunday with a dozen or so Hispanic members of the state Assembly and the City Council. READ FULL STORY
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Ramsey County commissioners Tuesday deadlocked on a $5.1 million politically and racially charged contract over services to poor families. The issue surrounds the Minnesota Family Investment Program, a welfare-to-work initiative that doles out money — local and federal dollars — to several private agencies charged with shepherding families from public assistance into the work force. The program serves more black residents than any other racial or ethnic group, and the St. Paul Urban League has cried foul because neither it, nor any other black-run group, was recommended for part of the contract intended to target minorities. READ FULL STORY
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GOP Genius--Blocking the Latina?

Hey, elephants, who's in charge of your political strategy these days? Anybody? Yesterday you couldn't find a single vote to join with a popular President to begin digging out of the economic mineshaft your man Bush left us in. Meanwhile, at least one of your geniuses is still blocking a vote on Labor Department nominee Hilda Solis, one of the most talented and impressive Latinas in American politics, supposedly because you didn't like her answers on the Employee Free Choice Act. READ FULL STORY
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In the two decades ending in 2007, the number of white, non-Hispanic K-12 students grew by 6 percent, while the number of Hispanic students soared by 372 percent. Yet Latino students continue to languish near the bottom in the rankings for high-school achievement and college attendance, in a system that often isn't geared to meet their needs. READ FULL STORY
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A new national trade magazine for business owners and vendors in the Hispanic food industry will launch this spring from its base in the Triad. Hispanic Marketing Consultants Inc., based in Winston-Salem, plans to publish 40,000 copies of its first issue of Abasto in May to distribute to Hispanic restaurant and shop owners, food distributors and other vendors. READ FULL STORY
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NAHJ President: Membership Is up, but Number of Hispanics in Newsrooms Is Down Ricardo Pimentel, editorial page editor at the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, has compiled a busy resume during his newspaper career: reporter, metro editor, Washington correspondent, managing editor, executive editor, syndicated columnist, author. In that mix there is one constant: advocate for diversity. READ FULL STORY
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Seat-belt PSA in Spanish irks lawmaker

A Colorado Springs lawmaker is angry about a Colorado Department of Transportation public- service announcement aimed at Spanish-speaking drivers. CDOT is expected today to introduce the PSA, in which the announcer, speaking in Spanish, asks drivers to buckle up. It will be up to television stations, such as Univision, to determine whether and when they run the ad. Transportation department leaders decided to shoot the PSA after statistics showed that almost 60 percent of the 80 Hispanics killed in traffic accidents last year were not wearing seat belts, CDOT spokeswoman Stacy Stegman said. That accounted for a full 23 percent of the unbuckled accident deaths in Colorado, she said. READ FULL STORY
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Hispanics, once among the smallest of Minnesota's minority groups and predicted to remain so for decades, are now expected to become the state's largest minority group within the next 10 years, the state demographer's office said Monday. But with a lot more white folks than what experts were predicting as recently as the mid-1990s, Minnesota will also remain overwhelmingly white through the early part of this century. READ FULL STORY
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A city ban on hiring ex-cons for hospital jobs is unfair to blacks and Hispanics, a city woman claimed in a complaint to the federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. Shanae Leath, who was convicted for her role in a mugging nine years ago, lost her shot at a clerical job at Bellevue Hospital when her record came to light. Leath, 28, said the city Health and Hospitals Corp. ban discriminates. READ FULL STORY
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Evangelical worship attracts Hispanic Catholics

Behind its bland, warehouse-like exterior, Comunidad Cristiana Hosanna on Sunday morning is a feast for the senses. Little girls in white robes and sequined headbands twirl as guitar, keyboard and timbales pound out salsa, merengue and American pop rhythms at rock-concert decibels. The crowd sings along with the robed chorus: "Levanto mis manos" -- "I raise my hands." READ FULL STORY
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A Disappointing Choice

If Governor David Paterson wanted to deliver a slap to immigrant New Yorkers, he effectively did so with his appointment yesterday of Rep. Kirsten Gillibrand. The congresswoman will replace Hillary Rodham Clinton as New York’s junior senator. In Clinton, New York had both a defender of women’s rights and an advocate of humane, sensible immigration reform. But Paterson chose to play politics by selecting an upstate representative who could shore up his support in that region—at the expense of immigrants. READ FULL STORY
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