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Stockton NAACP Presents Freedom Fighter Awards

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The Stockton Branch NAACP will be inducting longtime community activist Warren Gaines on Saturday, Nov. 23 into the NAACP Freedom Fund Hall of Fame as well as honoring excellence in serving the community with the Annual Freedom Fighter Awards for Community and Corporate partners.

Local leaders will be honored at 6 p.m. at a reception and dinner in their honor at the Brookside Golf & Country Club, 3603 St Andrews Drive in Stockton. The even will feature a live auction, raffle prizes, and dancing. Community Awards recipients include Stockton City Council and Community Activist Elbert Holman, Geraldine Edwards Hollis, Jose Rodriquez, Constance Smith, and Judge William Murray.

This year’s keynote speaker will be Orage Quarles III, publisher of the North Carolina News and Observer. Quarles was formally publisher of the Stockton Record. The honorary co-chairs of the event are Dr. and Mrs. Moses Elam.

Tickets are $100 per person. This is a Black Tie formal affair.

FREEDOM FIGHTER AWARDEES

Elbert Holman, Jr.Holman

A native of Stockton, CA, Elbert Holman, Jr. attended Cal Poly State University and the University of the Pacific. For 20 years he worked for the San Joaquin County Sheriff Department and in 1988 was recognized as one of the “Top Blacks in Law Enforcement” by the National Blacks in Law Enforcement Organization.

In 1991, he transferred to the District Attorney Office Investigations unit, becoming the first African American to work in that division of law enforcement. He worked up the ranks and in 2000 District Attorney John Philips promoted Holman to Chief Investigator of the District Attorney’s Investigations Division. Holman became the first African American to hold the position.

Holman was elected to San Joaquin County’s Board of Supervisor’s in 2010; he currently is serving his third term.

CONSTANCE SMITHLinks

Constance Smith is the Western Area Director of The Links, Incorporated and oversees 2000 members in 56 chapters from ten western states including California, Alaska, Hawaii, Nevada.

A native of St. Louis, Missouri, Smith has been a Stockton resident since 1970. She joined the Stockton Chapter of Links, Inc. in 1973 and has served twice as the chapter president.

Smith holds Master’s Degree in Education from Cal State Sacramento and is a certified mental heath and chemical dependency clinician. She is a retired San Joaquin Delta College educator and an adjunct Professor at Delta College and Cal State University, Stanislaus. She holds life Memberships in Girl Scouts of America and the NAACP.

“I am indeed honored to receive this award but service is something that becomes very natural to me. I give because I truly recognize that I’ve been blessed,” said Smith.

She says she truly believes that, “It’s not what you gather that counts, but how much you scatter.

MurrayJustice William Murray

A graduate of George Washington University Law School in 1982, William J. Murray, Jr. served as a prosecutor in Brooklyn, New York from 1982 – 1986 and the Office of the San Joaquin County District Attorney from 1986 -1995.

In 1995, he was appointed as a judge in San Joaquin County’s Superior Court, where he served for fifteen years. While a judge in San Joaquin County, he co-authored two programs which were recognized by the California Judicial Council and given the with the prestigious Ralph N. Kleps Award for innovative court programming. He was later appointed to serve on the California Judicial Council, the constitutional governing body for California’s courts.

Justice Murray was appointed to the Court of Appeal, 3rd District, in 2010. He currently serves as the chairperson of the 3rd District’s Outreach Committee for the Court of Appeal.

A member of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity Incorporated, he participated in the fraternity’s Bear Creek Mentoring program. He is also active in the Beyond Incarceration programs, Youth Leadership academy, and does outreach in Stockton and Sacramento schools.

“I’m extremely honored to receive the award. I do the things for which I have been honored, not for the honor but because it’s my perception that’s what I’ve been put on this earth to do,”

Geraldine Hollis Hollins

Geraldine Hollis has committed her life to advocacy and change. A native of Mississippi, she received her B.S. in Health and Physical Education with minors in Mathematics and Biological Sciences from, Tougaloo College in Tougaloo, Mississippi.

Hollis was apart of the historical “Tougaloo Nine” – a group of nine students to stage the first public sit-ins of public institutions in Mississippi in 1961. The demonstration helped spark the civil rights movement in Jackson, Mississippi.

She wrote the memoir “Back to Mississippi” and in 2012 Hollis and her book was inducted into the Mississippi State Department of Archives and History

Hollis worked as a teacher, counselor, and consultant in the Oakland Unified School District for 33 years before retiring. She lives in Stockton and is a member of Mount Pleasant Missionary Baptist Church. She is a proud wife, mother, and grandmother.

“…I’m actually elated, to be awarded this prestigious recognition. My civil rights experiences were all about the community and making things better for everyone,” Hollis said.

rodriguezJose Rodriguez

Jose R. Rodriguez has been the President and Chief Executive Officer of the Council for the Spanish Speaking more commonly known as El Concilio since 1996. Mr. Rodriguez is a graduate of the University of the Pacific and Humphreys School of Law.

Under his direction El Concilio has increased programs and expanded services, increasing the agency budget from $1.2 million dollars to $8 million dollars per year to become the largest Latino community based organization in the Central Valley.

“I am grateful to the San Joaquin County chapter of NAACP the nation oldest civil rights organization for this award,” said Rodriguez. “I have always considered the NAACP as the conscience of this country when it comes to fighting for justice and equality, this award from an organization that I have always held in high esteem is really humbling.”

El Concilio has been recognized by Hispanic Business Magazine as one of the top 25 non-profits serving the Latino Community in the United States. Through his leadership El Concilio has won local, state and national recognition for the services the organization provides to the communities of the Central Valley.

A community activist for many years Mr. Rodriguez has served on numerous board and committees such as the Mayor’s Task Force for Racial Harmony and Justice, Stockton Unified School District Measure C Citizen Oversight, and the National Council of La Raza Affiliate Council Member.

 

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San Francisco Is Investing Millions to Address Food Insecurity. Is Oakland Doing the Same?

There are over 350 grocery programs across San Francisco. Less than a handful in District 10, a neighborhood classified as a food desert, and includes Hunters Point, one of the lowest income areas in the city.

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The San Francisco District 10 Community Market is a fully government funded free grocery store for families in need of food assistance. The market is located in Hunters Point, one of the lowest income areas in the city. Photo by Magaly Muñoz.
The San Francisco District 10 Community Market is a fully government funded free grocery store for families in need of food assistance. The market is located in Hunters Point, one of the lowest income areas in the city. Photo by Magaly Muñoz.

By Magaly Muñoz

On a Thursday evening in February, Marquez Boyd walked along the aisles of San Francisco’s District 10 Community Market looking for eggs and fresh produce to take home to his children. He has been trying new recipes with ingredients he previously couldn’t afford or access.

“I learned how to cook greens since they got a lot of fresh greens here,” Boyd said. “All that stuff is better and more healthy for my kids because they’re still young.”

Meals filled with fresh produce are now possible for Boyd since the District 10 market in Hunters Point opened in 2024 when Bayview Senior Services, a non-profit running the program, received a $5 million investment from the city of San Francisco.

The market is a twist on a traditional food bank, where people can often wait in long lines for pre-bagged groceries they may not need. Here, the goal is to offer people in need a more traditional grocery store setting, with a bigger range of healthy options and less shame for needing assistance.

It’s a twist that Boyd appreciated. “This set up is way better as opposed to maybe like a food bank line,” he said. “It’s easier and faster.”

Similar models exist in Santa Barbara and Tennessee.

There are over 350 grocery programs across San Francisco. Less than a handful in District 10, a neighborhood classified as a food desert, and includes Hunters Point, one of the lowest income areas in the city.

Census Bureau data show that the median income for households in the 94124 zip code, where Hunters Point is located, is just under $83,000 annually. Black households earn about $46,000, Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islanders earn almost $41,000, and Hispanic households make just above the median income- an average of $86,000.

Located at 5030 3rd Street, the aisles are lined with fresh produce, canned goods, bread and snacks. While refrigerators and freezers in the back of the market are filled with dairy products and meat.

The best part- everything inside is free for eligible customers.

The San Francisco District 10 Community Market is stocked with fresh produce, dairy, meat and chicken, bread, and cultural food staples. Directors of the market say they pride themselves on providing healthy options for community members. Photo by Magaly Muñoz.

The San Francisco District 10 Community Market is stocked with fresh produce, dairy, meat and chicken, bread, and cultural food staples. Directors of the market say they pride themselves on providing healthy options for community members. Photo by Magaly Muñoz.

“The interesting thing about this market is that it’s a city-funded effort to create something besides the average food line to give more dignity and choice than is normally given to low-income people,” said Cathy Davis, executive director of Bayview Senior Services.

Davis said people feel more comfortable coming into the market because they can choose the food they want and at a time that’s convenient for them.

Boyd, a single father of two kids, recently lost his job and relied on his sister’s generosity before discovering the market. He comes to market when he gets off of work in the evening.

“It’s a lot of people in these communities that don’t get a chance to eat healthy,” Boyd said. “They don’t have the money to go to grocery stores to buy expensive stuff.”

Another shopper, Rhonda Hudson, said the market helped her meet her grandson’s diet-related health problems. She used to travel outside the neighborhood for affordable groceries, but now she no longer has to.

According to the city’s Human Services Agency, there are no plans to expand the markets in San Francisco due to budget constraints.

But Davis isn’t worried about losing the market funding.

“City leaders were on board with creating it and finding the money to put it together so I would say we didn’t have to advocate because it came through the government. Now it’s our job to keep it going to prove that it’s a pilot worth maintaining,” Davis said.

District 10 Supervisor Shamann Walton, who co-sponsored the ordinance, said that projects like the market are “essential to our neighborhoods,” where access to affordable food has been a challenge.

“Investing in local community markets helps ensure that families have reliable, healthy food options close to home, addressing food insecurity and supporting the well-being of our community regardless of income,” Walton said.

Rhonda Hudson is a shopper of the District 10 Community Market in San Francisco. The fresh produce she gets at the free grocery store program helps her grandson, who has a diet-related illness, stay healthy. Photo by Magaly Muñoz.

Rhonda Hudson is a shopper of the District 10 Community Market in San Francisco. The fresh produce she gets at the free grocery store program helps her grandson, who has a diet-related illness, stay healthy. Photo by Magaly Muñoz.

Why Not Oakland?

Only slightly larger than San Francisco, Oakland has over 400 food distribution sites. Oakland provides grants to nonprofit-run organizations who run grocery programs. But in recent months, the city has begun to reduce those, forcing some organizations to regroup, and making it challenging to implement a community market similar to San Francisco’s.

The Oakland Post repeatedly reached out to city and county officials for comment on the story but did not receive a response.

At several food banks across West and East Oakland, residents shared their frustrations about long lines, wilting produce, and limited food choices.

At one food bank, located at Christian Tabernacle Church, a young mother, who requested anonymity for privacy reasons, waited in the rain for over three hours for a single bag of groceries.

“I like to get here early because I get better [quality] fruits and vegetables,” she said. She added that it’s not a lot of food that she receives for her family, but it helps close the gap when her budget is tight.

Behind her, several other women waited their turn. Neither the timing of the distribution nor the location of the food bank fit their schedules, the women said, but their choices feel limited.

Only a handful of Oakland food bank sites operate throughout the day, like the San Francisco market. Most food distribution programs are sustained by Alameda County Food Bank, not by city funding. Private grants and donations also help fund the programs.

Securing city funding is increasingly challenging. Oakland faces a $130 million budget shortfall, with a projected $280 million deficit in the next biennial cycle. Citing budget concerns, the city has reduced numerous department budgets and grants. One of those cuts included slashing the longstanding SOS Meals on Wheels grant, which helped provide food to 3,000 seniors.

Charlie Deterline, executive director of Meals on Wheels, said the termination of their $150,000 annual grant could mean that Oakland residents might see a change in the amount of meals they receive. The organization has gone 19 months without funding from that grant, Deterline said, but “continued working on good faith from the city” because they were assured they would be paid out. Now, Deterline is having doubts.

The program also received a grant of more than $125,000 from the Sugar Sweetened Beverage Tax. Yet, on June 12, the city informed grant recipients that the funding could be rescinded in order to balance the budget. That ultimately happened, said Deterline.

“Oakland is by far the most expensive city for us to operate in. It is also where the greatest need is – for us to meet that need, it will take the entire community coming together,” Deterline said.

From the sugar tax, money from that measure is also not being allocated correctly as the majority of the funding has been used to fund government services, said members of the SSB tax advisory board.

The tax generates around $7 million annually. 25% to 40% of the funding goes towards grants for community based organizations instead of the 60% allocation that the SSBT advisory board recommended the city to use for health programs. The rest of the funding goes to the city, according to Oakland’s mid-cycle budget.

Advisory board member Dwayne Aikens said he’s not sure Oakland will ever renew the grants that have been cut from this tax. “I’m looking at the conditions of the city and I’m not optimistic,” Aikens said. “If they don’t have the money now, I don’t think they’ll have the money in the future.”

Aikens said the tax was “kind of a waste.” He’s heard displeasure from the community about the lack of funding into Black and Brown neighborhoods, groups who typically live in areas of Oakland that see health and income disparities.

Meanwhile, the Community Market, which reflects the diversity of the Bayview Hunters Point community, is investing in over 800 of the city’s most vulnerable households. In-store staff and directors speak the languages common to the area and the program provides a culture-of-the week selection of foods for those interested in trying something new.

Davis said it’s up to local municipalities to ensure that residents don’t go to bed hungry, and investments need to be made in order to combat the pockets of neighborhoods who are on the brink of food insecurity.

“That’s just such a core responsibility and a core goal of everyone, to make sure that people are fed and healthy. It’s not a luxury item,” Davis said. “It’s something that needs to happen, whether we’re in a budget crisis or not.”

Reporter Magaly Muñoz produced this story as part of a series as a 2024 USC Annenberg Center for Health Journalism Data Fellow and Engagement Grantee.

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Oakland Post: Week of March 12 – 18, 2025

The printed Weekly Edition of the Oakland Post: Week of March 12 – 18, 2025

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#NNPA BlackPress

Fighting to Keep Blackness

BlackPressUSA NEWSWIRE — Trump supporters have introduced another bill to take down the bright yellow letters of Black Lives Matter Plaza in Washington, D.C., in exchange for the name Liberty Plaza. D.C.

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By April Ryan

As this nation observes the 60th anniversary of Bloody Sunday in Selma, Alabama, the words of President Trump reverberate. “This country will be WOKE no longer”, an emboldened Trump offered during his speech to a joint session of Congress Tuesday night. Since then, Alabama Congresswoman Terri Sewell posted on the social media platform formerly known as Twitter this morning that “Elon Musk and his DOGE bros have ordered GSA to sell off the site of the historic Freedom Riders Museum in Montgomery.” Her post of little words went on to say, “This is outrageous and we will not let it stand! I am demanding an immediate reversal. Our civil rights history is not for sale!” DOGE trying to sell Freedom Rider Museum

Also, in the news today, the Associated Press is reporting they have a file of names and descriptions of more than 26,000 military images flagged for removal because of connections to women, minorities, culture, or DEI. In more attempts to downplay Blackness, a word that is interchanged with woke, Trump supporters have introduced another bill to take down the bright yellow letters of Black Lives Matter Plaza in Washington, D.C., in exchange for the name Liberty Plaza. D.C. Mayor Morial Bowser is allowing the name change to keep millions of federal dollars flowing there. Black Lives Matter Plaza was named in 2020 after a tense exchange between President Trump and George Floyd protesters in front of the White House. There are more reports about cuts to equity initiatives that impact HBCU students. Programs that recruited top HBCU students into the military and the pipeline for Department of Defense contracts have been canceled.

Meanwhile, Democrats are pushing back against this second-term Trump administration’s anti-DEI and Anti-woke message. In the wake of the 60th anniversary of Bloody Sunday in Selma, several Congressional Black Caucus leaders are reintroducing the Voting Rights Act. South Carolina Democratic Congressman James Clyburn and Alabama Congresswoman Terry Sewell are sponsoring H.R. 14, the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act. Six decades ago, Lewis was hit with a billy club by police as he marched for the right to vote for African Americans. The right for Black people to vote became law with the 1965 Voting Rights Act that has since been gutted, leaving the nation to vote without the full protections of the Voting Rights Act. Reflecting on the late Congressman Lewis, March 1, 2020, a few months before his death, Lewis said, “We need more than ever in these times many more someones to make good trouble- to make their own dent in the wall of injustice.”

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