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Whitmer, AG ask Legislature to OK $2 million to investigate Catholic clergy

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Michigan’s attorney general wants to use the state’s share of a national bank fraud settlement to investigate sexual abuse allegations against Catholic priests.

State Attorney General Dana Nessel says this would be the best use of the money collected from Wells Fargo for misleading and improperly charging fees to customers.

Kelly Rossman-McKinney is Nessel’s communications director.

“Clearly, the investigation into clergy abuse is one of the most important things that we’re working on here,” she says.

Rossman-McKinney says the investigation is statewide and requires a lot of time and resources.

“We have millions of pages of documents to review. We have a number of victims to interview, so there’s quite a bit of work to be done on the investigative side,” she says.

Rossman-McKinney says investigators are already sorting through millions of documents that have been subpoenaed.

“It is a sweeping investigation," she says. "It requires a great deal of time and attention. It’s very labor intensive. And it is a critical piece of work of the attorney general’s office.”

Michigan’s share of a national settlement with Wells Fargo is more than $5 million. Nessel and Governor Gretchen Whitmer are asking the Legislature to approve a little more than $2 million to investigate Catholic clergy. 




Source: https://www.michiganradio.org/post/whitmer-ag-ask-legislature-ok-2-million-investigate-catholic-clergy

How Buffalo Soldiers are making a difference at Detroit's Rouge Park

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First Sergeant James Mills of the Buffalo Soldiers Heritage Association (BSHA) believes in the power of keeping history alive.

"We represent the past," he says, sitting in the wood-paneled office of a century-old Detroit barn that serves as the BSHA headquarters. "History has shorted us as African Americans."

Together with other members of his organization, Sgt. Mills works to reclaim the stories of a group of African-American soldiers, known as the Buffalo Soldiers, who began their service with the U.S. military on the country's western frontier in the years following the Civil War.
James Mills clears a puddle from the BHSA barn.

In 1866, responding to an act of Congress, the U.S. Army formed six regiments composed entirely of black soldiers: the 9th and 10th Cavalry; and the 38th, 39th, 40th, and 41st Infantry Divisions. Many of the original servicemen in these units had formerly been enslaved or had fought in the U.S. Civil War. Buffalo Soldiers regiments served for eight decades, patrolling the border, protecting settlers and working on infrastructure projects, as well as fighting in the Philippine-American and Spanish-American Wars and World Wars I and II.

During their early years, the 10th Cavalry frequently clashed with Native Americans of the Great Plains, including the Cheyenne who gave them the nickname Buffalo Soldiers. Later the term was used to refer to all African-American units. Many of these servicemen were highly decorated; during their early years on the western frontier, 18 of them won Medals of Honor and 12 received Certificates of Merit.

Ultimately, though, all active Buffalo Soldier divisions disbanded during the Korean War era, as a result of President Truman desegregating the U.S. Armed Forces.

"The Buffalo Soldiers had a significant impact on our country without the recognition [of the public]," says Sgt. Mills. "Getting the job done without the recognition, racism thrown on you, but you still achieve at high levels, that's what I learned [of their experiences]."

In 2006 an informal group of horse enthusiasts from around Metro Detroit took over an abandoned stable at Rouge Park and adopted the Buffalo Soldiers mantel, resurrecting these servicemen's overlooked history. Today the Buffalo Soldiers Heritage Center serves as a place where visitors can learn about the story of these military men through lectures and reenactments, tour the stables, and groom and ride horses.

Like a Buffalo Soldier

The idea for what became the Buffalo Soldier Heritage Center actually got kicked off at a horse ranch in Windsor, Canada called the Broken Wheel.

"Everybody used to go over there to ride," says Sgt. Mills.

One day in 2005, the ranch’s owner exclaimed to future founding BSHA member Bob Jarber, "You look like a Buffalo Soldier!" He was covered in dust after a long day of riding.

"It escalated from there," says Mills. "They asked, ‘What’s a Buffalo Soldier?’ No one knew the history."

With his interest piqued, Mr. Jarber started researching the group. Soon an informal group of friends started gathering period-specific weapons, commissioning uniforms, and approaching the city of Detroit about taking over the stables. Through this initiative, The Buffalo Soldier Heritage Association was born.

The late 19th-century barn that houses the association is nestled in a quiet corner of Rouge Park. The facility had housed the Detroit Police Department’s Mounted Unit until its disbanding in 2005. Now it holds eight horses that live there year-round. Two barn cats, the affectionate Ceasar and skittish Bob, are tenants there too. And hawks and blue jays are also regular attractions, as is a family of coyotes frequently visit from the nearby hills.

Inside the barn, photos of the BSHA line the walls. There are pictures with former Mayor Dennis Archer, news clippings of the group, statuaries of the 9th and 10th Cavalry soldiers, and posters celebrating Buffalo Soldiers throughout history. These are just some of the many mementos that cover every inch of the center.

During the group's heyday in the late 2000s, BSHA members were staples of local parades and events. Some traveled to Atlanta, Washington DC, and even accompanied former four-star general Colin Powell during a Buffalo Soldier monument dedication ceremony in Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. These days they tend to stick closer to home.

As the original members of the group began to pass away, Sgt. Mills and the others enthusiasm for the chilly 5 a.m. show-up time for Detroit’s annual Thanksgiving parade became less appealing. But today three core members and nine regular volunteers are still keeping the organization active at Rouge Park. The center continues to stand as a monument to the men who served as Buffalo Soldiers and regularly educates children from Detroit and its suburbs, as well as those from as far away as Canada.

Running with horses

The story of how Sgt. Mills got involved with the Buffalo Soldiers Heritage Association actually goes back a while. He's a person who found a bond with horses early in life. Growing up in Detroit’s North End in the 1950s didn’t allow a lot of access to equestrian experiences. But a neighbor of his, a man named Sam Cobb, kept palomino show horses in a garage he'd converted into stables.

Impressed by the animals’ intelligence and unpredictableness, nine-year-old Mills worked his way into a job cleaning the stables. But even as the US military began to desegregate, ending the all-black Buffalo Soldiers units, Cobb couldn’t display his own horses in competitions.

Sgt. James Mills interacts with a horse."He couldn’t show them. So he hired two white girls to show the horses for him," Sgt. Mills says, noting that, despite winning numerous awards, Cobb's ownership remained a closely guarded secret. "He was a black man in a white man’s world."
As a teenager, Sgt. Mills got a job as a hired hand on a ranch in Warren, still largely farmland back then. During the summers, he'd ride a bike there from the North End and spend weekends saddling horses and retrieving animals lost by inexperienced tourists.

At age 25, after a six-year stint in the Army, he returned to Detroit and bought his first horse, a stallion. That ended up being a little too much to handle; after a year, he gave it up, choosing to concentrate on raising his two children and focus on his job as a biomedical engineer.

It was two decades before he bought another one, a quarter-horse named Eros. "You couldn’t ask for a better animal," he says of Eros, who recently passed away at 35, a ripe old age for a horse.

Today Sgt. Mills owns two horses. He's usually at the BSHA center seven days a week, which includes stopping by for 5 a.m. feedings on his way to his airport shuttle driver job. And that's just the way he likes it.

"If there was an eighth day in the week, I’d be here," says Sgt. Mills.

The call of service

For Elroy Reese, the center is a piece of home. As a native Mississippian, spending time around horses takes him back to his
Elroy Reese cuts an apple.youth.

"My dad had horses, and my neighbors had horses — I grew up around horses," he says.

In 1971 he came to Detroit looking for work at an auto factory. Although Reese soon got a job at the Chrysler Stamping Plant in Warren, he quickly realized he hated that line of work. In 1977 after six years at the plant, he decided to join the Detroit Police Department. Now he sees working with the BSHA as another chance to serve the community.

"I’m here to help," he says. "When the kids come here, they open up to asking questions … You gotta give them the best and most honest answers."

Mr. Reese sees his group as an informal park patrol. People walking aggressive dogs without leashes — a violation of park rules — are a big concern of his, and he's spoken to the Friends of Rouge Park about making BHSA volunteers official park rangers.
This is in keeping with legacy the Buffalo Soldiers, who served as some of the original enforcement officers in the National Parks. Reese envisions the BSHA being a regular patrol that calls the DPD when they encounter wrongdoing.

"If you see something, say something," he says of this philosophy.

Essential to the park

The Buffalo Soldiers Heritage Association has put in thousands of dollars of work into the barn, installing new office floors, expanding the stable's stalls, landscaping, and repairing fences.

Elroy Reese cuts an apple.Sally Petrella, President of the Friends of Rouge Park, sees the group as indispensable to the success of the park.

"Their work there has even led to the state funding the much-needed repair of the barn roof," Petrella said in a written statement. "We assisted the Buffalo Soldiers in coming to Rouge Park and continue to partner on many cleanups and events. We see them and their horses as an essential component of Detroit’s largest park."

The Buffalo Soldiers served the U.S. military for eight decades. Today the BSHA keeps their heritage alive through a different kind of service, educating and working with the public on Detroit’s west side.

This article is part of "Detroit Innovation," a series highlighting community-led projects that are improving the vitality of neighborhoods in Detroit, while recognizing the potential of residents to work with partners to solve the most pressing challenges facing their communities.

The series is supported by the New Economy Initiative, a project of the Community Foundation for Southeast Michigan that's working to create an inclusive, innovative regional culture.

All photos by Anthony Lanzilote.
 




Source: http://www.modeldmedia.com/features/buffalo-soldiers-detroit-04.16.19.aspx

6.75 percent in projected investment return could reduce pension gap

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TIME.com explains how a hike in anticipated investment returns has reduced the cutbacks in benefits for Detroit city workers. The city has increased projected return on one fund from 6.25 percent to 6.75 percent and on another from 6.5 percent to 6.75 percent.

TIME adds:

The most important accounting change was the assumed rate of return on investments held in the city’s two big retirement funds. Previously, the annual rate of return was estimated at 6.25% and 6.5% on the two funds. Now the city is assuming a rate of return of 6.75% on both funds. Why the bump? In part, anyway, the city seems to be taking heart in the stock market’s big gain last year, when after lackluster returns the past decade or so the S&P 500 rebounded with a glowing 32% total return.

Read the New York Times article linked in the paragraph above for a fuller discussion of the projections.




Source: http://detroit143.org/2014/04/projected-investment-return-how-accounting-change-closed-pension-gap/

COMMENTARY: CFPB Denies Duty to Enforce Military Lending Act

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According to the Pentagon, military members can and do lose security clearances and/or less than satisfactory discharges each year. Every discharged soldier’s separation costs the government an estimated $58,000. (Photo: iStockphoto / NNPA)According to the Pentagon, military members can and do lose security clearances and/or less than satisfactory discharges each year. Every discharged soldier’s separation costs the government an estimated $58,000. (Photo: iStockphoto / NNPA)

By Charlene Crowell, NNPA Newswire Contributor

America’s 1.29 million member-strong, all-volunteer military includes men and women from all 50 states, according to the U.S. Council on Foreign Relations.  Regardless of race or ethnicity, each made a choice and swore an oath to protect our nation. Together, they wear our nation’s uniforms and carry our flag on assignments and deployments in times of both peace and war.

I’d like to believe that our entire nation respects and appreciates their sacrificing service that takes them away from families, our stateside, and deployments. Further, while these brave men and women protect us, the nation should also protect them – including the clutches of predatory lending.

It was that kind of perspective that led to strong bipartisan enactment in 2006 of the Military Lending Act (MLA), a reform that was strongly supported by the Department of Defense. At the time, DoD warned how severe financial stress diminished “military readiness.” Years later, with the creation of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), MLA enforcement was assigned to the new agency along with other laws, and MLA was updated to include the phrase, “shall be enforced by the CFPB”.  That kind of language eliminates discretion or interpretation, thereby ensuring appropriate actions when warranted.

For years, CFPB’s enforcement levied fines against businesses that broke consumer finance laws and made consumers financially whole with proportional restitution. From July 2011 through September 2017, CFPB’s Office of Servicemember Affairs delivered $130 million of financial relief as a result of actions taken on 91,482 military complaints filed. In just one lending area — payday loans — CFPB projected that servicemembers saved $35 million every year as a result of MLA rules.

Justification for continued aggressive enforcement is attested to in CFPB’s own reports. From 2016 to 2017, CFPB recorded a 47% increase in the number of servicemember complaints. The following year, 2017 to 2018, the number of complaints were still rising at 12%.

According to the Pentagon, military members can and do lose security clearances and/or less than satisfactory discharges each year. Every discharged soldier’s separation costs the government an estimated $58,000.

Despite this abundance of complaints and warranted enforcement, CFPB’s first Trump-appointed leader, Mick Mulvaney as Acting CFPB Director, turned an about face on our military families by halting its use of its supervisory powers to fulfill its mandate of MLA enforcement.

CFPB’s new Director Kathleen Kraninger made it clear that she supports the same policies and practices begun under her predecessor in a March 8 letter to Ranking Members of the Senate Armed Services Committee and the Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs, Further in a recent Capitol Hill hearing, Director Kraninger went even further, advising, as reported by POLITICO, Director Kraninger went even further, claiming that Congress via legislation should provide CFPB with appropriate authority.

Confused? You’re not alone.

Last October, a bipartisan group of 33 states attorneys general (AGs) wrote then Acting CFPB Director Mulvaney following his announcement that the Bureau would no longer ensure that lenders would comply with MLA as part of its supervisory examinations.

“We are perplexed by reports indicating that the CFPB has determined that it needs further statutory authority in order to conduct examinations for MLA violations,” wrote the AGs. “We are disappointed to learn that CFPB did not consult the Defense Department in developing its new examination policy, even though Congress specified that the Defense Department – not the CFPB – is the primary federal agency responsible for interpreting the MLA.”

The officials signing the letter to Mulvaney represent states as far west as Alaska and Hawaii, to as far east as Massachusetts and New York, and southward to Mississippi and North Carolina. Together, these state officers understood and embraced that when it comes to consumer finance, predatory lenders make no partisan distinction.

“There’s no utility in arguing the fine questionable difference between enforcement and supervision,” said Scott Astrada, the Center for Responsible Lending’s Federal Advocacy Director. “The bottom line is that consumers – especially those serving in the military – need their government’s protection against those who would exploit their personal finances and at the same time, jeopardize their military service and careers. Our nation should protect them with just as much dedication as they give to protect all of us.”

Charlene Crowell is the Center for Responsible Lending’s deputy director of communications. She can be reached at [email protected].



Source: https://www.blackpressusa.com/commentary-cfpb-denies-duty-to-enforce-military-lending-act/

Detroitism

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An excellent piece in Guernica on ruin porn, Detroitsploitation and three classic Detroit narratives: Detroit as metonym, the Detroit lament, and Detroit utopia.

Insane Asylum

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Song: Insane Asylum
Artist: Koko Taylor
Written: Willie Dixon

Year : 1968
Album/Single: Checker # 1191

Cobra's Version
Song: Insane Asylum
Released: January 6th, 2004
Album: Seven Easy Pieces



Today's selection is the longest song in the Cobra's catalog, clocking in at 4:16, well over their 2:21 average. It is a cover for Koko Taylor's 1968 duet with the songwriter, Willie Dixon. It was Dixon who discovered Taylor and brought her to Chess records in 1963. She hit it big in 1965 with another of composition of of Dixon's, "Wang Dang Doodle" - the last Chess release to hit the R&B top ten. She moved from Chess to Alligator records in 1975 but continued to make records in the Chicago, electric blues tradition. Check out her take of Bo Diddley's / Muddy Water's "I'm A Man" called "I'm A Woman" on her MySpace page ("MySpace, not just for kids anymore").

Lyrics:
(Willie Dixon)
I went out to the insane asylum

And I found my baby out there

I said please come back to me darlin'

What in the world are you doin' here?

Then the little girl raised up her head
Tears was streamin' down from her eyes

And these are the things
That the little girl said

(Koko Taylor)
When your love has ceased to be (Lord, have mercy)
There's no other place for me (Mmmm)
If you don't hold me in your arms (Oh child oh child)

I'd rather be here from now on
Some people have it halfway fair
Without your love I ain't nowhere

Oh I can't eat and I can't sleep (oh child oh child)


Lord I can't even live in peace (Mmmm)
Please take me baby for your slave (Oooh)

And save me from that early grave

Some people have it halfway fair
Without your love I ain't nowhere

(Willie Dixon)
And then sorrow struck my heart
Tears began to stream down from my eyes
The only woman that I ever loved in whole my life

Out here in a place in a condition like this
And I began to thinkin' about what
my mama told me when I was a little boy

She told me when I couldn't help myself,
to get down on my knees and pray

Then I fell down on my knees
And these are the words that I said

(Willie Dixon & Koko Taylor)
Save me save me save me babe,

Save me save me save me dear,
Whoa I don't know just how we made it
But I'm so glad our love is here
But I'm so glad our love is here
But I'm so glad our love is here...

(For the record, this is the first of the 9 posts so far in this blog, in which I was able to actually find the lyrics online rather than having to transcribe them myself.)

Greg Cartwright steps in as Willie Dixon to Rachel's Koko on the Cobra's version. Greg Cartwright, of course, is from Reigning Sound, previously covered in my "I'll Cry" post. Considering the shoes they are trying to fill, they rise to the occasion quit well. Not surprising, considering "insane Asylum" was a song she frequently sang to herself in her car, long before she sang professionally. Thankfully she took her act out of the car and shared her talents with us all.

All pictures previously used in the blog were
pictures I had taken myself. Today's
is not, but it was too delicious to pass up.
Click on it and you will go to the original site


Download it now:


Koko Taylor - Insane Asylum - 1967 - Checker # 1191
Available on - Koko Taylor

Buy "Seven Easy Pieces" by the Detroit Cobras

(Sorry I missed last week's post - I've been busy)



Source: http://detroitcobracovers.blogspot.com/2007/03/song-insane-asylum-artist-koko-taylor.html

Detroit Listed As One Of The Top 10 Most Bike Friendly Cities In The U.S.

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Photo: Hour Detroit 

BikingExpert.com looked at locations throughout the United States to find out which are the country’s most bike friendly cities.

Cities all over the world — especially Europe — are known for their bike friendliness. But, cities across the United States are making strides in ensuring that their streets are accessible and safe for cyclists. BikingExpert.com has compiled a list of the top 10 most bike friendly cities in the United States for EfficientGov.

Cycling is an incredibly beneficial exercise. Your whole body gets a workout, including your heart, and as a bonus, your exercise doubles as a form of transportation. When you rely on a bicycle instead of a car to commute, you can save money on gas, auto insurance, car payments and parking fees. You can feel good about using your own two legs to get around, reducing air pollution while experiencing the health benefits of biking. The following U.S. cities make it easy for residents to reap the many benefits of bicycle transportation.

#5 Detroit, Mich.

The city of Detroit supports efforts to promote bike tours. Dedicated bike lanes can be found around the city’s best attractions and other heavily trafficked areas, which provide safety as well as recreation for cyclists and tourists. In addition, public and private projects are underway to connect Detroit to other locations in Michigan and Canada, making it easier for cyclists to travel longer distances by bike.

Click HERE For The Full Article! 


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