I Am Not A Minority: Why News Media Must Stop Using Inaccurate, Prejudiced Term

I Am Not A Minority: Why News Media Must Stop Using Inaccurate, Prejudiced Term

“Minorities” were characterized as a group of people at the bottom of society’s shoe, in need of handouts by the generosity of the establishment, the white majority. I have spent the better part of my professional life in championing for the fair treatment of Hispanics-Latinos in newsrooms and news coverage. The time has come to stop labeling people of color as “minorities.”

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Hats Off to Lowell Weicker and 30 Years of the Americans with Disabilities Act

Hats Off to Lowell Weicker and 30 Years of the Americans with Disabilities Act

Thirty years ago this week, by votes of 377 to 28 in the House and 91 to 6 in the Senate, the United States Congress passed, and President George Herbert Walker Bush signed, the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), among the most significant pieces of legislation since the Second World War. The principal author of the legislation was former Connecticut Senator Lowell Weicker.

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Social Entrepreneurs Needed to Meet Challenges of Current Times

Social Entrepreneurs Needed to Meet Challenges of Current Times

Social entrepreneurship has been around, in one form or another, for decades if not longer. Working to resolve our differences so, together, we can make our communities and our world a better place, is the “social” in social entrepreneur. At this point in time, it’s about healing the wounds inflicted by the pandemic and a legacy of racism and discrimination. We need that now.

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Main Street After COVID: More Locally Based Means More Resilient

Main Street After COVID:  More Locally Based Means More Resilient

As municipalities across the country begin to recover from COVID-19, Main Streets are witnessing unprecedented impacts on their small-business retail or commercial fabric. Ultimately, there may be more good news than bad in the aftermath of economic impact - there may be great opportunities to implement large-scale beneficial changes.

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In Fight for Justice, Zoning Laws that Exclude Low-Income People Must be Changed

In Fight for Justice, Zoning Laws that Exclude Low-Income People Must be Changed

As a person of color living in one of the country’s poorest cities, it has been heartening to see how many people with privilege and power have turned up at protests against inequality and police brutality. As the protests fade, we must not forget about one of the most important perpetrators of fundamental inequalities in the country today: zoning.

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We All Share a Sense of Outrage and a Desire to Drive Change

We All Share a Sense of Outrage and a Desire to Drive Change

Is remaining silent in the face of racial injustice an act of racism? Whether silence rises to the level of racism is open to debate; but it is, unequivocally and categorically, cowardly and insupportable. The leadership of the Connecticut Association of Schools, representing education leaders across the state, has shared its individual and collective perspectives.

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