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Why the Sheriff’s Office is important to all Philadelphians

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by Rochelle Bilal

As a lifelong resident and Democratic voter in Philadelphia, I felt the call to serve – to restart my many years of activism, leadership and management skills – by entering the 2019 Philadelphia Sheriff’s race. 

I am a new candidate for this office – but I am not new to public service.

Upon retirement as a 27-year veteran of the Philadelphia Police Department, serving in the roles of patrol and in the special victims unit, where I stood for victims and with their families during unbearable hardship, I thought I would finally take a break from public service and focus on retirement: paint some fruit, play some golf, and do some traveling. Well, I was wrong. My passion for effective government wouldn’t allow me to just relax – I knew I could make a difference in the lives of residents across this city. And so, I put my name on the ballot, knowing full well the pitfalls and politics that would come with that announcement.

The Sheriff’s Office focuses on three critical areas: protection of courts and city officials; transport of prisoners; and, of course, the sheriff sales. These three areas and the budget/leadership that corresponds to their needs are the basis of why many groups and individuals believe it’s time for the office to be dismantled.

This is a bad idea. The Sheriff’s Office’s main function is to remove property from residents, either for delinquent taxes or mortgage defaults. Property ownership is carefully regulated. It’s one of the fundamental rights protected by our Founding Fathers in the Bill of Rights, written and signed in this very city. The Fourth Amendment protects people’s rights against an unreasonable government search and seizure of property.

If that power were to be abused, or recklessly applied, imagine the consequences. Imagine people whose properties are unfairly taken or policies that make it impossible for them to fight back. What would happen then? People deserve to have someone who can be held accountable. Someone who – if residents feel is unfairly or illegally applying their power or acting in a way that is disrespectful to the citizens they are supposed to be serving – can be removed from office by vote. Elections ensure that the sheriff does not have unchecked and unregulated power. That is why we need this to be an elected position.

As sheriff, my first priority will be assessing how the current fiscal year $26M budget is allocated – and where we can exercise better programming and practices to be a more cost-effective office. The first step will be to take a deep dive into the books. We will check for any misuse of public funds and determine the best practices to safeguard taxpayer dollars.

Since starting on the campaign trail, I’ve had the opportunity to listen to citizens’ frustration toward the office as it relates to serving residents. If entrusted by those citizens with the responsibility to lead the Sheriff’s Office, I will act on those concerns and restore the integrity and effectiveness of the office.

We have to do better. If I am elected, we will.

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Music

The Beat Goes On…In Two Songs?

Tre Prada heard a beat this morning that sounded like one of his song, and it turned out to be Cardi B’s. We take a closer look at the two.

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You ever hear a song and think to yourself, wait a minute, that sounds like a beat I’ve heard before? That’s how Philly native Tre Prada started his afternoon.

Here are his thoughts on the new Cardi B song “Up” which dropped at midnight on Friday morning.

When you listen to it his song “Goonies”, a song that dropped back in October of 2020, the notes and the beat seem to be remarkably similar. We’re gonna drop the videos here. In this case, hearing is believing.

Now let’s compare that to Cardi B’s brand new, 13 hours old video.

We want to know what you think about this. Do you hear a similar beat? Do you think the songs are different enough? Do they sound like any other songs you know? Let us know on our Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram what you hear and what you think about this situation. We’re here to talk about it and other issues in the music industry.

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News

Lisa Forrest Makes Philadelphia Fire Department History

Lisa Forrest has always been a pioneer in the Philadelphia fire department. Now she’s becoming the first black woman to become a battalion chief.

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Lisa Forrest was already the first black woman promoted to captain in the fire department’s history in 2013, and now in 2020, she becomes the first to be made fire battalion chief. 

ELIZABETH ROBERTSON / PHOTOGRAPHER

Throughout the Philadelphia fire department, there are 70 battalion chiefs, and now 3 of them are women. Forrest has been defying numbers for a long time, with her authority far outpacing her 4-foot 10-inch frame. When asked about how she was able to overcome some of the physical challenges on the job and in the fire academy she stated “Men rely on strength, but women, we rely on technique,”. It is her unique perspective that will be one of the qualities she brings to her new position. Most recently she was the captain of Ladder 24. 

ELIZABETH ROBERTSON / PHOTOGRAPHER

The Mount Airy native was a year into a Penn State nursing program when she left to join the Army. After an honorable discharge due to injury after six months of service, she returned to Philadelphia. She then sat for the firefighter’s test a month after the events of September 11th. 

Forrest has preserved thanks to hard work and determination. We are excited to watch her continue to break barriers and blaze a path for the civil servants of tomorrow to follow. 

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Our City

We The People

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by Karen Eckstein-Sarkissian

The July 1, 2016 Draft “Democratic Party Platform” focused on thirteen specific issues, each with its own subheadings. It’s a lot to process yet it is vitally important, especially in this election. We are up against an opponent that opposes almost everything the Democrats support and he is getting his backers to clap loudly and agree with him. Here are the thirteen issues:

1. Raise Incomes and Restore Economic Security for the Middle Class
2. Create Good-Paying Jobs
3. Fight for Economic Fairness and Against Inequality
4. Bring Americans Together and Remove Barriers to Create Ladders of Opportunity
5. Protect Voting Rights, Fix Our Campaign Finance System, and Restore Our Democracy
6. Combat Climate Change, Build a Clean Energy Economy, and Secure Environmental Justice
7. Provide Quality and Affordable Education
8. Ensure the Health and Safety of All Americans
9. Principled Leadership
10. Support Our Troops and Keep Faith with Our Veterans
11. Confront Global Threats
12. Protect Our Value
13. A Leader in the World

The Preamble provides most of the necessary information. It begins by noting that while President Barrack Obama achieved great success in job growth, healthcare reform, auto industry progress, use of more alternative energies, and less dependence on foreign oil, many Americans were ignored and continue to struggle. Most people work harder and longer without security and with no increase in wages, yet the cost for everything, from childcare to college rose steeply and the racial gap widened. All the while, Republicans fought and blocked any and all programs and policies proposed by President Obama and Democratic Legislature. Allowing the top one percent to accumulate even more wealth and power.

Democrats believe in an economy that works for everyone, creates good-paying jobs, and puts a middle-class life within reach for more Americans. Most of the wealth goes to the top one percent and the richest 20 people in our country own more wealth than the bottom 150 million. They declare that race also plays a significant role in determining who is overlooked and that the school-to-prison pipeline must be replaced with a cradle-to-college pipeline.

They also propose helping Americans balance work and family without fear of punishment or penalty and by guaranteeing equal pay for women and safeguard Social Security in order to protect every American’s right to retire with dignity. Lastly, they agree that Wall Street’s selfishness and unlawful behavior must cease and that it must never be permitted to ever again menace families and businesses.

Democrats find that they are more powerful when citizens’ right to vote, rather than corporations’ and billionaire’ ability to buy elections, are preserved and, therefore, want to overturn the Citizens United and restore the Voting Rights Act. They also considered climate change a serious threat to the economy, national security, and to our children’s health and futures and that Americans deserve the careers and ability to become the clean energy giants of the future.

Most importantly, Democrats are the party of inclusion. Diversity is their promise. Today’s immigrants are tomorrow’s teachers and soldiers, entrepreneurs and activists. They believe in protecting civil liberties and guaranteeing civil, voting, women’s, workers’ rights, LGBT rights and rights for people with disabilities. They believe, as Robert Kennedy said, “a great country, an unselfish country, and a compassionate country.”

The thirteen issues went on to contain various subheadings. Some of the more noteworthy topics included raising the current federal minimum wage from $7.25 an hour, which Democrats consider a starvation wage, to $15.00 an hour. They also want to cease the sub-minimum wage of $2.13 for tipped workers (e.g. servers) and people with disabilities, which is based upon a calculation determined by the Federal Code of Regulations. Democrats also want to ensure that all Americans have the ability to organize and join a union, noting that Donald Trump has utilized union-busting firms to thwart workers’ rights.

Democrats also seek to pass a family and medical leave act that would provide at least 12 weeks of paid leave to care for a new child, handle a personal or family member’s serious health issue, and allow workers to accrue at least seven days of paid sick leave and vacation time. They want to make sure Social Security benefits are guaranteed and make sure those at the top paid more. Their plans are dissimilar with Donald Trump’s, who has called Social Security as a “Ponzi scheme” and has called for privatizing it and increasing the retirement age.

They support a “Make it in America” philosophy and hope to rescind tax breaks for businesses that ship jobs overseas, pointing out that Donald Trump has consistently outsourced his own products.

The party hoped to encourage the next generation of scientists, engineers, and entrepreneurs, specifically women and people of color and to also improve prospects for people with disabilities. It also wanted to make it easier to establish and grow a small business, especially for women, people of color, tribes, and rural America. Additionally, the party wants to focus on programs that offer jobs for youth, as about one in ten youths between the ages of 16 and 24 are unemployed, which is more than twice the national average.

Democrats also hope to make sure that no bank can ever be too big to fail again and that no executive is too powerful to jail. They feel that banks should not be able to wager with taxpayers’ monies.

They support legal and reasonable immigration for people seeking safety, freedom, and security and will continue to strive for comprehensive immigration reform and protect and implement President Obama’s DREAMers Act. Immigration enforcement must be humane and they oppose religious tests that intend to bar immigrants.

They aim to end discrimination on the basis of race, ethnicity, national origin, language, religion, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity, or disability. While freedom of expression is a constitutional right, everyone must condemn Donald Trump’s demonization of prisoners of war, women, Muslims, Mexicans, and people with disabilities. Everyone must also condemn the recent uprise in hate speech.

Democrats stressed that black lives mattered and that racism held no place in this country. It was unacceptable that the median wealth for white Americans is roughly ten times that of African-Americans and Latino-Americans. They aim to end racial profiling, and prosecute police-involved shootings. They will also highlight treatment over incarceration with regard to addiction and mental health issues and fight to end systemic racism.

Believing healthcare is a right, not a privilege, Democrats will always strive to guarantee health coverage to Americans through Medicare or as a public option. Donald Trump, by contrast, hopes to appeal the Affordable Care Act and leave tens of millions of Americans without coverage.

With regard to higher education, Democrats believed that cost should not be a barrier. They want to make community college free and college affordable for all. They want to allow those with current debt to refinance their loans at the lowest rate, cut interest rates for future undergraduates, and restore prior bankruptcy laws to allow borrowers with student loans discharge their debts as a measure of last resort.

Other important topics included investing in infrastructure, overturning Citizens United, providing more affordable housing, ending chronic homelessness, and forbidding predatory lending. They want the wealthiest Americans to pay their fair share of taxes and end the outsourcing of American jobs. They also approved of decriminalizing marijuana and hoped to abolish the death penalty, as it is a cruel and unusual form of punishment. They also want to invest in early childhood programs and provide access to high-quality childcare and pre-K programs. And, the Democrats will always protect a woman’s right to chose.

Photography by Darryl Cobb Jr.

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