Friday, May 12, 2006 

THE GULF CHANGE FORUM

Robert E. "Brother Bob" Saffold
R.E. Saffold Associates, Inc.

present

THE GULF CHANGE
OHIO MISSISSIPPI FORUM

“Rebuilding the Gulf Coast After
Katrina and Rita With People of Faith”

May 12th and May 13th 2006
9:00 a.m. – 5:00p.m.
at
3940 Olympic Boulevard Suite 100
Erlanger, Kentucky 41018
859.980.0775

Convened By:
The National African American Business and Contractors Association
in conjunction with the
Ohio Minority Contractors Association, Inc and the Minority Contractors Association of Mississippi, Inc.

SPONSORED BY:

R.E. Saffold Associates, Inc., National Collection Systems LLC, MMI Hotel Group, Inc., Gaf Castle Resources, Inc. Hargrove Engineering LLC, New Concept Consulting, Inc., Arick’s Environmental Management Services, Inc., U.S. Veterans Inc., Coalition of Black Trade Unionits, Nazareth Missions Inc., Neighbors Inc., Cincinnati Change and Entrust America.

The confirmed Keynote Speaker is
Mr. Kevin Boshears,
Director
Disadvantage Business Utilization
Department of Homeland Security, Washington D.C..

Invited Government Agencies and Others Includes:
U.S. Department of Homeland Security, FEMA, U.S. Army Corp of Engineers, U.S. Department of Commerce, U.S. Department of Housing & Urban Development (HUD), The Small Business Administration, U.S. Department of Agriculture, U.S. Department of Labor, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, and the White House Faith-Based and Community Initiatives.

_____________________________

During 2006, more than $150 billion dollars is being allocated for:

· Preventing another terrorist attack on the United States
· Detecting threats against the United States
· Preparing for and responding to future catastrophes
· U.S. Gulf Coast Reconstruction

These are among the nation’s top priorities this year, and are the central themes of Rebuilding the Gulf Coast After Katrina and Rita with People of Faith and one of the most influential homeland security small business events you can attend this year.

Participation in this high-profile national and international forum will provide you with:

· Detailed information on the $50 billion being spent by the Department of Homeland Security and other federal agencies on homeland security prevention, detection, preparedness, and response with small businesses.
· The latest details on more than $300 billion being spent on Gulf Coast reconstruction, the biggest reconstruction program in U.S. history.

Mr. Boshears was named Director of the Department of Homeland Security’s Office of Small and Disadvantaged Business Utilization (OSDBU) in May, 2003. He is responsible for the overall implementation of the Department’s small business procurement program.

Prior to this, Mr. Boshears was named Director of the Treasury Department’s OSDBU in February, 1999 where he had served as the Acting Director since August, 1998. He previously served in the same office as a Procurement Analyst since June, 1995 and was responsible for providing guidance to the Small Business Specialists located in Treasury’s twelve bureaus. He also worked on Treasury’s small business website and represented Treasury at various governmental, congressional, and trade association outreach activities.

Mr. Boshears brings a wealth of knowledge and experience in the procurement field, having served as a Contracting Officer for the Justice Department prior to his small business duties at the Treasury Department. Mr. Boshears is a well known instructor in the federal small business procurement arena. On numerous occasions, he has conducted training courses, made presentations, and handled briefings on contracting with small, small disadvantaged, 8(a), women-owned small, HUBZone small, and service disabled veteran-owned small business concerns.

Mr. Boshears currently serves as the Vice-Chair of the Office of Small and Disadvantaged Business Utilization Directors' Interagency Council, originally elected to the position for FY 2001 and re-elected for both FY 2002 and FY 2003. On May 9 - 10, 2002, Mr. Boshears was presented with the Frances Perkins Vanguard Award for Exemplary Utilization of Women-Owned Small Businesses by a Federal Procurement Official and the Gold Star Award for Excellence by the U. S. Small Business Administration.

He holds a BBA degree from the College of William and Mary, and earned his MBA from Liberty University.

Thursday, May 11, 2006 

Five Trillion Dollars On The March

This nation's civil rights movement of the 1960s broke the back of overt white supremacy that prevented black Americans (who were citizens) from enjoying the rights guaranteed to them under the Constitution. Undeniably, the freedoms codified by civil rights-era legislation have made life better for all Americans — regardless of skin color, gender or national origin.

The Immigration and Nationality Services Act of 1965 (also known as the Hart-Celler Act or the INS Act of 1965) abolished the national-origin quotas that had been in place in the United States since the Immigration Act of 1924. It was proposed by Emanuel Celler and heavily supported by Senator Ted Kennedy. In the two decades that followed, along with millions of legal immigrants, the U.S. attracted a huge, mainly Hispanic, illegal population -- roughly 3 million of whom received amnesty from Ronald Reagan in 1986.

Illegal immigration describes migration across national borders without complying with the legal requirements.

As of July 1, 2004, Hispanics accounted for 14.1% of the population [including the 11 million illegals]) or about 41.3 million people. Hispanic growth rate over the July 1, 2003 to July 1, 2004 period was of 3.6 %, higher than any other ethnic group in the United States, and in fact, more than three times the rate of the nation's total population (at 1.0%).

The projected Hispanic population of the United States for July 1, 2050, is 102.6 million people. According to this projection, Hispanics will then make up 24% of the nation’s total population. [2]At the same time, the black population is projected to rise from 35.8 million to 61.4 million by 2050, an increase of about 26 million or 71 percent. That would raise their share of the country’s population from 12.7 percent to 14.6 percent.

``This is the defining moment for the Republican Party,'' Graham, of South Carolina, said on the ``Fox News Sunday'' program. With Hispanics the fastest-growing group in the U.S., Republicans ``will lose our majority'' if Congress passes harsh penalties for illegal immigrants and fails to create a way of addressing the estimated 11 million undocumented workers already in the U.S., he said.

No matter how you look at it, it is the United State of America not the United States of the Americas. If Mexicans and other foreigners want to make it here legally, more power to them. Let them use the legal means.

Let them earn the rights and citizenship not just have it handed to them because they are here.Hispanic, as used in the United States, is one of several terms used to categorize persons whose ancestry hails either from Spain, the Spanish-speaking countries of Latin America, or the original settlers of the traditionally Spanish-held Southwestern United States. The term is used as a broad form of classification in the U.S. census, local and federal employment, and numerous business market researches.

In Spanish speaking America, when speaking of any given nation's Hispanic population, those who are implied include criollos, mestizos, and mulattos, but excludes indigenous Amerindians, the unmixed descendants of black African slaves, and other more recent non-Spanish immigrants which may now reside in Latin America. In this context, regardless of whether the excluded groups now use Spanish as their first and only language.

As is the case with all blacks, most Amerindians and the great majority of immigrants do not qualify for Hispanicity,We disagree with many immigrant-rights organizers [seemingly only Hispanic Latino] and their sympathizers who seem to be saying that there is some inherent right to enter the United States, thumb their noses at the law [it is against the law to cross the border without permission, even for Citizens] and at the same time make fools out of those who wait patiently in foreign lands for visas to come to the United States.Roughly 60% of the illegal alien populationare undocumented aliens and 40% are nonimmigrant overstayers.

The National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States found that the government inadequately tracked those with expired tourist or student visas.Crossing the border without authorization is a misdemeanor for the first offense and a felony for subsequent violations. Immigrants who are caught illegally trespassing U.S. territory are fingerprinted and immediately returned, unless they are a repeat offender, in which case they may be criminally prosecuted.

The Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 (IRCA) made the hiring of an illegal alien an offense for the first time. American businesses hire well over 10 million illegal aliens per year, with 4.2 million or more normalized into our economy. A 2005 Pew Hispanic Center survey on attitudes toward immigration, conducted in part in Mexico, found that an estimated 70 million adults in Mexico would come to the U.S. if they had the means and the opportunity.About half of those said they would be willing to move to and work in this country illegally.

The study also found that 35% of Mexican college graduates want to come to the U.S., even if that means they would have to work at a job below their qualifications — and many also said they'd be willing to come illegallyImmigrant-rights groups will have to acknowledge that an unchecked flow of unskilled labor drives [over a million a year] down wages for entry-level jobs, rendering all poor Americans, including millions of teenage workers, less competitive.

The reality is that most Americans won't do entry-level labor for the meager wages often offered to undocumented workers. Also in industries where they have concentrated their work the wages have been flat and or decreased in relation to inflation.

Those of us in Cincinnati Change who are Americans who came to America by slavery, have paid the dues, not the over 11 million illegals who broke the laws of this country and the over 5 million children they have had in America. We acknowledge that they have rights as human beings and believe that they should exercise those rights in their own country.

On the other hand, in our country we should have a plan if they don't want to leave America.Cincinnati Change Chairman Fred Hargrove Sr. said: "Our nation’s immigration policy must be consistent with humanitarian values that take in consideration the needs of America’s disadvanted and with the need to treat all individuals with respect and dignity who obey our laws. We must move away from the politics of ostracizing immigrants and instead look at how we can work to meet the needs of our nation"

Cincinnati Change is calling for Congress to enact comprehensive immigration reform with a focus on the enforcement approach in which the United States immigration policies must be consistent with our humanitarian values as expressed in our laws. As public policy, such legislation must address genuine immigration reform that should include proposals that would allow people to earn the right of citizenship through hard work, the commitment of several years, learning english and meeting several security and related requirements, including paying their fine for breaking our laws.

We also propose a partial monetary solution whereas they will pay the United States $250 Billion Dollars over the next 5 years to be used in those areas with the most unemployed Americans. This money would be used to address the larger economic needs of the nation such as the creation of job training programs and small business programs, as well as federal education assistance to those in areas already identified as in need of help through HUD so that all Americans can have enhanced opportunities.

We also feel employers employing those who break the immigration law should be prosecuted as should public officials and religious leaders who aid them. Fines for illegals and their employers would bring in over 60 billion dollars 1/5 of the war costs.

At the same time if we open up our borders to 50 million more people under the E-2 visa then the country could look to put over 5 trillion dollars into a second war on poverty in America. Under this expanded E-2 all you have to do is invest at least $50,000 in America over 5 years. For those already here after they pay their fine for breaking our laws, $5,000 each.

About me

  • I'm Cincinnati Change
  • From Cincinnati, Ohio, United States
  • CINCINNATI CHANGE believes in mixed-use development whereas the poor and moderate income people, in der Nati, will be able to use their assets so as to have a great quality of life for themselves, their family and their children and their children's children along with ours.
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