Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Fwd: [bangla-vision] Black farmers vs: blatant USDA discrimination & Injustice



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: nathaniel x vance <broali4xa@yahoo.com>
Date: Thu, Jul 29, 2010 at 3:31 AM
Subject: [bangla-vision] Black farmers vs: blatant USDA discrimination & Injustice
To: addicted2booksbyblackwriters@yahoogroups.com


 

Black farmers are the real victims of USDA discrimination
By Earl Ofari Hutchinson   07/23/2010

Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack was direct, forceful and blunt when he said that the USDA does not tolerate racial discrimination. This was Vilsack's widely circulated public explanation for firing Shirley Sherrod. There are two problems with this. One, the world now knows that Sherrod did not do or say anything to merit being branded a bigot and sacked. Vilsack and President Obama subsequently apologized to Sherrod and offered her her job back.

The second problem is more troubling. Vilsack should have been talking about the shameful and disgraceful treatment of black farmers by his agency, and the equally shameful and disgraceful treatment of the farmers by Congress. The day after Vilsack issued his lofty pronouncement about zero tolerance for racial discrimination, Gary Grant, President of the 20,000 member Black Farmer & Agriculturalists Association, flatly called Vilsack's statement "a complete lie." He had good reason. During the past quarter century, tens of thousands of black farmers have lost their land, homes, and livestock, due to the blatant refusal by the USDA to make or guarantee loans to them.

The farmers have filed individual and class lawsuits, staged sit-ins, held protests marches and rallies challenging the naked discriminatory lending practices of the USDA. Shirley Sherrod was one of them. She and her husband and a cooperative of black farmers were refused loans and their farms were foreclosed on in 1985. They filed a suit. It took more than two decades of legal wrangling but finally Sherrod and her husband and the other farmers won their suit and were awarded damages $13 million in damages.

The USDA has revamped its operations, has an active civil rights division, and says it carefully scrutinizes its lending program to prevent bias. This doesn't mean that the USDA has totally righted its past racial wrongs. In a statement, the black farmer's association notes that the USDA has not punished any of its agents or officials that encouraged or turned a blind eye to discriminatory lending. A decade ago the USDA shelled out $2.3 billion to the farmers to settle the discrimination suits. But that didn't end the injustice. Thousands of black farmers that lost their land did not get a nickel. They were excluded from the settlement through bureaucratic bungling, technicalities, and challenges by Bush Justice Department officials.

A decade later, with the approval of President Obama, Vilsack, agreed to a second settlement of $1.25 billion. This again didn't end the injustice. Congress had to approve release of the funds. It set a deadline of March 31 for approval. The deadline came and went. Congress went on spring vacation without approving the money. It set another deadline of May 31 for approval. That date also came and went with no action

 <http://www.thegrio.com/politics/black-farmers-are-the-real-victims-of-usda-discrimination.php>

Video: <http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3036677//vp/38372131#38372131>

 

The wicked ENDTIME - NOT the RIGHTEOUS! http://Zetaheaven.org:  

__._,_.___


--
Palash Biswas
Pl Read:
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