Thursday, May 14, 2009

Young boost diversity as population ages

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2009/05/14/MNCT17K1F4.DTL

Young boost diversity as population ages

Thursday, May 14, 2009

The population of the United States - and of California - is becoming older on average and also more racially and ethnically diverse. But the folks who are aging are not the same as the ones who are increasing the nation's diversity, according to 2008 population estimates released today by the U.S. Census Bureau.


The data show two different demographic trends at play: non-Hispanic white people tend to be older - a median age of 41.1 - and their ranks are increasing only slightly. Latinos, meanwhile, are the nation's youngest population group and its fastest growing, at 3.2 percent over the previous year. And nowhere is the trend more pronounced than in California, where whites are older and Latinos are younger than the national averages.


Blacks and Asian Americans, meanwhile, are closer to the median age of the country overall, which is 36.8 years, up 1.5 years since 2000. The Asian population is growing rapidly - 2.7 percent nationally between 2007 and 2008 - while the black population is increasing at half that rate, census figures show.


"California is aging as the rest of the country is, but it's ahead of the curve in diversity and behind the curve in aging, and that's our big advantage," said Dowell Myers, director of the Population Dynamics Research Group at the University of Southern California. "We have a more useful workforce, and we have more young people in school. That costs more money up front, but it will repay huge benefits in 10 years when the rest of the country has few young people."


Almost half of the nation's children under the age of 5 - 47 percent - were minorities, according to the Census Bureau. In California, the majority of the nation's 0-to-4-year-olds have been minorities for a number of years - and more than half today are Latinos.

The Latino boom

The growth in the state's Latino population is primarily due to births, many of them to immigrant parents, according to David Hayes-Bautista, director of UCLA's Center for the Study of Latino Health and Culture, who has studied 65 years' worth of data on Latino health and behavior.


"When Latinos are half of the total population in California, overall people will have fewer heart attacks, cancers and strokes, they'll have healthier babies, live three to four years longer, work harder, work more in the private sector, use welfare less and have stronger families," he said.

The problem, said Hayes-Bautista, is that the state's Latinos have lower rates of high school graduation and college attendance than average, in part because their parents had less schooling.

Education a concern

"The biggest area of concern for me is the performance of the educational system," he said. "That's what's going to make or break the U.S. economy for the 21st century."


In the Bay Area, the population's growing diversity can be seen in its preschools. At the Lotus Bloom Child and Family Resource Center in Oakland's San Antonio neighborhood, Monday's playgroup takes place in Vietnamese and English, Tuesday's in Chinese and English and Wednesday's in Spanish and English, said director Angela Louie-Howard.


"When we're able to connect to people in their own language and culture, they feel more connected to this place," said Louie-Howard, who opened the center last year to help parents improve their children's readiness for elementary school. "You can't talk to people about deeper issues if you're not making them feel welcome and comfortable."


The Bay Area is one of the state's most diverse regions, with sizable numbers of Asians, Latinos and whites, and a somewhat smaller black population, said Hans Johnson, senior demographer at the Public Policy Institute of California.

Mixing it up

The number of people who identify as multiracial is also growing, and at a faster rate than any other racial or ethnic group. Almost 1 in 5 of the nation's 5.2 million mixed-race people live in California, and the vast majority of them are children, the census data show.


They include Louie-Howard's daughter, who is half Chinese American and half African American. They also include Heidi Durrow, a writer who grew up with a Danish mother and African American father and now co-hosts a weekly podcast called Mixed Chicks Chat.


"I'm not surprised, and I'm actually excited," said Durrow, who noted that half the kids at her niece's recent birthday party were multiracial. "There are a lot more different kinds of people (in California), so it's probably easier to mix here than in other places."


The estimated U.S. population as of July 1, 2008, was 304 million, of whom 36.8 million lived in California. The state's population is almost 37 percent Latino, 42 percent white, 6 percent black and almost 13 percent Asian, according to the bureau.


E-mail Tyche Hendricks at thendricks@sfchronicle.com.


http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2009/05/14/MNCT17K1F4.DTL


This article appeared on page A - 1 of the San Francisco Chronicle


Note: See Pictures at websource!
 
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Education for Liberation!
Peter S. Lopez ~aka: Peta
Sacramento, California, Aztlan
Yahoo Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com


http://anhglobal.ning.com/group/humanerightsagenda
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Humane-Rights-Agenda/
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NetworkAztlan_News/
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FYI: Ode to the Habanero

>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Come Together and Create!
Peta-de-Aztlan
Email: sacranative@yahoo.com
Sacramento, California, Aztlan



From: Aztatl Garza <aztatlxikano@gmail.com>
To: Aztatl Garza <aztatlxikano@gmail.com>; adrian barboa <ywu_alb@yahoo.com>; Albuquerque IWW email list <abq-iww@lists.riseup.net>; Mazatzin AZTEKAYOLOKALLI <zemazatzin@hotmail.com>; Alb Peace & Justice <mail@abqpeaceandjustice.org>; Allen Cooper <ac611@msn.com>; Bob Anderson <citizen@comcast.net>; LaloXikano AlcarazCartoonist <laloalcaraz@yahoo.com>; "tlacayaotzin@aol.com" <tlacayaotzin@aol.com>; claire brock <claire.e.brock@gmail.com>; Mike Trinity House Butler <galluppeace@yahoo.com>; Bianca Encinias <msbianca@sneej.org>; Lisa Burns <solas@unm.edu>; Edna Casman <ecasman@yahoo.com>; Cansino <ccansi@comcast.net>; Cassandra Reid <casreid@swcp.com>; FRANK SIFUENTES <conzafos@msn.com>; Maria Cecilia Gallegos <xicaguerillera@hotmail.com>; tochtli Califas <tochtli@berkeley.edu>; Tupac Enrique <chantlaca@tonatierra.org>; "davidsanchezphd@webtv.net" <davidsanchezphd@webtv.net>; GinaWOWconf. DiazUNM <v.ginadiaz@gmail.com>; Patrisia Col.DeLasAmer. Gonzales <Patzin@gmail.com>; Irene San Diego Zap email Castruita <irenec7@hotmail.com>; Julie England <jengland745@hotmail.com>; Enrique Cardiel <magonista66@yahoo.com>; Elena Herrada <Elenaherrada@comcast.net>; Rachelle ElCentro <elcentro@unm.edu>; Virginia Hampton <vhampton@cnm.edu>; Janet <hootaway@comcast.net>; Hershel Weiss <hershel1000@yahoo.com>; Steve IWWblog Ongarth <intexile@iww.org>; Claudia Isaac <cisaac@unm.edu>; Jane Yee <jane.cambio@yahoo.com>; John Salazar <Salazarl8@aol.com>; Jeanne <stopthewarmachine@comcast.net>; Joy Soler <solerjoy@hotmail.com>; José Cuello <josecuello@wowway.com>; PatriciaSan Jose Juarez <pjuarezg@yahoo.com>; KarenDowntownLib. K. Schmiege <kschmiege@cabq.gov>; Rachel Lazar <rlazar_elcentro@yahoo.com>; Ruth Millan <rutholivarmillan@sbcglobal.net>; Mary(Poet) Oishi <poetoishi@yahoo.com>; MEChA Unm <mechaunm@yahoo.com>; Todd Mireles <mirelese@msu.edu>; nm_raza_unida@yahoogroups.com; ourania tserotas <ourania_tserotas@hotmail.com>; Santiago ObispoVenezuela <sobispo@gmail.com>; Peter S. Lopez de Aztlan <sacranative@yahoo.com>; renee wolters <rrwolters@aol.com>; ricky allen <rallen@unm.edu>; StopTheWarMachine <swm-d@swcp.com>; claude SF/CA <claude@freedomarchives.org>; todoslibre@egroups.com; toddlindblom@comcast.net
Sent: Wednesday, May 13, 2009 1:52:48 PM
Subject: Fwd: Ode to the Habanero

 
[for the forthcoming planting season]
Ode to the Habanero
True XXX Story
 
always in season popular
where the Sun so hot
must be a commie plot
 1950's-1960's matured
lurking there in the left hand cut,
light out, my habanero pepper
baby-doll hatchling darling
 
lonesome in the 'fridge - an
electric neon the sandwich
traffic has not touched
night of the living dead,
a most dangerous plant
more powerful than kryptonite
 
in the beginning was the word
y la palabra was HABANERO...
 
en El Jardin de Habaneros, el eden
back yard Xikano garden of spices
on Bagley y West Grand Boulevard,
Eva Sanchez said to Adan Garcia
in her most sultry voice
 
"orale honey, fijate, check out
this bad ass hotpepper, it is
sooooooo rico y good for you tambien! "
the remainder es historia
barbed wire fencing- cold
rio bravo waterway showers
 
later that evening,
into the wee wee hours
de la manana, adan
called eva his sweet
red hot pepper woman
 
hefe habanero
un dios among men
no es colored plain red or green
by god Herself si no pintado
glowing bright beelzebub red-orange
plutonium pulsation hypno-salivation
salvation chicken burro spicy
como el amor I fell for the lure
the fire set me free ...
 
oh beef y frijol tacito !
 
oh shameless
glut-o-nious stuffing
of one's own jowls !
 
I aged 4 years initiated into personhood-
tia habanera mi madrina y cool dos exxes
bironga mi padrino ...
 
laters 
                                          c. aztatl, 2004
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


Sunday, May 10, 2009

CLOSE TO HOME: Today Latinos march, tomorrow we vote: By Francisco H. Vázquez

http://www.pressdemocrat.com/article/20090509/OPINION/905089894?Title=CLOSE-TO-HOME-Today-Latinos-march-tomorrow-we-vote

CLOSE TO HOME: Today Latinos march, tomorrow we vote

Published: Saturday, May 9, 2009 at 3:00 a..m.
Last Modified: Friday, May 8, 2009 at 6:18 p.m.

''Hoy marchamos, mañana votamos! Today we march, tomorrow we vote!"


This is one of the chants during the Cinco de Mayo yearly marches in Santa Rosa. To what extent is this promise of civic engagement becoming a reality? Latino political representation in Sonoma County became a reality in the Nov. 4, 2008 election. There are now four elected Latino officials: Efren Carrillo, county supervisor for the 5th District, Ernesto Olivares, Santa Rosa City Council member, Laura Gonzalez, Santa Rosa School Board and George Valenzuela, Windsor School Board.


To delve into this question, it is pertinent to review the findings from 554 surveys conducted in five precincts in Roseland prior to the election as part of the Voter Education and Registration Project, Su Voto Es Su Voz. This project was initiated by the Coalition for Latino Civic Engagement (CLACE) and supported by the Community Foundation Sonoma County-Schultz Fund and Roseland Development Fund, Community Action Partnership, and the Hutchins Institute for Public Policy Studies.


These are some of the highlights from the report on the project:


*A significant finding is that 22.96 percent of the total registered voters in the targeted five precincts are Latinos. On the one hand, since Latinos in Sonoma County make up 21.9 percent of the population, this means that Latinos do indeed participate in the voting process well in proportion to their population and proportionally, even slightly higher than their numbers.

*On the other hand, when the focus is on specific precincts, it seems that registered Latinos are not voting as much as non-Latinos. This is evident from the fact that the precincts with the highest turnout (5008, 5118, 5101) do not correspond to those with the highest Latino registered voters.

*Public officials should be concerned that both Latinos and non-Latinos in Roseland rank a forum with them as their last choice. This is not necessarily a negative reaction against politicians, it may also point to the need for increased knowledge on how to interact with elected officials.

*What is contrary to the common public perception is their desire for civic engagement. This is evident in their ranking voter education workshops as number three, above forums on immigration and education.

*When asked for "other" suggestions to help residents get more involved in their community, there were 80 separate requests from Latinos for more community information.


This represents 40 percent of all the suggestions in this second question of the survey. The need for a better understanding of how the political system works is, in effect, the glaring discovery that emerges from the entire survey.


*While it is understandable that immigration is the number three issue affecting their community, for Latinos, it is surprising that it ranks number seven for non-Latinos, since this is supposed to be a hot issue for the general public.


*It is somewhat reassuring to note that "racism and discrimination" comes in eighth (out of 15 issues) place. Optimistically, this could mean that discrimination is lower in the Latino agenda than it's commonly believed. Conversely, it could mean that they are too busy struggling for social and economic survival to think about discrimination.


There is a clear and obvious need for channels of communication to distribute the requested information to all Roseland residents who are thirsting for opportunities to get involved in the community.


In these times of economic crises and the graying of America, we (Latinos and non-Latinos) ignore the pleas for inclusion and information at our own peril. These are cries for transparency in public affairs from the people who will be the backbone of our workforce in the extremely near future.


Francisco H. Vázquez is director of the Hutchins Institute for Public Policy Studies and Community Action at Sonoma State University.


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Education for Liberation!
Peter S. Lopez ~aka: Peta
Sacramento, California, Aztlan
Yahoo Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com


http://anhglobal.ning.com/group/humanerightsagenda
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Humane-Rights-Agenda/
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NetworkAztlan_News/
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In Disneyland's shadow, a rising new demographic

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-anaheim-latinos9-2009may09,0,5124639.story

In Disneyland's shadow, a rising new demographic

Anaheim
Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times
Crowds gather to watch a popular Lucha Libre wrestling match at Anaheim Marketplace. Anaheim's Latino population has more than tripled since 1980 and now stands at 186,000.

Latinos are now the majority in Anaheim, long known as the quintessential Orange County suburb..
By Tony Barboza
May 9, 2009
A brick wall separated Julio Perez's childhood home from Disneyland, where his father worked in the laundry room.

On that side was the Anaheim that America knew, the quintessential Orange County suburb where expanses of orange groves gave way to rows of 1950s tract homes and a signature theme park.

 
On his side was the neighborhood where Perez, 30, spent his 1980s childhood: a dense, vibrant, heavily Latino island where parks filled with soccer players and families grilled carne asada. Today, his side of the wall has become the new face of Anaheim.

Anaheim's Latino population has more than tripled since 1980 and now stands at 186,000, making Orange County's second-largest city the latest to become majority Latino -- at 54.5% -- according to new census estimates.

But unlike Southern California's impoverished gateways for Latino immigration -- such as Los Angeles' Pico-Union neighborhood or Santa Ana, one of the nation's most heavily Latino large cities, whose proportion of foreign-born residents has been ranked second only to Miami's -- Anaheim is pointed toward a future as a middle-class Latino community like Whittier and Downey, demographers say.

Some, like Perez, point to the emergence of a new social order, one in which a full spectrum of Latinos can find a place, from the recent immigrant to the newly minted middle-class family.

"So maybe there's been an exodus of middle-class people from other backgrounds," said Perez, a political director for a union. "But now there's larger diversity for Latinos . . . there's more access socially."

The population shift puts Anaheim, a city of 342,000, ahead of Los Angeles and Riverside in percentage of Latino residents.

Anaheim today is a sprawling community that stretches from the upscale neighborhoods of Anaheim Hills on the east side to the cramped apartments and aging 1950s-era houses on the west. It's a place where the manicured resort district and bustling sports arenas are for tourists and the bustling flea markets and Sunday afternoon lucha libre wrestling matches are increasingly for the locals.

Jesus Cortez, 28, a Cal State Fullerton student and landscaper who has lived in west Anaheim since he was 9, recalled the neighborhood's transition as white families moved out and Latinos settled in, buying up even the nicest houses.

"It tended to be half and half, then it became the majority," he said. "Now you see more carnicerias, more taquerias."

Councilwoman Lorri Galloway attributes her reelection last fall to campaigning among Latinos in central and western Anaheim, a community she said typically has been ignored while mostly white politicians courted loyal voters in the upper-class neighborhoods in the city's east side. That won't be the case much longer, she suggests.

Anaheim's transition from a mostly white suburb to a majority Latino city parallels the dramatic changes Southern California cities have experienced as immigration surged and communities diversified.

Now, as immigration slows, demographers envision places like Anaheim emerging as stable settling grounds for Latinos rather than depots for immigrants.

In Anaheim, fewer than half of Latinos are now foreign-born. Though housing figures are not broken down by ethnicity, about half the residents own their own homes and the median annual income is a healthy $58,000.

"It's the dream of having a single-family house and a white picket fence and a dog," said Harry Pachon, president of the Tomas Rivera Policy Institute at USC.

An increase in home ownership probably was one factor propelling the rise of Latinos in Anaheim. During the housing boom earlier this decade, upwardly mobile Latinos bought homes in record numbers, freeing up space for more recent immigrants in apartments.

"Now it's a heterogenous mix," said Louis DeSipio, a professor of political science and Chicano/Latino studies at UC Irvine.

"It's two things: Latinos moving in and non-Latinos moving out."

Leading the way for change was the lure of jobs in manufacturing, service and technology, which gave the city the second-highest job growth in Orange County over the last 15 years, just behind Irvine, according to a report by the Orange County Business Council..

Unlike Santa Ana, Maywood or Huntington Park, which have all-Latino city councils, the new majority in Anaheim has made few political gains.

"We don't have the juice up there in the City Council," said Amin David, leader of Los Amigos, an Orange County Latino advocacy group that meets in Anaheim once a week for breakfast. "We don't even have an entree. For anything to happen, of course, it takes three votes, and we don't get much progress."

David said it may be time for Latino representation to be boosted by carving the city into council districts. Currently, all five council seats are elected at large.

Latinos have not always felt entirely at home in Anaheim, which was founded as a colony of German farmers in 1857 and has a history of racial tension. In the 1920s, four Ku Klux Klan members were elected to the City Council and briefly took control of the government, earning the city an uncomfortable nickname: "Klanaheim." Decades later, in 1978, strife between the Latino community and police erupted in a riot at Little People's Park, where charges of police brutality led to reforms in the Anaheim Police Department.

You'd never know that now looking at the Anaheim Marketplace, a spacious indoor swap meet where droves of mostly Spanish-speaking families browse hundreds of stalls, shopping for jewelry, clothing and pets, and show up in force for beauty pageants, quinceañeras, weddings and carnivals.

For many of them, Anaheim is feeling more like home. A place to move up, open a business and buy a first home.

But even for entrepreneurs like Jose Luis Quintana, 41, who moved here from Guerrero, Mexico, 20 years ago and owns a gift shop in a stall named "Joseph's Place," progress is measured.

Anaheim today, he reflected, is a more comfortable place than decades ago, when he worked painting cars and was one of the few Mexicans in his apartment building. But there are growing pains.

"It's a suburb that's developing into a city," he said, sitting behind the counter, listening to a radio. "We're a bigger population now. We're more crowded and there's less space."

tony.barboza@latimes.com

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Comment: Hell... I ain't never been to Disneyland anyways~!!!

Education for Liberation!
Peter S. Lopez ~aka: Peta
Sacramento, California, Aztlan
Yahoo Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com


http://anhglobal.ning.com/group/humanerightsagenda
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Humane-Rights-Agenda/
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NetworkAztlan_News/
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