Monday, October 19, 2020

 

Please Report If a Voting Drop Box and/or Polling Location is not Accessible!
Unfortunately, there still are various public facilities and services that are not accessible. Thanks to the assistance of a Disability Rights Maryland (DRM) friend who identified a trashcan obstructing the path to a ballot drop-off box in Frederick County, DRM successfully had the the barrier removed to insure accessibility.

Help DRM identify inaccessible drop box and ballot locations by contacting our voter hotline by phone at 443-692-2492; 800-233-7201 ext. 2492; TTY 410-235-5387, or by email at Voting@DisabilityRightsMD.org.

   And don't forget the DRM's 2020 Breaking Barriers Gala Awards Banquet on November 12, 2020 at 6:30-7:30 p.m. 

The Breaking Barriers Awards Gala is DRM's signature celebration where individuals, law firms and organizations that have demonstrated exceptional leadership, vision and achievement in safeguarding the legal rights of people with disabilities in Maryland are recognized and honored. Funds raised at the Gala will directly support DRM and expand their ability to provide legal assistance so that Marylanders with disabilities, regardless of income, age or race, can live full independent lives in the community.

At this event, the DRM will honor Floyd Hartley On Behalf Of CARS, Gayle Hafner Grassroots Advocacy Award; Wade Henderson, Judith Heumann Champion Of Justice Award; Judith E. Heumann, Presenter, Judith Heumann Champion Of Justice Award; and Andrew D. Levy, Lorraine Sheehan Lifetime Achievement Award. 


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Source: Disability Rights Maryland's DRM Spotlight, October 2020.

Friday, October 16, 2020

 

National Community Reinvestment Coalition
Special Event



Redlining And Neighborhood Health
October 20, 12:00 pm EDT - 1:30 pm EDT

In this webinar, National Community Reinvestment Coalition (NCRC) staff and other advocates will discuss their new redlining and health report, major findings, and the effects of redlining today in Baltimore and Rochester, New York. There also will be a demonstration of the web application that allows you to examine the relationship between redlining and public health in more than 140 cities.

Speakers:
  • Jason Richardson, NCRC
  • Jad Edlebi, NCRC
  • Bruce Mitchell, PhD, NCRC
  • Marceline White, Maryland Consumer Rights Coalition
  • Ruhi Maker, Empire Justice Center
Register Now
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Source: NCRC email, October 16, 2020.

Friday, October 2, 2020

 Study Finds Higher COVID-19 Risk Factors in Redlined Neighborhoods - Like Parts of Baltimore

"People of color are disproportionately contracting COVID-19, and because they are more likely to have underlying health conditions, are also facing an increased risk of severe illness and mortality from COVID-19 (CDC, 2020). While COVID-19 has pushed racial health inequities into the national spotlight, the underlying differences in social, economic and environmental conditions that have given rise to inequities in COVID-19 infection, transmission and severe illness are not new (CDC, 2020)."

The just-released Redlining and Neighborhood Health study of multiple cities - including Baltimore - by the National Community Reinvestment Coalition (NCRC), working with two researchers each from the University of Wisconsin and the University of Richmond, has found that:

"Further, amidst the COVID-19 pandemic’s disproportionate impact on the country’s Black population, Barber et al. (2020) examined racial residential segregation and COVID-19 cases in Philadelphia, guided by theoretical frameworks for studying structural racism. The HOLC’s historical practices of redlining and other discriminatory lending practices were instrumental in driving the stark segregation seen in Philadelphia today. While not explicitly measuring HOLC redlining maps, Barber et al. (2020) acknowledge how these historical processes established the physical, economic and social conditions that are giving rise to racial inequities in COVID-19. They illustrate how structural racism embedded in our interlocking social, legal, economic and political systems interact to drive disproportionate prevalence of COVID-19 infection, transmission and mortality in Black communities (Barber et al., 2020). Their results showed that the most segregated neighborhoods in Philadelphia were more likely to have structural susceptibility to COVID-19 (a measure encompassing neighborhood indicators that increase the likelihood of exposure and community transmission, limit ability to access testing and treatment, and capture economic hardship). Further, the COVID-19 case rate in the five most segregated neighborhoods was twice that of the COVID-19 case rate in the five least segregated neighborhoods. These findings suggest that segregation acts as a structural driver of racial inequities in Philadelphia and calls for both short- and long-term solutions that center structural racism and health equity in the COVID-19 response."

Concerning Baltimore, a comparison between the 1930 situation and 2020 indicates that almost all of the parts of the city that had high racial segregation have continued to have the Center for Disease Control's High Vulnerability Index census tract score regarding COVID-19 possibility. Read an explanation of how to interpret the SVI map of Baltimore. The SVI combines social and economic, housing and transportation, minority status and language, household composition, and disability to provide numerical area comparison. Since development in the 2000s, indices of social vulnerability have been an important tool for emergency planning and public health assessment. 

To counter this, the study recommends:

  • Restore the Affirmatively Further Fair Housing (AFFH) rule that President Trump and Secretary of Housing Ben Carson have cancelled. This rule encouraged communities to identify and reduce concentrated areas of poverty.
  • Support inclusionary zoning that adds affordable housing choices outside of the redlined sections of the city and promotes the reduction of concentrated areas of poverty.
  • Expand the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) to include non-banks and to modernize how this law is implemented.
  • Encourage locally relevant solutions such as expanded Section 8 and rent control/vouchers. Protect public housing.
  • Modernize and expand access to data and other information for local communities on lending and investment in their area.
  • Explore how reparations, housing and desegregation intertwine. Talk with residents about how best to preserve culture and community while moving towards a solution where one’s health is not detrimentally affected by the place where they were born.

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Source: National Community Reinvestment Coalition, September 10, 2020