Louisville Public Media: Louisville Metro awards $250,000 to 16 local arts organizations with National Endowment for the Arts funds

Louisville Metro Government’s Office of Arts and Creative Industries awarded $250,000 to 16 local arts organizations. The funding comes from the National Endowment for the Arts’ American Rescue Plan sub-granting program. According to a news release from the city, the program aims to help arts organizations as they try to return to semi-normal processes following COVID-19.

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Jecorey Arthur
STAT: Racism leads to troubled sleep — and it’s putting Black Americans’ heart health at risk

The implications of these sleep disparities are far-reaching. The medical world has known for decades that habitually poor sleep increases the risk for heart disease. If more people regularly got the recommended seven to nine hours of restful sleep, experts assert, the incidence of heart disease — the most frequent cause of death in the U.S. — could fall substantially. Earlier this year, the American Heart Association went so far as to add getting a good night’s sleep to its central recommendations for improving cardiovascular health.

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Jecorey Arthur
22 WINS FOR 2022

In 2022 we sponsored 66 pieces of legislation in total, 63 of them passed, 2 are still held in committees, and 1 of them failed. A special shout out to the District 4 Legislative Assistant Brianna Wright who opened several hundred constituent cases this year and our staff helper Mikayla Hicks who has been helping with social media. We have a lot of work to do but can't do it without you.

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Jecorey Arthur
The Washington Post: Peaceful protest is much more effective than violence for toppling dictators

“Keep in mind that the state almost always has the military force at its disposal to crush just about any uprising. This is particularly true since the end of World War I, after which most states acquired tanks, machine guns and other tools that almost no rebel group could match on the battlefield. I found that an uprising is half as likely to succeed if the military intervenes directly and that this far less likely to happen if the uprising remains nonviolent.”

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Jecorey Arthur
Center for Neighborhoods Spring 2023 Neighborhood Institute

The Neighborhood Institute is a neighborhood leadership-education program established in 1987 by the Center For Neighborhoods, a non-profit civic organization. The Neighborhood Institute equips neighborhood leaders with the resources necessary to effect positive change by acting through and with their neighborhood groups. Part of the Neighborhood Institute curriculum includes a self-directed project in the community. Through the class projects, people become engaged in the community as they branch out and apply the information and knowledge from the class to real-life situations.

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Jecorey Arthur
The American Federation of Teachers: Fighting gun violence will take all of us

According to Brown, people who blame neighborhoods for violence are missing the real problem. “My neighborhoods are being attacked by … unjust legislation. My neighborhoods are being attacked by having no resources in our schools and in our homes,” he said. He thanked educators and school staff for supporting him through every challenge and encouraged them to call on him for help.

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Jecorey Arthur
Governing: Why Governments Declare a Homeless State of Emergency

The decision to declare states of emergency highlights the dual narrative of homelessness today: National point-in-time count data, collected in January, suggest that overall homelessness is trending downward. Indeed, some cities have made dramatic reductions in the number of veterans who are homeless on a repeat or long-term basis. But in certain places, and among certain parts of the homeless population, it’s getting worse. "For veterans in particular, Congress has made the resources available, scaled to the size of the problem," said Steve Berg, vice president of policy and programs at the National Alliance to End Homelessness. "For the rest of the homeless population, that just hasn’t happened."

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Jecorey Arthur
Courier-Journal: '20 steps ahead' of the competition: Ariel Thompson struts into role as Miss Black Kentucky

The event ― which took place this year for the first time in at least a decade ― was hosted at the Louisville Memorial Auditorium and welcomed Black women to compete as themselves, regardless of who they are or where they've come from. About 250 friends and family members were in the crowd, said Ashley Anderson, executive director of Miss Black Kentucky.

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Jecorey Arthur
Edutopia: How Music Primes the Brain for Learning

Consistent exposure to music, like learning to play a musical instrument, or taking voice lessons, strengthens a particular set of academic and social-emotional skills that are essential to learning. In ways that are unmatched by other pursuits, like athletics for instance, learning music powerfully reinforces language skills, builds and improves reading ability, and strengthens memory and attention, according to the latest research on the cognitive neuroscience of music.

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Jecorey Arthur
Access Louisville: ARP Housing Funding

Mayor Greg Fischer and Metro Council members today announced the city is in contract negotiations to devote about $32 million of federal American Rescue Plan (ARP) dollars to five community organizations for permanent supportive housing projects, providing help to vulnerable people not only with more stable housing, but also more opportunities for stability and productivity in their lives.

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Jecorey Arthur
Virtual Public Hearings on the Risk Management Program Safer Communities by Chemical Accident Prevention Proposed Rule

On August 18, 2022, EPA Administrator Michael S. Regan signed the Safer Communities by Chemical Accident Prevention (SCCAP) Proposed Rule, which proposes revisions to the Risk Management Program (RMP) to further protect vulnerable communities from chemical accidents, especially those living near facilities with high accident rates. The proposed rule would strengthen the existing program and includes new safeguards that have not been addressed in prior RMP rules. In addition to accepting written comments during the public comment period, EPA is also holding virtual public hearings. The virtual public hearings will provide the opportunity to present information, comments or views pertaining to the SCCAP proposed rule.

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Jecorey Arthur
Pew Research Center: Black Americans Have a Clear Vision for Reducing Racism but Little Hope It Will Happen

Discussions about atonement for the enslavement of Black Americans has a long history in the United States. Most famously, General William T. Sherman drafted Special Field Order 15 in 1865. The order stipulated that Confederate land seized in Georgia and South Carolina would be split among formerly enslaved Black people in those states, no more than 40 acres per family.

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Jecorey Arthur
Current and Former Louisville, Kentucky Police Officers Charged with Federal Crimes Related to Death of Breonna Taylor

A federal grand jury in Louisville, Kentucky, returned two indictments that were unsealed today, and the Department of Justice filed a third charging document today, in connection with an investigation into the circumstances surrounding the death of Breonna Taylor, a 26-year-old woman who was shot and killed in her Louisville home on March 13, 2020, by police officers executing a search warrant.

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Jecorey Arthur