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More Black Americans live in Texas than any other state. Two years after George Floyd’s murder, many reconsider their future here.

August 16, 2022 by www.chron.com Leave a Comment

After the nation watched a Minneapolis police officer murder George Floyd two summers ago, Gov. Greg Abbott promised his Houston relatives that his death would not be in vain — and signaled an openness to pursuing police reforms .

But even as millions of Americans protested excessive force, systemic racism and law enforcement’s treatment of people of color, Abbott quickly pivoted to defending police funding while remaining relatively quiet on overhauling public safety practices. Earlier this month, Abbott appointed an Austin police officer indicted for excessive force during the 2020 protests to the state agency that regulates law enforcement — which brought swift criticism for the message it sent to Black Texans.

Not that Chas Moore, an Austin activist who helped organize some of the 2020 Black Lives Matter protests, was surprised by the actions of the governor, who is white. After all, Texas is the birthplace of Juneteenth because it was the last state to free enslaved people — and is frequently a political harbinger in a country with a long history of racism, discrimination and oppression.

“There’s always been an attack on our very existence,” Moore said. “We’re not new to this, we’re true to this … it’s sad to say that we’re true to daily struggles of just existing as Black people.”

Floyd’s death and the massive demonstrations that followed it were part of a seemingly endless onslaught of upheaval, crises and emergencies that have trickled into every aspect of daily life — from the economy and health care to public safety and education — for the past two years. For Black people, deaths, illness, job loss and economic insecurity wrought by the coronavirus pandemic have compounded those traumas.

And in Texas, those seismic forces have been accompanied by a Republican-controlled state government that has limited how America’s history of racism is taught in public schools, restricted voting options heavily used by people of color and protected the GOP’s grip on power with new political maps that diminish the power of voters of color — who accounted for 95% of the state’s population boom between the last two censuses.

“What we’re dealing with now in Texas is not new,” said Karen Kossie-Chernyshev, a history professor at Texas Southern University. “It’s still about impacting the strength of the Black vote.”

Texas is home to more Black Americans than any other state — more than 3.8 million, about 13% of the state’s population. The state was founded by white men who were determined to expand slavery westward — the conflict that sparked the Civil War. Today, white men are overrepresented in the Legislature . At the start of the 2021 regular legislative session, there were 17 Black lawmakers in the 150-member Texas House — 16 Democrats and one Republican. Only two Black senators, both Democrats, serve in the 31-member Texas Senate. A few Black Texans have held statewide office, but none have made it to the senior-most executive and legislative positions.

Black Texans’ experiences of the past two years — and how they’re looking ahead to the November midterm elections and next year’s legislative session — are as varied as the individuals themselves. Some Black Republicans, for instance, don’t think that everything should be viewed through a lens of race. Robin Armstrong, who recently made an unsuccessful bid for the GOP nomination for a Texas Senate district that includes Galveston, said that people use the “offense of racism” to control Black Texans.

“If we see everything through that, then we’re always going to have an excuse to fail,” Armstrong said.

But nearly a dozen Black Texans who talked to The Texas Tribune see racism in state leaders’ actions. Some have wondered if remaining in the state makes sense for them. Others are determined to stay and advocate for a more equal and just government.

“If we all run, who’s going to be here to change some of the policies, change some of the laws and change some of the minds of people that are in control and power so that we are able to make it a better place?” said Naomi Green, a transgender woman who volunteers with multiple LGBTQ advocacy organizations in North Texas. “Who’s gonna be here to do that?”

Some turn to human connections made in their own daily lives as a way to focus on the joys in the world, rather than completely fixate on the hardships. Some Black Texans draw strength from their ancestors’ resilience, while others point out that the constant fighting for survival is utterly exhausting.

“We’ve been through Jim Crow, we’ve been through the ‘war on drugs,’ we’ve been through the ’90s crime bill,” Moore said. “We’ve been through redlining with banks, we’ve been through work discrimination. It’s just kind of what it is. We’ve always, in that same breath, been organizing and fighting for humanity and fighting for our rightful place in society as Americans.”

Perseverance and pain

The history of Black people in Texas is a story of resilience.

Texas was the last state where enslaved people were proclaimed free — on June 19, 1865. The Juneteenth commemoration has been a Texas state holiday since 1980 and was recognized as a federal holiday in 2021.

In a state where the scars of Jim Crow segregation still linger, Black students today find themselves turning up at weekend brunch parties, Greek Life events and Black History Month observances on campuses that refused to entertain their applications a few decades ago. Many excel at institutions established by Black pioneers. Thousands have voted for Black legislators in a state where thousands used to gather for Black lynchings.

Faith Anderson grew up in East Austin in the 1990s. Local culture was everything to Anderson. They attended several Black-owned charter schools that accommodated students’ various learning styles. There was East Side Story, an afterschool program started by neighborhood legend Larry Jackson. Kids would go to youth dances. Sliding to Highland Mall on Saturdays was still the move.

Today, the 29-year-old is a director, actor, pilates coach and trauma-informed yoga teacher. They have leaned heavily into arts and community building as a way to preserve their own mental health — and bring joy to others.

“I do think we are the people who are reflecting and giving fun and a breath of air to this painful society,” they said.

But for some Black Texans, resilience takes a toll — and some wonder what their lived experiences would be like if they didn’t always have to put so much emotional labor into persistently fighting for equality.

One 32-year-old Black Texan, whose name is X, has worked in service of Black communities for most of their adult life. They helped during recovery efforts in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, the cataclysmic Louisiana hurricane that killed more than 1,800 mostly Black people and displaced millions of others. Nearly 20 years later, they are still busy overseeing House of Rebirth, a Dallas organization advocating for Black trans women. They feel a constant tension between fighting for people’s rights and equality — and a sense that it’s inherently unequal to have to do so.

“At the end of the day, if I could have just been born free … I can’t imagine that I would be doing this,” X said.

Which Anderson gets. That’s a major reason why they stepped back from grassroots activism and now focuses largely on artistic endeavors meant to replenish people’s souls.

“I do think some of us are better suited in different places,” Anderson said.

A budding leader

Kennedy McGregor is entering her junior year at the University of North Texas in Denton as president of the school’s Progressive Black Student Organization. She has spent some of the summer trying to figure out the organization’s identity — finding a sweet spot between grassroots activism and serving as a safe space for Black students. The 20-year-old from Round Rock is also trying to keep her head in current events as much as possible to stay informed.

The leadership opportunity feels surreal considering she started college during the fall 2020 semester — when classes operated in a hybrid format because of the coronavirus and when much of the country stood off balance from Floyd’s murder. Months before McGregor arrived on campus, Darius Tarver, a 23-year-old Black student, was shot and killed by Denton police. Tarver’s family has filed a lawsuit seeking damages, asserting that police used excessive force.

“First, it kind of made me want to withdraw from things a little bit more because everything that was happening in 2020, with Black Lives Matter and then even nowadays where there’s grocery store shootings, church shootings, school shootings,” McGregor said, “it just made me want to withdraw because I’m like, am I even gonna be safe out here? Like, is there even a point of me doing all this and changing all this?”

But when McGregor joined the organization during her freshman year, she immediately identified with members’ raw and real vibe. Students were not consumed with trying to act overly flashy or classy. They prioritized getting to know one another through stimulating conversations, group meetings and social events.

That sense of grounding and belonging was exactly what she unsuccessfully sought in her predominantly white high school in an Austin suburb. For years, she tried to fit in and gain her white friends’ acceptance. Then came a devastating realization: They didn’t all respect her.

In the 11th grade, as she sat with some of her schoolmates in the local high school library, a white male friend unexpectedly walked up with a handful of students to harass her. Together the white students started shouting the N-word at the dark-skinned Black girl. Over and over and over. Even though there was no physical attack, she still felt like she’d been verbally jumped.

“It just scared the mess out of me,” she said. “It was just a real trigger for a while just to even hear their names or see them at school. So it was something I really struggled with.”

McGregor’s high school experience in part moved her to join the primarily Black student organization at UNT. The recent string of events has contributed to her longing to work in the service of more people who look like her.

Approaching the fall semester, at another moment when many Black Texans don’t feel that the state and country are working in their best interests, McGregor bears a heightened sense of responsibility to show up on campus ready to help those searching for guidance.

“I’m just trying to prepare myself and be as educated on what’s going on as I can,” McGregor said, “so that way I’m not biasing people, but I’m giving them information through someone who is familiar to them and … isn’t trying to trick them.”

Targeted on two fronts

Black trans women are fighting a battle on two fronts — one related to their race and the other having to do with their gender identity.

Since Green, the Garland woman who volunteers for several advocacy groups, began working in Texas, the state GOP has sought to limit access to LGBTQ-themed books in schools and vowed to restrict or ban classroom lessons on sexual orientation and gender identity. Lawmakers have already passed a law that requires student-athletes to play on sports teams that correspond to their sex assigned at birth rather than their gender identity. And state leaders have pushed to open child abuse investigations of parents who allow their children access to gender-affirming care.

Republicans also passed a law limiting classroom discussions about race and slavery’s role in the shaping of the country. Many Republican officials and parents criticized diversity and equity initiatives — and social studies lessons about slavery and racism — as attempts to make white students feel guilt or discomfort , something some school officials called a “manufactured crisis.”

A Black principal in North Texas — not far from where Green resides — resigned from his position after white officials and parents accused him of “encouraging the disruption and destruction of our district” after he shared the pain he felt over the deaths of three Black Americans: Floyd in Minnesota, Breonna Taylor in Kentucky and Ahmaud Arbery in Georgia.

“It’s a constant attack,” Green said. “You’re waiting on the next thing to happen. You’re waiting on the next law, you’re waiting on the next executive order. You’re waiting on the next proposed legislation, you know, you’re waiting on all of these things to happen because it’s been happening. I have not let my guard down.”

Green’s gender transition started in 2006. Looking back, she said her transition wasn’t as difficult as many people’s because she had already graduated from high school and college, started her career and had loving family members who accepted her.

“The thing about it is, for most transgender women of color, specifically, that’s not the case,” she said. “They lack most of those things. And so it’s much more difficult. And I didn’t realize that until I got into this work.”

Black trans women make up two-thirds of the victims of deadly violence in LGBTQ communities across the U.S. since 2013, according to the Human Rights Campaign. Advocates say that Texas officials’ rhetoric and legislation targeting marginalized communities only makes people of color and LGBTQ people more vulnerable.

Green’s motivation is powered by her work helping disempowered and stigmatized people.

“That is what keeps me going — receiving calls and texts and emails and kind gestures from people letting me know that I helped them in some way or that they need my help or that I am making a difference and having an impact,” she said.

Not that it always yields a positive result. Green recently got a call from a colleague asking her to help a trans woman sleeping outside of an office building. The woman had previously tried living in a shelter but left for unknown reasons. But when the colleague asked Green what she could do to help, she realized there were virtually no options available because of Dallas’ scarcity of resources for trans people.

“It’s deflating,” Green said about not being able to help the woman. “It’s sympathy, it’s empathy, you know, it’s feeling helpless in those particular moments. But at the same time, it’s what drives me because it’s something that I know needs to change.”

“Everything you were put on this Earth to be”

At 20 years old, Ryan Douglas finds herself frustrated with the ongoing political and social upheaval that so often impacts Black people much more negatively than their white counterparts. When she was younger, the Carrollton native had already decided there wasn’t really a future for her in Texas.

Then the U.S. Supreme Court this summer overturned the constitutional right to an abortion, a procedure Black women use at the highest rates . It was a decision many saw as a devastating revocation of settled law — and another attack on women’s rights. And Texas has a “trigger law” in place to now ban virtually all abortions this month.

That sealed the deal for the North Carolina A&T State University junior. She doesn’t want to live in Texas long term after she graduates partly because she’s lost faith that women of color will gain equitable political ground.

“I just don’t see it changing anytime soon,” she said. “It’s been this way for so long.”

But Ashton Woods, the co-founder of Black Lives Matter Houston, plans to stay in place. He most recently organized a demonstration outside of the Republican Party of Texas’ state convention. He understands that heading into the November midterm elections, there are fewer voting options than in 2020. His message to the thousands of people who showed up to protest was simple: Hold elected officials accountable and hold your neighbors accountable.

“I love the whole idea of being able to vote at midnight; I did love the idea of being able to drive-thru. I liked all of that,” Woods said.

For him, a piece of the antidote is still casting ballots, despite attempts that make it less convenient.

“We’ve always adapted,” he said. “So we’re just gonna have to do what we gotta do to get people to the polls.”

First: Ashton Woods, co-founder and lead organizer of Black Lives Matter Houston, continues to mobilize voters and has even run for office. Last: Milton Harris, executive director of 100 Black Men of San Antonio, runs a training center that mentors Black youth in self-empowerment. Credit: Annie Mulligan and Chris Stokes for The Texas Tribune

Milton Harris, the 54-year-old executive director of 100 Black Men of San Antonio, a youth training and support organization, views officials’ actions as attempts to knock Black Texans off their destined paths. The Air Force veteran said that as long as the “white caucasian male” power structure lasts, Black people will face strife. His organization uses job training, teaching and mentorship to show young people how to overcome those hindrances.

“Things are gonna be adversarial because it’s all about power and control,” Harris said. “But that should not and cannot prevent you from being everything you were put on this Earth to be and potentially, at some point, bringing about change.”

Moore, of the Austin Justice Coalition, also said Black Texans need to focus on holding officials accountable. To incite meaningful change, he said, they will need to mobilize more outside of mass demonstrations. He says, “something is going to have to give.”

He also plans to stay in Texas — even though he does sometimes entertain the idea of living somewhere else.

“Yes, I fantasize about being at a Black-ass brunch in Harlem, but I can’t do that and rest peacefully knowing that there are Black people that can’t up and leave if they wanted to, and they don’t want to leave because they have culture and heritage and history here,” Moore said. “I have to fight to make sure that Black people have the freedom and self will to call any place home, you know? So why not fight? This land is my land just as much as anybody else’s.”

Disclosure: Human Rights Campaign, Texas Southern University – Barbara Jordan-Mickey Leland School of Public Affairs and University of North Texas have been financial supporters of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune’s journalism. Find a complete list of them here .


The full program is now LIVE for the 2022 The Texas Tribune Festival , happening Sept. 22-24 in Austin. Explore the schedule of 100+ mind-expanding conversations coming to TribFest, including the inside track on the 2022 elections and the 2023 legislative session, the state of public and higher ed at this stage in the pandemic, why Texas suburbs are booming, why broadband access matters, the legacy of slavery, what really happened in Uvalde and so much more. See the program.

This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at https://www.texastribune.org/2022/08/16/black-texans-future/ .

The Texas Tribune is a member-supported, nonpartisan newsroom informing and engaging Texans on state politics and policy. Learn more at texastribune.org.

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Father’s fury at murderer who rolled his son into the bush ‘like some animal’

August 16, 2022 by www.stuff.co.nz Leave a Comment

A man who gunned down a perceived rival on a winding, bush-clad Coromandel highway has been jailed for 14 years – and treated to a harsh sendoff from court.

“Rot, you fat f…,” yelled the family of Bayden Williams to Adrian Phillips as he was ushered from a courtroom in Hamilton on Tuesday.

Following an almost six-week trial in the High Court at Hamilton earlier this year, Adrian Reginald George Phillips, 24, was found guilty of murdering Bayden Williams, 20.

Williams was found dead on the side of the Kopu-Hikuai Rd on the Coromandel Peninsula on the evening of Wednesday, August 5, 2020.

READ MORE: Guilty verdict in Coromandel roadside murder trial Psychiatrist: Murder-accused’s ‘concrete thinking’ at time of shooting ‘I just wanted to talk to him … I thought it could have gone quite well’

The jury found Phillips had deliberately rammed Williams’ vehicle off a twisting stretch of road. When Williams attempted to climb up a bank back to the roadside, about 7pm that night, Phillips fatally injured him by shooting him three times – in the thigh, shoulder and, finally, his head – with a shotgun.

Phillips’ defence case, led by Ron Mansfield, QC, was that he had fired in self-defence because he believed Williams was advancing on him with a knife. However, the jury agreed with the Crown case, led by Rebecca Mann and Jacinda Hamilton, that Phillips was in a murderous rage when he opened fire and had effectively ambushed Williams on the dark, twisting highway.

There had been bad blood between Phillips and Williams and his father, Lance Williams. The two families had been linked by a pair of twin sisters, one of whom was Phillips’ partner, the other the former partner of Williams – and with whom he had a son, Loki. The pair were rekindling a relationship at the time he was killed.

Phillips returned to the High Court at Hamilton on Wednesday for his sentencing before Justice Melanie Harland.

Lance Williams was also there, and he and his wife, Tracy, and brother Josh spoke of their anguish at hearing the manner of Bayden Williams’ death.

Lance Williams was evidently still furious at the man who killed his son “and rolled him into the bush like some animal”.

Seeing his son in a body bag “with one side of his face blown off” was an image that would always stay with him.

“Had I known you were capable of such a brutal act … I would never have opened my door to you.”

Tracy Williams told Phillips her son was “a people pleaser – a humble dude who made everyone welcome, as he did with you.

“He was such a spark of light in our lives, and you have snuffed him out.”

Josh Williams had a blunt assessment of the situation: “You have broken the hearts of many … I hope your time in prison is miserable with every waking moment.”

Mansfield said the actions of Phillips reflected a failure of the mental health system. His client had suffered horrific injuries in a fuel explosion about a year and a half before the shooting, and he had subsequently been assaulted by Lance and Bayden Williams in a confrontation in Tairua earlier that year.

“The consequences are sadly real. While the physical injuries may have healed, the emotional injuries remained real and raw.”

His issues “had not been adequately identified and treated. If they were, we would not be here today.”

In her submissions, Hamilton said Phillips “chose to put his desire for revenge to the fore. He armed himself … and knowing his capacity for anger he engineered a confrontation likely to trigger him[self].

“This offending is not the result of a mental illness. It is the result of the actions of a vengeful and angry man.”

Justice Harland described Phillips’ decision to intercept Williams’ car on the road as “an impulsive and irrational decision … You were not intending to have a civilised discussion to clear the air between you.”

She stopped short of describing the murder as premeditated, however.

Phillips’ case was comparable to other recent killers, including that of “stop-go” murderer Quentin Winders and the case of Raglan tourist murderer Mark Garson .

Hamilton had sought a minimum period of imprisonment of 15-and-a-half years. Mansfield asked for a 10-year minimum.

Phillips had tendered a letter to the court “offering my wholehearted apology … for what happened”.

“I will never forgive myself for what I did.”

Before the trial, Phillips had pleaded guilty to charges of unlawful possession of a shotgun and ammunition, and the judge sentenced him to a concurrent six months for those offences.

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A$AP Rocky hit with TWO charges four months after rapper was arrested at airport while with Rihanna

August 16, 2022 by www.thesun.co.uk Leave a Comment

RAPPER A$AP Rocky has been charged in connection to a 2021 shooting in California, said the state’s district attorney on Monday.

A$AP Rocky , real name Rakim Mayers, is facing two counts of assault with a semiautomatic firearm with allegations of personally using a firearm.

District Attorney George Gascón revealed his office filed the charges against Mayers following the alleged assault against a former friend last November.

The two men allegedly got into an argument on November 6, 2021, which escalated and resulted in the rapper allegedly firing the handgun at the other man, according to authorities.

The Los Angeles Police Department said the victim sustained a minor injury and Mayers allegedly fled the scene with two other people.

He was arrested in April of this year at LAX following a vacation in Barbados with girlfriend, Rihanna.

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“Discharging a gun in a public place is a serious offense that could have ended with tragic consequences not only for the person targeted but also for innocent bystanders visiting Hollywood,’ said Gascón in a statement.

“My office conducted a thorough review of the evidence in this case and determined that the addition of a special firearm allegation was warranted.”

Rocky is also being sued for assault and battery by a former member of the ASAP Mob, ASAP Relli, who claims that he is the alleged victim in the shooting.

Relli claims he was hit with bullet fragments and suffered injuries as a result.

Mayers is scheduled to be arraigned on Wednesday.

He is out on $550,000 bail, reported LATimes .

The U.S. Sun has reached out to A$AP Rocky’s reps for comment.

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The cheapest places in London to book a hotel room – and the boroughs charging you DOUBLE

June 15, 2016 by www.mirror.co.uk Leave a Comment

Britain’s costly capital not only hits the roof when it comes to rent and travel, but also hotel prices – with the big leading boroughs charging sky high for tourists after a glimpse of the city’s iconic sights.

Hotels comparison website Trivago has revealed the boroughs in the UK’s bustling city that are charging extortionate rates to sleep in overnight – and the towns just 5 minutes’ outside the city that will save you half price.

Trivago analysed hotel data from nine of London’s central boroughs, to reveal the best – and most affordable places to stay – as millions of visitors from around the world prepare to visit the capital’s streets for shopping and sightseeing this summer.

At an average of £220 per night, the most expensive borough is rather unsurprisingly the City of London – home to the Hilton Doubletree and M by Montcalm Shoreditch , while Westminster – the home of Big Ben and Parliament – is the most popular borough for visitors.

At an average of £204 a night, Westminster is home to a number of upmarket luxury hotels – including The Royal Horseguards , London Marriott Hotel and The Rubens at the Palace .

Meanwhile, the cheapest hotel prices can be found on the outskirts of London – far east in Newham (average of £99 per night) or far west in Hammersmith and Fulham ( see the 10 best hotels here ) – less than a 5 minutes’ bus ride from the heart of Chelsea, for £114 per night.

But which hotels rate the best?

The best-rated hotels can be found in City of London, with an average of 86.24 on the trivago Rating Index .

Next is the borough of Southwark, with an average rating of 82.58.

Meanwhile, the worst-rated hotels can be found in Westminster (average of 75.21) and Hammersmith and Fulham (73.18). In general, boroughs in the east of London have a better average hotel rating than boroughs in the west of London.

Trivago Communications UK & Ireland manager Denise Bartlett says: “It can be daunting deciding where to stay in a city as large and segmented as London, but by breaking the city down into boroughs we found clearly defined differences between each neighbourhood.

“Location is a key factor, with the most expensive neighbourhoods located in the centre, western and southern boroughs and cheaper neighbourhoods in the north, east and on the outskirts.

“There are also clear differences when it comes to average hotel rating, with neighbourhoods in East London boasting higher hotel ratings then neighbourhoods in West London.”

So what’s the cheapest place to stay?

If you’re visiting London this year, and rate value over distance, the best place to book your accommodation is in the far east, just outside of the city, where hotels are around £99 a night on average, and quality ratings are at their highest.

You can view the best value hotels in East London here .

Alternatively, head far west in Hammersmith and Fulham – which is also less than a 10 minutes’ bus ride from the heart of Chelsea, for £114 per night.

Read more: 10 best cheap hotels in London

Read more

How to save on London travel costs

Cheap travel tickets

Virgin Trains hacks

Booking tips

Network Railcard facts

11 spending secrets to find a cheap hotel in London

1. Use comparison websites

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Image:

i-escape.com)

Before you sign on the dotted line, make sure you’ve bagged the cheapest possible price on your stay.

Websites like TravelSupermarket and Trivago are experts at this, and will scour through hundreds of websites and millions of deals to bring you a round up of the best prices based on your destination and venue.

But, always remember to compare across comparison websites, as some may not cover specific chains or brands.

2. Consider a Top Secret Hotel

A lot of four and five star hotels like to remain anonymous when offering discounts and run ‘secret’ deals for their mystery hotel rooms, meaning you can get a great rate but you won’t know where you’re going to stay until night before you arrive.

Lastminute.com is famous for this, with their ‘Top Secret Hotels’ booking system .

LateRooms.com also has a secret system, type in ‘Secret hotel’ into their site and it’ll bring up a number of hotels in your destination.

Read more

Find a travel bargain

Cruise Deals

Walkable cities

Ski holidays

City break deals

3. Test out new hotels for free

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Image:

Getty)

If you’re happy to play the guinea pig, new hotels are always on the look out for clientele – like you, to test out and offer feedback on their rooms.

Websites like Hotel News Resource will flag up new venues, and you can call up to ask about a discount or potentially free stay.

4. Join loyalty points schemes

Hilton Honors and Marriott Rewards offer loyalty schemes – and if you travel a lot, especially with work, it’s definitely worth a sign up.

Points and loyalty schemes offer free rooms (once you’ve accumulated enough), special offers (like free breakfast) and discounts at certain times of the year, like your birthday.

5. Consider renting a revamped university room

In recent years, there’s been a spike in universities publicly renting rooms out of term time, and rooms start at around £37 a night in the UK and Europe.

Rentals website UniversityRooms revamp halls and bedrooms around the country, transforming them from boxy student accommodation to colourful, spacious rooms and studios for the public to rent out around key holiday times like Easter and throughout the summer.

Rooms in central London start from £37.50 a night. You can even stay at Christ Church in Oxford and eat in the Hogwarts Grand Hall from £50 per night.

Read more

Holiday booking secrets

TripAdvisor hacks

Beat rip-off airport transfers

The best time to book

Find cheap flights

6. The early bird catches the worm

Going to a concert, festival, conference, or a popular event? Book in advance. It’s basic economics – the higher the demand the higher the price.

So, if you’re headed somewhere everyone else is headed too, it’s better to get in there early if you want the best deal. You’ll also avoid the dreaded ‘No Availability’ notice from your favourite hotel.

7. Get on your smartphone

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Image:

Getty)

Be tech-savvy about booking.

LateRooms.com has ‘app only’ deals and users can get between 10 and 40% off last minute getaways.

Tripadvisor also has a handy ‘bargain hotels finder’ with 25 of the best priced rooms in your chosen destination. See our Tripadvsior how-to guide for more .

8. Get on the bus

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Image:

PA)

Happy travellers should always consider hotels in neighbouring towns and cities to their chosen location if a big event means that rooms are scarce (or scarily pricey).

9. Consider a hostel

Backpackers will know all too well how much a hostel can save you on your travels – you can get a room for around £20 a night.

The downside is you may have to share with strangers – so keep your belongings close (avoid travelling with anything too valuable) and be social – getting to know your roomies will save you a fortune in stress.

How to find a hostel: Travel firms like Hostel World and Hostel Bookers are a good, and safe place to start.

10. London rooms from £30 a night at Premier Inn

If you’re after a cheap stay in London, Premier Inn has recently opened 10 new London hotels, and prices start at £30 a night.

Take a look at our top picks below:

  • Brentford: 30 minutes to central London, for £30 a night .

  • Kingston: From the riverfront shops to the famous town sculptures, enjoy the market town of Kingston, for £39 a night .

  • Aldgate: Enjoy Brick Lane and its many markets for £59 a night .

For more overnight stays in the capital, see our cheap London hotels guide.

Read more

UK Holiday ideas

Affordable British destinations

Best UK holiday parks

Best sandy beaches in the UK

Best walking holiday destinations

11. £29 Travelodge rooms

Travelodge regularly hosts big deals on hotel rooms – with half price (£29) sales around four times a year – mostly during peak seasons – and a free stay in January to beat the New Year blues.

This week, the hotels chain has dropped 1.5 million rooms nationwide to £35 or less, when you book to stay before 31 December 2016.

To book your £29 room, visit: www.travelodge.co.uk .

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Letters: Should my tax dollars fund private-school tuitions?

August 16, 2022 by www.denverpost.com Leave a Comment

Debating public funding for private schools

Re: “Here’s why Democrats should support vouchers,” Aug. 7 opinion column

Thanks to Megan Schrader for a sensible and persuasive suggestion to Democrats: support vouchers.

Her proposal to set income limitations for vouchers, makes perfect sense. Don’t support those who can well-afford expensive private education. Rather, allow parents who rely on their education allotment from the government to choose the school that best suits their child.

I can speak only for the Denver Catholic school where I worked with the children’s choir, but am familiar with the statistics:

99% of Catholic high school students graduate (NCEA), compared with the national average of all high schools, 86% (usafacts.org)

92.4% of Catholic high school graduates within the Archdiocese of Denver in 2015-16 went on to enroll at 4-year college, according to denvercatholicschools.com.

The Black, Latino and Asian population accounts for 19.8% of the Catholic school population (16.1% Latino; 7.7% Black/African American; 5.5% Asian American; 5.9% Multiracial). (NCEA)

17.4% of students in Catholic schools are not Catholic (NCEA)

In 2016 the student-teacher ratio in Catholic schools was 13:1 (NCEA)

Catholic schools in Denver are accredited, their teachers, credentialed.

I do not mean to exclude other private schools, but to agree that vouchers given them will be to the benefit of the entire community. Catholic schools alone save the nation over $24 billion dollars a year, and the combined savings from private schooling amounts to much more than that. This is money parents of private-school students have paid in addition to what they spend on tuition at their chosen school.

Vouchers should not be a right-wing agenda item; they are a correct choice for both parties.

Frances Rossi, Denver


Megan Schrader’s editorial is based on so many bad assumptions that it would take far more than 250 words just to describe them. States should never “offer public funding to private schools”!

A fundamental loss of confidence in public institutions in general and schools in particular combined with overweening trust that the invisible hand of the market will arrange all things for our betterment has engendered completely irrational public policy. The pretense of “school choice” and an imagined market in which schools compete to provide the best education is so ideologically appealing that educational reality doesn’t stand a chance, but this is a very expensive and ineffective pretense.

Charter schools in general have proven no better than those administered directly by school districts, so there’s no possible justification in transferring money to them. Some genuinely private schools outperform public ones, at great expense; providing well-off parents with vouchers serves their selfish ends, but vouchers are not the means by which most students from families of modest means can get a better education.

Public schools are failing, in large measure, because we have debased their academic integrity — restore that rather than encouraging a relative few to abandon public education for private.

Robert Chase, Aurora


Don’t forget the achievements of Flight for Life

Re: “Air ambulances can now operate as mobile ERs,” Aug. 5 news story

Colorado was the home to the first civilian air ambulance service dating back to 1972 with the birth of Flight for Life, a Centura/St. Anthony Hospital, multi state, air and ground medical transport system.

Flight for Life is the premier air transport service in the western states, celebrating its fiftieth anniversary this year. With over 150,000 medical transports, Flight for Life has enjoyed accolades and recognition for being a statewide first responder for Level 1 trauma, premature infant transport, rescue operations in hard to get locations and for patients in medical distress needing a “level” trauma emergency service. These dedicated responders, pilots and ground crew are very special people that dedicate their lives to help and serve others in distress. For this we should say thank you.

Flight for Life’s helicopters have been equipped similar to an ICU for well over twenty years. Centura and FFL continues to raise the bar to have the most up to date medical equipment for their air and mobile units and their continuous training of their personnel makes them highly sort after by other systems throughout the country.

“The best part of your worst day” is when you see the Orange Bird in the sky, hovering over you to provide care and immediate transportation.

Happy 50th Anniversary and may your next 50 years be as rewarding to the citizens FFL serves and to the special breed of dedicated men and women of FFL.

Jay Weinstein, Denver


Let’s consider the problems in the Republican Party

Re: “Politically motivated swatting in Woodland Park,” Aug. 7 opinion column

As an academic, Krista Kafer should know that extrapolating to an entire group from a few individual cases demonstrates poor logic and a lack of rigor.

There needs to be a substantial proportion of group members behaving similarly before arguing for a group norm. For example, over 60% of Republicans believe the 2020 election was stolen and support laws to prevent them losing again.

This suggests Republicans do not support democracy and/or are afraid they cannot win without cheating.

This may be why Republicans have also mastered the use of gerrymandering, far better than Democrats, to give them power even when receiving well under 50% of the votes (see Wisconsin for example).

Of more concern is Republicans promoting candidates that aggressively support the fossil fuel industry while working to block efforts to mitigate climate change, suggesting Republicans are not only anti-science but delusional.

All of these Republican “norms” pose grave threats to democracy and our country’s future. I hope that Kafer holds her students to higher standards than she does for her own op-ed columns.

Garry Auld, Fort Collins


Let voters decide the abortion question directly

Re: “The crusade to revoke your abortion rights will never, ever end,” Aug. 7 opinion column

Let’s stop referring to anti-abortion rights activists as “pro-life.” They are not concerned about the life and health of the pregnant woman, nor are they concerned about the life of the baby or his/her family after birth. To be accurate, they are “anti-choice.”

Their goal is to impose their minority religious precepts on a majority of Americans. Their views are not based on science, they are based on the preaching of patriarchal organizations that seek to control a woman’s personal medical decisions and thereby keep her subservient.

They should realize this will never be an abortion-free country — abortions have been around as long as civilization. Abortion is health care, and thus needs to be accessible and safe.

Kansas voters showed that a majority of people do not want more restrictive abortion laws. Other “red” states should have the courage to let their citizens make the same choice.

Karen McClurg, Wheat Ridge


The search for missing … valentines?

Re: “Mar-a-Lago search could be end of another ‘long national nightmare,’” Aug. 10 opinion column

I must say I had a good laugh reading your guest columnist, Harry Litman, who, when justifying the search of ex-president Trump’s home, mentioned the “particularly brazen and damaging” aspects of Trump’s mishandling of official documents.

According to Litman, “among the documents he reportedly took with him and has declined to return are true historical items belonging to the American people” are valentines to North Korean dictator Kim Jong-Un. If only this fact was general knowledge!

Even the most strident Trump zealots would find the search justified if they only knew the issue involved missing valentines!

Scott Grove, Lakewood


Sinema goes to bat to keep taxes low for wealthy

Re: “Senate passes budget package,” Aug. 8 news story

So thank you, Kyrsten Sinema, for agreeing to vote for the Inflation Reduction Act. Since the U.S. is the first or second largest contributor in the world to greenhouse gases (depending on how you measure) we must show leadership in this regard.

I’ve got two questions for you. Is it typical behavior that Democratic senators negotiate as heavily as you just did, on behalf of wealthy hedge fund managers?

The average citizen — who doesn’t have the wealth to invest in hedge funds — pays between 22% and 27% in federal income taxes. Hedge fund managers, (whom you just helped by your insistence that a loophole be left alone), only pay the 20% long-term capital gains tax on their earnings.

You just saved some of the wealthiest people in this country an annual $5 billion dollars in taxes that they would’ve had to pay, had the bill been passed as it was proposed. Add to that, the taxes saved by thousands of additional hedge fund investors across the country. Who do you actually represent, senator?

Sherre Waggoner, Castle Rock


Technology can make us safer

Re: “Woman, 32, is hit by debris, killed on I-25,” Aug. 10 news story

Considering the large number of destructive and life-threatening accidents that routinely occur nationwide because of oversize vehicles and loads traveling on our roads, railways and waterways, transportation authorities should ponder installing transponders on or near bridges, overpasses, tunnels and other low-clearance infrastructure that send wireless signals to and communicate with built-in or portable receivers in vehicles that could be programmed with the maximum height, width and weight of the vehicle and its load.

As an oversize vehicle approaches the restriction, a warning is sent automatically to the driver to avert potential disaster.

In this day and age of cheap and readily available technology, having this alert likely would save lives, bridges, overpasses, tunnels, vehicles and vehicle loads.

Michael Pravica, Henderson, Nev.


Polis’ personal use of the mail

Re: “When to expect your $750 check,” Aug. 4 news story

I just received some of my taxes back that were collected over and above what TABOR allows. The return address on the envelope from the State of Colorado clearly has in bold print “State of Colorado Official Mail — Penalty for Private Use.”

Inside the envelope included with my check, was a signed letter from Gov. Jared Polis stating he signed a bill directing this refund.

The refund, however, is required as outlined in the state Constitution, so no bill was needed. No letter was needed. I see this as purely campaign rhetoric to get a vote for Polis. That is “private use.” Per CRS 24-30-1111, this is a Class 3 Misdemeanor. Per Use.

Does anyone in the Democrat-controlled state government have the guts to file charges? Or, because this is a misdemeanor, does any judicial district prosecutor have the guts to file charges?

Roger H. Weed Jr., Colorado Springs


Are the ReTrumpian Party people insinuating they would not have included a similar letter with the $750 or $1,500 checks if they were in office instead of Polis?

Ha!

Larry McLaughlin, Aurora


We can do better with TABOR

Re: “It’s like even living out of your car is gentrified,” Aug. 7 news story

Having read another article about the desperation workers and mountain towns are facing with adequate and affordable housing, I reflected on a letter to the editor that I wrote, and was published, in May regarding the TABOR amendment and the Colorado taxpayers’ refund we’re about to receive. I questioned the continued unwillingness to end TABOR and loss of monies we desperately need to solve problems.

In today’s article, a business owner suggests that Gov. Polis declare an affordable-housing emergency so federal government funding can be made available for this crisis.

We use over a billion dollars of surplus that our state government is holding to refund $750 per taxpayer because of TABOR, while asking the federal government, currently hemorrhaging in debt, to solve our problem. Democrats lacked the courage to challenge Colorado citizens and Republican legislators to repeal or manipulate spending this money throughout our state this year before calculating the surplus.

And the Republicans, beating the “it’s your money” drumbeat, lack the foresight to problem-solve, even when so many struggling people are in Republican-leaning towns and counties. We need to do better than this.

Mark Zaitz, Denver


Political sniping is tiresome

Re: “Republican complaint rips Polis rebate letter,” Aug. 6 news story

Kudos to Gov. Jared Polis. He is emulating and learning from the Republicans.

Who remembers that in April 2020 President Donald Trump refused to sign a COVID-19 relief bill passed by Congress and delayed the issuance of checks so his personal name could appear on the memo line of the checks with the words, “Economic Impact Payment.”

No president’s name has ever appeared on the checks from the Internal Revenue Service before; the idea originated with Trump himself. Was this “electioneering?”

Who remembers the 2001 recession when President George W. Bush signed stimulus checks? He did not get his name on the checks, but his administration sent a letter with the checks, saying “We are pleased to inform you that the United States Congress passed and President George W. Bush signed into law the Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001, which provides long-term tax relief for all Americans who pay income tax.” Was this “electioneering?”

A letter of notice and explanation from Polis to the residents of Colorado and the accompanying refund payment is in order, explaining the Taxpayer’s Bill of Rights and that by state law a flat amount would be mailed directly. “We are focused on ensuring that people understand why they are receiving immediate relief. … ”

Who is really playing politics, wasting taxpayer dollars and “electioneering” here?

Katherine Webster, Littleton


Where was this indignity when ex-President Donald Trump had his name printed on the economic stimulus checks we received during the pandemic? This constant political sniping has become very boring.

Lindy McNamee, Littleton


FBI search is distressing

The FBI search of Trump’s personal residence was distressing, especially given the stated issue: documents belonging to the National Archive. Government contractors having dealt with the National Archive over the years report they are as slow, backward and ham-handed as any other federal agency, if not more so. My hope is the raid recovered something worthy of the spectacle created. Otherwise, I see only escalation of the ugly, and ultimately counterproductive partisanship gripping Washington. I really don’t want Trump to run again, despite appreciating some of his accomplishments. He would be a strong force for increasing divisiveness. His die has been cast, and he should just fade away.

Douglass Croot, Highlands Ranch


Don’t blame officers; blame no-knock-raid orders

Re: “Feds charge four officers in Breonna Taylor raid,” Aug. 5 news story

The death of Breonna Taylor should not be blamed on the officers performing the no-knock raid. Her death should be attributed to the judge who authorized the raid and the official who requested it.

I have argued against no-knock raids for years as they seem to cause the death or injury of innocent people on a regular basis, especially when officers are sent in error to the wrong house. There are thousands of homes in the United States occupied by totally law-abiding citizens where any forced entry would be met with gunfire.

For the safety of the officers and the innocent, no-knock raids should be eliminated.

William F. Hineser, Arvada


Yes, save for the future

Re: “Retirement is ‘absolute fantasy,’ ” Aug. 8 news story

I was a bit shocked, saddened and eventually mad about how the millennials and Gen Z’ers were thinking about their finances and retirement. We do live in a topsy-turvy world right now, but are we really so short-sighted that we have forgotten how it felt during World War I, the Great Depression, World War II, the Cold War.

What if our younger generations during those times just decided to spend for today, not save any money for their future, just give up on government programs?

Social Security was started because of the financial insecurity we suffered through in the Great Depression. It was always set up as way to supplement your financial security in retirement.

There are ways to keep Social Security funded, and those solutions will be found. Solutions to huge problems take time and lots of people to solve. But for individuals to selfishly live only for today is disheartening.

I work in the retirement industry and can tell these folks that retirement happens. Often it is not on your terms, but your physical body won’t allow you to continue to work, or you lose your job and are too old to get rehired. Yes, you could get hit by a bus tomorrow, but is that any more realistic then taking some time to plan and save for the future?

Alane Morris, Denver


Trump’s “third-world” quip strikes close to home

Re: “Trump says FBI searches estate,” Aug. 9 news story

Our ex-president, Donald Trump, has indignantly declared that the FBI search of his Mar-A-Lago home in Florida is “outrageous,” and this kind of thing could only happen in “broken, Third-World Countries.”

Does Trump realize that his ongoing assertions about the 2020 election being rigged are similarly casting aspersions on the United States as being a third-world country? Does he even realize that it sullies the United States’ image as a free country and Americans’ ability to choose who should be their president?

It is unpatriotic, to say the least.

I have been an American for only 30 years, and I am proud to be so. As such, I am always defending American foreign and social policies to my foreign friends, who, unfortunately, have been bombarded with anti-American literature and rhetoric on social media.

In that sense, I am more of a patriot than our former president.

Jane Liew, Littleton


We’ve given autocrats power

Re: “Pelosi arrives in Taiwan,” Aug. 3 news story

“It is essential that America and our allies make clear that we never give in to autocrats.” — U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi

We have already given in.

Does Speaker Pelosi or anyone in our government understand our true physical and economic reliance/dependence on China? Critical components of our everyday lives are controlled by China. China doesn’t have to “rattle sabers.” All they need to do to “retaliate” is withhold some or all their exports to America.

It’s not just about China. The world is dependent on other autocratic countries such as Russia. We know from experience autocrats are unpredictable, undependable and often very dangerous. If we are dependent on autocrats, they control our present and future and, accordingly, we have already given in to autocrats.

America needs to wake up before “woking up” kills us. We must wake up and deal with the realities of the world. We must regain control of our future.

Daniel G. Zang, Lakewood


Vets health bill spent $400B

Re: “Voting down vets health bill was nothing but petty revenge,” Aug. 3 letter to the editor

The letter writer needs to look further than his nose to understand why the Republicans blocked the PACT Act when an earlier version of the bill passed by 84-14 in June. This newer version of the PACT Act (which has now passed) allows $400 billion over the next 10 years in spending, which is completely unrelated to veterans. Democrats are at their finest when it comes to spending and then accusing the Republicans of not caring for veterans.

Kay Robbins, Denver


Misuse of political donations

Re: “Six Colo. Dems condemn party’s meddling,” Aug. 3 news story

As a lifelong Democrat, I join the six emeritus party leaders who wrote a letter condemning the use of party money to advertise Republican candidates. It smells of dirty tricks and I resent any of my contributions going for such a sordid effort. This was a major faux pas. I sincerely believe that the Democratic Party is better than this.

Philip Brien Clarke, Lone Tree

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