logo
#

Latest news with #Murguia

UnidosUS comes to KC for listening session with city, business and community leaders
UnidosUS comes to KC for listening session with city, business and community leaders

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

UnidosUS comes to KC for listening session with city, business and community leaders

A group of national Hispanic leaders met in Kansas City this week for a listening session with city legislators and local business leaders. There's a lot for this community to be worried about lately — news stories paint an anxious picture of changing immigration policies. Still, the tone was surprisingly upbeat. When asked what word they would use to describe how they felt Thursday morning at the Mattie Rhodes Cultural Center, words such as 'hopeful,' 'proud' and 'gratitude' were spoken. Only one 'uncertain' surfaced among the rest. Perhaps it's because this is a community that supports and uplifts each other because in these times it feels like that's all you can do. UnidosUS seeks to do more. The nation's largest Latino civil rights and advocacy organization has planned several of these listening sessions around the country with the goal of understanding concerns facing local residents. Headed by Kansas City, Kansas, native Janet Murguia, the organization seeks to close gaps and barriers facing Latinos. 'As we hear from our community, as we understand the challenges that our community is facing, it informs us even further with a level of authenticity that will give us strength to advance solutions,' she said. KC wasn't the first stop on this multicity listening tour, but in some ways, it was the most important. The UnidosUS national convention is in Kansas City this year, and Thursday's event was another opportunity to shine a spotlight on Murguia's hometown. After coffee, breakfast and the positive start, Murguia and Unidos/US Senior vice president for policy Eric Rodriguez offered some sober realities: 'To be honest, there's a shifting political landscape right now, and we're facing some tough headwinds. We've made it very clear that we are going to do everything we can to protect and defend our community,' Murguia said. The fears are real. Just this week, Kansas City's migrants, like others around the country, have found ICE officers waiting after court appointments. And in Massachusetts, a student on his way to volleyball practice was arrested by ICE and later released. Murguia and UnidosUS representatives spent two hours meeting with Kansas City leaders. Among the city, community and business representatives were John Fierro, President and CEO of the Mattie Rhodes Center, Kansas City Councilman Crispin Rea, Jaime Guillen, who leads KC's Civil Rights and Equal Opportunity Department and Raytown Alderman Theresa Garza, among many others. The Beacons of Change annual conference comes to Kansas City August 5-7.

Mexican mayor arrested arrested in probe of alleged drug cartel ranch
Mexican mayor arrested arrested in probe of alleged drug cartel ranch

First Post

time04-05-2025

  • First Post

Mexican mayor arrested arrested in probe of alleged drug cartel ranch

The Jalisco New Generation Cartel, a powerful drug trafficking group, allegedly used the ranch in Jalisco state to train newly recruited gunmen, senior officials have said read more (File) Soldiers patrol near the hamlet Plaza Vieja in the Michoacan state of Mexico. The Mexican army acknowledged for the first time on August 2, 2024, that some of its soldiers have been killed by drug cartel bomb-dropping drones in the western state of Michoacan, without providing fatality numbers. AP A federal official said a mayor in western Mexico was arrested as part of a probe into a suspected drug cartel training camp, where forced recruits were allegedly tortured or killed if they refused to cooperate. The Jalisco New Generation Cartel, a powerful drug trafficking group, allegedly used the ranch in Jalisco state to train newly recruited gunmen, senior officials have said. The discovery of human bones and clothing at the ranch in the city of Teuchitlan in March – what Human Rights Watch has called an 'apparent mass killing site' – caused shock in a country where murders and kidnappings are daily occurrences. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Teuchitlan Mayor Jose Murguia Santiago was arrested as part of an investigation by government prosecutors into probable omissions or complicity of authorities with the cartel, a federal source told AFP on Saturday. The source requested anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media. Murguia was arrested late Saturday afternoon, according to federal arrest records. The Guerreros Buscadores collective, a group dedicated to locating missing relatives, has described the Teuchitlan ranch as an 'extermination center' with 'clandestine crematoriums' where forced recruits were thought to have been held by the cartel. Security Minister Omar Garcia Harfuch told reporters in late March that there was 'no evidence that it was an extermination camp.' But he also said that an alleged recruiter – who was arrested – said that cartel members tortured and killed recruits who refused to cooperate or tried to flee. The attorney general's office, which has denied executions were systematically carried out, took over the investigation after a complaint from Guerreros Buscadores. The group found buried bones, clothing, shoes and other objects at the ranch, which went unnoticed during a search in September by authorities who raided it following reports of gunfire. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD According to the Jalisco state prosecutor's office, 10 people were arrested, two captives freed and a dead body found along with skeletal remains in September. Besides Mayor Murguia, about a dozen others have been arrested in the case, including a police chief from a neighboring municipality and two of his officers. More than 127,000 people are registered as missing in Mexico, most of them since 2006 when the government declared war on drug trafficking groups. By state, Jalisco has the highest number of missing persons cases, with more than 15,000.

Vegan who stole lamb from farmer almost killed it in attempt to hand-rear
Vegan who stole lamb from farmer almost killed it in attempt to hand-rear

The Independent

time03-04-2025

  • The Independent

Vegan who stole lamb from farmer almost killed it in attempt to hand-rear

A vegan and self proclaimed 'animal lover' has admitted animal cruelty and been banned from owning sheep after she stole a lamb from a farm and almost killed it with failed attempts at hand-rearing it. Louise Murguia, 49, kidnapped the lamb from Stuart Ludwell's Hile Farm in Dorset because she thought it had a broken leg and believed it wouldn't survive the night. She took the lamb to her home where she shampooed it to remove the identifying number on its fleece, put it in a nappy, and fed it cow's milk and specialist formula which she bought on Amazon. In the three weeks the lamb was confined to her house, the animal grew malnourished. When police turned up at her door to seize the baby, the lamb weighed almost half what it should have and needed more than a week of intensive treatment to ensure it survived. Murguia, of Sturminster Newton, admitted to one offence of theft and one of causing unnecessary suffering to a protected animal in Bournemouth Crown Court. Mr Ludwell found that his lamb was missing the morning after one of his ewes died on 23 March last year, leaving two lambs orphaned and needing hand rearing. He decided to wait until the next morning to retrieve them so as not to distress the other ewes and their newborns by chasing the orphans in the dark. The next morning, he returned to the field with his wife and two children to find only one lamb. They assumed the other might have been taken by a fox. Three weeks later, he received information that his lamb had been taken by Murguia. When the lamb was recovered, it weighted just 5.8kg, while its twin brother, hand reared by the Ludwell family, weighted 9.95kg. A vet concluded the lamb had been given inadequate nutrition. Mr Ludwell's victim statement said: 'I was relieved it was alive, but shocked by its poor condition - its sibling was nearly double the size and it could barely stand. 'It took over a week of intensive medical care to ensure the lamb's survival and a significant amount of money and time. He added: 'The entire ordeal has left me angry - stealing a lamb under the guise of welfare only to keep it in solitary confinement." Prosecutor Luisa Rose said that when officers attended the address, they located Murguia in her bedroom with the missing lamb, which was in a nappy. She claimed she was due to take the malnourished animal to the animal sanctuary later that day. The court heard that her home was in a poor state, with hay and rubbish on the floor in every room and three dogs inside the property. When she was interviewed by the police, Murguia said she was an animal lover who had seen a sick and dead sheep in the field and returned in the night to take the lamb, claiming it had a bad leg. Murguia had previously told a local paper that she was a proud vegan and 'anti-farmers' because she believed they exploit animals. 'Farmers abuse lambs from day one', she said. 'Why people think [that] farmers care so much is just ignorant. I just wish people weren't so obsessed with eating meat full stop. Plant-based is so much better for the animals, for the environment and also for the ozone layer. But I feel I am in the minority and people are just blood-hungry.' Defending, Ben Thompson told the court that Murguia: 'cared for it in the best way she could. It was completely unorthodox.' He added: 'It came from a well intentioned but incredibly poorly executed place. 'She wanted to get her to the animal sanctuary but got attached and kept hold of the lamb longer than she should have, but she didn't think she was mistreating it. 'She knows now that what she did was wrong and she shouldn't have interfered, but at the time her heart ruled her head', he said, concluding it was 'unwise and ultimately illegal.' Recorder Nicholas Haggan KC sentenced Murguia to a 12-month community order with a six-month alcohol treatment requirement and six rehabilitation activity days. He also placed an indefinite restraining order on Murguia, preventing her from contacting Mr Ludwell, going to his farm or feeding any livestock within two miles of it. She was also banned from keeping or owning sheep indefinitely.

‘Altadena is not for sale': LA wildfire rebuild sparks gentrification fears
‘Altadena is not for sale': LA wildfire rebuild sparks gentrification fears

The Guardian

time14-02-2025

  • General
  • The Guardian

‘Altadena is not for sale': LA wildfire rebuild sparks gentrification fears

The day after the Eaton Canyon wildfire, still reeling from the destruction of her home and her business, Gaby Murguia scrawled a message on the windows of her truck: 'Altadena is not for sale.' In the month since historically destructive fires raged across Los Angeles, the same slogan has been appearing on posters at local protests, on fliers at restaurants and across new and old social media accounts in the small and racially diverse suburb of Altadena. Locals here and in neighboring Pasadena are deeply aware of the struggles that residents of Maui and other communities faced in the wake of devastating fires, such as skyrocketing rents, increased evictions and expensive rebuilding efforts that force longtime residents out. Locals say the flames were still raging as people who had just lost their homes started receiving calls from developers. It's 'plain and simple. I've heard it. I've said it,' Brandon Lamar, the president of the local branch of the NAACP, said of the slogan. 'Everyone that has been displaced – we want them to have the ability to come in and build back. We don't want price gouging. We don't want people to come in and try to buy people's lands.' Altadena has a proud history of Black homeownership. For decades, it has nurtured Black actors, writers, musicians and activists, while providing a refuge for a racially diverse assortment of creative people who relished their small enclave in the hills north-east of Los Angeles. The Eaton Canyon fire, which destroyed more than 9,400 structures across Altadena, Pasadena and Sierra Madre, had a disproportionate impact on Black residents in west Altadena, razing nearly half of the Black households in Altadena, according to early estimates from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). A majority of Black homeowners in Altadena are over 65, meaning they are likely to face additional financial and logistical hurdles in the rebuilding process, the UCLA report found. At least one burned-out plot in Altadena was in the process of being this week, for a reported $550,000, with the realtor in the deal telling LAist that the previous owner had been renting the property, and 'didn't want to take on the enormous project of rebuilding the home'. Last Saturday, Murguia and Lamar were both part of a community rally that drew a multiracial crowd of more than 150 people, many wearing different versions of 'Altadena is not for sale' T-shirts. Artists set up booths for locals to make paint signs, newly-founded advocacy groups collected contact information from residents affected by the fires, and a drum circle of young artists performed. Murguia, whose embroidery and screen printing business was destroyed in the fire, was working with other local activists to sell T-shirts, and planning to use the proceeds 'to fill Altadena with lawn signs to show them we are not selling', the 30-year-old said. 'Now is the time to come together. Now is not the time to sell,' Anthony McFarland, a local pastor whose home was destroyed, told a cluster of cameras at the rally. If older Black homeowners in Altadena were overwhelmed by the task of rebuilding, he urged them to sell to younger Black and Brown families and maintain the fabric of the community. 'Keep it in the family,' he said. The economic challenges that Altadena's current residents face in rebuilding are formidable. Jesse Keenan, a Tulane University professor who coined the term 'climate gentrification', said that rebuilding after a big disaster is expensive and comes with major hurdles, such as supply chain disruptions and massive competition for construction, labor and materials. 'Even building code officials – there's barely enough building code officials,' he said. Rebuilding from scratch usually means that 'the cost of housing, and the value of housing, basically doubles,' Keenan said. That can benefit some residents, but it can also result in a community that becomes 'unrecognizable or inaccessible to the people who live there'. There's economic pressure to build condos in place of cheaper multi-family rental units that were damaged or destroyed. And even if rental units are built back in similar quantities, he said, prices tend to rise: rebuilt, an older apartment unit that once rented for $1,000 will cost $3,000 or $4,000. California governor, Gavin Newsom, quickly issued executive orders banning price-gouging for rent in the wake of the fires and attempting to block developers from making under-market offers for properties in fire-damaged areas. But trying to counteract the broader economic pressures that make rebuilt housing more expensive is 'a massive effort of civil society', Keenan said. In order to rebuild a community and keep it affordable, 'You need a multi-sector coordinated effort between the public sector, philanthropy, community development finance institutions, non-profit housing developers and the state, in terms of permitting,' he said. 'Basically, it requires subsidy.' This kind of coordinated effort also needs to happen quickly, Keenan said. The faster that people rebuild, 'the more likely that the community will be more or less intact', he said. 'The longer it takes for people to rebuild, the more likely it is that people give up, sell, pay off their mortgages with the insurance proceeds.' Doing all of this in Los Angeles, which already has a very expensive housing market and is one of the epicenters of California's long-running housing shortage crisis, will be extremely difficult, he added. Meanwhile, real estate developers with massive financial resources will be standing by, ready to buy up properties that individual owners are struggling to rebuild, said Stephanie Pincetl, the director of the California Center for Sustainable Communities at the University of California, Los Angeles. 'Equity capital is already doing a lot of financialized development, and they're not going to stop,' she said. 'This is an enormously profitable opportunity.' While homeowners tend to be the focus of post-disaster assistance efforts, Los Angeles renters are also likely to struggle for years to come. The sudden destruction of so many homes has cascading effects on rental markets, said Justin Steil, an urban planning expert at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. 'Climate disasters are associated with a significant increase in rents after the disaster, especially for the lowest income renters,' Steil said. Researchers have also found an increase in evictions not only in the year of the disaster itself, but also the year following. 'In places where the median rents are already higher, the increase in evictions is larger,' Steil said. Even before these fires, Altadena had struggled with years of gentrification that had made housing there increasingly unaffordable, and decreased the town's proportion of Black homeowners. In 1980, 43% of the town's residents were Black, while today, that number is just 17%, according to the UCLA report. Recent statistics showed that many Black households in the town were already paying a disproportionate amount of their income on housing costs, and that Black applicants made up only 4% of those trying to buy homes in Altadena in 2023. Now, the threat of post-fire gentrification 'is probably one of the top three concerns amongst people here,' said Michael Williams, 31, a Black Lives Matter Los Angeles organizer and third-generation Pasadena resident who estimates that more than 30 people he knows lost their homes in the blaze, most of them Black. While homeowners whose houses were destroyed have to make individual decisions about whether to sell or to try to rebuild, the outcome of their choices will be deeply shaped by what their neighbors do. 'I was just talking to someone that I know who had lost their home, and they were like, 'I want to rebuild, but I don't know if my neighbours or folks around me want to rebuild. I don't want to rebuild in a neighborhood that's going to be either parking lots, or apartment buildings, and being the only home there,'' Williams said. He and other advocates have been working together to host frank community discussions on the challenges of rebuilding and the resources available to them, including the possibility of creating land trusts to allow residents to sell their property to others within the community. The goal, he said, is 'to keep Altadena the Black center it has been'. It's not just those who lost their homes who have to decide whether to stay in the community as it rebuilds, Williams added. The threat of wildfires is not going away. Williams, his parents, who are in their 60s, and his 100-year-old grandmother all had to evacuate their homes in Pasadena during the Eaton Canyon fire. The ordeal, and its long aftermath, have been particularly difficult for his grandmother, who has had to remember to wear a mask outside, and that it's not currently safe to drink the water from her tap. His mother and father 'are trying to find ways to stay, but also thinking about what their options are', Williams said. 'We don't know if this will happen again next year, or how bad it will be if it happens again.' 'Those are questions that everyone has to ask,' he added. 'Even if we do decide to stay, what changes in the way we live do we have to make in order to protect ourselves?' For small business owners, the massive displacement of local residents in the wake of the fire creates additional challenges. Geoff Cathcart, 48, a barber, lost his home in the fire, but his Altadena-based barbershop, Lawrence and Colbert, survived. But Cathcart's customers are currently scattered to many different locations, he said, and he knows recovery 'is going to be a long process'. Still, he showed up to Saturday's community rally, determined to work to preserve the local culture. 'This is one of the few predominantly black communities in southern California that still has a hometown feel,' he said. The importance of community spirit and local organizing should not be underestimated, said Keenan, the climate gentrification researcher. After the major earthquake and tsunami in Japan in 2011, the government opened community centers in affected areas, which hosted programming and 'brought people of different ages and backgrounds to be in dialogue'. 'Little things like that add up,' he said. 'It sounds very soft, the emotional healing that comes along with community…but it's really important, and we know it's important.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store