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- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
- Path: sparky!uunet!wupost!mont!pencil.cs.missouri.edu!rich
- From: Nigel Allen <nigel.allen@canrem.com>
- Subject: Puerto Ricans See Presidential Transition as Opportunity
- Message-ID: <1992Nov19.203338.19202@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Followup-To: alt.activism.d
- Originator: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Sender: news@mont.cs.missouri.edu
- Nntp-Posting-Host: pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Organization: NDA
- Date: Thu, 19 Nov 1992 20:33:38 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Lines: 82
-
- Here is a press release from the National Puerto Rican Coalition.
-
- Puerto Ricans Will Use Presidential Transition as 'Window of
- Opportunity' to Improve Treatment by Federal Government
- To: National Desk
- Contact: Edward Segal of Edward Segal Communications,
- 202-333-7966
-
- /EDITORS: Puerto Ricans represent a significant portion
- of the population of 28 cities in eight Midwest and Northeast
- states, including New York, Illinois, Pennsylvania,
- New Jersey, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Ohio, and Florida./
-
- WASHINGTON, Nov. 18 -- The National Puerto Rican Coalition
- said today the presidential transition during the next
- four months is a rare "window of opportunity" to improve how
- millions of Puerto Ricans will be treated by the federal government
- for the next four years.
- Coalition President Louis Nunez said he expects Puerto Ricans,
- "will have more allies to help fight for their best interests than
- ever before," because Puerto Rican representation more than doubled
- on the federal level after the last election.
- Nunez told a Washington news conference that Puerto Rican
- leaders will use the presidential transition, "to chart and
- implement a new course for the future of the Puerto Rican community
- in the United States. This transition is also an opportunity to
- strengthen our continuing efforts for better education, health
- care, and community economic development for the nearly 3 million
- Puerto Ricans who live on the U.S. mainland."
- Nunez said he expects the new Clinton White House "will offer
- millions of Puerto Ricans the first ray of hope for a better way of
- life than they've had in more than a decade. Now that the election
- is over, perhaps Clinton will turn his attention to the plight of
- the poor in our society."
- "Puerto Ricans are the most highly urbanized ethnic group in the
- United States, and while American cities are not working for large
- numbers of people, they have failed Puerto Ricans in a major way.
- Now is the time during this presidential transition to focus
- national attention on the problems facing Puerto Ricans, and to
- encourage a national debate on what can be done to help our
- people," he said.
- The Coalition also released today a preliminary report about
- trends in the election of Puerto Rican officials to federal, state,
- and local offices and a demographic profile of Puerto Ricans living
- in the United States.
- Major findings of the election study include the following:
- -- There was a net increase of 16 percent (20 officials)
- in the number of Puerto Ricans who were elected to federal,
- state, and local offices in 1992. The increase brings the total
- number of elected Puerto Rican officials to 143.
- -- The five states that elected additional Puerto Rican
- officials in November included New York (17 officials), Ohio (3),
- California (2), Connecticut (1), and Illinois (1).
- Puerto Rican representation more than doubled on the federal
- level. Counting the resident commissioner, Puerto Ricans now
- constitute 24 percent of the Hispanics in the House of
- Representatives. Island and mainland Puerto Ricans represent 24
- percent of Hispanics in the United States.
- The demographic profile found, among other things, that:
- -- The number of Hispanics has increased five-fold since
- 1960, and will probably pass the black population to become
- the largest minority population by the year 2010; and
- -- As the presence and influence of the Hispanic populations
- continues to increase, so will that of the Puerto Rican population.
- Nunez said this influence is needed because, according to the
- Census Bureau:
- -- Puerto Ricans, as an ethnic group, had a 39.4 percent poverty
- rate in 1991, the highest for individuals in the nation;
- -- Puerto Ricans had the highest percentage of families living
- under the poverty line in the nation in 1991 at 39.7 percent; and
- -- Puerto Ricans had the highest percentage of children in
- families living in poverty in 1991, at 57.7 percent.
- The news conference preceded the start tomorrow of a two-day
- conference of 600 Puerto Rican leaders in Washington who will
- discuss the anticipated impact of a Clinton White House on the
- Puerto Rican community.,
- - 30 -
-
- --
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