Archive for the ‘ NAACP ’ Category

Ooops! We inadvertently omitted a line on The Jesse Johnson Funeral Home Ad, in our 2010 Freedom Fund Souvenir Journal.
The Bethlehem NAACP sincerely apologizes for the print error and is including the ad here as a make good.

The Bethlehem NAACP Supports all African-American businesses.

The 2010 King Celebration was hesl Monday, January 18, 2010  – 1:00pm at the Cathedral Church of the Nativity, Bethlehem, PA – The Very Rev.  Anthony R. Pompa, Dean & Rector

The program was sponsored by the Bethlehem NAACP and the YWCA of Bethlehem

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FEBRUARY 21, 2010

65th Annual Freedom Fund Banquet of the Bethlehem Branch NAACP

Theme: “Reclaiming Our Youth; Securing Victories”

Keynote Speaker:

Dr. Nathaniel J. Williams
President and CEO of Humanworks Affiliates Inc.

Honorees:

Mr. Frank Stanton, Mrs. Edith Banks

Mrs. Helen Singleton, Rev. Melvin Tatem

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Four Points Sheraton, 3400 Airport Rd.,
Allentown, Pa.

Adults: $35.00
Seniors over 65/Students: $27.00For tickets and/or souvenir book information, please call 610.866.2078

Mrs. Esther M. Lee, President ~ Mrs. Tomacene Nickens, Chairwoman

Donations are not tax-deductible

Job Diversity

Northampton County, NAACP working to increase minority hires

Thursday, December 31, 2009

Northampton county, NAACP talking

Northampton County officials and the Bethlehem chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People are doing something important to encourage minority hires and create a more racially diverse county work force.

They’re getting together, reviewing hiring practices and talking.

This last part might seem self-evident, but it’s sometimes lost when terms such as racial inequality and hiring barriers are placed on the table. NAACP officials have been frustrated by the lack of progress in minority hiring at all levels. Government officials don’t like being targeted as obstructionists, especially when they are looking to diversify labor forces but don’t get enough applications from blacks, Latinos or members of other minority groups.

So it’s a good sign that Esther Lee, president of the Bethlehem NAACP, and John Stoffa, Northampton County executive, are looking at this. Since September, a group from the NAACP and county human resources officials have gotten together to talk about the availability of county jobs, how they are advertised, how people can apply, how the county can reach out to people who might not be aware of job opportunities.

Lee recently questioned the inclusiveness of the county’s job efforts: “When you come to the courthouse, you don’t see a lot of African-American faces.”

Stoffa conceded the point: “We probably need more diversity than what we have.”

Lack of diversity in employment can result from shortcomings on both sides. Traditionally, governments resorted to political favoritism and nepotism in filling jobs — and to the extent this process is dominated by whites, men or any group, it favors those groups. That might not be a form of overt racism or gender bias, but it has the same effect. Cronyism and nepotism are close cousins of racism.

Northampton County, which is committed to having a qualified, diverse work force as part of its mission statement, advertises jobs on its Web site and in newspapers and must adhere to career service regulations in hiring. The extent to which the county and other public work forces are representative of the populations they serve depends greatly on communication — getting notices of job openings to people who might not see them, getting qualified applicants to apply. And hiring them.

NAACP organizations in Bethlehem and Easton are well-positioned to do this. Keeping in touch with county officials and helping with job recruiting can go a long way to eliminating racial barriers in hiring, real or perceived.

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Dr. Martin Luther King Holiday Celebration
sponsored by the Bethlehem NAACP and the
YWCA of Bethlehem

“Advancing Big Dreams”
Monday, January 18, 2010
1:00pm at
The Cathedral Church of the Nativity
Sayre Hall
321 Wyandotte Street
Bethlehem, PA

Refreshments following. Open to the Public.