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STAY SAFE......STAY COOL.....WEAR A MASK! VOLUME 14 NO. 35 SATURDAY, AUGUST 29, 2020 SIERRA MADRE POLICE DEPARTMENT'S PUBLIC SAFETY WEEK A HUGE SUCCESS broker lic. #01514230 | source: CoreLogic, Freddie Mac, BankrateTHEWEBB-MARTIN GROUPJan Greteman 626.975.4033jan@jangreteman.com jangreteman.com #01943630Judy Webb-Martin 626.688.2273jwmartin@dppre.com #00541631 Katie Orth 626.688.0418korth@dppre.com #00942500We are active and doing business safely and successfully. Call us today if you are looking to buy or sell! Your Story. Your Home. Your Team. Together Stronger. Recently Sold1530 Loma Alta – represented the buyer430 North Alta Vista – represented the buyer230 West Montecito – represented the seller381 Montecito #B – represented the seller901 Cabrillo Drive #32A – represented the seller180 South Michillinda Avenue – represented the seller162 East Sierra Madre Blvd – represented the seller1115 Cordova – represented the buyer451 Camillo Drive – represented the seller690 Oak Crest Drive - represented the buyer381 Mariposa Avenue #B – represented the seller118 East Laurel Avenue #C – represented the seller60 Rancho Road – represented the buyer707 Woodland DriveSierra Madre 91024Listed at $1,299,000707WoodlandDrive.com It’s a great time to list and buy. Interest rates are at an all time low. Call us today! JUST LISTED2 Beds + Den | 1.5 Baths | 1,344 sf89 West Bonita AvenueSierra Madre 91024Listed at $929,80089Bonita.com 3 Beds | 1.5 Baths | 1,296 sf IN ESCROWMULTIPLE OFFERS Covid 19 has required everyone to make adjustments in the way we live, worship, socialize, communicate and learn. Many have come to the realization that the best way to 'cope' is to create alternative means of doing the same things. Most have found new ways to teach, communicate, exercise, worship and much more by utilizing the technology at our fingertips.. One such 'alternative way' of engaging the community was presented by the SMPD and city hall staff during the pandemic this week over Zoom. SMPD Chief Rodrick Armalin created Sierra Madre's first Public Safety Week! and for five consecutive days community members, in surroundings of their own choosing, were able to participate in an interactive virtual workshop on a wide range of topics. The program included: Monday: SMPD Chief Rodrick Armalin – "Keeping Our Community Safe" Tuesday: LA County Department Mental Health - Dr. Nicolas Beliz - "Mental Health and the Pandemic" Wednesday: Pasadena Humane Society Outreach - Coordinator Michelle Holbrook / Department of Fish and Wildlife - Biologist Rebecca Barboza - "Living with Bears and other Wildlife Thursday: Sierra Madre Search and Rescue – President Barbara Fortini - "Hiking Safety and Precautions when out in Nature and Friday: Sierra Madre Fire Department Chief Brent Bartlett and Captain Rich Snyder - "Fire Safety and You." Each one hour session included PowerPoint presentations and allowed attendees to 'chat' with presenters and/or staff during the Question and Answer period. The program was an exciting alternative to our National Night Out one day event that was held annually prior to the pandemic. When asked for his feedback on the event, Armalin said, "We want to thank all the staff and outstanding speakers who graciously gave their time and effort to not only give very excellent presentations, but also answer direct questions from community members. To the many citizens of Sierra Madre and other cities who joined in, thank you! Your participation and input helped make each presentation informative and interesting. We sincerely hope you enjoyed and received useful information each day. We look forward to next year’s Public Safety Week, and have plans on expanding the presentations/events offered. Everyone please stay safe and healthy!" S. Henderson/MVNews SMPD Chief Rodrick Armalin Special Op Ed THE 100TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE NINETEENTH AMENDMENT Diane Sands, Sierra Madre, CA Around Sierra Madre MARY'S MARKET CANYON CAFE HAS REOPENED FOR OUTSIDE DINING & TAKE OUT! marysmarket.com 561 Woodland Dr, Sierra Madre, CA 91024 · ~11.4 mi (626) 355-4534 One hundred years ago this week the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution became law. American women had won the vote! The Suffrages had won! The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States on or by any state on account of sex. In 2019, I started gearing up to participate in celebrations here in Southern California. I purchased a white Victorian suit with a white Victorian hat, and added a "Votes for Women" sash – purple, gold, and white – to my outfit. A few replica buttons of campaign pins of the period and I was set. Then Covid-19 set in and celebrations for the most part were cancelled. We saw the float in the Rose Parade on New Year's Day, and that was about it. Oh, there were the occasional Zoom events online, but the idea of a comradery of women all together would not happen. I convinced myself that I would (mask and all) take myself down to Kersting Court dressed in my finery, and carry a celebratory sign and sing suffrage songs from the Suffragist campaign. Then it hit home, and I became too ashamed to celebrate. Why? The fact that the Nineteenth Amendment gave the vote to white women only. Not all of our sisters got the vote this day 100 years ago. It is true that the Nineteenth Amendment granted American women the right to vote in 1920, but African-American women (and men) faced such discriminatory Jim Crow era voting policies and other voting intimidations, that most of them did not even attempt to go to the polls. Literacy tests, paying a tax to cast a ballot, white-only primaries, making a white person vouch for them – the inhumanity was palpable. Not until the historic Voting Rights Act of 1965 were barriers of discrimination removed and outlawed, allowing our black sisters to go to the polls. Native-Americans were finally granted US citizenship in 1924 (unbelievably) which allowed them to vote. However, the caveat was that they could only vote if they were not living on a reservation or enrolled in a tribe. So much for our Native-American sisters being granted the vote in 1920. In addition, our Asian-American sisters did not fare much better. The McCarren- Walter Act of 1952 finally lifted the restrictions on Asian-Americans becoming naturalized citizens, and thus they could vote. The voting Rights Act of 1965 gave them further protections. Where was their right of my sisters to vote in 1920? This is a simplified version of the true Women's Suffrage movement. Along the way there were many heroes and heroines involved in the fight for all races and nationalities. You should look into the history of it all and be impressed and outraged. Nevertheless, it is a sad truth that the majority of the original Suffragists did not advocate for giving the vote to African-Americans or Native-Americans or Chinese-Americans. Only white Americans. Now at this divisive time in our history, we have seen the Voting Rights Act of 1965 weakened in a 2013 Supreme Court decision. We have seen the old discriminations come back with a vengeance. As a white woman, especially one who grew up in the '50s and '60s, I can no longer celebrate the Nineteenth Amendment this year with a clear conscience. I am ashamed that my race got the vote 100 years ago, but my minority sisters did not. Please reflect on that as the 100th anniversary of the Nineteenth Amendment is here. SIERRA MADRE CHAMBER HOLDS SECOND SUCCESSFUL, SAFELY DISTANCED BLOOD DRIVE On August 26,, 2020 the Sierra Madre Chamber of Commerce with the assistance of the City of Sierra Madreand the American Red Cross held its second blood drive since the pandemic began. According to Chamber Vice President and Event chair Carol Canterbury the goal for the drive was 28 pints of blood. The total collected was 36 pints. At the previous drive held in June, 25 pints were donated. Plans are pending for additional Blood Drives in the near future. | |||||||||||||||||
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Mountain Views News 80 W. Sierra Madre Blvd. #327 Sierra Madre, Ca. 91024 Office: 626.355.2737 Fax: 626.604.4548 www.mtnviewsnews.com |