SCHOOL’S OUT FOREVER?


Donald Trump has already #blessed us with several backwards speeches this week about immigration and foreign policy, and this Saturday he’s gearing up for another ramble, this time about education. Surprising basically no one at this point, Donald Trump’s plans for education are reckless (just like his plans in basically every other policy area). The (alleged) billionaire wants to help pay for his deficit-ballooning “billionaires-first” tax plan by eliminating or drastically cutting the Department of Education—that’s right, the agency that helps ensure we have educated children in this country. His speech this weekend is supposed to be part of Trump’s new outreach to African-American voters, to whom he has asked “what do you have to lose?” Black students stand to lose a lot under Trump’s education plan, which would will deny Pell Grant to 2.7 million black students and eliminate Title I aid for 5.3 million black students in Pre-k through 12.
Here are a few more findings about the consequences Trump’s education plan:

  • 5 million children and students with disabilities would lose $12.7 billion used every year to ensure that they receive a quality education
  • 750,000 or more students from military families, Native American students, students living in U.S. territories, and students living on federal property or Native American lands would lose $1.1 billion per year for their schools
  • 4,000 or more rural school districts would lose more than $175 millionused annually to help improve the quality of teaching and learning in many hard to staff schools
  • $700 million used by states to support the 5 million English language learners currently in public schools—representing close to 10 percent of all students—would be cut

Protecting our Island Earth


The White House, Washington

Born and raised in Hawai’i, I’ve spent the better part of my life dedicated to the ocean that surrounds me. This is why President Obama’s recent expansion of Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Sanctuary off the coast of northern Hawaii, means so much to me.

I have voyaged thousands of miles of open ocean by canoe, guided by the sun, stars and swells, practicing the art and science of Polynesian wayfinding and navigation. This tradition and legacy of wayfinding goes back centuries in my culture. We have worked hard to bring it back from the point of extinction, and perpetuate it as a means for understanding our environment, our history, our culture, our future and our world.

On long voyages, surrounded by the vast blue ocean, we come face to face with the Hawaiian concept of “mālama ” — or “caretaking.” My ancestors learned long ago that if they took care of their canoe and each other, they would arrive safely at their destination.

On islands, as on the canoe, we care for each other and our resources, and work together to protect that which is sacred and fragile — our Island Earth.

As I sail around the world, I’ve gotten a glimpse of what can happen to special places if they are not protected. Initiatives like the expansion of the Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument help us perpetuate and build upon more than a hundred years of protection efforts by thousands of people in our community and around the globe. Thanks to their work to advocate for protection of this area’s cultural and ecological resources and thanks to President Obama, Papahānaumokuākea will become the largest marine protected area on earth. This is a step in the right direction at this crucial time for Island Earth.

Ours is a blue planet, and the health of our Island Earth and her people is dependent on the health of the ocean. If climate change and protection of biodiversity and wildlife are part of the biggest challenge of the 21st century, then ocean protection is the strongest solution.

The expansion of Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Sanctuary will help keep our waters safe — improving ocean resilience, helping the region’s distinct physical and biological resources adapt, and creating a natural laboratory that will allow scientists to monitor and explore the impacts of climate change on these fragile ecosystems.

Join me in celebrating the work of those who stand for and work to mālama our precious honua, those who are caring for our Island Earth.

And I’ll hope you’ll take the time to watch the President’s remarks on conservation from the Midway Atoll.

Aloha Pumehana,

Nainoa Thompson

ADDITIONAL FREE TIME ENTRY PASSES — NMAAHC


NMAAHC-header_2016_600.pngADDITIONAL FREE TIME ENTRY PASSES will be available at 9:00 am (EDT) on Tuesday, September 6, 2016.

The museum will now be open to the public for additional hours over the Grand Opening Dedication Weekend through Sunday, October 2. The additional extended hours provide more than 80,000 new Timed Passes from Saturday, September 24 to Sunday, October 2. Timed Passes will also be released for November and December, 2016 on Tuesday, September 6.

To access Timed Passes go to nmaahc.si.edu/passes or call ETIX Customer Support Center at (800) 514-3849 or (919) 653-0443.
Ordering passes online will be faster, as phone wait times may be long.

For additional information about timed-passes, please visit nmaahc.si.edu.

  • Timed passes are required for entrance into the museum for every visitor including infants because of the time required for security screenings.
  • There are no same-day Timed Passes on September 24 and 25.

Online: Free timed passes for visitors will be available online atnmaahc.si.edu/passes. There is a limit of six free timed passes per order.

Phone: Up to six free timed passes obtained through the ETIX Customer Support Center will be emailed or mailed in advance. Contact ETIX Customer Support Center at (800) 514-3849 or (919) 653-0443. Hours of operation:MondaySaturday, 9 a.m. to 8 p.m., and Sunday, noon to 8 p.m. EDT.

Nonprofit Groups: School, student, religious and community-based organizations with groups of 10 or more may obtain free advance timed passes by phone. Contact ETIX Customer Support Center at (800) 514-3849 or (919) 653-0443.

Same-day Passes in Person: Beginning Monday, Sept. 26, a limited number of same day passes will be available. Four free timed passes per visitor can be obtained in person at the museum on the same day of the visit. There will be no same-day walk-up passes available Sept. 24 or Sept. 25. Passes are distributed on a first-come, first-served basis by the museum’s Visitor Services staff beginning at 9:15 a.m. daily. These Same-Day Passes cannot be reserved in advance.

We look forward to welcoming you to the National Museum of African American History and Culture.

Most sincerely,
edison signature
Edison R. Wato, Jr.
Membership Manager

on this day …


USflag

1974 Frank Robinson was named the first African-American manager in major league baseball.

1838 – Frederick Douglass boarded a train in Maryland on his way to freedom from being a slave.

1777 The Stars and Stripes flies