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Candidates Forum Events News

CHIP Conference rescheduled to early 2025

By EDITORIAL STAFF | news@morningjournal.com
PUBLISHED: March 29, 2024 at 6:00 AM EDT

The Coalition for Hispanic/Latino Issues and Progress Board of Trustees and Conference Planning Committee has rescheduled their 26th anniversary Hispanic Leadership Conference to early 2025, according to a news release. It has been set for April 27. All sponsorships received to date will be utilized for the conference as planned, the release said.


Over the coming months, the organization plans to continue meeting with as many of its 63 partners and 44 sponsors to review the conference’s direction and gather input on ways to ensure that it continues to meet the
informational and strategic needs of attendees, youth, sponsors and collaborators, the release said.


The group seeks to gather input from the community leading to new ways and additional tools it can utilize to present important issues so that they can be addressed in a unified and impactful manner, according to the release. Issues such as human trafficking, mental health, suicide, immigration, AI, environmental concerns, upcoming changes in the workplace, the importance of civic engagement in today’s society and so many others can have a devastating impact on our community if left unaddressed.


For 25 years, Hispanic Leadership Conference organizers have sought to be as relevant as possible, and for this reason and some unanticipated challenges, they decided to reschedule the conference to early next year.
Organizers are asking people to attend a free viewing of “Sound of Freedom” at 7 p.m., April 12, at the Palace Theater, 617 Broadway in downtown Lorain. This movie, based on real-life events, stars Jim Caviezel as an individual who sets out to rescue children from human traffickers because God’s children are not for sale.


For more information or to share ideas on issues to address and available tools to ensure maximum impact on conference attendees, contact trustee Michael Ferrer at 440-336-1501.

This article originally published by The Morning Journal

Categories
Advocacy News

Lorain County Hispanic Leadership Conference Teaches on Pressing Community Issues

By MARTIN MCCONNELL
PUBLISHED: March 11, 2023 at 5:30 PM EST

For a 25th anniversary, the Lorain County Coalition for Hispanic/Latino Issues and Progress (CHIP) decided an annual leadership conference had to be in person.

After multiple years without a time to get together, the group’s brass decided that March 2023 was the right time to revive their yearly gathering.
According to CHIP trustee and former conference director Michael Ferrer, about 30% of Lorain County speaks Spanish in some form. For years, the county has had the largest Hispanic population in the state of Ohio, he said.

He explained that on March 11, that population finally had a place to meet, join hands with each other, and educate both themselves and the wider community about important issues facing the Hispanic and Latino community.

“It’s been three years next month, it normally happened in April,” Ferrer said of the conference. “It’s been three years and we resisted every single call to have a virtual conference… Our conference is really all about the front line workers.”

Online meetings weren’t going to cut it, Ferrer said. The leadership group’s
logic was that a virtual conference would never get the message of appreciation for the front line worker across properly.

“We can’t do that virtually. We have to be there and let them know, fifty times, walking around, that we appreciate you,” he said. “We care about you (and) we thank you… This way, it shows what we’re about.”

This year’s conference developed six main themes, according to Ferrer. The top priority, he said, was human trafficking, or “sexploitation.”

“A new statistic just came out that was so shocking to us, that we’re now going to focus on that for the next three years,” Ferrer said. “Right before COVID and during COVID, 41% of all the people being trafficked are being trafficked by a family member or someone very close to them… That means that even during COVID, when you couldn’t leave the house, you were being exploited.”

In response, the conference featured human trafficking survivors as one of its featured speakers. Prominent conference talks on the subject will continue into the next few years.

According to Ferrer, the conference also tackled other issues. Among them
were community engagement, mental health issues due to the coronavirus
pandemic, and Latina empowerment.

“Latina empowerment is a big one for us,” he said. “It’s such a big thing, about empowering the women in our community… During COVID, I think our community survived because of women. (We continue) to empower young women.”

Each of the main themes had presenters on the conference’s main stage inside the conference center’s Hoke Theatre.

Outside of the main stage presentations, the conference’s main room was filled with tables highlighting programs run by the Hispanic and Latino community, for the Hispanic and Latino community.

Main room booths included the Spanish American Committee’s Latino
Construction Program, which features a six-week course for everything from introductions to unions, to OSHA 10 certification.

Classes start at 5:30 p.m. March 14, 15, and 16 at Lorain County Community College in Elyria, according to program contact Juan Carlos Medina. Hopeful attendees can reach Medina at 216-961-2100, extension 222.

Additionally, the Community Foundation of Lorain County Hispanic Fund
scholarship program, manned by Eileen Torres, hopes to bring much-needed funding to education in the community.

“We have instituted a new endowment, and we intend to add to the
endowment so we can serve more Latino students,” Torres said. “We believe that every Latino student that gets an education, walks out of poverty, that lifts the entire Latino community.”

Those looking to apply for the scholarship can do so at peoplewhocare.org, Torres said. Additionally, the conference’s back room featured Mercy Health, as well as other health-related sponsors, teaching on local medical fields and procedures with a focus on mental health.

Presenter Armando Telles noted in his speech that even in a relatively strong Latino community like Lorain County, members of that community can often feel like outsiders.

Still, he urged Hispanic and Latino youths to get out, vote in their local
elections, and create the change they wanted to see in the wider community, one of the main messages of the conference as a whole.

“Everywhere a person goes, if they didn’t grow up there, they’re an outsider; they’re not the local,” he said. “So it requires the local community to be reflective of the virtues of the values of any person that travels.”

This article originally published by The Morning Journal.

Categories
Candidates Forum Events News

Lorain Candidates Participate in CHIP Forum

By Kevin Martin kmartin@morningjournal.com @MJKevinMartin1 on Twitter | July 15, 2021

The Coalition of Hispanic/Latino Issues and Progress (CHIP) hosted a candidates forum highlighting Lorain candidates and issues in the May 7 primary election.


Education, economic development and local government spending and other issues took center stage April 10 at a Lorain High School Performing Arts Center on at 2600 Ashland Ave. in Lorain.


The forum was moderated by Michael Ferrer, CHIP Trustee Alisha Pardon and CHIP Conference Co-Director and Lorain High School Freshman Iris Rivera.


“The forum is for the candidates and incumbents and those running for public office to have an opportunity to showcase themselves and sell themselves to the community which they vote to represent,” said co-moderator Michael Ferrer.


The bi-annual forum saw candidates discuss ways to tackle Lorain’s housing and blighted homes, economic development, taxes and how to best manage the city’s financial resources.


In addition, residents had the opportunity to hear about two renewal issues on the ballot on May 8. Tiffany McClelland, economic development director for the Lorain Port Authority, explained a five-year one-mill renewal levy which supports operating expenses.


Lorain Council President Joel Arredondo spoke in support of Lorain’s five-year renewal of one quarter of a one percent tax levy.

This article originally published by The Morning Journal.