Communities Work To Build Understanding 25 Years After La Riots (NBC News)

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BY CHRIS FUCHS

When a video made headlines last month appearing to show an Asian store manager pinning down a black customer he had accused of shoplifting, Hyepin Im’s heart sank.

“I said, ‘Oh s**t,'” Im, president and founder of Korean Churches for Community Development (KCCD), a national nonprofit, told NBC News.

For some, that cellphone video from inside Missha Beauty in Charlotte, North Carolina, rekindled memories of the 1990s, a time of tense relations between Korean store owners and black customers in cities like New York and Los Angeles.

“Here I am, really trying to help reshape the narrative that has been told and trying to create bridges of understanding,” said the 50-year-old Im. “And then something like this happens that just in a way reinforces some of that false narrative that’s been going around.”

The incident also came a little more than a month before the 25-year anniversary of an especially dark episode in American history, one that pitted Koreans and blacks against each other — the Los Angeles riots.

Those six-days of unrest, beginning on April 29, 1992, followed the acquittal of four white officers who were videotaped beating black motorist Rodney King after a police chase.

The devastation was vast: over 50 dead, over 12,000 arrested, over $1 billion in property damage. Korean-owned property suffered between 35 to 40 percent of that destruction, according to research from the University of California, Riverside.

While relations between Koreans and blacks have improved since then, community leaders say the work is far from done.

“The challenges that lay ahead are overcoming myths, overcoming misunderstandings, overcoming the things that have really shaped our own ideas and our own philosophies that do not anchor themselves in reality but oftentimes borders on something that is innuendo,” Rev. “J” Edgar Boyd, pastor of the First African Methodist Episcopal Church of Los Angeles, told NBC News.

Mistrust between Koreans and blacks had been brewing for years in a neighborhood no stranger to race riots. In 1965, the South Los Angeles section known as Watts had already been ground zero for looting and unrest.

That violence came after a white police officer arrested a black motorist on charges of drunk driving.

Meanwhile, Koreans had begun arriving in the United States in large numbers after immigration restrictions on Asian countries were lifted in 1965. As Jewish shop owners left South Los Angeles, Korean merchants stepped in to take their place. They began opening their own mom-and-pop stores in the 1970s, Boyd said, in a predominantly black community that had fallen on hard times.

“African Americans felt the bite and the squeeze and the pinch of poverty in real serious ways,” said the 69-year-old Boyd, who was pastor of Bethel AME Church of Los Angeles at the time of the riots.

“There became areas and moments of frustration and tension between those who were marginalized and those who seemed to be surviving — and surviving from the resources of those who were actually pinched and who were impoverished,” Boyd added.

According to Im, myths about Koreans’ success in South Los Angeles helped to fuel an animus toward Koreans and Asians both before and after the unrest.

Among the myths, she said, were that Korean and Asian store owners exploited blacks and stole business opportunities from them while earning a lot of money.

“They depicted our community as one raping resources from the black community, one that didn’t give,” Im said. “It was just this really negative PR, which probably was 99 percent untrue.”

At an April 4 Saigu prayer breakfast — “Saigu” is Korean for the date the riots broke out — Im said she presented data to a multi-ethnic audience to challenge the model-minority stereotype often applied to Koreans and Asians.

Using census figures from 2006 to 2010, her report showed that 31 percent of Asian Americans in the City of Los Angeles were considered poor. It also said Koreans had the lowest rate of homeownership in Los Angeles County and second lowest value of total assets held by households in 2015.

“One of the things that is really sad is that for these store owners, they are in these communities because they are very much suffering from the same economic challenges, pretty much in the same economic wheelchair,” Im said.

But some in the black community saw it differently.

“All too often, they got the image of wealth building and wealth holding from persons inside the community who were not them,” Boyd explained. “And all too often it was among those who were in fact Korean.”

“And so I can see plainly how myths can develop…just from the person’s visual, casual evaluation,” he added.

Further fanning the flames of discord between the two groups was a series of deadly clashes before the riots that involved Korean shopkeepers and black customers.

One flashpoint came in March 1991 with the death of 15-year-old Latasha Harlins. Korean store owner Soon Ja Du fatally shot Harlins in the head following a scuffle over a bottle of orange juice she accused Harlins of trying to steal. Du got five years probation but served no jail time.

Another happened in June that same year when Tae Sam Park killed 42-year-old Lee Arthur Mitchell. Park refused to sell Mitchell a wine cooler he allegedly wanted for 25 cents less than it was priced, according to the Los Angeles Times.

A struggle ensued after Mitchell went behind the counter of Park’s liquor store to take money, the article said. Park pulled a pistol and shot an unarmed Mitchell five times. Park was cleared in the incident.

And just a month earlier, two recent Korean immigrants working at another liquor store were shot to death after complying with demands from a robber whom police identified as black, the LA Times reported.

When a video made headlines last month appearing to show an Asian store manager pinning down a black customer he had accused of shoplifting, Hyepin Im’s heart sank.

“I said, ‘Oh s**t,'” Im, president and founder of Korean Churches for Community Development (KCCD), a national nonprofit, told NBC News.

For some, that cellphone video from inside Missha Beauty in Charlotte, North Carolina, rekindled memories of the 1990s, a time of tense relations between Korean store owners and black customers in cities like New York and Los Angeles.

“Here I am, really trying to help reshape the narrative that has been told and trying to create bridges of understanding,” said the 50-year-old Im. “And then something like this happens that just in a way reinforces some of that false narrative that’s been going around.”

“We have to understand this can happen today, and the conditions that existed then in 1992 are here today. That’s why I feel so much that our communities have to talk to each other, gain that understanding of each other, and develop those relationships.”

The incident also came a little more than a month before the 25-year anniversary of an especially dark episode in American history, one that pitted Koreans and blacks against each other — the Los Angeles riots.

Those six-days of unrest, beginning on April 29, 1992, followed the acquittal of four white officers who were videotaped beating black motorist Rodney King after a police chase.

The devastation was vast: over 50 dead, over 12,000 arrested, over $1 billion in property damage. Korean-owned property suffered between 35 to 40 percent of that destruction, according to research from the University of California, Riverside.

While relations between Koreans and blacks have improved since then, community leaders say the work is far from done.

“The challenges that lay ahead are overcoming myths, overcoming misunderstandings, overcoming the things that have really shaped our own ideas and our own philosophies that do not anchor themselves in reality but oftentimes borders on something that is innuendo,” Rev. “J” Edgar Boyd, pastor of the First African Methodist Episcopal Church of Los Angeles, told NBC News.

Mistrust between Koreans and blacks had been brewing for years in a neighborhood no stranger to race riots. In 1965, the South Los Angeles section known as Watts had already been ground zero for looting and unrest. That violence came after a white police officer arrested a black motorist on charges of drunk driving.

Meanwhile, Koreans had begun arriving in the United States in large numbers after immigration restrictions on Asian countries were lifted in 1965. As Jewish shop owners left South Los Angeles, Korean merchants stepped in to take their place. They began opening their own mom-and-pop stores in the 1970s, Boyd said, in a predominantly black community that had fallen on hard times.

“African Americans felt the bite and the squeeze and the pinch of poverty in real serious ways,” said the 69-year-old Boyd, who was pastor of Bethel AME Church of Los Angeles at the time of the riots.

“There became areas and moments of frustration and tension between those who were marginalized and those who seemed to be surviving — and surviving from the resources of those who were actually pinched and who were impoverished,” Boyd added.

According to Im, myths about Koreans’ success in South Los Angeles helped to fuel an animus toward Koreans and Asians both before and after the unrest.

Among the myths, she said, were that Korean and Asian store owners exploited blacks and stole business opportunities from them while earning a lot of money.

“They depicted our community as one raping resources from the black community, one that didn’t give,” Im said. “It was just this really negative PR, which probably was 99 percent untrue.”

At an April 4 Saigu prayer breakfast — “Saigu” is Korean for the date the riots broke out — Im said she presented data to a multi-ethnic audience to challenge the model-minority stereotype often applied to Koreans and Asians.

Using census figures from 2006 to 2010, her report showed that 31 percent of Asian Americans in the City of Los Angeles were considered poor. It also said Koreans had the lowest rate of homeownership in Los Angeles County and second lowest value of total assets held by households in 2015.

“One of the things that is really sad is that for these store owners, they are in these communities because they are very much suffering from the same economic challenges, pretty much in the same economic wheelchair,” Im said.

But some in the black community saw it differently.

“All too often, they got the image of wealth building and wealth holding from persons inside the community who were not them,” Boyd explained. “And all too often it was among those who were in fact Korean.”

“And so I can see plainly how myths can develop…just from the person’s visual, casual evaluation,” he added.

Further fanning the flames of discord between the two groups was a series of deadly clashes before the riots that involved Korean shopkeepers and black customers.

One flashpoint came in March 1991 with the death of 15-year-old Latasha Harlins. Korean store owner Soon Ja Du fatally shot Harlins in the head following a scuffle over a bottle of orange juice she accused Harlins of trying to steal. Du got five years probation but served no jail time.

Another happened in June that same year when Tae Sam Park killed 42-year-old Lee Arthur Mitchell. Park refused to sell Mitchell a wine cooler he allegedly wanted for 25 cents less than it was priced, according to the Los Angeles Times.

A struggle ensued after Mitchell went behind the counter of Park’s liquor store to take money, the article said. Park pulled a pistol and shot an unarmed Mitchell five times. Park was cleared in the incident.

And just a month earlier, two recent Korean immigrants working at another liquor store were shot to death after complying with demands from a robber whom police identified as black, the LA Times reported.

Angered over Mitchell’s death, Bethel AME organized a boycott of Park’s liquor store, across the street from the church, Boyd said. It lasted 113 days, he said. Park eventually shuttered his business, and Bethel AME bought over the property, turning it into a community development center, Boyd said.

It “was done in an act to bring some visible measure of satisfaction to the community that some recognizable, tangible process and progress was being made to the betterment of the community,” Boyd said.

Meanwhile, as tensions flared between Koreans and blacks, all of Los Angeles and the nation was glued to another case with strong racial overtones — Rodney King.

As timing would have it, Harlins, the black girl shot by the Korean store owner in March 1991, was killed one day after a county grand jury indicted four LAPD officers in King’s beating.

Im blamed the media for connecting the two incidents.

“That has nothing to do with the LA riots, with Rodney King, the police brutality,” she said of Harlins’ death.

After a not-guilty verdict came down in the King case on April 29, 1992, Korean stores in South Los Angeles found themselves among those being looted, torched, and destroyed.

“So in that way, when they decided to protest, they saw that it wasn’t just like the white government system, but also locally right in their own backyard,” Im said. “It’s this evil empire — the predator — and these are the store owners.”

Among the television images seared in the minds of Americans back then were those of Korean shop owners brandishing rifles and pistols, standing sentry outside their businesses, warding off would-be looters as the city burned.

Boyd said there was a feeling among blacks that Koreans were taking from the community but not giving back.

“From conversations I’ve had with a large number of African Americans, they felt that since those stores proliferated at a big percentage throughout African-American communities, that they would have been a bit more sensitive to the cultural needs of the community, of the social and economic needs of the community,” he said.

That might’ve included hiring blacks or training them in merchandizing, among other things, Boyd said.

Emile Mack, 59, can see both sides. He was one of the Los Angeles firefighters called to battle blaze after blaze as projectiles were hurled at them and as gun battles broke out between Korean merchants and looters.

Mack is also of Korean descent — and an adoptee whose parents are black.

“The Korean community called it the riots because to them it was just chaos, people just gone berserk,” Mack told NBC News. “When you talk to the African-American community — and I’m not speaking for them, but it’s just kind of what I interpret — they saw it as the pent up police injustice, discrimination and all the negative things their community had to endure for decades.”

“All of that tension was sitting there,” he added. “But it just took an event to ignite it.”

Twenty-five years after that ignition point, groups in both the Korean and black communities — as well as the LAPD — have been working hand-in-hand to ensure something like this never happens again.

To that end, Im said KCCD has partnered with groups across cultures, including the California African American Museum, Project Islamic Hope, and the Center for Asian Americans United for Self Empowerment. Today, Im said KCCD’s planning committee has close to 60 members representing a variety of organizations.

“All too often, they got the image of wealth building and wealth holding from persons inside the community who were not them. And all too often it was among those who were in fact Korean.”

For Im, heartfelt dialogue and debunking myths across different ethnic, racial, and religious groups are key to bridging the divides among communities, she said.

“We definitely see it as a long-term effort,” Im said.

But she cautioned, “Without the data points, the myths are still ingrained and pervasive.”

For his part, Boyd said he believes discourse between Koreans and blacks is more constructive today than it was 25 years ago. Clergy from both groups frequently participate in councils, he said, and relations between Korean and black public school students have also improved.

Since the riots, blacks have been able to own businesses in South Los Angeles, and banks have provided loans, Boyd said.

“I think there’s a genuine intent on everybody’s part to look back and see the pain and see the death and the pathology that existed in 1992,” Boyd said.

“Loss never benefits any body except the undertaker or those who come in and make a living to clean it up,” he added.

Policing in Los Angeles has also evolved, according to LAPD Commander Blake Chow, who was on the front lines of the unrest back in 1992.

Following the riots, the Independent Commission on the Los Angeles Police Department found that a culture of excessive force largely pervaded the LAPD. That culture was exacerbated by officers with racist and biased views toward the people they policed and even their fellow minority officers, the report concluded.

One big difference today is that the LAPD is much closer to the communities they serve, Chow told NBC News in an email.

“Each community partnership is akin to a pressure relief valve,” Chow wrote. “Issues dealing with the police and community no longer build up like a pressure cooker, but we are able to work with the community to reduce that pressure.

However, in recent times other parts of the country have witnessed flashbacks to the Los Angeles of the 1990s. Riots and looting broke out in Ferguson, Missouri, and Baltimore, Maryland, following incidents where black men have died during police encounters.

In both places, stores owned by Asians were among those looted and destroyed, according to business owners.

“We have to understand this can happen today, and the conditions that existed then in 1992 are here today,” Mack said. “That’s why I feel so much that our communities have to talk to each other, gain that understanding of each other, and develop those relationships.”

Yamaguchi Re-Elected To Placentia City Council (Rafu Shimpo)

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PLACENTIA — Placentia Mayor Jeremy Yamaguchi was re-elected to the City Council on Nov. 8.
Out of nine candidates, the top three were elected: Retired Police Chief Ward Smith with 7,270 votes (16.2 percent), Yamaguchi with 7,241 (16.1 percent), and insurance agent Rhonda Shader with 5,737 (12.8 percent).

The other candidates were small businessman/CPA Chris Bunker, Planning Commissioner Thomas Solomonson, business owner Kevin Kirwin, retired engineering manager Robert McKinnell, retired federal auditor Fabian Fragiao, and industrial manufacturer executive Blake Montero.

Yamaguchi’s endorsers included Rep. Ed Royce (R-Brea), City Treasurer Craig Green, former City Treasurer Lee Castner, and The Orange County Register, which said in an Oct. 30 editorial:

“Placentia has certainly had its financial woes in recent years. Since 2000, it has suffered from two recessions, the calamitous OnTrac project to trench five miles of train tracks — which turned into a $54.4 million sinkhole that put the city into heavy debt — and an embezzlement scandal involving a financial services manager that cost the city nearly $5 million.

“Nevertheless, the city’s financial situation is improving as it begins to get out from under its debts. The business climate has been getting better, code enforcement is no longer overly aggressive, as it was in years past, and there are opportunities to revitalize the downtown area.

“Among the nine candidates vying for three seats on the council, we believe lone incumbent and current Mayor Jeremy Yamaguchi deserves some credit for the city’s relative stability and turnaround, and we endorse him for a third term on the council. Yamaguchi sees his role on the council as a watchdog for residents, fighting for private property rights and opposing taxes and overbearing regulations on businesses and residents.”

The newspaper also endorsed Shader and McKinnell.

One of the youngest elected officials in California and the youngest in Orange County history, Yamaguchi was first elected to a four-year term on the City Council in November 2008 at the age of 19, running in a race with six candidates for three open seats and receiving the highest vote count.

Before entering high school, he was involved with the Placentia Neighborhood Watch, Placentia Heritage Parade and Festival, Placentia Cultural Arts Commission, Placentia Chamber of Commerce, and the Placentia Police Department, among other organizations.

Yamaguchi attributes much of his success to his time in the Boy Scouts of America. He earned his Eagle Scout award in 2006, was named in 2007 as California Scout of the Year by Veterans of Foreign Wars, served on the board of Boy Scouts of America, Orange County Council, and served as Southern California section chief to the National Boy Scouts of America, Order of the Arrow.

He graduated from Placentia’s El Dorado High School in 2007 with numerous honors and distinctions, including a record 3,000 community service hours. He recently graduated from CSU Fullerton with a bachelor’s degree in political science. On campus, he was an officer of the Pi Sigma Alpha Political Science Honor Society and a member of the CSUF Pre-law Society and the Phi Beta Delta honor society for international scholars.

Yamaguchi now owns and operates his own full-service production company in Orange County. The Placentia Chamber of Commerce honored him as Citizen of the Year in 2006 for his volunteer efforts in the community; he was the youngest person to receive the award.

He also received the Presidential Gold Volunteer Service Award from a nomination by the Disneyland Resort and was honored in 2009 by the Center for Asian Americans United for Self Empowerment (CAUSE) with the Rising Star Award.

His personal motto is “I have pride in our past, faith in our future and a vision for a more stable and secure community.”

Orange County Results

A number of other Asian American candidates were on the ballot, including:

Orange County Board of Supervisors, 1st District — Incumbent Andrew Do defeated Santa Ana City Councilmember Michele Martinez, 51,352 votes (53.1 percent) to 45,281 (46.9 percent). Do has served as supervisor since winning a special election last year to succeed Janet Nguyen, who was elected to the State Senate. The district covers Garden Grove, Santa Ana, Westminster and parts of Fountain Valley.

Do’s win maintains the Asian American majority on the five-member Board of Supervisors. Chairwoman Lisa Bartlett (5th District) is Japanese American and Vice Chair Michelle Steel (2nd District) is Korean American. All three, as well as Supervisors Todd Spitzer (3rd District) and Shawn Nelson (4th District), are Republicans.

Aliso Viejo City Council — Incumbent Ross Chun was re-elected with 7,581 votes (23.1 percent), finishing in third place. Also re-elected were William Phillips with 8,494 (25.9 percent) and Mike Munzig with 10,634 (32.4 percent). Mary Rios was in fourth place.

Garden Grove City Council, District 3 (short term) — Thu-Ha Nguyen beat Clay Block, 4,305 (66.7 percent) to 2,149 (33.3 percent).

Garden Grove City Council, District 6 — Kim Bernice Nguyen defeated Rickk Montoya, 2,830 (57.3 percent) to 2,113 (42.7 percent).

Irvine Mayor — Gang Chen finished in third place with 10,560 (14.5 percent) and David Chey fifth and last with 2,742 (3.8 percent). The winner was Donald Wagner. Mary Ann Gaido was in second place and Katherine Daigle was in fourth place.

Irvine City Council — In an 11-way race for two seats, Anthony Kuo finished in third place with 19,863 (15.5 percent), Farrah Khan was fourth with 14,908 (11.6 percent), Dale Cheema was seventh with 8,184 (6.4 percent) and Hyunjoung “Genii” Ahn was 10th with 4,153 (3.2 percent). The winners were incumbent Christina Shea and Melissa Fox.

La Palma City Council — Incumbent Peter Kim was re-elected with 3,790 (35.1 percent). Also elected were incumbent Gerard Goedhart with 3,841 (35.6 percent) and Marshall Goodman with 3,156 (29.3 percent). There were no other candidates.

Santa Ana City Council, Ward 1 — Jessica Cha unsuccessfully challenged incumbent Vicente Sarmiento, 25,214 (45.1 percent) to 30,746 (54.9 percent).

Westminster Mayor — Incumbent Tri Ta was re-elected with 14,960 (56.9 percent), followed by Margie Rice with 8,447 (32.1 percent) and two other challengers.

Westminster City Council — In a seven-way race for two seats, Kimberly Ho came in second with 11,521 (25.8 percent), behind incumbent Sergio Contreras with 12,989 (29.1 percent). Incumbent Diana Lee Carey was third with 7,384 (16.5 percent), followed by Mark Lawrence with 5,033 (11.3 percent), Tommy Luong with 3,246 (7.3 percent), Samantha Bao Anh Nguyen with 2,835 (6.3 percent), and Linh Le with 1,704 (3.8 percent).

Coast Community College Governing Board, Trustee Area 2 — Vong Xavier Nguyen lost to incumbent Jerry Patterson, 67,433 (33.3 percent) to 136,020 (66.7 percent).

Coast Community College Governing Board, Trustee Area 4 — Jonathan Bao Huynh lost to incumbent Mary Hornbuckle, 67,176 (34.3 percent) to 128,467 (65.7 percent).

Rancho Santiago Community College District Governing Board, Trustee Area 5 — Steven Nguyen lost to incumbent Claudia Alvarez, 7.325 (38.9 percent) to 7,041 (42.1 percent). Cecilia “Ceci” Aguinaga was third with 3,358 (20.1 percent).

Garden Grove Unified School District Governing Board, Trustee Area 5 — Dina Nguyen won with 6,713 (52.0 percent), followed by incumbent Linda Paulsen-Reed with 4,728 (36.6 percent) and Omar Montanez Ablouj with 1,474 (11.4 percent).

Saddleback Valley Unified School District Governing Board — In a six-way race for three seats, Edward Wong was second with 36,249 (21.2 percent). Incumbents Suzie Swartz and Amanda Morrell were first and third, respectively. Also running were David Johnson, Mark Tettemer and Theo Hunt.

Fullerton Joint Union High School District Governing Board, Trustee Area 3 — Faith Sarupa Mukherjee lost to incumbent Andy Montoya, 1,491 (12.9 percent) to 10,038 (87.1 percent).

Huntington Beach Union High School District Governing Board — In a five-way race for two seats, Trung Ta was third with 24,364 (13.7 percent). The winners were incumbents Michael Simons and Susan Henry. Saul Lankster and Colin Melott also ran.

Ocean View School District Governing Board — In a five-way race for two seats, Amalia Lam was in last place with 6,085 (11.6 percent). The winners were incumbent Gina Clayton-Tarvin and Norm Westwell, followed by Patricia Singer and Kathryn Gonzalez.

Westminster School District — In a three-way race for two seats, Frances Nguyen was elected with 11,140 (32.6 percent) and incumbent Jamison Power was re-elected with 14,078 (41.2 percent). Karl Truong was third with 8,992 (26.3 percent).

Midway City Sanitary District — Chi Charlie Nguyen was elected with 10,281 (23.4 percent) and incumbent Al Krippner was re-elected with 11,407 (26.0 percent). Samantha Bao Anh Nguyen was in fifth place with 5,668 (12.9 percent). Incumbent Joy Neugebauer was third and Anita Rice was fourth.

Orange County Water District, Division 3 — Incumbent Roger Yoh defeated Peter Kim, 38,070 (53.3 percent) to 33,398 (46.7 percent).

Municipal Water District of Orange County, Division 7 — Megan Yoo Schneider won with 44,165 (42.6 percent), followed by Raymond Miller, Evan Chaffee and Richard Gardner.

CAUSE Hosts 24th Annual Gala To Promote Asian Americans In Politics (Alhambra Source)

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BY AGNES CONSTANTE

Alhambra City Councilman Jeff Maloney has always been interested in making his community a better place.

So when the opportunity to run for city council presented itself, he decided to enter the race for office last year.

“It was a big decision I had to discuss with my family, but … because I have that interest and that motivation to try to find solutions to all kinds of issues, big and small, I felt that it was the right thing for me to do,” Maloney told the Alhambra Source.

Before the 2016 election, Maloney attended a seminar hosted by the Center for Asian Americans United for Self Empowerment (CAUSE), a non-partisan, non-profit organization dedicated to advancing civic and political empowerment among the Asian Pacific American (APA) community. The seminar helped encourage and prepare potential Asian American candidates for what they should expect and what they should do, Maloney said. He added that it’s one of multiple CAUSE programs from which he has benefited.

Maloney was among elected officials who attended CAUSE’s 24th annual gala Thursday evening at The L.A. Hotel Downtown. The event celebrated and recognized individuals working to make a difference in the APA community. Also in attendance were Rep. Judy Chu, Los Angeles City Councilman David Ryu, Alhambra Vice Mayor Stephen Sham and California State Assemblymember Ed Chau.

During the gala, Chu said she has been a long-time supporter of CAUSE. As the chair of the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus, a priority for her has been to get more Asian American Pacific Islanders (AAPIs) into office.

“For over two decades, CAUSE has played such an important role in building our next generation of leaders,” Chu said. “And that’s why I always have a CAUSE intern in my office every year.”

The organization issued three awards during Thursday’s event: the Partners in Public Service Award to Anthony Rendon, speaker of the California State Assembly, and Annie Lam, principal of Lam Consulting Group; the Community Championship Award to John Kobara, executive Vice President and chief operating officer of the California Community Foundation; and the Corporate Leadership Award to Patrick Niemann, managing partner of Ernst & Young, Greater Los Angeles.

Honorees thanked CAUSE for the work it has done to empower the APA community.

Yet despite the strides the AAPI community has made in the political sphere, it is still underrepresented and underappreciated, Kobara told attendees during his remarks.

“We’ve made progress, but it’s not enough. We’re still ignored, we’re still overlooked and we’re still thinking about where the opportunities can be,” he said. “There is an ocean of untapped talent in this community, an ocean of suffering in this community. We must help others know we are here, that our voices and needs matter and it cannot be ignored.”

Maloney echoes the sentiment and says that mobilizing the AAPI community is crucial.

“If there’s no diversity in our representation, then we aren’t going to be able to express and address the concerns of everyone in our communities,” he said.

In Alhambra, Maloney thinks the city has appropriate representation at the council level and that council members have established a good level of communication with each other.

“It’s been encouraging for to me to see that level of participation and input that all the different communities in our city have in the process,” he said.

Maloney noted that CAUSE, among other organizations, has served as a voice for communities that historically haven’t had one in politics. He also said that for young AAPIs interested in getting involved in politics, CAUSE is a good place to start.

“And I think for the most part, you’ll be embraced into that world and will be presented with a lot of opportunities,” he said.

CAUSE Mobilizes APA Community For Its 24th Annual Gala – “Empowering Tomorrow’s Leaders”

CAUSE mobilizes APA community for its 24th Annual Gala – “Empowering Tomorrow’s

Leaders”

Pasadena, CA – February 27, 2017 – Center for Asian Americans United for Self Empowerment (CAUSE) will be celebrating its 24th Anniversary on Thursday, April 20, 2017 at the L.A. Hotel Downtown (333 S. Figueroa Street, Los Angeles, CA 90071). This year’s theme is “Empowering Tomorrow’s Leaders.” As our country enters a new era of leadership, it is more important than ever to empower the future leaders and change-makers of the Asian Pacific American (APA) community.

The schedule of events is as follows:

5:00 P.M. VIP Reception

6:00 P.M. Silent Auction & Networking | California Ballroom Foyer

7:00 P.M. Dinner Program | California Ballroom

The CAUSE Annual Gala is the premier APA event for those interested in politics and community. It boasts the largest attendance of APA elected officials and is a celebration of those striving to make an impact in our community. More than 100 APA federal, state and local officials from all

over California will be in attendance. The gala also serves as the largest fundraiser of the year for CAUSE. Funds raised help sustain our many programs and services, which include voter outreach, training, and education and leadership development programs. Our programs have proven to be successful in encouraging increased civic engagement and political leadership in the Greater Los Angeles area and beyond.

Additionally, 500 guests are expected to attend this year— all of whom are dedicated to elevating the APA community. We are delighted to recognize the following honorees for their audacity and resolve to stand as leaders for the APA community:

Partners in Public Service Award

The Hon. Anthony Rendon, 70th

Speaker of the California State Assembly and

Annie V. Lam, Principal, Lam Consulting Group

Speaker Rendon and Ms. Lam have exemplified the importance cross-sector partnership in civic leadership. Their commitment to public service in government and the nonprofit industry is commendable. Speaker Rendon and Ms. Lam’s long-standing support for the APA community includes supporting CAUSE’s past programs and helping us to inspire the next generation of civic and public service leaders.

Speaker Rendon was elected to the California State Assembly in 2012 and was sworn-in as the 70th Speaker of the Assembly in 2016. He represents the 63rd California Assembly District, which includes Bell, Cudahy, Hawaiian Gardens, Lakewood, Lynwood, Maywood, Paramount, South Gate and a northern portion of Long Beach.

Ms. Lam specializes in governmental affairs, organizational development, and nonprofit management. Ms. Lam serves as the executive director for four nonprofits with complementary missions: the Asian Union Election Committee Education Fund (AUECEF), the League of California Cities Asian Pacific Islander (API) Caucus, the League of California Cities Women’s Caucus, and the California Asian Pacific Islander Legislative Caucus Institute.

Community Championship Award

Mr. John Kobara

Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer

California Community Foundation

After serving five years on the Board of Directors, Mr. Kobara was appointed Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer for the California Community Foundation in 2008. For more than 40 years, Mr. Kobara has been leading and managing diverse and complex non-profit and for-profit organizations, including CK12 Foundation, OnlineLearning.net, and Big Brothers Big Sisters of Greater Los Angeles. More than anything, Mr. Kobara considers himself an educator and teacher. He has taught hundreds of classes and workshops for undergraduate and graduate students, including participants in CAUSE’s leadership development programs for many years.

Corporate Citizenship Award

Mr. Patrick Niemann

Managing Partner – Greater Los Angeles

Ernst & Young LLP

As Managing Partner for Greater Los Angeles at Ernst & Young LLP, Patrick Niemann leads a team of 1,600 professionals who serve more than 1,000 innovative and entrepreneurial companies. Mr. Niemann is also a client-serving partner who works with public and private companies in diverse sectors. Prior to his current role, Pat managed EY’s Greater Los Angeles Audit practice and served as industry leader for the Media & Entertainment and Japanese Business Services practices. For many years, Mr. Niemann and EY have been actively involved in the Los Angeles community and dedicated to empowering and giving back specifically to the APA community.

Certificate presentations and press interviews will take place during the VIP reception. Press will receive complimentary admission; to reserve your press spot, please RSVP with Lindsey Horowitz by email at lindsey@causeusa.org or phone at (323) 573-3452 by Friday, April 14.

Center for Asian Americans United for Self Empowerment (CAUSE) is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, nonpartisan, community-based organization with a mission to advance the civic and political empowerment of the Asian Pacific American (APA) community through nonpartisan voter registration and education, community outreach, and leadership development.

For press inquiries, please contact CAUSE via phone at (626) 356-9838 or email at info@causeusa.org. General information can be obtained from our website, www.causeusa.org. Our offices are located at 260 S. Los Robles Avenue, #115, Pasadena, CA 91101.

Multilingual Campaign Aims To Boost Local Voter Turnout In LA (Asian Journal)

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BY ERIC ANTHONY LICAS

CITY officials hope Angelenos will take the opportunity presented by the upcoming primary and general elections in Los Angeles to shape the future of their communities.

In an effort to drive more residents to the polls, representatives from the office of the City Clerk’s Election Division launched the “L.A. City Votes!” outreach and education campaign on Thursday, December 8.

Projects staged by the division, along with 25 nonprofit groups and 18 media organizations, aim to reverse the trend of low voter turnout in local elections.

“I don’t think we’ve done a great job in the past of getting the word out about why it’s important for people to vote in local elections,” L.A. City Clerk Holly Wolcott told the Asian Journal following a press conference promoting voter outreach on Thursday. “That’s what we hope to change this year.”

The Election Division and its partners in the campaign will distribute informational materials available in English, Tagalog and 11 other languages designed to educate residents about voting procedures and their options on next year’s ballots.

In addition, representatives of “L.A. City Votes!” will put on presentations and conduct outreach at college campuses, farmer’s markets, festivals and other community events in hopes of boosting electoral participation across the county.

Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders (AAPIs) typically exhibit a low voter turnout rate, according to Josh Alegado, the programs coordinator for the Center for Asian Americans United for Self Empowerment (CAUSE). He hopes that the in-language information offered by the “LA City Votes!” campaign will help many members of those communities overcome perceived language barriers to the polls.

AAPIs, and Filipinos in particular, have the potential to play a decisive role in the outcome of next year’s elections and the development of their neighborhoods, according to Alegado.

“[Filipinos] comprise a large part of the population for a lot of the council districts that are going up for re-election,” he told the Asian Journal after Thursday’s press conference. “We are a big force in Los Angeles and we need to go out and vote.”

Alegado went on to say that, so long as the electorate stays informed, making the choice to be heard matters more than who or what residents vote for.

The information disseminated by the “LA City Votes Campaign” is not intended to sway voters’ decisions in one particular direction or another.

“We’re here to educate, support and just be there for everyone so that they can exercise their right to vote in any language,” Chief of Elections Jinny Pak told the Asian Journal at City Hall on Thursday.

All of the campaign’s educational materials are available on the Election Division’s website.

In addition, the campaign will reach out to the electorate via Facebook, Instagram, Twitter and YouTube. Residents can also submit any questions they might have to the election division by phone, mail or email.

Pak also recommended a series of speeches to be delivered by each of the candidates and aired on LA CityView Channel 35 to those who would like to learn even more about the people currently running for office. Transcripts of those speeches will also be made available for those who are unable to catch the broadcast.

“Municipal elections are important because the decision makers you are electing have the most to do with your everyday life,” said Wolcott. “They make decisions about community planning, how budgets are spent in your community, police, trash pickup, things that impact you every day.”

The offices of the Mayor, City Controller, and City Attorney, as well as a number of City Council and school board seats, are at stake next year. Proposals related to education, homelessness, and a diverse collection of other issues encountered by many Angelenos will also seek the public’s approval.

Alegado encouraged families to sit down with each other to discuss the ballot and how their decisions might decide the direction their communities moving forward. He hopes the outreach conducted by the Election Division and its partners will help add substance and context to those conversations.

“Now the city is doing a better job of giving us those resources, making us feel confident, and making us feel like we’re part of democracy,” he said on Thursday.

The primary nominating election scheduled for Tuesday, March 7, 2017 will narrow down the field of competitors for public office. Voters will then cast their ballots for the remaining candidates in the general municipal election on Tuesday, May 16.

2017 CAUSE Political Institute – Now Accepting Participants

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

 

 

Contact: Lindsey Horowitz

Director of Programs

Phone: 626-356-9838

Email: lindsey@causeusa.org

 

2017 CAUSE Political Institute – Now Accepting Participants

 

Pasadena, CA – November 28, 2016 – Center for Asian Americans United for Self Empowerment (CAUSE) is now officially accepting candidate forms for the 2017 CAUSE Political Institute.

 

The CAUSE Political Institute (CPI) is a political leadership and advocacy training certificate program for high-potential professionals with seasoned leadership experience and a passion for serving the needs of the Asian Pacific American (APA) community in California. The program was co-founded by CAUSE and the USC Dornsife Jesse M. Unruh Institute of Politics in order to ensure a pipeline of political and civic leadership for the APA community.

 

CPI trainings consist of policy seminars, skill development workshops, intimate roundtable discussions with notable leaders, and group work. Training sessions and activities are led by a unique array of seasoned politicians, campaign professionals, and other civic and issue experts who will share their best practices and personal insights. Participants complete the program armed with the skills, knowledge and network vital to advocate for the APA community and run for elected office.

 

CPI is open to participants through a nomination-only process. Elected officials at the state and federal levels are invited to look within their networks to identify and nominate two candidates per year for the program: one in public service, and one from the broader community. While this program is geared towards individuals pursuing public office, the program is also highly recommended for individuals desiring community leadership roles in the private and non-profit sectors.

 

If you are interested in participating in this program, please click here. The candidate information form and nomination package must be received by Sunday, January 15, 2017 at 11:59 PM PST.  All submitted materials will be carefully reviewed by the CPI Selection Committee.  Please contact CAUSE at info@causeusa.org or at (626) 356-9838, if you have any questions.

 

It is the policy of Center for Asian Americans United for Self Empowerment (CAUSE) to provide equal opportunities without regard to race, color, religion, national origin, gender, sexual preference, age, or disability.

 

 

Center for Asian Americans United for Self Empowerment (CAUSE) is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, nonpartisan, community-based organization with a mission to advance the  political empowerment of the Asian Pacific American community through nonpartisan voter registration and education, community outreach, and leadership development.

 

For any further inquiries, please contact CAUSE via phone at (626) 356-9838 or email at info@causeusa.org. General information can be obtained from our website at www.causeusa.org. Our office is located at 260 S. Los Robles Avenue, #115, Pasadena, CA 91101

 

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East West Bank’s Reach Further: Getting Out The Asian American Vote (East West Bank)

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BY ANGELA BAO

Asian Americans have the lowest voter turnout rate than any other racial group in the U.S.

In Los Angeles’ historic Wiltern Theatre, Asian Americans of all ages gathered in the soaring art deco interior for the inaugural #IAmAsianAmerican concert and cheered enthusiastically when popular YouTube singer/songwriter AJ Rafael stepped on stage, guitar in hand. The dark theater was dotted with the lighted screens of dozens of smartphones as people began recording and taking photos of him. Before starting, Rafael expressed his appreciation for being included in the conversation on the Asian American vote and urged the audience to be proactive. “We [Asian Americans] have always been seen as a quiet community,” said Rafael, “but I think we could use our platforms and voices to do things like vote.”

#IAmAsianAmerican was conceived as a way to engage Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) millennials in the voting process by bringing together notable Asian American performers such as Rafael for a free concert. Each performer reiterated the importance of voting, and volunteers wearing #IAmAsianAmerican shirts were available to help guests register to vote.

Although Asian Americans are the fastest growing and best-educated racial group, their voter turnout rates (31 percent) are the lowestamong all racial groups. Amongst registered Asian American millennials (voters aged 18-34), the turnout rates were significantly lower compared to their older counterparts. According to a 2014 report done by APIA Vote, an organization dedicated to engaging Asians and Pacific Islanders in civic participation, only 47 percent of millennials actually voted, compared to the 66 percent in the 35-49 age range and the 67 percent in both the 50-65 and 65-plus categories.

However, the lack of voter participation does not mean Asian Americans, millennials or otherwise, are unenthusiastic about the political process. In a 2016 report, overall Asian American voter enthusiasm has increased drastically since 2014, jumping from 28 percent in 2014 saying they were “more enthusiastic” to 51 percent in 2016. So what’s preventing AAPI people from voting?

GETTING AAPI INVOLVED IN THE POLITICAL PROCESS

Charlie Woo, chairman of the Center for Asian Americans United for Self Empowerment (CAUSE), believes that it all starts with proper voter education for immigrants. According to Pew Research Center, immigrants make up 74 percent of the adult Asian American population, and 38 percent of Asian Americans speak limited English. Factor in the diversity of cultures and languages, Asian American immigrants can find the voting process a bit intimidating—hence, why Woo makes a point of properly educating immigrants on the importance of voting. “There are a lot of propositions on the [voter] ballot,” says Woo. “Unless you’re extremely well-versed in the political process, you won’t really understand. Because of the language barrier, the cultural barrier, it’s very difficult for immigrant communities…but once they understand the importance of [voting], I think they will voice their opinions.”

In the 2016 APIA Vote report, surveys showed that 54 percent of Asian Americans felt disengaged from politics because they believed politicians “didn’t care” about their opinions. At least part of that disengagement stems from the tendency to lump all Asian Americans into one category, when in reality AAPI people come from many different countries and speak dozens of different languages and dialects. Taking the time to understand the differences and preferences—cultural, political and generational—between each Asian ethnic group can greatly benefit any organization trying to increase AAPI engagement. Although Asian Americans as a whole lean Democratic, there are striking discrepancies between individual ethnic groups. For instance, only 18 percent of Indian-Americans lean Republican, whereas 40 percent of Filipino-Americans favor the right. “The Asian American community is not homogeneous—it’s extremely heterogeneous,” states Woo. “Some immigrants need more help in education or healthcare, and some just want help to start their business—their needs are very different.”

For Asian American millennials, social media is the best way to reach out. Asian American millennials are tech-savvy and spend more time on the Internet than the average consumer. #IAmAsianAmerican wisely utilized social media to appeal to the millennial demographic by incorporating a hashtag into the name and encouraging guests to live tweet about the event, which were then displayed on screens on the stage. Imprenta Communications Group, a firm that helps businesses and organizations market to people of color, produced a Public Service Announcement for APIA Vote that featured Asian American celebrities such as George Takei, Constance Wu and John Cho that many millennials will recognize. “Millennials are the key,” says Ronald Wong, the founder and CEO of Imprenta Communications Group. “Lower voter turnout affects us all. Voting is fundamental to our form of democracy—just look at the importance of political activism and how it’s helped Asian Americans gain leadership roles in a relatively short amount of time.”

THE ECONOMIC IMPACT OF INCREASED AAPI VOTER TURNOUT

Asian Americans who don’t vote, whether for a political candidate or for a policy change, might inadvertently be working against their own interests. “People need to see that all of these decisions have a direct economic impact on communities,” says Wong. “There are government policies that help create business, but also ones that hurt business, like the increased regulation on laundromats. Years ago, there was an environmental ruling that affected the dry cleaning business and subsequently closed a lot of Asian businesses. In San Francisco, there’s a tax impacting sugary drinks—that would affect boba tea shops. The Asian American community needs to understand that these policies and politicians have a direct impact on our business—in a sense, voting is a return on investment.”

Woo notes that increased Asian American participation could affect future business and political leaders. “[CAUSE’s] thinking is, voters become engaged when they see an elected official from the community,” says Woo. “So if we train 10 or 20 elected officials in the issues [relevant to Asian Americans], they become a spokesperson for the community. The most effective way to communicate is to develop leaders who share our motivations, share our values.” The ripple effects of increased voter turnout and representation go beyond just politics; Woo believes it will also benefit the business world. “In this world, whether you’re in politics or business, you get ahead not just because of what you know, but who you know,” says Woo. “Any business leader that does not have political knowledge will not be able to rise to the top because, in this society, it’s business leaders helping political leaders, who in turn help business leaders. All of the civic leaders work together.” By increasing political representation and voter turnout, Asian Americans can make significant gains in the business world.

CAUSE To Host Voter Education Workshop Focusing On The General Election

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

  

Contact: Lindsey Horowitz

Director of Programs

Phone: 626-356-9838

Email: lindsey@causeusa.org

 

CAUSE to Host Voter Education Workshop Focusing on the General Election

 

Pasadena, CA – October 14, 2016 – Center for Asian Americans United for Self-Empowerment (CAUSE) will be holding a Voter Education Workshop and Dim Sum Reception at the Grand Plaza Community Room in Downtown Los Angeles (601 N. Grand Avenue) on Wednesday, October 19th from 2:30 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.

 This voter education session will be geared primarily towards English, Mandarin and Cantonese-speaking seniors who are seeking easily accessible information about voter registration and voter re-registration, in addition to absentee ballot information, ballot propositions and other information regarding the November 8th General Election.

The workshop will be conducted in English, Mandarin and Cantonese and will begin with an overview of the voting process and ballot measures. It will then be followed by a question and answer portion and will end with a dim sum reception. The event is free and open to the public.

Center for Asian Americans United for Self Empowerment (CAUSE) is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, nonpartisan, community-based organization with a mission to advance the  political empowerment of the Asian Pacific American (APA) community through nonpartisan voter registration and education, community outreach, and leadership development.

For press inquiries, please contact CAUSE via phone at (626) 356-9838 or email at info@causeusa.org. General information can be obtained from our website, www.causeusa.org. Our offices are located at 260 S. Los Robles Ave., #115 Pasadena, CA 91101.

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CAUSE Welcomes Leadership Academy Class Of 2016

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact: Aki Leung

Director of Programs

Phone: 626-356-9838

Email: aki@causeusa.org

CAUSE Welcomes Leadership Academy Class of 2016

Pasadena, CA – June 9, 2016 – Center for Asian Americans United for Self Empowerment (CAUSE) will host the 25th Leadership Academy Kickoff Press Conference and Reception on Friday, June 17, 2016 at the Los Angeles Area Chamber of Commerce (350 S. Bixel Street, Los Angeles, CA 90017), from 2:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.

Through this event, CAUSE welcomes and introduces the 25th Class of Leadership Academy participants to the community. Program participants will share their stories and passion in serving the community. The Honorable Mike Eng, Vice President of the Los Angeles Community College Board will serve as the keynote speaker for the event.

Since its inception in 1991, the CAUSE Leadership Academy develops a pipeline of leadership for the Asian Pacific American (APA) community. The program prepares its participants to be leaders at the forefront of the democratic process through learning the importance of civic engagement and political participation. Graduates of this program have gone on to run for political office and have become leaders in politics, business and nonprofits.

This year, CAUSE received a record number of applications from elite students across the nation. Participants went through a rigorous and comprehensive reviewing process. Decisions are made based on academic and personal excellence, as well as demonstrated leadership capabilities in extracurricular activities.

The CAUSE Leadership Academy – Washington, DC Program offers opportunities for students to gain firsthand experience in politics through legislative work, attending various legislative briefings and hearings, and conducting policy research.

Class of 2016 Leadership Academy – Washington, DC Cohort includes:

  • Haeeun Blessing Jee, Harvard College | Intern at the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development

  • Edwin Saucedo, University of Southern California | Intern at the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development

The CAUSE Leadership Academy – Los Angeles, CA Program offers opportunities for students to gain firsthand experience in politics through constituent services, community organizing, community relations, and legislative research.

Class of 2016 Leadership Academy – Los Angeles, CA Cohort includes:

  • Zenni Duong, University of California, Davis | Intern at the Office of U.S. Congressmember Judy Chu

  • Kevin Hsu, Claremont McKenna College | Intern at the Office of California State Treasurer John Chiang

  • Sabina Li, University of California, Los Angeles | Intern at the Office of California State Controller Betty Yee

  • Jess Xinyi Liu, University of Michigan | Intern at the Office of U.S. Congressmember Adam Schiff

  • Eric Phung, Yale University | Intern at the Office of California State Assemblymember Ed Chau

  • Phoebe Shen, Scripps College | Intern at the Office of California State Assemblymember Jimmy Gomez

  • Joanna Tien, University of California, Los Angeles | Intern at the Office of U.S. Congressmember Grace Napolitano

  • Xuan Le Tong, University of California, Riverside | Intern at the Office of Los Angeles Unified School District Boardmember Scott M. Schmerelson

  • Erika Zheng, University of California, Berkeley | Intern at the Office of Los Angeles City Mayor Eric Garcetti

This event is open to the public. Elected officials, community leaders, press members, family and friends are welcome to join. Admission is free and light refreshment will be provided. Please RSVP by Wednesday, June 15 at cla2016-kickoff.eventbrite.com. Parking is at 417 S. Boylston Street, Los Angeles, CA 90017 ($7 cash only) and additional street parking is available.

Center for Asian Americans United for Self Empowerment (CAUSE) is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, nonpartisan, community-based organization with a mission to advance the  political empowerment of the Asian Pacific American community through nonpartisan voter registration and education, community outreach, and leadership development.

For any further inquiries, please contact CAUSE via phone at (626) 356-9838 or email at info@causeusa.org. General information can be obtained from our website at www.causeusa.org. Our office is located at 260 S. Los Robles Ave., #115 Pasadena, CA 91101

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CAUSE Board Chair Charlie Woo And Los Angeles City Councilmember David Ryu Speak On The New Wave Of Young Asian American Voters In Los Angeles County

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact: Joshua Alegado

Programs Coordinator

Phone: 626-356-9838

Email: joshua@causeusa.org

CAUSE Board Chair Charlie Woo and Los Angeles City Councilmember David Ryu speak on the new wave of young Asian American voters in Los Angeles County

Pasadena, CA — June 23, 2016 — New wave of young Asian American voters in LA County means change is on the way, according to Pat Brown Institute Poll. Survey has warning signs for both the Republican and Democratic parties.

What:

The Pat Brown Institute for Public Affairs at Cal State LA will host a press and community event to release findings from its Asian American poll on civic engagement and political behavior. The event will be held on June 29 from 8–10 a.m. at Cal State LA’s downtown campus located at 801 South Grand Ave., Los Angeles 90017. The poll, conducted in collaboration with the nonprofit, Asian Americans Advancing Justice, surveyed 1,865 Asian American registered voters in Los Angeles County, and included Chinese Americans, Japanese Americans, Korean Americans and Filipino Americans.

The survey reveals major differences between younger and older Asian American voters on social issues, religion, and partisanship. The event will include a presentation by Dr. Raphael Sonenshein, director of the PBI-Cal State LA Poll. Commenting on the results and their implications will be Los Angeles City Councilmember David Ryu, Chair of (CAUSE) Center for Asian Americans United for Self Empowerment Charlie Woo, and Cal State LA Professor and Director of the Asian and Asian American Studies Program, Ping Yao.

When:

8–10 a.m., Wednesday, June 29. Click here to register for the #PBIAsianAmPoll. Reserved seating in the front will be held for members of the media who have registered.

Where:

Cal State LA’s downtown campus, 801 South Grand Ave., Los Angeles, 90017. Parking is free with validation at the parking structure located at 801 South Grand Ave. Public transit stops are also within walking distance of the downtown campus. For additional information, visit the Pat Brown Institute or call us at (323) 343-3770.

More:

Gov. Edmund G. “Pat” Brown, who held office from 1959 to 1967, brought the Pat Brown Institute to the Cal State LA campus in 1987. The Institute is a nonpartisan center for community engagement, civic education, public policy forums and debates, youth leadership, and applied public policy research. The Pat Brown Institute has developed a series of distinguished and accessible programs to carry out the mission of the University and create more inclusive and empowered communities across Southern California.

Center for Asian Americans United for Self-Empowerment (CAUSE) is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, nonpartisan, community-based organization with a mission to advance the political and civic empowerment of the Asian Pacific American (APA) community through nonpartisan voter registration and education, community outreach, and leadership development.

For press registration and inquiries, please contact CAUSE by phone at (626) 356-9838 or by email at joshua@causeusa.org. General information can be obtained from our website, www.causeusa.org. Our office is located at 260 South Los Robles Avenue, #115, Pasadena, CA 91101.

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CAUSE Hosts Women In Power: Leadership In Entrepreneurship

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact: Aki Leung

Director of Programs

Phone: 626-356-9838

Email: aki@causeusa.org

CAUSE Hosts Women in Power: Leadership in Entrepreneurship

Pasadena, CA — January 27, 2016 — The Center for Asian Americans United for Self Empowerment (CAUSE) will be hosting Women in Power: Leadership in Entrepreneurship at City Club Los Angeles (555 South Flower Street, 51st Floor, Los Angeles, CA 90071) on Friday, February 5, 2016 from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.

This Women in Power panel discussion program will feature some of Los Angeles’ top entrepreneurial women. Through candid discussion, panelists will continue the program’s tradition of empowering women to rise to the top. Panelists include:

  • Ellen Chen, Co-Founder and President, Mendocino Farms

  • Toni Ko, CEO, Butter Ventures, and Founder, NYX Cosmetics

  • Pooneh Mohajer, CEO and Co-Founder, tokidoki

Nita Song, IW Group’s President and Chief Momentum Officer will moderate the program.

CAUSE will facilitate a candid discussion about the challenges and opportunities facing women entrepreneurs. While reports from the United States Census Bureau show that women-owned businesses have increased by 79% since 1997, businesswomen still face significant struggles in achieving the same ground as their male counterparts. Forbes recently announced that the majority of women-owned businesses start their companies with 50% less capital and that only 4 % are able to generate over $500,000 in revenue.

Panelists will delve into the heart of these challenges, share how they were able to rise above, and point out why leadership made all the difference. CAUSE will explore what made their individual brands successful as well as how they grew those brands to reach success. By sharing their experiences, panelists intend to encourage members of the audience to follow suit.

This event is in partnership with the National Association of Women Business Owners – Los Angeles and was made possible due to the support of East West Bank and Ernst & Young. Please RSVP by Monday, February 1, 2016 at wip-entrepreneur.eventbrite.com. Admission is $35 per person and valet parking is $10 with validation. Please contact Kim Yamasaki at kim@causeusa.org or at (626) 356-9838 for sponsorship inquiries.

Center for Asian Americans United for Self-Empowerment (CAUSE) is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, nonpartisan, community-based organization with a mission to advance the political and civic empowerment of the Asian Pacific American (APA) community through nonpartisan voter registration and education, community outreach, and leadership development.

The Women in Power program aims to create opportunities for candid discussion regarding issues that women leaders face and to explore strategies for overcoming them. The panel discussions and networking programs help foster a community built on leadership, inspiration, and mentorship. The program helps women professionals achieve their full leadership potential.

For press registration and inquiries, please contact CAUSE by phone at (626) 356-9838 or by email at aki@causeusa.org. General information can be obtained from our website, www.causeusa.org. Our office is located at 260 South Los Robles Avenue, #115, Pasadena, CA 91101.

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