Pubdate: Sat, 28 May 2005 Source: Daily Review, The (Hayward, CA) Copyright: 2005sANG Newspapers Contact: http://www.dailyreviewonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1410 Author: Chauncey Bailey STUDENTS GET INTRODUCTION TO POLITICS Lawrence Traylor Jr. of East Oakland, who wants to be a senator some day, got a good dose of politics last week when he met lawmakers and lobbyists. The 17-year-old Skyline High School student was among 175 youths from Alameda and Contra Costa counties who went to Sacramento for Young Leaders Advocacy Learning Day. The Wednesday event was sponsored by Chevron, SBC and the Training Institute for Leadership Enrichment, a project of a statewide, Oakland-based nonprofit called Black Women Organized for Political Action. "I learned a lot about politics," Traylor said. "Most of the legislators don't have college degrees in political science. You need to major in banking or business administration so you can have expertise to serve on a committee. As for lobbyists? They "have to register what they spend," he recounted. Black Women Organized for Political Action, headed by former Oakland Vice Mayor Dezie Woods Jones, was formed in the mid-1970s when blacks began organizing grassroots political campaigns. Today, with no African-American California legislators from any district north of Los Angeles, their mission is far from complete. LaNiece Jones, the organization's executive director, said one goal is to expose the next generation to the inner workings of politics, community organizing, and leadership needed to address urban issues. "We want to stay engaged in civic learning." The group plans to send 10 young leaders to Washington, D.C., in September. It has sponsored numerous field trips to the capitol over the years to give neighborhood leaders and concerned residents access to decision makers and an understanding of the political system. Oakland young people who attended last week's field trip included students from the Leadership Academy on the Castlemont High School campus, the Law Academy at McClymonds High School, and Laney and Merritt colleges. BWOPA chapter leaders Lillie Litzsey of Hayward and Rhonda Harris of Richmond also went with the students. They met in Assembly and Senate conference rooms for briefings with lawmakers such as Assemblymembers Wilma Chan, D-Oakland, and Meryvn Dymally, D-Los Angeles, and state Sen. Jackie Speier, D-Hillsborough. Among the topics they discussed were a proposed bill by Dymally to equalize sentences for persons convicted of crack and powdered cocaine use. According to arrest records, whites tend to use powdered cocaine and serve less jail time than blacks who use crack, which is cheaper but viewed by law enforcement as a more powerful drug, said Simeon Gant, deputy director of Drug Policy Alliance. Traylor met Gant, Eric Garris, an aide to state Sen. Don Perata, D-Oakland, and Assemblywoman Karen Bass, D-Los Angeles, the only black woman in the Legislature, who offered him an internship. "I want to make a difference in my community," Traylor said. "That's why I want to get into politics." - --- MAP posted-by: Josh