-
WEEKENDWEEKENDEDITIONEDITION
MILWAUKEE COMMUNITY JOURNAL
VOL. XXXVIV NO.40 JAN. 8, 2021 50 CENTSBULK RATE U.S. POSTAGE
MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN PERMIT 4668
SPECIAL FOCUS
COPINGCOPINGWITHWITHCOVID-19COVID-19The New Terrorism, Like The
Old TerrorismBy Nkechi Taifa, Esq.
WASHINGTON (TriceEdney News Wire) — I amat Ground Zero. My law
de-gree cannot protect me. Myfancy address cannot pro-tect me. My
radio appearances and Zoombook tour cannot protect me. Icheck with,
and for, my daughteragainst this madness as we allshould the way
the Black PowerMovement taught me.On the 24-hour cable television
there
are many references to how the situationis comparable to the
burning down of theWhite House during the War of 1812. But my
reference point keeps going
back to 1925, when the Ku Klux Klanmarched down Pennsylvania
Avenue,showing their power and allegiance to asegregated capital
city and a segregatedUnited States in broad daylight whilehooded,
hidden.What happened Wednesday was neither
hooded nor hidden. It was as open as thebarricades that the
Capitol police yielded— or invited. While victims of Jim
Crow,COINTELPRO, and now Black Lives Mat-
Photo by Samuel Corum
/Getty Images) via theGrio.com
‘What happened Wednesday wasneither hooded nor hidden. It wasas
open as the barricades that theCapitol police yielded — or
in-vited. While victims of Jim Crow,COINTELPRO, and now Black
LivesMatter attacks as Black IdentityExtremists were at home or
atwork, celebrating an incoming U.S.Senate that now might
providesome financial relief to those onfood lines or about to be
evicted, amob of white privilege blatantlystormed the Senate and
theHouse. —Nkechi Taifa (pictured above)
(continued on page 6)
4 Truths About Older People and the Pandemic
NEW YORK, NY— Life spans are gettinglonger, and the pandemic is
greatly af-fecting older people (and theiryounger counterparts).
Erica Bairdand Karen E. Wagner are two suc-cessful lawyers, now
retired, whocofounded Lustre.net, an onlinecommunity aimed at
redefiningretirement for modern careerwomen by confronting
outdatedstereotypes as they step into theirnext two to three
decades. Together,Baird and Wagner reveal 4 Truths About
OlderPeople and the Pandemic:1. Older people are people, too.
According to the World Health
Organization, ageism affects at least 600 million people
worldwide.Ageism, the last acceptable ‘ism,’ serves only to
legitimize stereo-types of older people and leads to views, such as
those articulatedduring the pandemic, that maybe the pandemic is
not so bad if it onlyaffects older people (which of course it does
not). It is time to ditchthose false assumptions. Older people are
living longer and betterthan ever. Every lucky person will, in
fact, one day be older. Longbefore that day, everyone needs to
understand that older people arepeople, too. 2. Boomers have skills
that help them handle the pandemic.
Boomers have solved many problems in their time—especiallywomen,
who have to solve problems at home, at work and every-where else.
They also know that crises can bring about positivechange—they
lived through the dawn of modern feminism, the birthof the civil
rights movement, the Vietnam War protests and the AIDScrisis. So
while they hate the pandemic, they know how to deal withthe daily
dramas, and they know it will bring some useful changeswhen it is
over. 3. Younger and older people have better lives if they live
in
the same communities. Older people are in the prime of their
lives,and have experience and perspective to offer younger
people.Younger people, in turn, have energy and exuberance that can
ben-efit older people. Diversity of perspectives is always a good
thing.Isolating older people, by housing them in retirement
communitiesand excluding them from the workforce, is a waste for
both genera-tions. Never before have so many generations lived at
the sametime. Keeping them together profits everyone. 4. Older
people should participate in tech design. Thanks to
the pandemic, right now is Zoom time, and everyone is
connectingvirtually. Older people know this is not the way anyone
wants to live,but they also know how to make it work for the
moment. In their ca-reers, when technology flowered, they learned
well its value and howto use it. Zoom is just an extension of what
they already know. As Forbes
reported, older people do sometimes get frustrated with
technol-ogy—and who doesn’t—but older people are seldom asked for
inputon the design of anything. Maybe if someone over 16 who isn’t
agamer were asked for her opinion, everyone’s frustration would
dis-appear.
-
The Weekend Edition•January 8, 2021•Page 2
As more citizens learnthat every vote truly doesmatter, WORLD
Channel,the national multiplatformpublic media outlet dedi-cated to
bringing true sto-ries from diverse and oftenunheard voices, is
bringingtwo films spotlighting thework of female activistsdedicated
to making sureall voices are heard at thepolls, in city hall and on
thestreets. I’m writing to seeabout your interest in re-viewing one
of the films.On Monday, January 18,
Metcalfe Park: Black Vote
Rising tells the story of amother-daughter team fight-ing voter
suppression anderasure in their Black com-munity, Milwaukee’s
Met-calfe Park. When theWisconsin primary, held inthe midst of the
COVID-19pandemic, resulted innearly 16% of Milwaukee’sBlack voters
being disen-franchised, Danell Crossand her daughter MelodyMcCurtis
set out to preventthat from happening again.Going door to door in
Met-calfe Park, the pair work tohelp residents realize
theimportance of their votes forthe upcoming 2020 Presi-dential
Election.
Bringing voting and cen-sus information, COVIDsafety kits, food
staples andmore, Cross and McCurtisare in a fight against a
surg-ing pandemic and citizenswho feel they have beenleft behind by
those incharge. In the race to November,
will the women be able tomake a difference?Metcalfe Park: Black
Vote
Rising, directed by MielaFetaw Kefleyesus and BradLichtenstein,
premieres onWORLD Channel andworldchannel.org on Mon-
day, January 18 at 9 p.m.ET as part of the WORLDseries Local,
USA.The following day, Janu-
ary 19, brings The Areafrom director David Schal-liol. The Area
presents thefive-year odyssey of theresidents of Englewood, aBlack
neighborhood on theSouth Side of Chicagowhose home owners arebeing
expelled by a freightcompany looking to ex-pand. An exploration
ofcommunity ties, friendships,and history, The Area also
examines
Black home ownership andgrassroots activism as theremaining
families in Engle-
wood unite to fight their dis-placement and also cometo terms
with a changingcommunity.The Area premieres on
Tuesday, January 19 at8pm EST as part of the se-ries America
ReFramedpresented by WORLD andAmerican Documentary,Inc. As part of
America Re-
Framed, the series whichpresents independent docu-mentaries
showcasing theever-evolving contours ofthe United States of
Amer-ica, the film will be availablefor broadcast viewing onWORLD
and will alsostream onworldchannel.org,amdoc.org (the onlinehome of
American Docu-mentary Inc.), onLinkTV.org and the LinkTVapp on
Apple TV, YouTubeand Roku platforms, and allstation branded PBS
plat-forms including PBS.org,and on PBS apps for iOS,Android, Roku,
Apple TV,Amazon Fire TV andChromecast.
Milwaukee'sMetcalfePark andBLACK ACTIVISM in thespotlight
thismonth on WORLD Channel
(Photo at top): Metcalfe Park: Black Vote Rising, premieres
January 18 onWORLD. (Photo above): The Area directed by David
Schalliol, screenshotcourtesy of WORLD ChannelWith the nation
stunned by the riotson the Capitol and the efforts of thoseseeking
to negate the results of the2020 presidential election and
alsowatching true democracy at work inthe results of the Georgia
Senaterunoffs, more and more Americans arerealizing the importance
of remainingpolitically engaged at all levels and ofthe organizers
like Stacey Abramswho work to empower voters.
-
The Weekend Edition•January 8, 2021•Page 3
Becerra’s decades of experience in health caremake him uniquely
qualified to serve as Healthand Human Services Secretary as our
countryfaces the challenges of an ever-worsening globalpandemic. As
California’s AG, Becerra held drug compa-
nies accountable for the opioid crisis and stoppedhospital
systems from overcharging patients.He’s been on the legal forefront
of defending theAffordable Care Act, opposing junk plans
andfighting pharmaceutical companies to make pre-scription drugs
more affordable. Becerra will undo the sabotage Republicans
have been waging on health care for the lastdecade and use his
policy experience to enactPresident-elect Biden’s vision of
lowering healthcare costs, expanding access and
improvingcare.Expanding Access To Care • Becerra was an original
co-sponsor of the Af-
fordable Care Act and helped write the portion ofthe ACA that
addresses Medicare benefits andreimbursements. • Becerra served in
Congress for 24 years and
was the first Latino to serve on the House Waysand Means
Committee where he tirelesslyworked to protect Medicare and Social
Security.• Starting in 2007, Becerra was the lead spon-
sor of the Medicare Savings Programs Improve-ment Act. The bill
expanded cost-sharing subsidies for
low-income seniors who receive both Medicareand Medicaid
benefits by increasing the amountof resources they could receive
and making as-sistance available to more seniors who needmedical
care, but can’t afford it. Portions of Becerra’s legislation were
included
in legislation passed by the House in 2008 and2015. • Becerra
sponsored legislation to raise the cap
on benefits for patients receiving Medicare phys-ical therapy. •
In 2009, Becerra sponsored the E-Centives
Act, which provided incentives for Medicaidproviders to improve
care by implementing elec-tronic health records. A version of
Becerra’s billwas included in the American Recovery andReinvestment
Act. • Becerra helped draft the Improving Medicare
Post-Acute Care Transformation Act (IMPACT) of2014, requiring
the HHS Secretary to conduct re-search on issues related to
socioeconomic status
in Medicare’s value-based programs.• As California Attorney
General, Becerra
worked with the state senate on legislation thatwould make
healthcare more affordable and ac-cessible by cracking down on
anticompetitive be-havior and consolidation in the
healthcaremarket. The bill required the Attorney General’sOffice to
review and approve affiliations or acqui-sitions between healthcare
systems, facilities, orprovider groups to ensure transactions
either im-prove care coordination or increase healthcare
access for underserved populations. Fighting to Protect the
Affordable Care Act• In the House, Becerra fought back against
multiple attempts to repeal and sabotage the Af-fordable Care
Act, voting at least nine timesagainst efforts to fully repeal or
defund the law.Becerra stood up to protect the law and
itsachievements, which he said he was “very proud”of. • Becerra has
been a stalwart legal defender of
the Affordable Care Act, taking on at least fourcases to protect
the law: • Becerra has led the 20+ state coalition of at-
torneys general fighting to protect the AffordableCare Act from
the Republican effort to repeal theentire law via the California v.
Texas lawsuit. Thecase was heard at the Supreme Court on Novem-ber
10, 2020.
• Becerra joined a coalition of attorneys generalfiling a
lawsuit in opposition to the Trump admin-istration’s expansion of
Association Health Plansthat offer junk insurance that doesn’t have
tocomply with ACA coverage requirements and pro-tections. • Becerra
intervened in House v. Hargan, a law-
suit filed by Republicans seeking to eliminate costsharing
reduction payments and undercut the af-fordability of the ACA’s
health plans. He then led a multi-state coalition in California
v. Trump suing the administration over its deci-sion to stop
making CSR payments as requiredby the ACA. • Becerra led a
coalition of attorneys general
who successfully secured a preliminary injunctionagainst the
Trump administration’s “PublicCharge” rule, which targeted
immigrant familieswho often rely on health safety net programs.
Reducing Drug Prices• Becerra led the defense of California’s
law
banning collusive “pay for delay” pharmaceuticalagreements that
delay generic drugs from enter-ing the market and keep costs high.
• Becerra launched a House Affordable Drug
Pricing Task Force in 2016 to address the risingcosts of
prescription drugs. Fighting The Covid-19 Pandemic• Becerra led a
bipartisan multi-state coalition
to urge the federal government to take action toincrease the
supply and affordability of drugs tofight Covid-19.• Becerra has
repeatedly urged President
Trump to fully invoke the National Defense Pro-duction Act to
ensure that Americans haveenough PPE. • In May 2020, Becerra and
other state attor-
neys general called on CMS AdministratorSeema Verma to increase
transparency and ac-countability from nursing homes as Covid-19
con-tinued to spread through Medicare and Medicaidfacilities.
Following Becerra’s letter, CMS issuedinterim rules to ensure that
nursing homes would
quickly notify family members of illness and pro-vide data to
federal public health institutionsabout any casesReproductive
Rights And Equitable Care• Becerra sued to overturn the Trump
adminis-
tration’s “Healthcare Refusal Rule,” which jeop-ardizes health
and safety by allowing anyoneremotely involved in a healthcare
transaction—from doctors to ambulance drivers or front officestaff—
to deny care on religious or moral objec-tions. • Becerra is a
stalwart supporter of reproductive
freedom. He led a lawsuit against the Trump ad-ministration’s
rules that would take away accessto birth control and defended the
Title X FamilyPlanning Program in court, which funds care formore
than four million people each year.
Xavier Becerra’sDecades-LongHealth CareRecord
Xavier Becerra has been on the frontlines fight-ing for health
care throughout his career by work-ing to expand people’s access to
health care andprotect underserved communities — all whiletaking on
powerful special interests.
“Becerra will undo the sabotage Republicanshave been waging on
health care for the last
decade and use his policy experience to enactPresident-elect
Biden’s vision of loweringhealth care costs, expanding access
and
improving care.”
-
The Weekend Edition•January 8, 2021•Page 4
MADISON – From computertechnology to financial serv-ices, the
Wisconsin Housingand Economic DevelopmentAuthority exceeded its
targetsfor purchases from certifiedminority-, disabled veteran-and
women-owned busi-nesses during fiscal 2020.In all, these targeted
purchases ac-
counted for some $859,700 or 12.4% ofWHEDA’s total $6.9 million
in discre-tionary spending, up from $509,963 or8.58% during fiscal
2019.“Fostering a diverse supply chain
drives competition and opens the doorto innovation among
vendors,” saidWHEDA CEO Joaquín Altoro. “By beingintentional in our
supplier relationshipsand procurement practices, we canlevel the
playing field and bring morebusinesses to the starting line for
con-sideration. The results include improved sourcing
options, quality and service as well asmore job opportunities in
our underrep-resented communities.”Consistent with its commitment
to increase
equity, diversity, inclusion and economic oppor-tunity, for
fiscal 2020 WHEDA exceeded its 6%goal for discretionary spending
with minority anddisabled veteran business partners certified bythe
Wisconsin Department of Administration.Among these certified
businesses, WHEDA dis-bursed 6.5% of its discretionary
purchases.Additionally, WHEDA expended 2.9%, of its
discretionary purchases with DOA-certifiedwomen-owned business
partners and another3% with non-certified minority-, disabled
vet-eran- and women-owned vendors.Emery Harlan, a partner in MWH
Law Group
of Milwaukee, has been doing business withWHEDA for nearly 20
years. The law group spe-cializes in bond issuances, including use
of con-duit financing techniques that allow nonprofitsand
development partners to raise capital usingtax-exempt municipal
bonds for affordable hous-ing projects. This specialized field
provides a critical layer
of low-cost financing for affordable housing proj-ects where
rents will not cover costs under tradi-tional financing methods.“As
a result of our work and experience with
WHEDA, our firm has definitely been able to in-crease the
opportunities we are able to pursue,not only in Wisconsin but in
other parts of thenation,” Harlan said. “You can also draw a
direct
line from our relationship with WHEDA to ouremployment base,
including our efforts to hireup-and-coming attorneys from
under-repre-sented communities.”Harlan said WHEDA’s approach is
instructive,
because it involves building capacity amongsmall businesses
through partnerships and, attimes, breaking larger contracts down
into op-portunities that small businesses can success-fully compete
for.“WHEDA has broken down some of the mys-
tery behind the procurement process and showna willingness to
help small businesses navigatethe procedural requirements,” Harlan
said.Among WHEDA’s other vendors in fiscal 2020
was Amanda Evans Photography, a certified mi-nority-owned
business enterprise in Milwaukee.Evans said her small business
focuses on cap-turing people and the special moments theywish to
remember.“As a small business with many individual
clients, I also appreciate the benefits of workingthrough an
established supplier network to con-nect with organizations such as
WHEDA,”Evans said. “Being able to shoot photos thatdemonstrate
progress in housing and economicopportunity is a plus. The state
certification alsoopens up greater potential for future
assign-ments with a number of state agencies, as well.”Altoro said
the commitment to supply chain di-
versity represents one way in which WHEDA’s
internal efforts to promote equity, diversity andinclusion are
being reflected outward in bestpractices that influence external
stakeholders.WHEDA created a portal enabling interested
businesses to register and connect more di-rectly with the
authority’s procurement activities.This groundwork resulted in 62
businesses reg-istering and allowed WHEDA to support fourbusinesses
in their efforts to gain state minority-owned business
enterprise/disabled veteran-owned business certification. WHEDA
also isbuilding capacity among underrepresented busi-nesses by
hiring subcontractors along with moreexperienced vendors.Find more
information about WHEDA procure-
ment opportunities
here:https://www.wheda.com/working-with-wheda/procurement. To keep
up with informa-tion about WHEDA resources, follow us onFacebook,
Twitter and LinkedIn and sign up toreceive emails here.
ABOUT WHEDAFor more than 45 years,WHEDA has worked to pro-vide
low-cost financing forhousing and small businessdevelopment in
Wisconsin.Since 1972, WHEDA has fi-nanced more than 75,000
af-fordable rental units, helpedmore than 133,000 familiespurchase
a home and pro-vided more than 29,000small business and
agricul-tural loan guarantees.WHEDA is a self-supportingpublic
corporation that re-ceives no tax dollars for itsoperations. For
more infor-mation on WHEDA pro-grams, visit wheda.com orcall
800-334-6873.
‘Emery Harlan of MWH Law Group Amanda Evansof Amanda Evans
PhotographyWHEDAexceeds targetsfor purchasesfrom diverse,disabled
veteran andwomen-ownedbusinesses “Fostering a diverse
supply chain drives competition and opensthe door to
innovationamong vendors... bybeing intentional in oursupplier
relationships andprocurement practices,we can level the
playingfield and bring more businesses to the start-ing line for
consideration. —WHEDA CEO Joaquín Altoro
-
The Weekend Edition•January 8, 2021•Page 5
-
The Weekend Edition•January 8, 2021•Page 6
ter attacks as Black Identity Extremists were at home or atwork,
celebrating an incoming U.S. Senate that now mightprovide some
financial relief to those on food lines orabout to be evicted, a
mob of white privilege blatantlystormed the Senate and the
House.Making the Klan look civilized, they came, they climbed,
they smashed, they terrorized. And they were allowed todo that
because they were white.The double-standard here is too obvious to
repeat. So
let me just say this: this country has never forgiven H.
RapBrown for merely mouthing “Burn, Baby Burn,” or theBlack
Panthers for peacefully protesting with their legalarms at the
Sacramento State Capitol. So how fast willthese people be
forgiven?As fast as, say, Abner Louima is now forgiving those
who terrorized him? As fast as the survivors of Charlestonhad
forgiven Dylan Roof, now seen as the canary in thecoal mine, trying
to warn us what was coming? I hopeJacob Blake will be slow to
forgive as he deals with a life-time of pain because he dared turn
his back on Americanauthority.America loves forgiveness, because
then it can get on
to the business of forgetting.Those who are shocked to see the
American flagpoles
as weapons have very short memories. Ask any BlackBostonian
about the flag as a weapon.Since we are talking about memory:
President Woodrow
Wilson, president during that KKK march, openly praisedthe Klan
not unlike the way the current President haspraised these latest
terrorists. So what is new, really?“I know how you feel.” It’s a
new low for a country that
was founded by genocide and slavery.—Nkechi Taifa is the author
of the new memoir, BlackPower, Black Lawyer: My Audacious Quest for
Justice
The New Terrorism,Like The Old Terrorism(continued from cover
page)
Flames of insurrectionand victimhood lead tosiege of the
People’s HouseFrom Alderwoman Milele A. Coggs, Alderwoman Chantia
Lewis, Alderman AshantiHamilton, Alderwoman Marina Dimitrijevic,
Alderman Cavalier Johnson, Alder-woman Nikiya Dodd, Alderman
Michael J. Murphy, Alderman Khalif J. Rainey,Alderwoman JoCasta
Zamarripa, Alderman Robert J. Bauman, Alderman Mark A.Borkowski,
Alderman Nik Kovac and Alderman Russell W. Stamper, IIJanuary 6th,
2021 will be remembered as a dark day in U.S. history, as amob of
thugs and looters laid siege to the U.S. Capitol Building, the seat
ofour government and home to Congress.The nation watched in
disbelief as supporters of President Trump – egged on by him to
march on the
Capitol after consuming disinformation, conspiracy theories, and
lies about nonexistent election fraud anda “stolen” election for
months (thanks to his Twitter fingers and his en-ablers) – broke
into the Capitol and ransacked offices and (briefly)occupied the
Senate Chamber.It was truly scary and appalling to watch these
thugs – many of
them armed – fill the People’s House with hatred, destruction,
vio-lence and a seething and vile air of insurrection. The hallowed
ro-tunda and halls were filled with tear gas and pepper spray as
theinvaders had time to take selfies and then terrorized frightened
mem-bers of Congress and their staffs. The siege left dozens of
officers in-jured and four people dead, including a woman who was
reportedlyshot by officers inside the building. The law enforcement
and securityofficers scuffled with the thugs but were clearly
outnumbered.Members of Congress who had gathered to certify the
Electoral
Votes from each state were whisked away, and some members
andstaff then sheltered in place in their offices in fear of what
might hap-pen next, some texting or calling loved ones to let them
know theywere OK and to tell them they loved them.We are stunned
that the Capitol Police were not adequately pre-
pared for the possibility that mobs would try to enter the
building todisrupt the proceedings. We are confident that Congress
will investi-gate how this happened, and how it can be prevented
from happen-ing again.The weak response of law enforcement and the
seeming ease with
which the rioters were able to breach the Capitol was not lost
onmany. We remember the helicopters and the military response to
theBlack Lives Matter protests last summer in Washington, D.C.,
andhow thousands of soldiers and officers lined the steps of the
Capitoland other buildings and landmarks.The polar opposite
treatment of the protesters and these rioters by
law enforcement is stark, disturbing, and unjust. Additionally,
the BLMprotests in the nation’s capital and across the U.S. were
generallypeaceful, and none with the death count from yesterday.We
also remember well how hundreds of peaceful protesters were
forcefully removed – some even dragged from wheelchairs – by
Capi-tol Police as they gathered in 2017 inside the Capitol to air
their feel-ings about cuts to Obamacare and other programs in the
AmericanHealth Care Act of the 115th Congress.Why was there not the
same vigorous response and preparedness
level yesterday?Last, it should be noted that the historic acts
of insurrection and vio-
lence we witnessed yesterday did not happen in a vacuum –
theywere stoked and incited by President Trump, and he must be held
ac-countable.We urge Vice President Pence and the cabinet to invoke
the 25th
Amendment to remove President Trump from office, in order to
helpprevent further violence or illegal acts during his remaining
days in of-fice.This time the peaceful transfer of power was
momentarily inter-
rupted, sadly, but we must resist and fight against similar
attacks onour democracy and continue to move forward to create a
more perfectunion.
FIRST PERSON(S)FIRST PERSON(S)
-
The Weekend Edition•January 8, 2021•Page 7
SUMMONS(PUBLICATION)
STATE OF WISCONSINCIRCUIT COURT
MILWAUKEE COUNTYNOTICE AND ORDER FORNAME CHANGE HEARINGCase No.
20CV006763
In the matter of the name change of:UNDRALON RAELL COLLINSBy
(Petitioner) UNDRALONRAELL COLLINS
NOTICE IS GIVEN:A petition was filed asking to changethe name of
the person listed above:From: UNDRALON RAELLCOLLINS To: Undralon
RaellCollinsBirth Certificate: UNDRALONRAELL COLLINS
IT IS ORDEREDThis petition will be heard in theCircuit Court of
Milwaukee County,State of Wisconsin.Judge’s Name: HON. PEDROCOLON
BR. 18 RM 412/VIAZOOM PLACE: 901 N. 9th Street,Milwaukee,
Wisconsin, 53233DATE: January 12, 2021 TIME 1:30P.M.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED:Notice of this hearing shall be givenby
publication as a Class 3 notice forthree (3) weeks in a row prior
to thedate of the hearing in the MilwaukeeCommunity Journal, a
newspaperpublished in Milwaukee County,State of Wisconsin.Dated:
12-1-2020BY THE COURT:HON. PEDRO COLONCircuit Court
Judge249/12-23-30-2020/1-6-2021
SUMMONS(PUBLICATION)
STATE OF WISCONSINCIRCUIT COURT
MILWAUKEE COUNTYNOTICE AND ORDER FORNAME CHANGE HEARINGCase No.
20CV006936
In the matter of the name change of:ELI COLEBy (Petitioner) ELI
COLE
NOTICE IS GIVEN:A petition was filed asking to changethe name of
the person listed above:From: ELY COLE To: ELI COLEBirth
Certificate: ELY COLE
IT IS ORDEREDThis petition will be heard in theCircuit Court of
Milwaukee County,State of Wisconsin.Judge’s Name: HON. CARL ASH-LEY
BR. 33 Room 500 PLACE:901 N. 9th Street, Milwaukee, Wis-consin,
53233 DATE: January 27,2021 TIME 9:00 A.M.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED:Notice of this hearing shall be givenby
publication as a Class 3 notice forthree (3) weeks in a row prior
to thedate of the hearing in the MilwaukeeCommunity Journal, a
newspaperpublished in Milwaukee County,State of Wisconsin.Dated:
12-22-2019BY THE COURT:HON. CARL ASHLEYCircuit Court
Judge251/12-23-30-2020/1-6-2021
SUMMONS(PUBLICATION)
STATE OF WISCONSINCIRCUIT COURT
MILWAUKEE COUNTYNOTICE AND ORDER FORNAME CHANGE HEARINGCase No.
20CV007245
In the matter of the name change of:HEAVYN LE’SHAE
REMSCHNEI-DERBy (Petitioner) HEAVYN LE’SHAEREMSCHNEIDER
NOTICE IS GIVEN:A petition was filed asking to changethe name of
the person listed above:From: HEAVYN LE’SHAE REM-SCHNEIDERTo:
HEAVYN LE’SHAE SMITHBirth Certificate: HEAVYNLE’SHAE
REMSCHNEIDER
IT IS ORDEREDThis petition will be heard in theCircuit Court of
Milwaukee County,State of Wisconsin.Judge’s Name: HON. DAVIDSWANSON
RM 413 PLACE: 901N. 9th Street (VIA ZOOM) Milwau-kee, Wisconsin,
53233 DATE: Feb-ruary 5, 2021 TIME 10:00 A.M.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED:Notice of this hearing shall be givenby
publication as a Class 3 notice forthree (3) weeks in a row prior
to thedate of the hearing in the MilwaukeeCommunity Journal, a
newspaperpublished in Milwaukee County,State of Wisconsin.Dated:
12-16-2020BY THE COURT:HON. DAVID SWANSONCircuit Court
Judge252/1-6-13-20-2021
SUMMONS(PUBLICATION)
STATE OF WISCONSINCIRCUIT COURT
MILWAUKEE COUNTYNOTICE AND ORDER FORNAME CHANGE HEARINGCase No.
20CV007244
In the matter of the name change of:MASSYAH
KE’MONEE-DAMIONRIMSCHNEIDERBy (Petitioner) BARBARA BEAT-RICE
RIMSCHNEIDER
NOTICE IS GIVEN:A petition was filed asking to changethe name of
the person listed above:From: MASSYAH KE’MONEE-DAMION RIMSCHNEIDER
To:MASSYAH KE’MONEE-DAMIONGUIDENBirth Certificate: MASSYAH
KE’-MONEE-DAMION RIMSCHNEI-DER
IT IS ORDEREDThis petition will be heard in theCircuit Court of
Milwaukee County,State of Wisconsin.Judge’s Name: HON. TIMOTHY
MWITKOWIAK Room 415 PLACE:901 N. 9th Street, Milwaukee, Wis-consin,
53233 DATE: February 4,2021 TIME 9:30 A.M.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED:Notice of this hearing shall be givenby
publication as a Class 3 notice forthree (3) weeks in a row prior
to thedate of the hearing in the MilwaukeeCommunity Journal, a
newspaperpublished in Milwaukee County,State of Wisconsin.Dated:
12-29-2020BY THE COURT:HON. TIMOTHY WITKOWIAKCircuit Court
Judge254/1-6-13-20-2021
SUMMONS(PUBLICATION)
STATE OF WISCONSINCIRCUIT COURT
MILWAUKEE COUNTYNOTICE AND ORDER FORNAME CHANGE HEARING
Case No. 20CV7372
In the matter of the name change of:
ALYESE JEAN BUELOWBy (Petitioner) ALYESE JEANBUELOW
NOTICE IS GIVEN:A petition was filed asking to changethe name of
the person listed above:From: ALYESE JEAN BUELOWTo: ALYESE JEAN
MASONBirth Certificate: ALYESE JEANBUELOW
IT IS ORDEREDThis petition will be heard in theCircuit Court of
Milwaukee County,State of Wisconsin.Judge’s Name: HON. LINDSEYGRADY
RM 402 PLACE: 901 N.9th Street (VIA ZOOM) Milwaukee,Wisconsin,
53233 DATE: February10, 2021 TIME 9:30 A.M.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED:Notice of this hearing shall be givenby
publication as a Class 3 notice forthree (3) weeks in a row prior
to thedate of the hearing in the MilwaukeeCommunity Journal, a
newspaper
published in Milwaukee County,State of Wisconsin.Dated:
1-5-2021BY THE COURT:
HON. LINDSEY GRADYCircuit Court Judge253/1-6-13-20-2021
If you have a namechange, divorce, orother legal action that you
have to publish,publish itHERE in YOUR MilwaukeeCommunityJournal
Weekend Edition!
-
The Weekend Edition•January 8, 2021•Page 8