Hilltop Action Coalition

By Aria, Nicole, Amaris, Sharon, and Natalie What is the Hilltop Action Coalition (HAC)? At the time the Hilltop Action Coalition was founded in 1989,  Hilltop was the 3rd most dangerous city in the United States behind Compton and Los Angeles, due to the migration of gangs from California. Members of Hilltop were concerned with the heightened drug and crime rates of the community and were disappointed with the lack of government response the community was receiving. Now, HAC wants to inform the community of changes going on in the community that affects its citizens. For example, the light rail that will go from downtown Tacoma up through Hilltop and eventually to Tacoma Community College. The Hilltop Action Coalition is an ongoing and developing organization that tries to change and adapt based on the needs of the community. The official mission statement of the HAC is: “The Hilltop Action Coalition is the “Communications Anchor” for the Hilltop Area community. Our Volunteer network of Neighborhood Leaders, Community Block Programs, Informational Outreach, and Advocacy Work are at the heart of the community building work HAC is famous for.” How do you establish a membership?  When it first began, the Hilltop Action Coalition was self-funded by a few people in the Hilltop community, who eventually got more people from the community involved with the organization. Currently, HAC members are mainly in one of three groups: city officials, residents of Hilltop, and donors. The HAC is open to anybody and everybody, but members must be engaged in the organization’s events and attend the monthly meetings. If an individual wants to and is active enough in the organization, they can become a neighborhood leader, someone who represents and advocates for their community. What is the significance to communities of color and to the broader community?  Because of the Hilltop Action Coalition’s history, the organization is often perceived by others as a policing organization. Members of the organization worked with the police department to lower drug and crime rates in the community. As a result, many black men were arrested, giving HAC a bad reputation for the families of those incarcerated. Now HAC’s main objective is to inform people of new developments going on in their community, such as affordable housing initiatives. HAC also works with housing developers to reverse the displacement already seen in the community. HAC also aims to create a powerful example for young and older people of color in the community. By getting people of color into leadership roles, providing a safe place for community members, creating the right image of the organization with the use of representation, they hope to inspire people of all colors and ages to be proactive in their community. What are its goals and objectives? Gentrification can’t be stopped in the community, so their goal is to work and adapt to it. Getting black people in positions of power is important for the community to flourish. The idea is to have a solid footprint in their own neighborhoods. Their goal is for people of color to continue to feel comfortable in their own community while these changes are being made. The light rail being built has made it more difficult for current black-owned businesses to get the same attention as they did before. Which is why HAC is creating maps of alternative routes people can take to get to these places. While the affordable housing buildings are in the process of being built, the Hilltop Action Coalition is working with local businesses to occupy these storefronts. Their goal is to have them be black-owned businesses. What are some achievements of HAC? Why are these achievements important?  HAC is thrilled to be able to have paid staff before, HAC was run by devoted volunteers that volunteered hours of their time every week for no pay. The HAC is able to put on two annual fundraisers to benefit their organization, which allows them to expand. 35-40 attendants to each community meeting allows HAC to reach more people in the community to educate and receive input. Having more consistent people to be neighborhood leaders and hold a say in local occurrences Another achievement of the Hilltop Action Coalition is that they are now recognized by city funders and have been awarded competitive grants. This means that they are taken more seriously as a nonprofit organization as opposed to being disregarded by the community officials. This also means that the HAC is able to invest in important necessities that are needed to preserve and grow their organization, such as new technology and office equipment. The HAC publishes their very own local Newspaper that includes contributions of articles and poems from local business owners and residents of a range of ages. They pride themselves on the “Hilltop-centric” lens of the topics they present. This newspaper reaches over 5,000 people. The way it is spread throughout the community is divided between publicity online, and exchanging information with community members and spreading the physical copies. You can easily find access to all of their previous journals on their website.
Is gentrification a current concern for Hilltop?  In 2008-09, the HAC projected that access to healthcare would be Hilltop’s main concern in upcoming years, however, migration of people began to raise housing prices and change the city in ways no resident would have expected. By the time it was too late, the residents of Hilltop realized that access to healthcare would not be as significant of a problem as the gentrification the city was soon to endure. Subtle changes by the city began, and Hilltop’s name and history started to be slowly erased. Signs were put up renaming Hilltop as “Upper Tacoma” and “New Tacoma”. Magnet school Bryant Elementary became a Montessori school where parents had to apply for their children to be accepted, and the catchment zone placed limitations on the families that could enroll. Older middle and lower class residents of Hilltop have been taken advantage of because of their age and financial stability. People research homes and their inhabitants in the community and entice older residents to sell their homes to them for a moderate price so they can renovate the homes and place it on the market for more. The average home in 2015 was $200,000, now the average cost is $350,000 with homes selling for half a million. Another issue that comes from gentrification is the decline in Black-owned businesses. At one time, Hilltop was home to many prominent Black-owned businesses, but today that number is down to three; Mr. Mac’s Men’s Clothing Store, Scott’s Funeral Home, and Fish House Cafe.
Connections:  The Hilltop Action Coalition has been working with the residents of Hilltop to protect the community from ongoing issues such as gentrification and the rising cost of living. The foreboding changes that are being anticipated with the construction of the light-rail are a concern to the current residents as they are aware of the impact of influxes of people and how that impacts their local economy and urban areas. The concept that we chose to work on is gentrification, we decided to focus on gentrification because the Hilltop Action Coalition does a lot of work to help the Hilltop community that is affected by gentrification and the rising cost of living. While the HAC focuses on other issues such as educating the community and community clean-ups, a significant amount of their energy is spent on helping the Hilltop community deal with gentrification. Although gentrification cannot be completely stopped, they try to make sure that the members of the Hilltop community can survive gentrification without being completely pushed out of their homes. The work of the Hilltop Action Coalition will matter as long as gentrification is happening in Hilltop.

Northwest Tap Connection

African American Studies 101  Group Profile Project
by: Liv, Albert, Ingrid, Ryan, Sami

What is Northwest Tap Connection?

Northwest Tap Connection is a social justice oriented dance studio located in Seattle, Washington that specializes in rhythm tap. The studio’s philosophy is that dance enriches the lives of the students, while developing self-discipline, instilling self-confidence, and encouraging achievement and goal setting. The organization provides an environment where dancers can grow artistically and technically, while simultaneously developing leadership skills and social responsibility. The primary mission of Northwest Tap Connection is to provide dance and job opportunities to under-served communities, and to raise a generation of socially conscious artists who produce work that fosters change. Their goal is to bring the art of dance to multi-cultural and inter-generational audiences through dance instruction, cultural events, and arts education programs locally, nationally and internationally.

Founder and Artistic Director – Melba Ayco

The founder and the Artistic Director of Northwest Tap Connection is Melba Ayco, fondly known as Ms. Melba. She is a tap dance historian, choreographer, and storyteller. Ms. Melba was born into segregation in a small town near New Orleans, and she survived integration by pursuing enlightenment through cultural diversity. Ms. Melba’s goal in founding the Northwest Tap Connection is to define and share the African American experience through the performing arts. She has received numerous accolades including the 2009 Mayor’s Art Award, the 2017 African Town Queen Award, and the 2017 Martin Luther King, Jr. Medal of Community Service Award for District No. 2 of the City of Seattle.

Image result for melba ayco

Not only is Ms. Melba the founder of Northwest Tap Connection, but she is also a 31 year veteran of the Seattle Police Department. A part of why she founded the dance studio was to give the underprivileged youth in the area an alternative to being on the streets. And she was successful in doing so – if students were involved in the dance studio, they didn’t come across her desk at the SPD. Through her endless dedication to the community and desire to offer opportunities for growth and enlightenment to people of all ages and backgrounds, Ms. Melba has made a lasting, positive imprint in the Pacific Northwest.

Goals and Objectives of Northwest Tap Connection

The Northwest Tap Connection aims to “close the gap” for people of color in the dance community. In this context, closing the gap means making classes that are affordable and accessible to all. In the dance world, beginning levels of dance are easier to access because they require minimal hours. However, beyond this when dancers become more advanced and require more hours and practice at a competitive level, accessibility becomes more difficult. While families may be able to pay for a few hours of dance, once students start to require more hours, families are often not able to pay. This creates the gap. To target this disparity, the Northwest Tap Connection offers classes that get progressively cheaper with more hours. Additionally, if a dancer has siblings in the program, they are offered discounted classes. Beyond classes, the Northwest Tap Connection also offers its dancer’s enrichment programs that combine dancing with education and social justice, where they learn professional and leadership skills.

To fund these classes, the Northwest Tap Connection holds events to raise money. The main event is a yearly auction, for which people purchase tickets to attend and engage in both a live and silent bid for different products and experiences. All the money raised at the event goes directly back to funding children’s dance classes and improving the Northwest Tap Connection. The main goal of the Northwest Tap Connection is to “close the gap,” and events like the auction allow for the funding of dance classes in order to do this. 

Membership and Achievements

The members of the Northwest Tap Connection are the dancers enrolled in classes. The organization serves over 150 students on a weekly basis. They’ve had the opportunity to perform at the Kennedy Center in Washington D.C., Paramount and Moore Theaters in Seattle, and the Museum of Contemporary Arts in Chicago. In addition, dancers have had the opportunity to travel to where they may not have had the opportunity to do so before. Northwest Tap Connection dancers have been able to travel within the United States to places like Los Angeles, Louisiana, Chicago, New York, and Washington D.C and also abroad to Germany and Austria.

Cipher Goings, 18, is one of the members of the Northwest Tap Connection and has been dancing with them since the age of 7. He was named a National Young Arts Foundation Dance Finalist of 2019, a competition between young artists in different realms across the U.S. This is an example of the achievements that the Northwest Tap Connection facilitates for their dancers.

NWT’s Significance to Communities of Color 

In order to understand the importance of the work that NW Tap Connection and Ms. Melba have, we must look at the history of tap, and how it is intrinsically tied to the African American community.  Historically, many African tribes utilized drums not only as a means of creating music and facilitating important events, but also as a form of communication; they were often the primary source of correspondence between neighboring tribes, and could transmit messages across immense distances. When slaveholders discovered this, the use of drums by slaves was banned in the U.S. South. African music is closely integrated with dance, and without drums to create the rhythm, slaves used other forms of percussion to accompany their dancing – their hands, feet, and thighs all became instruments.

Tap is often thought to be a fusion of several percussive dances with roots in many different countries: African tribal dances, Spanish flamenco, English clog dancing, and Irish jigs. Tap gained popularity after the civil war as part of traveling minstrel shows, where performers (both white and black) wore blackface and played into negative racial stereotypes about African Americans; that they were dumb, lazy, and a great source of entertainment. Early tap shoes had wooden soles, which sometimes had pennies attached to the heel and toe to create the signature brassy sound that identifies tap. As jazz and Ragtime become more popular throughout the late 1800’s, tap absorbed many of the rhythms of these new music styles and popularized syncopated step. This is nowhere more apparent than in the 1898 musical, Clorindy, written by Will Marion Cook and Paul Laurence Dunbar, which became the first Broadway musical to employ an all-black cast. However, within other popular forms of entertainment such as Vaudeville, black people were only allowed to perform under certain conditions, including the “two-colored rule” which forbade black people from performing solo, ensuring that the majority of Black tap dancers danced in pairs, preventing them from achieving the kind of stardom that solo white tappers could. Even so, some of the most famous tap dancers, the ones who revolutionized tap, are Black people. Some of the tap dancing greats are described below. 

William Henry Lane (1825-1852) – also known as “Master Juba” – was possibly the only African American man to perform in minstrel shows before 1858, and the only one of the era to perform with a white minstrel group. Charles Dickens saw him perform in 1842, and described his dancing as “resembling the noises of the fingers on a tambourine” – one of the earliest records of tap dance.

Bill “Bojangles” Robinson (1877-1949) started his craft in his minstrel shows and vaudeville, and was one of the first black men to go solo, as well as the most highly paid African American entertainer in the early 20th century. He went on to star in many Hollywood films, most famously in The Little Colonel, where he danced with Shirley Temple – the first interracial couple to dance on screen. World Tap Dance Day (May 25), which was signed into law in 1989, was chosen to honor his birthday.

Famous stair dance from The Little Colonel

Eleanor Powell as Bill Robinson in Honolulu 1939 – he taught her the routine, and it is meant to pay “respectful tribute” to his work.

John “Bubbles” Sublett (1902-1986), often considered the father of rhythm tap, performed in the Vaudeville duo “Buck and Bubbles,” made up of himself and pianist Ford “Buck” Washington. They popularized the polished tuxedo and cane look of tap. They were the first black artists to perform at Radio City Music Hall, and the first black artists in a television program. Sublett gave tap lessons to Fred Astaire in 1920; Astaire considered him to be one of the best tap dancers of his time and paid homage to him and Bill Robinson in a number from Swing Time; unfortunately, it was in blackface.

Fred Astaire, Bojangles of Harlem

Buck & Bubbles – Varsity Show (1937)

Although some of the most famous tap dancers throughout history have been black, it is still an inaccessible dance form – in the same way as ballet – due to racial biases of what dancers should look like and rising costs of lessons and equipment. Northwest Tap Connection gives black people the ability to participate in a form of dance that has been historically used to disparage them; “as a result of tap dance’s affiliation with minstrelsy and thus its ties to caricatures of blackness, tap dance on its own has come to signify not only “blackness” but a national identity that creates space for the white body through the exclusion of the black” (Shiovitz 11). They seek to close that gap and to allow African Americans to learn a form of dance that is deeply rooted in their heritage, and to bring dance to a community that is often under served and underrepresented in the arts.

How Does Northwest Tap Connection Relate to the Course?

Self-Organization

Because of institutionalized racism, the American system has largely failed over the years to provide equal opportunities to African Americans. In result, the Black community, and other marginalized groups, have needed to provide opportunities for themselves through self-organization. One way that these communities have provided opportunities is through local organizations that focus on providing services to marginalized individuals in the area.

The programs offered By Northwest Tap Connection continue the long history of self-organized sports and recreation by the African American community.  Before the organized play movement of the early 1900’s brought playgrounds and recreation centers to African American communities, community sports and recreation were self run and organized. This self-organization sparked creativity, expression and above all else a sense of unity among the African American community. While the organized play movement brought new facilities to the African American community these often failed to meet the needs of the community. As a result the 1920’s through the 1940’s were highlighted by the efforts of independent Black social clubs organizing  competitions and other recreational opportunities. The impetus for much of this self organized competition was the Jim-Crow segregation that dominated organized sports and even dance. The self-organization of the Black Community has often been sparked by systematic inequalities, and a need to provide to the community what the system cannot. This phenomenon is demonstrated by the Free-Breakfast programs instituted by the Black Panther Party. This program provided breakfast for schoolchildren who would otherwise be unable to afford and eat breakfast, similarly Northwest Tap Connection provides arts programs for students who would otherwise not have this access.

While dance is often thought of as an apolitical art form, Black artists have in fact used dance throughout history as a form of protest. Pearl Primus was one of the mainstays of Black concert dance in the 1940’s, she used her background in dance and anthropology to construct “protest dances” which called for racial equality and an end to racial terrorism. One of the most notable of such performances was “Strange Fruit,” featuring poetry of Lewis Allan, which condemned lynching. Northwest Tap Connection has continued this tradition, following the shootings of Philando Castile and Alton Sterling, dancers from the studio were filmed dancing in the streets among unrest and protest. This sparked the interest of directors, Joseph Webb, Denzel Boyd, and Tyler Rabinowitz who have partnered with Northwest Tap Connection to produce the short film “Hell You Talmbout.” The film is a protest to the modern day lynchings by police shootings of African Americans.

Inequality and Underfunded Schools

Due to economic inequality, schools with more students of color are under-funded. For instance, the top 10% of school districts “spend nearly 10 times more than the poorest 10 percent” (p. 31, Allen). Students in the poorest districts receive $1,000 less on average when compared to wealthier districts. With a lack of funding more diverse schools are then forced to remove funding from arts programs and focus on courses that teach directly to Common Core Standards. One can see this lack of funding specifically in dance. In the school year of 1999 to 2000 20% of schools funded dance programs, but in the school year of 2009 to 2010 only 3% of schools funded dance. Dance has essentially been removed from public education. The removal of such programs has a dramatic effect on college admission. One study found that students who took four years of art classes scored on average 91 points higher on SAT tests. The removal of arts programs then has a disproportionate effect on African Americans because their schools are the ones most underfunded and, therefore face the largest cuts to the arts. School districts serving majority African-American or Hispanic students are twice as likely to lack art programs as school districts serving predominantly white students.

Programs like Northwest Tap Connection are then a major, and often overlooked, option to combat educational and future economic inequality. Northwest Tap Connection is able to provide an opportunity that can help to lower educational inequality by supplementing an education in the arts that was lost in many public schools. Ultimately, by evening the educational playing field there is a greater potential for educated African Americans to transcend the institutionally racist barriers put before them. Just as Cipher Goings proves, Northwest Tap Connection moves beyond just a center for dance by helping students get an education in the arts, an important factor to overcoming educational inequality. According to 2008 data, African-American and Hispanic students were two times less likely to have access to art programs in their school districts in comparison to their white peers.

Works Cited

Allen, Donald W.R II, “What are the ways K-12 public school systems and teacher training programs contribute to the exploitation of black educators; what political, cultural and economic ends does this serve? How does the current treatment and deployment of black educators hamper rather than further black educational progress?” (2018). School of Education Student Capstone Projects. 186. https://digitalcommons.hamline.edu/hse_cp/186

Dance Studio | United States | Northwest Tap Connection. (n.d.). Retrieved from https://www.nwtapconnection.org/

Gates, H. L. (2009). Harlem Renaissance: Lives from the African American National Biography. New York: Oxford University Press.

Hill, C. V. (2009). Tap Dancing America: A Cultural History, New York; Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Rees, G. (2011). Tap Dance. Encyclopedia of African American Popular Culture (pp. 1367–1370).

Seibert, B. (2015). What the Eye Hears: A History of Tap Dancing. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. pp. 445–6.

Shiovitz, B. W. (2016). Masks in Disguise: Exposing Minstrelsy and Racial Representation within

American Tap Dance Performances of the Stage, Screen, and Sound Cartoon, 1900-1950. UCLA. Retrieved from https://escholarship.org/uc/item/1023p0b6

 

Building Equality and Cultural Strength in the Tacoma Urban League

African American Studies 101

Parker, Elle, Mason, & Justin

The Tacoma Urban League was created in 1968 to support and assist African Americans and other marginalized people to obtain equality and economic independence. It was modeled after the Seattle Urban League by Thomas Dixon and a board of members who decided Tacoma was ready for an Urban League.

History of the Tacoma Urban League

This Urban League currently has six programs to aid African Americans in closing the gap between African Americans and white people.

    1. Male Involvement Program: Run by John Levi and Joseph Womack, MIP helps and mentors middle school boys with anger and conflict management, and learning how to understand emotions and feelings in a safe space.
    2. Girls with Purpose: GWP works with middle-school girls to empower them to succeed educationally and socially through mentoring.
    3. Career Empowerment Academy: This academy holds evening classes to formulate career paths and create connections with businesses and industries.
    4. Budget and Finance Workshops: These workshops provide meaningful education about finances such as credit card debt, household budgets, savings, and checking accounts.
    5. Home Ownership Program: Owning a home is the simplest way to grow wealth, and so the Home Ownership program works with people to begin the process of owning a home.
    6. Black Empowerment Center: An independent organization that works with the Tacoma Urban League with the goal of closing the wealth gap between African Americans and white people.
      1. “Overall, it’s been discovered that it will take African Americans 242 years to catch up to white wealth if white wealth stopped accumulating today” (Adriane, Black Empowerment Center Coordinator).

    1. Double-Consciousness: Dr. W.E.B DuBois coined the concept of Double Consciousness as the ability, only possessed by a black person, to see America, and its relationship to yourself, through the eyes of others. This Double Consciousness must be constantly utilized by black people in order for them to interact with and be prepared for the world as a white person can without Double Consciousness.

    2. “It’s not because black people don’t have an education, it’s not because we don’t have motivation, it’s not because our priorities are jacked up. It’s because of the systemic barriers that we face, such as gentrification, redlining, and the constant displacement of African Americans in Tacoma.”

    3. – Adriane Wilson, Black Empowerment Center Coordinator

    4. Tacoma Urban League was created to, “Help achieve social equality and economic independence…” for the African American community in Tacoma (https://thetacomaurbanleague.org). Currently sharing a building with the Black Empowerment Center, the League prides itself on offering cultural reinforcement and development to the community. In relation to W.E.B. DuBois’ concept of double consciousness or, “two-ness of thought” wherein black people live in struggle to balance the stereotypes and beliefs created and maintained by white America against their individual sense of self. The Tacoma Urban League is a place wherein black people can be without the often harmful expectations of American culture present throughout our society, specifically in Tacoma. Through their current Male Involvement and Girls With Purpose Program, the League provides safe spaces for black youth to foster discussion on identity and offers mentorship opportunities to reinforce the cultural pride and confidence in being African American, rather than having to weigh one’s identity against the standards set by another group. Besides their youth initiatives, the League also offers programs assisting with finance, credit card debt, home ownership, and employment. By providing opportunities centered around supporting and educating the black community in Tacoma, the League counters the debilitating stereotypes and systems holding African Americans back from living in social, economic, and cultural equality with the rest of America.