Saturday, May 25, 2013

The Mysterious Charlie Featherstone

I need to get to the 60 Minutes Video to see what Charlie Featherstone is all about

Backlog of Complaints Filed Against the USDAThe significant backlog of unresolved discrimination complaints against the USDA is an ongoing reality for black farmers, who find themselves without appropriate economic and technical assistance from the Department. Moreover, Secretary Glickman has conceded that the Department has discriminated against black farmers in the past and in recent times.[273] This treatment is illustrated in the case of Calvin Brown: Mr. Brown farmed tobacco on land in Brunswick County, Virginia, that was previously owned by his father.[274] In 1984, Charlie Featherstone, a white supervisor at the Brunswick County FmHA office allegedly required Mr. Brown to keep his loan in a restricted account that needed the FmHA’s supervisor’s signature for any banking withdrawals.[275] When Mr. Brown attempted to obtain his funds to rent a barn to dry his crop, Mr. Featherstone could not be located in person or by telephone.[276] The tobacco crop eventually was ruined, and Mr. Brown was later unable to obtain further loans from the FmHA office. As a result, Mr. Brown filed a discrimination complaint against the USDA in 1984. In 1998, Mr. Brown received an initial response from the Department, which indicated that its Office of Civil Rights was still processing his complaint.[277]

] Ibid. “[Mr.] Featherstone also denies charges from black farmers that he would routinely sleep in his office while they waited outside to see him. [He explained], ‘Sometimes when I had to think of something, or do . . . quite a bit of calculations in my head, sometimes atmosphere pressures would close my eyes to do that.’ ” Ibid.

Is this discrimination or not---- how long was Featherstone missing.


He's mentioned in this strange educational document


Example:  Charlie Featherstone, Virginia Department of Agriculture employee.  Accused of sleeping in his office while black men waited to see him.  “He doesn’t like blacks.”  Featherstone denied that and said he has nothing against blacks, it’s just that “when I am calculating things in my heard, the atmospheric pressure forces my eyes to close.”

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