Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Dear: Chief Executive Officers of Color

What I want in hard times is facts … facts alone are wanted in life.

When I first invited the VOWOC to my community, we met in the midst of a moral and political battle. Hartford, Connecticut has breed two classes of people; vagabonds and millionaires. I realized there was a struggle between two great political parties for power and plunder.

Grievous wrongs have been inflicted upon suffering people, no politician, community or religious leader has made a serious effect to prevent or restrain them. Neither do they now promise any substantial reform.  They have agreed together to ignore in past and present campaigns, every issue but one. They promise to drown the outcries of impoverished people.


Tragedy is often a force that brings people together, and one of colossal magnitude shows us how connected we really are; the tragedy at Sandy Hook New town, Connecticut seemed to be showing us that we need to reconsider our priorities. Instead of placing social capital at the top of our agenda, perhaps we should put family and friends in the number one spot. The stench of poverty and homicide are overwhelming in Hartford.



A certain distrust and wariness is created, when a CEO of color fails to hold themselves accountable, and yet we know that trust is the foundation of any good relationship, and fundamental to getting extraordinary things done.  Young voters aren't giving in to the idea that they don’t make a difference.  More and more of us are on a quest for greater meaning in our lives. Whether you call it spiritually, religion, faith or soul, there’s clearly a trend toward accountability within the walls of community leadership and politics. Social equality is free when it is built on the love of the whole people for each other and for the City Of Hartford.

There’s no going back to the days of back door politics, a diverse society brings diverse voters. We also have to face another truth; most of today’s voters seriously question whether CEO’s of color are going to be loyal to constituency members and committed staff. Volunteers hear all this talk about how community leaders want loyal volunteers who are committed to empowering the community, yet the volunteers don’t experience life on the job as a reciprocal relationship.

People worry about the legacy they are leaving; values and virtues are discussed more openly. There are countless opportunities to restore hope and create a sense of meaning in our communities.  There are Opportunities’ to rebuild a sense of hope and increase understanding among diverse peoples; Opportunities to turn information into knowledge and improve the collective standard of living. Opportunities’ to weave the innocence and wisdom, while providing direction and support during uncertain times.

Global leadership means global understanding. VOWOC it is true that those with educational degrees have higher incomes and more opportunity, and it is true that an organization fitness to compete is dependent upon the mental fitness of the workforce Politicians, community, and religious leaders, who have a vision for the future, should not be obsessed with money, power and respect. Any good leader will be recognized as a builder, they see a problem that they want to fix- be it large or small. Even so, there’s a new champ in the ring. It’s called Accountability.

After interning under the tutelage of Janice Fleming (VOWOC) for eighteen months I recruited volunteers to participate in leadership training (OLA), I become conscious that corruption dominated the ballot box, the legislatures; including congress dishonesty touches even the ermine of the bench. The VOWOC has dominated the voters at the polling places. The CEO of color has created a Brain Trust which includes a group of advisers –many of them include politicians who have been endorsed by the VOWOC. It is therefore, a civil and political status that rests on greed, pride and tyranny.

CEO’S of community organizations endorse corrupt candidates for a small fee, while selling their fellow neighbors under the bus. The community leader of color uses civil rights and human liberties as a tool to hold community conversations about ethnic and economic disparities that exist in Hartford. Their mission is blurred by fabrications and fails to spot opportunities to empower the residents that live in districts directly affected by poverty and homelessness.


Door knockers solicit votes from registered voters, and there are some districts in which, Political Prostitutes use the promise of leadership training and economic development for communities that volunteer with the VOWOC to ensure that the community gets candidates endorsed by the CEO of color. To ensure that they know what to say and what the community needs. Yet the candidate must be willing to throw the impoverished district to the wolves under the supervision of the CEO of color.

Door knockers tend to control a majority of the votes in North Hartford and South Hartford, Not the official candidate that’s running for office but the actual community organizer that stalks the residents living in poor districts with the prime intention to solicit the average voter for his or her mark on the ballot.

VOWOC has ignored the fundamental law of justice as far as I can see…they have interfered with the voting process, the process which guarantees no man or woman shall hinder the right to vote. Too many promises have been made; too many misunderstandings have come up between the VOWOC and the community. While VOWOC mouth talks right, I do not understand why nothing is done for the people of color. I have heard VOWOC talk and talk, but nothing has been done for the people.





Community leaders are the go between the politician and the community, yet the leaders develop nonprofits/profit organizations to gather grants and federal funding. They say we want to develop leaders in our community, we want to empower the impoverished residents of Hartford, however; when you contact them they say we don’t have any monies or resources to assist you. Contact 211 so that they can add you to their data bases of people in need.

Leadership is a dialogue, not a monologue.  When successful leaders talk about their personal achievements, they talk about searching for opportunities to innovate and change things. Modeling the way is essentially about earning the right and the respect to lead through direct individual involvement and action. To enlist people in a vision, leaders must know their constituents and speak their language.

More than ever there is need for people to seize opportunities to lead us to greatness. What I have discovered, and rediscovered, is that leadership is not the private reserve of a few charismatic men and women. Leadership is a process that ordinary people use to when bringing forth the best from themselves and others. Good leadership is an understandable and a universal process. Great leaders make extraordinary things happen by liberating the leader within everyone. People first follow the person, then the plan.

Titles are granted, but it’s your behavior that wins you respect

The stench of poverty and homicide makes a toxic cocktail in any urban setting. Parents are no longer chasing away the boogey man; they are chasing dreams that have been deferred from the lack of economic development in a City who main source of funding is based on federal grants for the poverty-stricken citizen! A parent worst nightmare usually consisted of teenage pregnancy, dropping out of school or incarceration. Now they are threatened with the nightmare of Homicide, Sandy Hook was not the only neighborhood affected by gun violence in Connecticut. 


 My name is Martha Hood I live in one of the poorest districts in Hartford, Connecticut. I spent my entire life as a leader, organizer and advocate for justice concerning peace and economic development in Hartford, Connecticut. I have achieved a well deserved reputation as an activist for social and economic change, a defender of the poor, oppressed and disadvantaged. I am well known in the ghettos of Hartford as the voice those oppressed.

 Fighting for the rights of the oppressed have become my sole occupation my mission is to hold city leaders and corrupt politicians accountable in the city of Hartford. I will never cease fighting for fair housing rights for residents living in the north end of Hartford.

“I would never ask anyone to do anything I was unwilling to do first”.

Martha Hood

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