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Bookstore owner takes literacy mission on the road with ‘Black Star Line’ Summer Tour

MD: SUMMER BOOK BUS TOUR BRINGS LITERACY TO KIDS

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    BALTIMORE (WMAR) — A Baltimore bookstore owner is taking her mission to inspire young readers directly into neighborhoods across the city with a bus full of free books.

The Black Star Line Literacy Bus, created by Tia Hamilton, is making stops throughout Baltimore this summer with one goal: put books into the hands of children and help close the city’s literacy gap.

“It’s free,” Hamilton said. “And just to be able to say that means everything.”

Hamilton says too many neighborhoods are what she calls “book deserts,” where families have limited access to books and literacy resources.

“There are children who aren’t getting the necessary literacy tools that’s needed,” she said. “It’s time to get to the literacy. It’s time to educate.”

Wrapped in vibrant Pan-African colors, the Black Star Line bus is impossible to miss. Inspired by Marcus Garvey’s historic Black Star Line ship, the mobile library also features images of influential Black leaders, including Malcolm X.

As a person who was formerly incarcerated, she draws inspiration from the civil rights leader because a pivotal part of his story included turning his life around from behind bars.

Hamilton says education transformed her own life, and now she’s determined to help children avoid the barriers she once faced.

“If 54% of America’s adults can’t read above the sixth-grade reading level, that’s why I exist,” Hamilton said. “That’s why my mission exists. That’s why my foundation exists.”

At every stop, children are encouraged to choose books to take home and build their own personal libraries. Hamilton hopes those books become the foundation for lifelong learning.

“If children are reading 20 minutes a day, they will expose themselves to 1.8 million words a year,” she said.

Hamilton believes investing in literacy today can help prevent much bigger problems tomorrow.

“It takes $54,000 for one child to take care of them inside a prison,” she said. “So instead of investing in that, invest in this cause and invest in me and let me go out here and do the work to make our children literate.”

The work isn’t easy. Hamilton loads, unloads and distributes hundreds of books herself at each stop, bringing plenty of enthusiasm along the way.

“I don’t know,” she laughed. “I wake up like this.”

Still, she says community support is essential to keeping the bus rolling.

“Donate your time and donate gently used books,” Hamilton said. “This is why I’m asking for books and donations because it’s not about me. It’s about our children, our youth, our legacy.”

Hamilton’s goal is to give away 100 books at every stop this summer, totaling 5,000 books across Baltimore. She also hopes to expand the program next summer by adding two more literacy buses to reach even more communities.

“They are going to change the world,” Hamilton said. “We give them an opportunity.”

People interested in donating books, volunteering or supporting the Black Star Line Literacy Bus can find more information through Hamilton’s organization here. Hamilton has also launched a “Bookmark It” program to help families, kids and adults, where you can join a reading club and get a discount on books.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

Judge orders ICE to release mother detained on school campus

Click here for updates on this story    BALTIMORE (WJZ) -- A mother who was detained on a Baltimore school campus in June was ordered by a judge to be released from immigration custody.Adriana Gavilan Sanchez was ordered to be released before 5 p.m. on Wednesday, July 15, according to a court filing.Our media partner, The Baltimore Banner, reports that Gavilan Sanchez, who has been held at the Caroline Detention Facility in Virginia, no longer appears in U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement's (ICE) online detainee locator system.Her partner, Jesus Acevedo Sanchez, is scheduled to appear in court on July 23.CBS News Baltimore reached out to ICE for comment but has not heard back.On June 11, Gavilan Sanchez and Acevedo Sanchez were detained by ICE agents while dropping off their daughter at Commodore John Rodgers Elementary/Middle School. Video showed ICE agents detaining the two, as a window was shattered on their vehicle.The U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) said last month that Acevedo Sanchez "refused lawful commands, violently resisted arrest, and used his vehicle to evade law enforcement, dragging an ICE officer in the process."DHS said a second undocumented immigrant in the vehicle punched officers.However, according to the Banner, ICE's latest court filings did not mention an assault, stating that officers met "minimal physical resistance" when they ordered her out of the car.According to the Banner, the federal government is trying to deport both parents, who are from Mexico and don't have legal immigration status. Their daughters are U.S. citizens.Last month, ICE claimed that the agency coordinated with the Baltimore City Public School System in the arrests. School district officials denied those claims."ICE has acknowledged that schools should remain places focused on learning and that enforcement actions should not occur on school campuses," school officials said. "We welcome that commitment and expect future actions to reflect it consistently." Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.
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