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Memphis Gaydar News

Lobbying 101

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According to the Tennessee Equality Project (TEP), Representative Stacey Campfield’s “Don’t Say Gay” bill will make a comeback in this General Assembly.

Be prepared to fight Campfield’s push to ban talk of homosexuality in schools and other anti-gay legislation with the “Lobbying 101” workshop on Saturday, January 29th from 10 a.m. to noon. The event — hosted by the University of Memphis Law School’s OUTLAW group and TEP — will focus specifically on lobbying during Tennessee’s 107th General Assembly.

Attendees will learn how to research and track bills, how to handle meetings with elected officials, and how to advocate on behalf of legislation. The workshop will be held at the University of Memphis Law School in room 226.

For more information, see the workshop’s Facebook page.

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Opinion

Do Black People Think Alike?

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A shamelessly alarming headline to get attention. The obvious answer is no, but some people in the schools debate would apparently like you to think otherwise.

How else to explain the pep rally at Hollywood Community Center Thursday night? Nice crowd of over 200, nice attentive atmosphere. Either by design or because of no-shows, it was a one-sided pro-merger panel of past and present elected officials including Willie Herenton, Henri Brooks, Martavius Jones, Hubon Sandridge, and Sidney Chism plus Thaddeus Matthews and Cardell Orrin.

Granted that one of the first responsibilities of a speaker is to put on a show. Granted that every argument needs a bad guy, hence the references to David Pickler, who wasn’t there but has attended other hostile forums. Granted that, as Brooks said, it’s still about race. And granted that most of the hot rhetoric was followed by a wink and a grin.

I still don’t get the argument, if you can call it that, of Brooks, Herenton, Chism, Matthews, and Sandridge that black Memphians should feel one way about schools and that Kenneth Whalum Jr., Lasimba Gray, Freda Williams, Dwight Montgomery, and the leadership of the teacher’s union to name just a few are out of step with the program. The notion that black or white people will and should vote a certain way on charter surrender is simplistic, stupid, and wrong and these panelists know it. But they talked like it was 1980 or 1970.

This is what passed for argument: If David Pickler is against it then you must be for it. The Commercial Appeal, aka “the newspaper,” is playing up fear and wants to confuse “you.” The day the vote is certified “we” are going to make sure “they” have no control. “We” are the majority in the city of Memphis so there is no way “we” can lose. To those leaving Shelby County, “don’t let the door knob hit you where the good lord split you.” And special school district status in Shelby County Schools means those residents won’t have to pay county taxes, some of which support Memphis schools — which is simply not true. Special school districts pay twice.

Quoting from the 2008 University of Memphis study: “Property Tax Alternative 2: Each district would levey its own property tax as a primary funding source. Shelby County government would discontinue using property tax to fund the MCS and special school district; and the two school districts would utilize property tax each collects from their respective territories.”

Anyway, on this night the show was the thing, and it was a pretty good one, with the audience getting into it. But like most meetings, it went too long. I left early to see the Central-White Station basketball game at the Spartan Palace at WSHS. I parked half a mile away but was surprised when I got inside to see the gym only about three quarters full. And it was basketball homecoming, too. When I was a regular at games during the Dane Bradshaw and J. P. Prince years, a sellout was really a sellout, especially when Ridgeway or Raleigh-Egypt were in the house.

Anyway, the basketball was high quality. Central has two really big guys who can play. White Station looks a year or two away. WSHS Principal David Mansfield roamed the sideline in a coat and tie and twinkling green headband. There was not a single white player on either team. The student section was packed, with guys in the front row with painted chests spelling out “Spartans.” Central won a clean, hard-fought game.

This is integrated public education in Memphis in 2011. Take a good look. It’s years may be numbered.

Memo to my fellow Memphis residents: the ‘burbs are not kidding. There are legal complications to setting up a new municipal school district, but they have the numbers in the legislature and anything can happen in the courts, which follow public opinion to some extent. If Mr. and Mrs. Suburb put a pencil to it, the extra $1 on the tax rate or additional $1500 a year in property taxes will look pretty good compared to $12,000 or more for private school per year per kid and declining home values. The majority of suburban residents — and Tennesseans outside Memphis — see Memphis as black city that thinks one way. A simplistic, no-win, wrong generalization that some here are nevertheless promoting.

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News

Should O.J. Mayo Go?

A bad season for Grizzlies guard O.J. Mayo got worse yesterday with a 10-game suspension for testing positive for a banned — but legal — steroid-like over-the-counter drug. Mayo is rumored to be on the trading block. On Beyond the Arc, Chris Herrington makes the case for caution, listing the reasons why the Grizzlies should not deal Mayo.

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Why the Grizzlies Shouldn’t Trade O.J. Mayo

O.J. Mayo‘s miserable season got a lot worse yesterday, when it was announced that he’s been suspended for 10 games by the NBA for testing positive for the legal but banned-by-the-NBA steroid-like drug DHEA. This will cost Mayo more than $400,000 and cost the Grizzlies their fourth-leading scorer during a crucial stretch of games in which they’re trying to catch the Portland Trailblazers for the final playoff spot in the Western Conference.

Will O.J. Mayo play another game in a Griz uniform? If the team is smart, the answer is yes.

  • Will O.J. Mayo play another game in a Griz uniform? If the team is smart, the answer is yes.

A Bad Year
But this is only the latest and worst incident in what has been a bit of a nightmare season for the third-year guard, preceded by the following:

The Grizzlies spent their top draft pick (Xavier Henry) and primary free-agent acquisition (Tony Allen) on players at Mayo’s position.

Mayo’s attempt to develop his on-ball skills in the summer league resulted in a turnover-heavy performance aborted after two games and dismissive public comments from a head coach who has bristled at even the mildest criticisms of Mayo’s backcourt partner, Mike Conley.

Mayo failed to make the US national team only to watch teammate Rudy Gay and two-guard rival Eric Gordon not only make the team but shine at the World Basketball Championships.

While Gordon and Gay followed up their international play with career-best seasons, Mayo was moved into a sixth-man role and has registered career lows pretty much across the board.

Mayo caught the bad end of a fistfight with teammate Tony Allen following a gambling dispute on the team plane. Mayo missed the next game with a black eye labeled “bronchitis” while Allen shined in a win over the Oklahoma City Thunder, drawing public praise from his coach and teammates.

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Cooking Demonstrations at Fresh Market

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I get regular e-mail blasts from Fresh Market about the store’s cooking demonstrations, but I had never stopped by until Saturday afternoon. The store’s featured recipe “Smoky Shrimp and Sweet Potato Chowder” hooked me, due to the lonely bowl of sweet potatoes on my kitchen counter.

Things are busy at Fresh Market on Saturdays, but the crowds didn’t deter Davona Patterson, who was happy to discuss the lovely smoked flavor of her chowder and ladle out a taste. Patterson, who is a personal chef, had tried out the recipe at home, and she was enthusiastic about the results: “The longer is sits on the stove, the better it gets,” she said.

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News

New Frontier

Leonard Gill talks to former Flyer staffer Jim Hanas about his e-book Why They Cried and being a test case for electronic publishing.

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News

Survivor

Greg Akers reviews the Oscar-nominated film 127 Hours.

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

VIDEO: Herenton, Others Weigh in at Meetings on School Merger

Public interest in the forthcoming March 8 citywide referendum on the merger of Memphis City Schools and Shelby County Schools continues to mount, with multiple meetings on the subject occurring on almost a nightly basis.

In addition to a public forum conducted Thursday night by the Shelby County Schools Board, two “town meetings” were held under the auspices of Shelby County Commission members. One, at Hollywood Community Center, sponsored by Commissioner Henri Brooks, featured an array of speakers in favor of the merger, including former mayor Willie Herenton. Another, at Snowden School, sponsored by Commissioner Melvin Burgess, featured MCS president Freda Williams and others, addressing the possible complications of the proposed merger.

Former Mayor Willie Herenton at Hollywood:

MCS Board president Freda Williams at Snowden:

Shelby County Commissioner Sidney Chism at Hollywood:

Memphis Education Association president Keith Williams at Snowden:

Thaddeus Matthews on black and white:
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Jeff Warren on differences between the two systems:

Categories
Opinion

Don’t Blame Teachers, Unions, or Families

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Wendy Kopp, the founder of Teach For America which has placed more than 200 corps members in Memphis, says teachers, unions, and apathetic families are getting too much blame for failing schools.

All three of those scapegoats have been getting a workout in the debates over surrendering the Memphis City Schools charter. Kopp draws from the collective experience of 20,000 Teach For America graduates working in tough school districts like Memphis for the last 20 years. (Memphis is not specifically mentioned.)

From her new book “A Chance to Make History”:

“Just as the silver bullet solutions ultimately prove insufficient in solving educational inequity, so too are these silver scapegoats undeserving of all the blame.”

When she asked corps members if the general public understands the causes of bad schools, 98 percent said they did not. Their consensus, after putting in their two years, was that the public mistakenly blames “lack of parental involvement” and home life. Kopp says most corps members reported that parents were responsive if teachers and schools reached out.

Nor is the problem an absence of good teachers in rural and urban areas.

“The problem is that our urban and rural educators are asked to tackle much greater challenges than teachers in other communities without receiving the training and professional development to teach or lead in transformational ways.”

Unions, one of the favorite targets of philanthropists and Republicans, get too much blame, too, Kopp says. It is not “fair and it isn’t productive. It backs groups that we need as allies into a corner and ultimately it simply doesn’t get us anywhere.”

Often, she says, school reformers “focus on the high-hanging fruit and neglect attainable victories.”

I read Kopp’s book looking for clues to our citizens’ choice, but could not find anything specifically addressing charter surrender or the merits of big districts versus smaller ones. Here are a few other takeaways, however:

1. The key to success is “local leadership and capacity to employ all the elements of strong vision.” Interestingly, this was apparently written just before TFA alum and education superwoman Michelle Rhee left Washington D. C. as superintendent following the defeat of the Mayor who empowered her. And we have two mayors, two councils, and two school boards!

2. Place teachers in schools based on how well that fit a particular school’s needs and values, not because they are looking for reassignment from another job. A consolidated school system could see hundreds of both. Lots of churn. Good grades don’t necessarily make good teachers, but “teachers should not come, on average, from among the least academically accomplished.”

3. Career ladders are often part of a “talent mindset” but should not be mandated at the state or federal level, Kopp says. U.S. Senator Lamar Alexander presumably disagrees. While governor, he implemented the Tennessee Career Ladder for teachers. And he went on to become U.S. Secretary of Education.

4. New Orleans is becoming a national poster city for school reform. I don’t get it. The city lost over half of its population and its school system shrank drastically after Katrina. Too many variables.

5. States watered down their standards to look good on tests due to No Child Left Behind. Kopp says that for all its faults, NCLB did highlight the achievement gap between schools.

6. Watch for Baltimore and schools superintendent Andres Alonso to be the next Washington/Michelle Rhee. Notably, Kriner Cash pointed out this week that Memphis has a better graduation rate than Baltimore.

7. As school reformer Brett Peiser says about school success, “There’s not one big thing, there are one hundred one-percent solutions.”