Categories
News

Tornado Alley

Tornado Alley, a film all about twisters and storm chasers, shows at the Pink Palace IMax Theatre.

Categories
News

Griz! Clippers! Playoffs!

It’s time to grit and grind, Memphis. The playoffs start Sunday. For analysis, great reporting, and more, read Beyond the Arc, Chris Herrington’s GrizBlog.

Categories
Beyond the Arc Sports

Gameday Motivation

The Grizzlies tipoff Game 1 against the Los Angeles Clippers at 8:30 tonight at FedEdForum.

Get your mind right, Memphis:

Categories
News

TPC Should Go For It

John Branston says the Transition Planning Committee should try the flea-flicker, end-around, and Hail Mary — every play in the playbook — since they only have one shot.

Categories
Opinion

Schools Panel Should Leave Everything on the Field

9b38_1_174_1.JPG

Transition Planning Commission to unified Shelby County School Board: Close 21 (unnamed) schools before school starts in 2013 and save about $20 million.

Predicted response of school board: That’s easy for you to say.

The planning commission knows this, because several of them are current or former Memphis City Schools board members, students, or staff. They can only plan; it is the school board that is empowered to make decisions, as the federal court ruled last year. So don’t expect there to be 21 school closings before school starts in 2013.

Near the end of Friday’s meeting, chairwoman Barbara Prescott, a former MCS board member, asked for a non-binding show of hands to signify general agreement or disagreement with the school closing recommendation. TPC members tentatively raised their arms like students hoping they would not be called upon in class.

The lack of enthusiasm was understandable.

“This will be a very difficult implementation process,” said Prescott.

Closing schools, especially high schools, has “a tremendous negative effect” on the community, said Reginald Green.

The open secret is that underutilized schools (58 percent of capacity in the targeted areas of northwest and southwest Memphis) are a fact of life. In 2005, the Memphis school board closed four schools, and this year three more schools will be closed, but closing 21 at a time, including four high schools, would be unprecedented.

Right-sizing is a moment of truth. Former Memphis superintendent Johnnie B. Watson has said that closing schools was the hardest thing he had to do in his career. The bad news is usually buffered with hopeful comments about alternative uses such as charter schools or community centers that might or might not pan out. But Pete Gorman, the former superintendent of the award-winning Charlotte-Mecklenburg school system in North Carolina, admitted that “you can’t close schools well” when he spoke to the TPC last year.

The TPC should ask its Boston consultants what alternatives are feasible and what impact they would have on the projected savings if the lights have to be turned on anyway and the buildings have to be ADA compliant. If school closings come to a vote, the school board will need all the evidence and support it can get.

There has never been a schools transition planning commission before, and there will probably never be another one. This is not a team, because that implies a common goal, but it is a diverse, experienced group. Look at these names and backgrounds on the TPC website. The report the TPC puts together in the next six weeks will be one of a kind. It won’t be the last word. The school board rules. The state legislature and the Shelby County suburban mayors are moving full speed toward a vote on municipal schools this year, as Jackson Baker reported.

To borrow a favorite motivational line from coaches, the TPC must “leave everything on the field” if a unified system including the suburbs is to have a chance. Acknowledge the changes that have happened since the panel was created. Improvise. Everyone else is. If TPC members want to put some meat on the bones of a unified system, recommend that the board hire popular Shelby County Schools Superintendent John Aitken. And examine the claim that the municipalities should get their school buildings for free because they “have already paid for them.” And put a dollar figure on the cost of new schools, and identify who will have the responsibility of paying for them. If there are going to be referendums this year, give the voters some names and numbers to weigh against the projections of the suburban school consultants.

In one of the first TPC meetings six months ago, members talked about their hopes in a get-to-know-you session. Louis Padgett, the principal at Northhaven Elementary School, urged everyone to “really go at each other really hard” and “take on our biases.”

The schedule that Prescott outlined calls for some long meetings in May and June. It will be tempting to remain above the fray, bury some things under words and numbers, and just be done with it. The court-ordered and carefully chosen TPC, with all those consultants and staff its disposal, should go at it really hard and take on biases.

I know, easy for me to say.

Categories
News

Bristerfest

Check out BristerFest this weekend. Thirty bands at the Levitt Shell plus a party at the Hi-Tone Saturday night.

Categories
News

Mingo Fishtrap

Check out the soulful, gut-bucket sounds of Mingo Fishtrap at the Stax Museum today.

Categories
Politics Politics Beat Blog

Norris’ School Bills Finally Get Through

HB1105.jpg

Though the Tennessee General Assembly was still grinding away at last-minute matters on Friday afternoon and was destined to work over the weekend and on Monday to complete this year’s budget and other matters, the two bills affecting school districts for Shelby County’s suburban municipalities finally got legislative imprimatur.

Just before 5 o’clock on Friday, the House easily approved a conference committee report on HB1105/SB1923, the education bill on which Senate Majority Leader Mark Norris (R-Collierville) had grafted an enabling amendment for the suburbs to hold referenda on municipal districts this year.

Thus was concluded a drama that resulted from state Attorney General Robert Cooper’s opinion last month that referenda which had been scheduled for May by Germantown, Collierville, Bartlett, Lakeland, and Arlington would be unconstitutional . Cooper’s reasoning was that no such steps could be taken until August 2013, the date specified by last year’s Norris-Todd bill. Subsequently the Shelby County Election Commission canceled the May referenda.

Norris then submitted one bill, SB2908/HB3234, that would have moved up the date of eligibility for municipal school Districts to January 1, 2013 and offered an amendment to HB1105/SB1923, an unrelated measure concerning the evaluation of school directors, that explicitly would have permitted the suburbs to hold referenda, presumably in August, and then to establish the machinery for school boards.

Both the new Norris bill and the amendment were written so as to apply statewide. This would seem to have been a precaution taken by Norris in the wake of an earlier Cooper opinion that a piece of Norris legislation affecting annexation procedures in Shelby County alone was unconstitutional and had to be withdrawn. Cooper had noted that the bill’s effect was limited to one county without having the unanimous consent of that county’s delegation, and thus could not qualify as a private bill.

But the two new Norris initiatives, cast as general bills with provisions seeming to enable new school districts everywhere, aroused alarms even among previously compliant GOP legislators elsewhere in the state. Ultimately, SB2908/HB3234 was amended to a shadow of its previous self, merely repeating language already appearing in Norris-Todd concerning the eligibility of municipal districts in Shelby County as of August 2013, when merger of Memphis City Schools and Shelby County Schools is due to be completed.

And Norris’ amendment to HB1105/SB1923, which had failed of acceptance twice in the House because it, too, seemed clearly to have statewide application, was revised in a House/Senate conference committee this week so as to apply only to counties where transition committees were monitoring school mergers — a definition that essentially fit only Shelby County. In that circuitous form the amendment was made acceptable to the full House, which accepted the bill as so amended and passed the measure 61-25.

Almost certainly the new legislation will be subjected to legal challenge of one sort or another. And so will other aspects relating to the establishment of municipal school districts — notably the issue of whether such districts are entitled to enroll (and receive state and federal funding for) students residing outside their borders, as well as the vexing issue of potential costs for the suburban municipalities in acquiring existing school property.

Categories
News

Bully For Them

Greg Akers reviews the edgy documentary, Bully.

Categories
Intermission Impossible Theater

Three Answers with NOISES OFF Director Ann Marie Hall

The popular farce Noises Off opens at Theatre Memphis this weekend so I asked Ann Marie Hall if she’d be interested in doing a three question interview. Her response…

Ann Marie Hall: “sure! The answers are the Cheetah, Bismark and 3.14159.”

Did I just get a Pi in the face? Oh well, here’s a photo. And a link for tickets.

Screen_shot_2012-04-27_at_4.21.42_PM.png