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Private School Voucher and Charter-Friendly Bills Sail Through Tennessee Senate

The Tennessee Senate on Monday approved two Republican-sponsored bills that would expand and clarify eligibility for students to receive private school vouchers or enroll in charter schools.

Both measures passed 27-5 along partisan lines and now await action in House committees.

Sen. Jon Lundsberg, of Bristol, sponsored the bill to expand eligibility for Gov. Bill Lee’s education savings account program to students who attended private or home schools during the last three school years. The current law says a student must move directly from a public to private school to be eligible for the program, which launched last fall in Memphis and Nashville.

A second bill, sponsored by Sen. Todd Gardenhire of Chattanooga and Rep. Charlie Baum of Murfreesboro, would cap enrollment at charter schools — which are publicly funded but independently operated — at 25 percent for students who live outside the school district that authorized the charter. The House is scheduled to take up that bill on Tuesday in its K-12 subcommittee.

Meanwhile, House Speaker Cameron Sexton filed legislation that would let the Tennessee Public Charter School Commission approve charter schools to serve home school students, as well as residential boarding schools that are charters. Those charter applicants could apply directly to the state-appointed commission for authorization, without having to go through local school boards.

All measures seek to continue the Republican governor’s push to expand education choices for families. But critics say vouchers and charter schools are vehicles to privatize education at the expense of traditional public schools, which operate under stricter regulations, provide more transparency through their locally elected school boards, and serve the bulk of students who are disadvantaged or have special needs.

Under the education savings account bill, co-sponsored by Rep. Chris Todd of Madison County, voucher eligibility would be extended to students who did not complete a full year in public school after 2019, when the legislature approved the voucher law

“The reason we’re doing this is because that legislation was locked up in the courts for a couple of years,” Lundberg said about ongoing litigation that halted the voucher program’s planned 2020 launch before a 2022 Tennessee Supreme Court ruling upheld the law.

Last week, Lundberg told the Senate Education Committee the change would open eligibility to many students who have applied to receive education savings accounts but were denied because they weren’t moving directly from public to private schools. So far, the state has approved 643 out of 1,273 applications, he said.

The voucher program, which provides taxpayer money for families to use toward private school tuition, is open to students in Memphis and Nashville but could be expanded to Chattanooga-based Hamilton County Schools under legislation approved by the Senate last week. That bill is scheduled for its first vote in a House subcommittee on Tuesday.

The charter school bill approved on Monday is backed by the Tennessee Charter School Center, an advocacy organization funded by pro-charter groups. 

Currently in Tennessee, it’s generally up to the local school district that authorizes a charter school, as well as the governing body that oversees that charter school, to determine how many out-of-district students can enroll.

Gardenhire said his bill seeks to address confusion around those policies with a state law that would cap out-of-district enrollment at 25 percent, and give priority to students from within the school district.

Sen. Jeff Yarbro, who voted against Gardenhire’s bill, said local school districts should be able to control enrollment policies for the charter schools that they authorize.

“If they’re making that decision for the public schools in their district, that same policy ought to apply to the charter schools in the district,” said the Nashville Democrat. “I think that ought to be a uniform policy.”

Elizabeth Fiveash, chief policy officer for the Tennessee Charter School Center, testified last week that out-of-district student enrollment in charter schools isn’t an issue in the four cities that have charter schools. However, it could be in the future as the state’s charter sector expands.

She told members of the Senate Education Committee that charter schools statewide have a waiting list of over 10,000 students, most of whom come from within the authorizing district.

“This is not an issue that’s currently happening,” Fiveash said, “but we’re trying to make sure it’s clear going forward.”

Sexton’s legislation, which is co-sponsored by Lt. Gov. Randy McNally, would mark a significant expansion of Tennessee charter school law.

Under the proposal, the state could authorize charter schools to enroll homeschooled students from within any school district in Tennessee. Those schools would be required to provide classroom instruction at least three days per week, while parents providing instruction the other two days could use remote instruction provided by the charter school.

Lundberg and Rep. Mark White of Memphis, who chair education committees for their respective chambers, have signed on as co-sponsors.

Editor’s note: This story has been updated with information about Sexton’s charter school legislation.

Marta Aldrich is a senior correspondent and covers the statehouse for Chalkbeat Tennessee. Contact her at maldrich@chalkbeat.org. Chalkbeat is a nonprofit news site covering educational change in public schools.

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Bill Would Limit Calls, Texts Asking “Do You Want to Sell Your House?”

While the Memphis housing market may have cooled somewhat, a new bill would limit those pesky calls and texts from randos asking, “Do you want to sell your house?”

The “anti-harassment” bill would limit “the number of times that a real estate developer, business entity, or individual working on behalf of the developer or business entity [would be] permitted to contact a property owner to make an unsolicited offer to buy the property owner’s property.” 

That limit is one time per calendar year. That contact is through a call, text, email, mail, fax, or any other form of contact. Each contact beyond one is considered a separate violation. A call and two texts? That’s two violations. 

Break the rule and the person you contacted can report the contact to consumer affairs division of the Tennessee Attorney General’s Office. Under the proposed rule, that office would have to begin an investigation into the contact within 15 business days after the complaint is submitted. 

If a developer, business, or individual is found guilty of violating the rule, they can be fined up to $1,500. A court could also charge the violator with costs associated with the investigation and prosecution, including attorney fees.  

Sen. Charlane Oliver (Credit: State of Tennessee)

The bill is the first from new state Sen. Charlane Oliver (D-Nashville). In a post on Medium, Oliver called the behavior of these developers “predatory” and said it is shrinking “supply of affordable housing and taking advantage of longtime homeowners who may not know what their home is worth.” 

“Tennesseans are being displaced due to rising housing costs, driven by corporate greed, unchecked growth and gentrification,” Oliver said in the post. “I’m filing anti-harassment legislation to enact penalties on predatory developers who pressure homeowners into selling their property. We must help families protect their most valuable asset and those who want a path to homeownership.”

The idea for the legislation came as Oliver said she watched “schemers” target older homeowners after the 2020 tornado struck Nashville.  

No one should suffer incessant harassment just because they own a home.

Sen. Charlane Oliver (D-Nashville)

“No one should suffer incessant harassment just because they own a home,” Oliver said. “It’s time for the legislature to create some guardrails to protect Tennesseans, and especially our senior citizens, from these deceptive, high-pressure tactics.”

For a deep dive on the issue in Memphis, read the Flyer’s 2020 cover story from Chris McCoy here.

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New Commute Option Lead Says Streets Should Not Be Just for Cars

Jackson McNeil, a self-described “transportation nerd,” was named the new Transportation and Mobility Director for Commute Options, a division of Innovate Memphis, last month. 

McNeil succeeds Sylvia Crum in the role. Crum, known for advocating for bicycle-friendly attitudes and infrastructure, now works in Seattle for the Washington State Department of Transportation. 

The role in Memphis encourages system-wide improvements to transit and mobility here with a focus on promoting alternative transportation (i.e. other than cars). 

Originally from Jonesboro, Arkansas, McNeil moved to Memphis in 2012. Here, he focused on Urban Studies for his undergraduate work at Rhodes College and earned a Master’s in City and Regional Planning from the University of Memphis. He then moved to New York City, working for the city’s Department of Transportation. He returned to Memphis more than a year ago.  

We caught up with him as he begins his work here to see what might be on the horizon for Memphis transportation. — Toby Sells

Memphis Flyer: What opportunities do you see here? What challenges do you see in Memphis? 

Jackson McNeil: Memphis has been designed in such a way that driving a car is often the most convenient — and sometimes physically the only way — to get around our city. The city’s over 300 square miles and, of course, Shelby County is even bigger. We know that a lot of employment centers and major employment hubs are not necessarily located in super convenient places.

The average Memphian spends about $13,000 a year to own, maintain, and gas up a car to get around. So, in a in a city with high poverty rates, that’s not a good equation. 

At Commute Options and Innovate Memphis, we really see transportation as one of the key solutions to a lot of the problems that our city faces. Whether that is inequality, or economic opportunity, safety, or improving the environment, these are things that folks care about and I think that oftentimes transportation isn’t clearly connected to those.

What’s an opportunity — a good change — we can make pretty quickly here? 

JM: A moral imperative for our city is the issue of pedestrian safety. We’re consistently in the top five most dangerous cities in the country for pedestrians. That’s due in part to the way that our city has been designed. 

I think that making our city more walkable not only increases safety, but it makes our communities more desirable. It helps people have more pride in their neighborhoods and get to know their neighbors. That’s a big piece of the transportation puzzle that we have to work on here. 

Transit is also a really high priority. We got to see some big wins for [the Memphis Area Transit Authority — MATA] last year getting dedicated funding from the city and county. But we still have a long way to go to see our transit system adequately funded to provide effective service for all Memphians.

Are there any solutions or examples of things that you saw in New York City that we could implement here? 

JM: New York City does a lot of things when it comes to promoting other forms of transportation, partly because they don’t really have a choice. There’s only so much room for cars. 

New York City also has a really, really strong transportation advocacy scene. They have a lot of folks that are really passionate about it that help raise it to the forefront to local elected officials. 

Another thing is that a lot of the neighborhoods there really take pride and ownership in their city streets. A lot of times Memphians see streets just as things for cars to get around.

I really think that there’s an opportunity to learn from cities like New York to show folks that [streets are] one of the largest public spaces in our city. It’s not just for cars, it’s for people. Streets should, ultimately, serve people and shouldn’t be relegated [just for cars].

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Music Music Blog

Beale Street Music Fest Announces Lineup, Poster and More

City’s longest-running music festival will be back in Tom Lee Park this year, May 5th to 7th, and as of today we know what artists will be performing. As usual, the diversity and quality of artists represented is staggering.

For starters, the headliners will include The Lumineers, Greta Van Fleet, Robert Plant & Alison Krauss, Earth Wind & Fire, HARDY, Jazmine Sullivan, The Roots, AJR and 311. For Memphians, Earth Wind & Fire’s appearance will be especially meaningful, given that the band’s late founder, Maurice White, was born and raised here.

“This year’s lineup reflects the broad musical tastes of our festival goers with a diverse lineup of some of today’s hottest artists as well past festival favorites and stars of tomorrow,” said James L. Holt,
President & CEO of Memphis in May. “At the Beale Street Music Festival, we endeavor to offer something for almost every musical taste, and we have a few more surprise additions to come.”

To that end, many other delights are in store, such as chart-topping hometown hip hop queen GloRilla, blues guitarist extraordinaire Gary Clark Jr., reggae icon Ziggy Marley, and others such as Young the Giant, Live, PJ Morton, The Struts, Gov’t Mule, mike., Andy Grammer, Yola, Dru Hill, Toadies, Lucinda Williams, Living Colour, Cameo, White Reaper, Shovels & Rope, Marcy Playground, Phony Ppl, Low Cut Connie, Beach Weather, Myron Elkins, Mac Saturn and more.

As always, Memphis area talent is well represented at the festival with hip-hop stars Finesse2Tymes and Big Boogie making their BSMF debuts. Legendary soul stars The Bar-Kays will be returning to the BSMF stage. and other featured Memphis area talent includes Jason D. Williams, Dirty Streets, Tyke T, Sleep Theory, The Sensational Barnes Brothers, and breakout Mille Manny.

Best of all, the Blues Tent, a mainstay of the Beale Street Music Festival, will be presented in Handy Park in the Beale Street Historic District as the Memphis Tourism “Blues Stage on Beale,”
featuring major headliners such as Los Lobos, Keb Mo, and the North Mississippi Allstars.

Ana Popavic, Bernard Allison, Colin James, Cedric Burnside, Selwyn Birchwood, Blind Mississippi Morris, Ghost Town Blues Band, Mr. Sipp, Reba Russell Band, Will Tucker, Rodd Bland Members Only Band, Mark Muleman Massey, and Ollie Moore will also be featured in the Blues Tent, which will be offered free of charge to local Memphians so they can “experience the festival and the musical genre born in our city,” according to organizers.

“Music just sounds better in Memphis, and there’s nothing like experiencing the Beale Street Music Festival in its home in Tom Lee Park next to the Mississippi River with the Memphis skyline and
lighted bridges as the backdrop,” said Memphis in May 2023 Board Chairwoman Leigh Shockey in a statement today. “We are so pleased to return the festival to its long-term home downtown on the riverfront at the foot of historic Beale Street.”

Tickets and other information about the 2023 Beale Street Music Festival are available at www.memphisinmay.org/bsmftickets.

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Film Features Film/TV

Music Video Monday: “Why Not You” by Sister Lucille ft. Reba Russell

In today’s Music Video Monday, Sister Lucille‘s Kimberly Dill and Reba Russell are a match made in suffragette heaven. Russell wrote “Why Not You” for the Missouri band’s latest album Tell the World, which she also co-produced alongside Memphis sonic wizard Dawn Hopkins.

The song is all about female empowerment. Director Kim Lloyd took the duetting duo to Beale, where they show off their brass notes and pay a visit to the statue of Black feminist hero Ida B. Wells. I don’t know about y’all, but I’m ready for the matriarchy!

If you would like to see your music video featured on Music Video Monday, email cmccoy@memphisflyer.com.

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Grizzlies Rout Nuggets

The Grizzlies beat the West-leading Denver Nuggets, 112-94, to improve to 25-5 at home this season.

Swag is what the Grizzlies had been missing as of late. Swag returned briefly on Thursday night against the Philadelphia 76ers, however the lack of late-game execution cost the team a game that it led up until the final seconds. 

“The whole mentality, the last five, six weeks of the season, is just building to our best version of ourselves,” said Grizzlies head coach Taylor Jenkins on the team getting their swagger back. “I think our guys have really embraced it day one in practice. I thought we had that mentality, thatswag, that trust. That’s a big word that we’ve been using recently. 

Jenkins added, “What we’ve had to do to play our best basketball home and away, I thought we did that in Philly, it just didn’t bounce our way the last couple of minutes, but we put ourselves in a position to win a game there.” 

“And then tonight, we came out with the same urgency, and I think we just clamped down on both sides. I thought the discipline… it starts with the mentality for sure when you go into games, but then I said our discipline from our game plan, execution defensively, has got to be on point, but then even offensively, knowing that they’re going to be a heavy shift team.”

“We scored 60 points in the paint, but we knocked down 15 threes – The ball movement, the energy, the trust on what we’ve got to do offensively was huge for us,” Jenkins concluded. 

“So, just really proud of the guys. Four days, but as I said, it’s just continued growth one day at a time. Keep trusting the process to what we’ve got to do one day at a time to get better and responding.”

Bench Play

The Grizzlies bench has been missing in action as of late. On Saturday night, the bench put up 48 points. 

Tyus Jones had been in a slump, but that changed against the Nuggets. Jones tallied 17 points and five assists off of 5 of 10 from the 3-point line tying a season-high with threes made. 

Jones on breaking his slump, “I mean, it’s always good to see the ball go through the basket. But yeah, you just try not to get too high or get too low. You try to stay even-keeled. The season is so long. Like you said, I’ve had hot stretches, I’ve had cold slumps, and I know it comes and goes, but it’s always good to kind of break out of that and see the ball go through the basket. I had a good convo with coach this morning, but just been trusting my work. It’s part of the season, it’s part of the grind.”

Luke Kennard had his best game since his trade to the Grizzlies. Kennard finished with 12 points while converting 4-of-5 from beyond the arc. 

And Kennard completed a beautiful play started off by Morant. Take a look here: 

Kennard comments after the win. 

Call 12 and Rookie Dunker 

Ja Morant led all scorers with 23 points, and added seven rebounds and four assists. 

Some say it was a statement win but Morant was cautious knowing there are more games to played and to him it was “just another win.”

Morant described his magnificent play in the third period: “I pretty much just went to chase the rebound. We were all kind of under the rim when the shot went up. It was a long rebound, and there were times when we had our struggles. We didn’t get that rebound right there, so I pretty much just gave it my all, went and got the rebound. I kind of tapped it. We both were kind of going for it and once I got control, I just did a couple of dribble moves to actually make sure I have control over the ball. He kind of slipped, and I just attacked the rack. Once I got by that first defender, I felt the other one behind me, and I pretty much just used me being in front to an advantage. Kind of just stopped and jumped back. He bumped me in the back and after that, it was just a basic left-hand layup, finishing the play. So yeah, just one of those plays. I kind of yelled out there and got lightheaded, so I probably won’t do that again.”

Take a look at this spectacular play: 

Xavier Tillman 

Tillman ended the game with 12 points on 6-6 shooting, seven rebounds and four assists while holding the front-runner for NBA MVP Nikola Jokic to 16 points 

Morant credited Tillman’s play since Steven Adams has been out due to injury. He said, “He’s been holding his own. Out there battling, giving it his all and playing very well on both of those guys who are two of the most dominant bigs in the game. A lot of credit goes to him for locking in, knowing what they want to get to and making everything tough for them.”

Tillman’s play earned him the walk-off interview. 

Up Next

The Grizzlies will host the new look Los Angeles Lakers on Tuesday, February 28th at 6:30 pm CT. 

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Grizzlies Fall Short Against 76ers

The All-Star break is over, and the stretch run is upon us. Memphis was up by 17 in the first half, but things deteriorated in the second half to the tune of a 110-105 Philadelphia win.  

Let’s get into it.  

Desmond Bane started out the game on fire and scored 19 points in the first quarter. Unfortunately, he only scored 6 points in the remainder of the game.  

Ja Morant struggled in the scoring department, with 9 of his 15 points coming from the free throw line.  

Brandon Clarke was in the starting lineup in the center position, but was horribly mismatched against Joel Embiid, the 76ers starting center.  

The Grizzlies have hit a stretch where they are not closing out quarters effectively, which leads to them not closing out games effectively and losing games after having a double-digit lead. There are two dozen games left in the regular season, and that is how long this team has to figure out how to get back to the baseline they have played at through most of the season.  

Hopefully, Steven Adams will be returning to the lineup soon and that might help slow the bleeding. Adams has been recovering from a right knee sprain for the past several weeks.  

By The Numbers: 

As a team, the Grizzlies shot 21.9% from beyond the arc, and 39.1% from the field overall.  

Desmond Bane scored a team-high 25 points, 8 rebounds, and 2 assists. He shot 4 of 5 from three-point range in the first quarter, and 0 for 7 during the rest.  

Jaren Jackson Jr finished the night with 18 points, 9 rebounds, and 4 blocks. 

Ja Morant closed out with 15 points, 3 rebounds, 5 assists, and 2 steals. 

Dillon Brooks scored 11 points, 5 rebounds, and 2 assists.  

David Roddy and John Konchar each put up 9 points from the bench.  

Who Got Next? 

The Grizzlies are returning to Memphis to face off Saturday against the current frontrunners in the west, the Denver Nuggets. Tip-off is at 7 PM CST. 

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Film Features Film/TV

Now Playing in Memphis: Murder Bears Everywhere

It’s the moment we’ve all been waiting for—the weekend when Cocaine Bear comes out to play! Based on the true story of a God-fearing Tennessee ursine led to drug-fueled damnation in Georgia by a forest cachet of yayo, this promises to be the most accurately named junt since Snakes On A Plane. Elizabeth Banks directs Keri Russell, O’Shea Jackson Jr., and one completely wrecked bear.

Murder bear week continues with Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey. To answer your first question, yes, this is a real movie. British schlockmiester Rhys Frake-Waterfield noticed that Winnie the Pooh passed into the public domain in 2022, and now he’s here to destroy and corrupt the only thing in your childhood that gave you comfort. Thanks a lot, dude.

In Bunker, a squad of soldiers is trapped underground with a malevolent presence in this atmospheric horror flick. Is it a bear? Probably not, but a guy can dream, can’t he?

Director M. Night Shyamalan returns with his latest psychological thriller, Knock at the Cabin. A young family on a mountain vacation is terrorized when a hulking figure appears at the door. Is it a bear? Kinda—it’s Dave Bautista, here to present the mother of all trolly problems. 

If you’ve had enough of bears, Saturday night is the February edition of the Time Warp Drive-In, where you can watch two towering masterpieces of Blaxploitation cinema. Shaft was a huge hit in 1971 that won Isaac Hayes an Academy Award. That meant that in 1972, Shaft’s Big Score could afford to blow up a helicopter. Witness the power of Shaft.

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Food & Drink News News Blog News Feature

Patio Porkers Brings Former Memphis In May Event to Beale Street

Patio Porkers is back, but on Beale Street.

It has been division for amateur barbecue teams for years, offering smaller sites and lower costs for teams during the Memphis In May (MIM) World Championship Barbecue Cooking Contest.

Patio Porkers was cut in 2021 when the contest temporarily moved to Liberty Park. The division came back, though, during last year’s contest. 

MIM made no announcement that the Patio Porkers division had been cut. But a Friday statement from the Downtown Memphis Commission (DMC) characterized the division as “formerly part” of the MIM barbecue contest.

This year’s inaugural Patio Porkers on Beale event will be organized by the DMC and Beale Street Management. The event will bring 30 teams to Handy Park on Saturday, May 20th for a single-day, ribs-only competition.

“We can’t wait to welcome 30 of the best backyard barbecue teams to world-famous Beale for the ultimate amateur title,” said DMC president Paul Young. “Bringing the Patio Porkers competition to Beale just feels right.”

The competition is sanctioned by the Kansas City Barbecue Society competition. The winning team will take home $1,000 in prize money, a trophy, and bragging rights. 

The contest will be free and open to the public. But — as any MIM barbecue vet will tell you — that doesn’t mean it’s free to eat. Teams usually cook for themselves, their friends, and judges and are not obligated to share any food with the public. 

However, the DMC noted that Beale Street has 10 restaurants that all serve barbecue. They include: 

Alfred’s on Beale

BB King’s Blues Club

Blues City Cafe

Jerry Lee Lewis Cafe & Honky Tonk

Jerry Lawler’s Hall of Fame Bar & Grill

King’s Palace Cafe

The Pig on Beale

Rum Boogie Cafe

Silky O’Sullivan’s 

Tin Roof

Applications for teams are now available with a deadline of April 3rd. Click here for more details.

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Memphis Critics Take Aim at New 3rd Grade Retention Law

Many Memphis youths are already struggling to overcome emotional and psychological trauma inflicted or exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic.

But the specter of being held back in third grade if they can’t pass the state’s reading test will pile onto that trauma, Memphis and Shelby County child and education advocates said during a town hall Wednesday.

“I don’t want my babies that I’m responsible for caught up in this,” said Ian Randolph, board treasurer for Circles of Success Learning Academy charter school. 

“They’re trying their best to meet our expectations as educators, and you put this kind of crap on top of them, after going through a pandemic … now you want to put more pressure on them to meet a state expectation?”

Randolph was among the roughly 50 people who gathered at First Congregational Church to discuss — and to lambaste — Tennessee’s strict third grade retention law, which kicks in this year. The law requires that third-grade students who don’t demonstrate reading proficiency on the TCAP assessment for English language arts participate in tutoring or summer learning programs, or risk being held back from the fourth grade. (Some students are automatically exempt.)

The law, passed in 2021 during a special legislative session that Gov. Bill Lee called to address pandemic learning loss, also included funding for tutoring and summer learning camps to help struggling third graders catch up.

But those aspects of the law became unworkable for many families, some attendees said, because of issues ranging from a shortage of tutors to confusion about how progress is measured on the tests the students take after the recovery camps. 

Barring changes in the law, thousands of Memphis students face the prospect of having to repeat third grade. According to data presented by Venita Doggett, director of advocacy for the Memphis Education Fund, 78% of third-graders in Memphis-Shelby County Schools could be held back this year, while 65% of third-graders could be retained statewide.

The figure would be closer to 80% for Black, Hispanic and Native American third-graders in MSCS, and 83% for low-income students.

The implications of those figures resonated with Natalie McKinney, executive director and co-founder of Whole Child Strategies Inc., a nonprofit that supports families and children in the Klondike and Smokey City neighborhoods in Memphis.

The retention law, she said, would have a disparate impact on children in those neighborhoods, where 1 in 3 residents are poor, and 70% of the schoolchildren are from low-income families. 

“They’ve all been impacted emotionally by the pandemic,” said McKinney, who moderated the town hall. The retention policy “doesn’t make any sense.”

Lee and other defenders of the law say that it’s needed to avoid pushing unprepared students ahead, and that holding students back who aren’t proficient in reading is part of the state’s post-pandemic recovery efforts.

“If you really care about a child’s future, the last thing you should do is push them past the third grade if they can’t read,” the governor once told Chalkbeat.

But even some of his political allies have expressed concerns about enforcing the law based on the result of a single test. 

Already, Doggett said, 19 proposals have been filed to amend the law — bills that range from nixing the retention requirement altogether to extending funding for summer camps and other aid beyond this year. 

Pending the outcome of those efforts, organizers of the town hall urged attendees to sign a letter they had drafted asking Lee to issue an executive order to waive the retention policy for third graders testing below proficiency this year.

“The current 3rd grade class of 2022 and 2023 were the students who were affected by the pandemic,” the letter reads. “Studies show that a tremendous amount of learning loss occurred due to these students being virtual in the previous grades. In addition, these studies showed (that) to recoup the loss during the pandemic would take years.

“The third grade retention law seems to hold these students and educators accountable for something that was new to this generation for which they had no control,” the letter said.

The letter also urges lawmakers to use more criteria than a single test to determine whether a student should be retained, and to focus on broader solutions, such as partnering with community agencies, to help students recover from pandemic learning loss.

Besides sending a letter to Lee, opponents of the retention policy said they planned to pressure their local public officials to push back on the law, as many school boards have. Some called for the MSCS school board, the Memphis City Council and the Shelby County Commission to issue a joint resolution supporting the waiver.

The two MSCS board members who attended the meeting in person, Amber Huett-Garcia and Michelle McKissack, said they intend to push for revisions to the law. 

“Let me be clear: This is not a good law. I do not support it,” said Huett-Garcia, who said she plans a trip to Nashville in early March to talk directly with lawmakers.

“The mood that I have gotten from legislators is that they know that they have not gotten this right,” she said, “but this is not the time to let up pressure.” 

Bureau Chief Tonyaa Weathersbee oversees Chalkbeat Tennessee’s education coverage. Contact her at tweathersbee@chalkbeat.org.

Chalkbeat is a nonprofit news site covering educational change in public schools.