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Opinion

The Superintendent Search

After watching the coming and going of five Memphis school superintendents, I can’t say I know how to pick the next one, but I know a little about how NOT to do it.

The Unified School Board has a little over a month to come up with a name or a bunch of names that will be interviewed before the winner is chosen. The next superintendent will preside over the first year of the unified county school system after Memphis City Schools goes away July 1st and possibly the first year of the aftermath of separate suburban systems, if they start up in 2014.

Pretty hard lines, I would say.

Meanwhile, Dorsey Hopson and David Stephens are acting superintendent and deputy superintendent. Hopson is former legal counsel to Memphis City Schools, and Stephens was an administrator in the Shelby County Schools. He is also the son of O.Z. Stephens, the co-author of the Plan Z busing in the 1970s. The unified system could do a lot worse than retaining these two gentlemen for at least a couple of years, but the search goes on.

Don’t expect much of anything to come out of the series of community meetings now being held around the city and county to get citizen input. Search firms do this as part of their checklist and make a fuss over writing everything down. Last time, before Kriner Cash got the Memphis job, a handful of people showed up at most of them. People respond to specific candidates and controversies more than they do to “what qualities do you like?” surveys.

Don’t pay too much attention to candidates with big awards on their resumes. The cheating scandal in Atlanta’s public schools is the big story in education now.

Former superintendent Beverly Hall and 34 others were indicted last week on racketeering charges. Hall was the American Association of School Administrators’ superintendent of the year in 2009, and Arne Duncan, the secretary of education, hosted her at the White House. Former MCS superintendent Gerry House won the award in 1999, left the next year, and has not held a job in public education since then. Carol Johnson, MCS superintendent from 2003 to 2007, was named superintendent of the year by the National Alliance of Black School Educators in 2008.

Don’t expect candidates to brag about big increases in student test scores. Such claims are suspect, if not toxic, these days. The Atlanta indictments, coupled with the federal indictments in Memphis of several people involved in a teacher certification scam, indicate that some teachers will cheat to get a job or bonus.

Don’t expect the next superintendent to have a bonus clause in his or her contract. Hall earned more than $500,000 in bonus pay, because Atlanta students supposedly scored so highly on standardized tests. Cash’s contract paid him $290,479 this year and had a clause in it that allowed the school board to award him a performance bonus of up to $10,000 annually, but “I don’t think the board ever awarded Dr. Cash a bonus,” Hopson said.

Don’t be surprised if the next superintendent earns more than Cash, who was not the highest-paid school administrator in Tennessee by a long shot. According to public records, William Moseley, head of the private K-12 Ensworth School in Nashville, earned $700,133 in 2010-2011.

Don’t expect Hopson and Stephens to have smooth sailing if they are the default choice. The last insider to serve as MCS superintendent, Johnnie B. Watson, was so exasperated by board member Sara Lewis (now on the unified board) that he filed a harassment complaint against her. The Memphis Education Association and Shelby County Education Association will oppose any superintendent who favors more school closings and major revisions to the teacher-pay structure.

Don’t expect a long-term relationship. Superintendents are a little like college football coaches. The scrutiny is constant, the pressure is intense, and the odds of them leaving if they’re unpopular or being hired away if they’re successful are overwhelming. The average tenure of the last four Memphis and Shelby County superintendents was four years.

Finally, don’t be surprised if the finalists include at least one 30-something hard-charger from the “school reform” movement with a background in Teach For America. That fits the profile of Tennessee education commissioner Kevin Huffman and Achievement School District superintendent Chris Barbic. Such a candidate would win favor from the Gates Foundation and board members like Tomeka Hart (now working for TFA) and Martavius Jones. In a time of guaranteed upheaval, why go old school?

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Cover Feature News

Memphis Schools: A Year in Limbo?

After rendering his long-awaited and fateful judgment last week declaring unconstitutional 2012 legislation allowing the immediate start-up of new municipal school districts in Shelby County, U.S. district judge Hardy Mays is off on a vacation in the Caribbean, and in his absence, new suspense is building about the fate of Section 3 of Public Chapter 1 of the 2011 Tennessee General Assembly — aka Norris-Todd.

Mays has already bestowed his imprimatur on most of Norris-Todd, which established the framework for city/county school merger, but he has yet to rule on Section 3, which would enable the ultimate creation of the independent municipal districts.

Meanwhile, Shelby County’s school situation is in limbo, with only one apparent certainty — that, as of the school year beginning August 2013, there will be, for at least that year, a Unified School District in Shelby County comprising the former public schools of what had been Memphis City Schools and the former version of Shelby County Schools, which was limited to institutions outside the city limits of Memphis.

So far, all the parties involved in the ongoing controversy — which was triggered originally by the MCS board’s vote to surrender its charter in December 2010 — are biding their time, with no one certain as to what comes next.

In the course of a brief visit to Memphis last week, Governor Bill Haslam, who had signed all the relevant merger-related legislation to date, urged caution: “I want to be encouraging everybody: Let’s leave the courtroom behind, and let’s go sit down and have conversations that we need to prepare.” Not legislation. Not new legal briefs. Conversations.

Haslam’s lead was rapidly followed up by Jim Kyle, the Memphis Democrat who heads the seriously shrunken Democratic caucus in the state Senate and was narrowly reelected to that post by his colleagues last week.

In a press release Monday from his Senate office in Nashville, Kyle announced that he had asked Tennessee commissioner of education Kevin Huffman “to act as an independent, honest broker in the organizational restructure of Shelby County Schools” and claimed that he had support in that approach from his Republican opposite number, state senator Mark Norris (R-Collierville), the Senate’s majority leader and the principal author of both Norris-Todd and the follow-up legislation of 2012.

“We have seen what happens when we divide on ideology; it is unproductive. The political dynamics are what brought us to this point and will drive us back if we do not choose to act differently,” Kyle said in the press release, excerpting a portion of his letter to Huffman.

Both Norris himself and state representative Curry Todd (R-Collierville), his co-sponsor on the merger-related bills, were absent from a meeting of the Shelby County legislative delegation with local officials at the University of Memphis Monday, but Norris, while suggesting that a new round of legislation might be forthcoming in the legislative session of 2013, was so far keeping his own counsel about the nature of it.

Keith McDonald, mayor of Bartlett and for the last two years the most active spokesperson for the municipal-school concept, was at the U of M meeting and basically recapped for reporters his sentiments of last week in the wake of Mays’ ruling.

“We’re wounded, but we’re not dead,” McDonald had said then. He conceded that the ruling made municipal systems impossible for the 2013-14 school year but held out hope that Norris-Todd might still be found viable, permitting the suburbs to make a new start on municipal districts after August 2013.

“There are all kinds of creative new ideas for public education, in both the state and the nation,” McDonald said, apropos the idea of seeking alternatives to the concept of municipal school districts. “As I’ve said for two years, we’re in this for as long as it takes.”

And David Pickler, the former chairman of the Shelby County Schools board, a current member of the Unified School Board representing Germantown and Collierville, and a proponent of municipal schools, said of Mays’ ruling last week in language anticipating Haslam’s later comments, “This is certainly a delay, but not necessarily a defeat. It’s even an opportunity for all parties to the issue to engage with each other in a boardroom, not a courtroom, possibly to create a new vision that respects everybody’s rights and the principle of self-determination.” 

Satisfaction was meanwhile expressed by members of the Shelby County Commission majority, chief among the plaintiffs and the architects of the Unified School District. “It looks like we got what we asked for,” said commission chairman Mike Ritz, who predicted that the suburbs would be hamstrung in getting new legislation passed. Ritz’s colleague Steve Mulroy said simply, “We won.”

If there is to be a “new vision” of the sort mentioned by Pickler, it will build upon the existing scaffolding of Sections 1 and 2 of Norris-Todd. There is a fair amount of irony in that fact.

Norris-Todd was rushed into passage at the very start of the 2011 legislative session by its suburban sponsors, ostensibly as a means of slowing down and organizing what was then a pell-mell rush toward the merger of Memphis City Schools and Shelby County Schools.

That aim was accomplished by the establishment of a merger date, August 2013, and by the bill’s creation of a 21-member Transition Planning Commission, which met for a year and made a series of recommendations on the merger, which were duly presented to an ad hoc 23-member Unified School District board.

But while most of Norris-Todd passed muster with Judge Mays in a preliminary ruling on school litigation in August 2011, Section 3 of the bill, the legislation’s trump card (and, advocates of school merger contend, its true raison d’être) is still in jeopardy.

What Section 3 does is lift, for Shelby County only, a long-standing state ban on new school districts, and it was seized upon as a way out of merger by six Shelby County suburbs — Germantown, Collierville, Bartlett, Arlington, Lakeland, and Millington. The now defunct legislation of 2012, also by Norris and Todd, was meant to allow those municipalities to begin taking the first steps toward creating new districts so as to have them ready to go by the August 2013 merger date.

That add-on measure, Public Chapter 905, was in response to an opinion by state attorney general Robert Cooper, who had ruled that no such steps could be taken until the merger date itself. This meant that, for at least the school year 2013-14, the public schools of the former Shelby County Schools system would in fact co-exist under the same umbrella as those of Memphis City Schools, whose board had voted to surrender the MCS charter in December 2010 (an act later ratified by a Memphis City Council that was no doubt anxious to escape thereby a court-ordered $68 million annual “maintenance-of-effort” payment to MCS).

Both 905 and a less-sweeping companion measure by Norris-Todd, Public Chapter 970, served to get around Cooper’s ruling and to allow the six suburbs to hold referenda in August of this year for half-cent sales-tax increases and to elect school boards in November.

Those actions were duly taken but were nullified when Mays found the two 2012 acts unconstitutional on grounds that the measures, though enacted — with what Mays called “a wink and a nod” — as general legislation, had targeted Shelby County only.

Therefore, said the judge, they had improperly circumvented the requirements for private laws in Tennessee, which must either be submitted to a referendum of all affected voters or ratified by the locality’s chief legislative body — in this case, the Shelby County Commission, chief plaintiffs against the creation of municipal schools in complicated litigation which had begun in early 2011, ironically enough, with a suit by the former SCS to halt school merger.

The conundrum facing Norris and other suburban allies in the General Assembly going forward is that there is serious resistance in the General Assembly to any legislation that would open up the Pandora’s box of new special school districts beyond Shelby County. It was that fact that caused the 2012 legislation to be written in such a way as to doom its prospects with Mays, and it is that fact which renders Section 3 of Norris-Todd vulnerable as well.

In the language of Mays’ ruling last week: “Although general in form, Public Chapter 905 is local in effect. Because it does not include a provision for local approval, Chapter 905 is VOID under Article 11, Section 9 of the Tennessee Constitution. All actions taken under the authority of Chapter 905 are VOID. The Municipalities are enjoined from proceeding under Chapter 905 to establish municipal school districts.

“The Third-Party Plaintiffs are invited to submit additional arguments, both factual and legal, addressing only the constitutionality of Chapter 970 and Section 3 of Chapter 1 under Article 11, Sections 8 and 9 of the Tennessee Constitution. Those arguments should be submitted not later than December 11, 2012, and should not include further references to legislative history. The Third-Party Defendants may respond no later than December 27, 2012.”

So it is that, two years to the month since the MCS board surrendered its charter, the plaintiffs in the ongoing suit — the Shelby County Commission, the Memphis City Council, and the city of Memphis — will make their last pitch. The municipalities will make theirs some two weeks later, on the virtual eve of a new year.

And in the month that follows, assuming that Mays provides a timely judgment, Norris, Todd, and other legislative allies of the suburbs will plan their next moves. If Mays allows Section 3 to stand, there will doubtless be legislation addressing the manner in which existing school buildings can be made over to the suburban districts, and establishing the cost of such a transaction, if any.

If Mays says no to Section 3 of Norris-Todd, however, the game is over. The plaintiffs will have won, and there will be one common educational district for the public schools of Shelby County (absent those subsumed in the new state-ordained and operated Achievement School District for failing institutions). At that point, the suburbs will have to accept merger at long last or launch some other strategy, perhaps availing themselves of the state’s aggressive new policy in encouraging charter schools.

For the time being, though, everything remains in limbo. — Jackson Baker

The Confusion Over Closing Schools

Elvis was here 60 years ago, but these days Humes Middle School is starved for students. In fact, it has the lowest occupancy of any public school in Memphis — 17 percent — which put it on the Unified School Board’s agenda last week.

The board is considering closing six schools, although the Transition Planning Commission recommended closing 21 schools, which is less than half of the schools with enrollment below 65 percent of capacity. There are 212 schools in the Memphis City Schools system and 52 schools in the Shelby County system, plus 30 charter schools for a total enrollment of about 150,000 students. The Unified School Board and the administrative staff are trying to “right size” the system under the watchful eye of parents and teachers’ union leaders who want to minimize closings.

Humes and Gordon Elementary School, another low-enrollment school in North Memphis, illustrate the hard decisions and convoluted “school reform” picture that board members are facing.

Humes Middle School is less than a mile from the heart of downtown. It borders the Uptown neighborhood of new, brightly painted houses and duplexes that replaced a crime-ridden housing project. Three nonprofit agencies — Porter-Leath, the Salvation Army, and Bridges — are heavily invested in the neighborhood. The school facility itself is in good shape, due to the massive spending on Memphis schools in the past 20 years driven by the city-county school funding formula. When the county system built a school in the fast-growing suburbs, more than twice as much money had to be spent in the city of Memphis, even though it was losing population except for annexation. This means that, whatever deficiencies they might have, low-enrollment schools are generally not blighted buildings.

“Humes would be a huge loss,” said MCS superintendent Kriner Cash at last week’s board meeting.

The plan is to “repurpose” Humes as a music and performing arts school and move its students to the Gordon Elementary School building about a mile away. Gordon Elementary School is “co-located” with a charter school in the same building. And if this is not complicated enough, Gordon is going to become one of the state-run schools in the Achievement School District (ASD) for failing schools. The definition of a “failing” school depends on which rankings, grades, and test scores are used. In the eyes of various board members, Gordon is either failing, improving, or in good standing.

The fog of jargon and data makes it hard to tell if schools are actually being closed or just being renamed while students are moved around.

The Transition Planning Commission says closing 21 schools would save about $20 million, but Cash contends the savings would only be $9.6 million. And if there are only six closings, the savings, Cash said, would be $4 million.

Gordon Elementary was built in 1939 in a North Memphis neighborhood called Smokey City. Cash said the Achievement School District had its sights set on taking over Humes because of its historical significance as Elvis Presley’s alma mater and the school’s abysmally low utilization rate. But Cash negotiated for Memphis City Schools to “close” the school and reopen it as Memphis Academy of Musical Arts & Sciences. The resulting tradeoff required turning over the entirety of Gordon Elementary and the Gordon Academy of Arts and Sciences, run by Gestalt charter schools, to the ASD. Gordon Elementary currently covers pre-K through fifth grade, while Gordon Academy of Arts and Sciences handles sixth grade.

When and if Humes Middle School closes, its seventh- and eighth-graders will be sent to Gestalt’s Gordon Academy of Arts and Sciences, which will expand to accommodate sixth through eighth grade, and eventually, Cash hopes, to pre-K through eighth grade. Gordon Elementary students will be sent to nearby Carnes and Caldwell-Guthrie elementary schools, and the Memphis City Schools-run Gordon Elementary will be closed.

This idea did not please a group of Gordon Elementary supporters, including fifth-grader Lance Armstrong, who pleaded with the board members to spare his school.

“There’s an old saying, ‘If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it,'” said Armstrong. “We are the Gordon Rockets. Let us soar and we will make you proud.”

Keith Williams, president of the Memphis Education Association, said the school is vital to the community.

“It is a community of declining population, a community racked with poverty, but Gordon is a beacon of light in that community,” he said.

School board member Stephanie Gatewood moved that each school’s closure be voted on individually instead of as a package. The board agreed to move forward with the closure process for each of the six schools after a series of community meetings, culminating in a final vote or votes in March.

Board chairman Billy Orgel concluded the meeting with a warning about the inadequacy of the $5 million the unified system is projected to save if six schools are closed.

“It’s not assured that we’re going to close these schools,” he said. “Our decision won’t come until March after thorough investigation. But if you take the $5 million and you add it back to the $57 million [gap between expenditures and revenue], we’re going to be short. There’s no money out there for public education. It’s not political. It’s not pandering. It’s reality. There’s no money.” — Hannah Sayle

Odd Couples on Unified School Board Get Along

A couple of years ago, it might have seemed like the Dinner Party from Hell. Gather the members of the Memphis and Shelby County school boards, throw in some fresh faces, bust up the alliances, and put them in a room together for hours at a time for a year or so.

At the center of the table sit superintendents Kriner Cash and John Aitken, total strangers four years ago. Nearby, county schools champion David Pickler sits next to MCS charter surrender leader Martavius Jones. As much as anyone, these two set the tone for frank but civil discussions in a series of debates and joint public appearances in 2010-2011.

The unified school system may or may not work, but the Unified School Board — by design and circumstance — has the most interesting seating chart in town. It may not lead to a world-class unified school system, but it has probably done as much consciousness raising as any public undertaking in recent history.

Other seatmates include Memphis firebrand Dr. Kenneth Whalum Jr. and Germantown schools lion Ernest Chism; Dr. Snowden Carruthers of the old county board and Tomeka Hart, co-author of the MCS charter surrender; and David Reaves, another suburbanite and one of the board’s youngest members, and, a few seats away, Sara Lewis of Smokey City in North Memphis, one of the board’s senior members. At various times during Thursday night’s board meeting, they could be seen talking amiably and smiling and laughing together.

Not to attach too much significance to this or understate differences, but things could be worse. School board is the lowest-paying part-time public job and probably the most demanding. Five-hour meetings are the norm. Members must have stamina as well as convictions. When the topic is closing schools, as it was Thursday, this is not a job for the faint of heart.

It is also old-school ­­— the polar opposite of the internet chat room or newspaper comment section where anonymity is the rule. Board members speak, opine, disagree, and vote in public, side by side, for all to see and hear, on issues that change people’s lives.

The merger is unique in size and scale and may not last more than a year or two. Nashville, with the blessing of Mayor Karl Dean and education commissioner Kevin Huffman, is pushing for charter school expansion to the middle class over the opposition of the local school board. The state-run Achievement School District for failing schools is slated to grow in Memphis. The Republican-dominated state legislature is sympathetic to charters as are private donors such as the Gates Foundation. Vouchers have support. Most important, alternative schools have support from teachers and parents, who are the ultimate deciders.

After U.S. district judge Hardy Mays made his ruling last week nullifying suburban school board elections, the board gathered for the second time in 48 hours. It promised to be another long evening. Near the end of the discussion of school closings in North and South Memphis, a somewhat exasperated Chism, former principal at Germantown High School, protested that he was elected to represent the people of Shelby County.

The spectators gave him a small ovation. Chism voted against the closings, as did Whalum on most of the votes. — John Branston

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Opinion

Odd Couples on Unified School Board Get Along

Ernest Chism (left) and Kenneth Whalum Jr.

A couple of years ago it might have seemed like the Dinner Party from Hell. Gather the members of the Memphis and Shelby County school boards, throw in some fresh faces, bust up the alliances, and put them in a room together for hours at a time for a year or so.

At the center of table sit superintendents Kriner Cash and John Aitken, total strangers four years ago. Nearby, county schools champion David Pickler sits next to MCS charter surrender leader Martavius Jones. As much as anyone, these two set the tone for frank but civil discussions in a series of debates and joint public appearances in 2010-2011.

The unified school system may or may not work, but the unified school board — by design and circumstance — has the most interesting seating chart in town. It may not lead to a world-class unified school system, but it has probably done as much consciousness raising as any public undertaking in recent history.

Other seatmates include Memphis firebrand Dr. Kenneth Whalum Jr. and Germantown schools lion Ernest Chism; Dr. Snowden Carruthers of the old county board and Tomeka Hart, coauthor of the MCS charter surrender; and David Reaves, another suburbanite and one of the board’s youngest members, and, a few seats away, Sara Lewis of Smokey City in North Memphis, one of the board’s senior members. At various times during Thursday night’s board meeting, they could be seen talking amiably and smiling and laughing together.

Not to attach too much significance to this or understate differences, but things could be worse. School board is the lowest-paying part-time public job, and probably the most demanding. Five-hour meetings are the norm. Members must have stamina as well as convictions. When the topic is closing schools, as it was Thursday, this is not a job for the faint of heart.

It is also old-school: the polar opposite of the Internet chat room or newspaper comment section. Anonymous online commenters of unknown expertise can post insults and opinions without ever having to face each other or the people they slam. Board members speak, opine, disagree, and vote in public, side by side, for all to see and hear, on issues that change people’s lives.

Humes Middle School

Humes Middle School and Gordon Elementary School, two schools near north downtown that are on the chopping block or “repositioning” menu, are tough calls because they have customers, neighborhood ties, and attractive buildings that are not at all blighted.

Near the end of Thursday night’s meeting on school closings in north and south Memphis, a somewhat exasperated Chism, former principal at Germantown High School, protested that he was elected to represent the people of Shelby County.

The spectators gave him a small ovation. Chism voted against the closings, as did Whalum on most of the votes.

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Opinion

School Board Endorses Sales Tax Hike, National Search for Superintendent

Kriner Cash

  • Kriner Cash

The Unified Shelby County School Board has trouble voting on matters within its control, but did agree on Tuesday to tell citizens to vote for the referendum calling for a half-cent increase in the sales tax.

The vote was 14 to 6, with one abstention. It came near the end of a five-hour meeting during which the board also voted 15-6 to conduct a national search for a superintendent.

The majority of board members felt that the sales tax increase, while regressive, would raise $62 million, of which $31 million would go to schools.

“This benefits all children regardless of where they live,” said Martavius Jones.

The superintendent search vote came after an amendment changing the search from national to local (effectively handing the job to John Aitken, superintendent of the current Shelby County school system) failed.

“I’m sitting here wondering how anyone in their right mind would want to come to work for us 23 board members,” said David Reaves. He noted that the board took 90 minutes to approve a resolution on merger strategy and timeline after questioning whether it gave the administration too much power.

The timeline calls for a key meeting on November 15th about Transition Planning Commission recommendations. Additional meetings will be held in November, and members predicted they will last several hours and possibly draw thousands of spectators.

“This is a whole lot of work,” said MCS Superintendent Kriner Cash. “There’s never been a merger like this in the history of anything.”

Cash also said, “We are going to have to get down and dirty with this, and that dirt is coming real soon.”

The basic problem is that the board is divided between urban and suburban interests, the suburban representatives don’t trust the Shelby County Commission, several board members don’t trust the administration, and several more members from both camps don’t trust the Transition Planning Commission and the outside interests working behind the scene through foundations, nonprofits, the state Department of Education, and the group Stand For Children.

In a sign of divisions and votes to come, the auditorium was filled with members of AFSCME, the Memphis Education Association, and supporters of the CLUE program in MCS for “gifted” children. They carried signs saying “Keep CLUE,” “No Lottery For Optional Schools,” and “Stop Rich Folks making $ from public education and creating low-wage workers.” Among the TPC recommendations is a lottery for some spaces in optional schools. Slots now go on a first-come, first-served basis. CLUE, heavily supported by parents from Grahamwood Elementary School and a few of their children who also spoke, is often under the gun at budget time. The “rich folks” reference was apparently to operators of charter schools.

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Cash and Herenton Bury the Hatchet

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Eight times they met for breakfast in a restaurant in the Westin Hotel downtown, Kriner Cash the superintendent with an uncertain future in a unified school system and Willie Herenton the former superintendent who wanted to hold the job again before Cash got it instead.

The meetings began in February and continued for several weeks. Seven months after they buried the hatchet, Cash and Herenton held a joint press conference Wednesday to announce the former mayor’s participation in a new charter school for juvenile offenders.

It isn’t clear exactly who reached out to whom and how. Cash recalled that he sought out Herenton to fill a niche in the school system well suited to his experience and personal biography as a home-grown Memphian raised by a single mother. Herenton said he reached out to Cash as well as Shelby County Schools Superintendent John Aitken and others to help him get back in the schools game. Whatever, the two men met and apparently the talk was unfiltered.

“Straight talk, real straight talk,” said Herenton, adding that if the meetings had been taped “you would have heard some dynamic interaction.”

“We would tease each other,” said Cash. “I asked him ‘why do you want to take our money?’ ” — a reference to the state funding that follows students who go to charter schools. They ate pancakes, and all of the meetings were one-on-one.

At the news conference, Herenton said the final form of the new school isn’t clear yet but “my personal hand, my professional hand, will be all over this program.”

The announcement and photo op came a day after Cash gave what seemed to be a farewell speech at Memphis Botanic Gardens to 134 Memphis teachers honored by their peers as the best at their individual schools. He said his role now is to ease the transition to the unified school system and the 14 new charter schools that have been approved. He is undergoing a personal transition as well as a widower looking for another job. He expects to be gone by the end of the year and is a finalist for a superintendent job in Florida.

Herenton, on the other hand, has been on the outside looking in since leaving the mayor’s office. His attempt to be named superintendent failed when the school board instead opted to do a national search and ultimately selected Cash, of whom Herenton has occasionally been openly critical. Herenton’s image was tarnished again when he was trounced by Steve Cohen in his bid for Congress. After that he turned his attention to what he has said many times was his first love, education.

I met with Herenton at the Flyer’s office (a change, to be sure) in January when his charter school application was being slow walked in Nashville. He wasn’t ready to go public with his frustration, but he was considering other means of getting a piece of the charter deal if he didn’t make any progress soon. Within weeks, he and Cash started meeting.

And a year from now, Willie Herenton could be a player again in Memphis education while Kriner Cash is somewhere else.

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Opinion

The Next Superintendent

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Prediction: Those who think a national search for a superintendent for the unified Shelby County school system will find a superstar, rock star, wow candidate, knock-your-socks-off candidate, or an oh-my-God candidate are going to be disappointed.

Let’s look at the record. Charlotte-Mecklenburg, a system with 140,000 students, just did a national search. One of the three finalists was a gentleman you may have heard of, one Kriner Cash. The winner was Heath Morrison, a white guy from Reno, Nevada. All those who think Mr. Morrison could have gotten the job in “unified” Memphis and Shelby County raise your hands.

The former superintendent in Charlotte was described by a local newspaper reporter as being something of a “rock star” when he took the job, but when Peter Gorman came to Memphis last year, he sounded like anything but a rock star. In fact, he cautioned against setting such unrealistic expectations, and told the Transition Planning Commission that one task in particular — closing schools — is impossible to do well.

The current superintendent in Nashville Davidson County, a pretty happening and prosperous place compared to Memphis and Shelby County, is Jesse Register, the former superintendent in Chattanooga and Hamilton County.

The last three national searches by MCS netted Gerry House, Carol Johnson, and Cash.

Finally, Cash got the Memphis job a few years ago over one Nick Gledich, a white guy who, like Cash, was also from Florida. Gledich is now the superintendent in Colorado Springs. Someone is definitely watching over this guy.

I don’t know any more about the next superintendent than anyone else, but I think John Aitken should get serious consideration so long as we’re still giving a unified system the old college try. If the burbs bolt, all bets are off. Bottom line: I don’t see how a superintendent search can even begin until after the August 2 votes are counted. But it’s not a bad idea to go ahead with the scheduled school board meeting next Monday and bring in Cash and Aitken to clarify their intentions.

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Opinion

Summer Special on Special School Districts

A dispute among the parties

  • A dispute among the parties

Must Improvise.

Good advice for anyone involved with or following the school systems merger story. Going into the home stretch, here’s what I think.

Kriner Cash. Usually there is a hard way and a less hard way. Am I the only one who thinks he is making this really hard? He had a contract that ended this summer. In 2011, after the charter surrender (which he opposed), Cash got an extension from a lame-duck school board that keeps him around until August of 2013 when MCS ceases to exist. But only if he chooses to stay. Which he seems disinclined to do considering that he applied for a superintendent job in North Carolina and, for all we know, some other places. His right-hand man, Irving Hamer, shot himself in the, uh, foot and had to leave. That falls mainly on Hamer but also partly on Cash. Cash does not pander to the media, which is his right, but his communications policies and his aloofness won him few friends, at a time when MCS needs all the friends it can get. Apathy is the enemy when your budget is bigger than the city’s but only directly serves part of the population. His report card in a Yacoubian Research survey of MCS folks was not good. He played hardball with the Memphis City Council and Mayor Wharton during budget hearings, threatening to delay the start of the school year and getting national attention for it. In a grit and grind town, he has the trappings of celebrity. He is being credited with Gates Foundation money, but that is a bit disingenuous. I think Mr. and Mrs. Gates and some of their Memphis friends had more to do with that. Finally, why do superintendent contracts have to be as full of buyout clauses and loopholes as star coaches’ contracts? Why is it so yesterday to fulfill a contract without complaint, no more no less? There is nothing stopping Cash from sending out a press release or calling a meeting to state his intentions about Memphis. If his views have changed or are evolving, so what? Who would not understand? Just tell us what you want. Or the Unified School Board calls a meeting June 11th and it comes out then.

Martavius Jones. Always thoughtful, always available, always on the job. Those of us who blew our horns for MCS charter surrender and unity with the Shelby County system have an obligation to play out the hand, bad as it looks. We knew it was risky. There’s no going back in the face of suburban sentiment to have their own school systems. Make the positive case for a unified, inclusive system and make compromises if necessary to see that it has a chance. If you invite white suburbanites to your party, don’t be surprised when they act like white suburbanites.

Rev. LaSimba Gray and the black preachers. Several years ago, before this current fuss began, I was at a Shelby County school board meeting when the board was all white. Mr. Gray was there to discuss the black population in southeast Shelby County and its lack of representation on the school board. He left the meeting in a huff, muttering about “an all-white board.” Man’s got a point, I thought. But if you are doing a television interview about John Aitken, give him the courtesy of pronouncing his name right. (No s in it.)

Willie Herenton. Watching and waiting and biding his time. He will be heard from again. Twenty years ago, he saw the coming dissolution of Memphis schools as we know them, and he also saw and stated publicly the importance of keeping white people in the city.

John Aitken. The opposite of Cash in some respects as far as openness. Attends all the meetings, gets there on time, no bodyguards or driver, speaks to anyone and everyone. Sometimes it makes sense to hire the white person, and sometimes it makes sense to hire the black person. If the goal is a system with some sort of unity, Aitken would be a good hire, assuming he wants the job and can assure board members that he is his own man, not David Pickler’s go-to guy. I don’t think this job needs – or would attract – a super-superintendent if a search were to be undertaken. Too much money and pull from education think tanks and consulting. MCS has had three outsiders – Kriner Cash, Carol Johnson, and Gerry House – as superintendents in the last 15 years. Good time to give an insider a shot. I like the idea of taking up Aitken’s contract along with Cash’s contract. The old county school board gave Aitken a two-year extension in 2011; otherwise his contract would have expired in 2013. Like the city school board, the county board was jockeying for position. If Aitken doesn’t get the job, he gets paid through 2015. Question: would he want the job if the suburbs and their schools, including Houston High School where he was once principal, broke away? No harm in asking.

U.S. District Judge Samuel H. Mays. In his ruling on September 28, 2011, eight months he wrote, “The Court will appoint a special master to assist in implementing the Consent Decree and to resolve disputes among the parties.” I don’t really know what a special master does or if one would do any good, but why bring it up if you’re not going to do it?

Charter schools. The basic impulse of proponents of charter schools and suburban school systems is similar. Both want independence from the mother ship, and both want to poach some of the students, funding, and teaching talent working for same. If charter surrender had not broken up MCS, charter schools would have done it eventually.

Teacher options and mobility. There is soon to be a bull market for good teachers, especially in math and science, and for principals. For years some of them have gone from MCS to private schools and DeSoto County to pick up a second pension and leave some of their ulcers behind. Now they can go to charter schools, especially if they are young Teach For America alums. In 2013, imagine the opportunities if Bartlett, Germantown, Collierville, Lakeland, Arlington, and Millington and the Achievement School District are all gearing up new systems and looking for a few good men and women to build around. No matter how many ‘burbs vote for muni’s, it’s hard for me to see anything but competition for students, funding, and teachers/principals where the rich get richer and the losers get left behind. Sharing? I don’t think so. At some point this gets to be every system for itself.

Fred Smith on liberal arts degrees. The chief executive of our biggest employer is in Fortune magazine this week talking about lots of things, including college education and, by extension, high school and community colleges. “I personally think that the federal government — and you’re talking to a liberal arts major here — should restrict its funding of higher-education grants and loans to science, math, and engineering because that’s where most of the value added comes,” he says. Chaucer and “The Canterbury Tales” or mechanical engineering? The choice is yours, college students. I’m pretty sure Smith has no plans to become a superintendent or a college president, but when a liberal arts graduate (Yale) disses liberal arts and praises a community college in West Memphis, it might be a good idea to pay attention.

Categories
Opinion

The Benefits of a Big School System

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You work with what you have, and what the transition team and the citizens of Shelby County are going to have in 2013 is a big consolidated public school system — probably one of the ten biggest in the country for the first year or two.

The transition team has held its first of many meetings. There are so many big and small decisions to be made in the next two years by the transition team and the new school board, but bigness is a given. So what are the benefits? Here are a few that come to mind.

Marching bands. As Flyer editor Bruce VanWyngarden wrote this week, there is a lot of pride, excitement, talent and diversity in a high school band. Charter schools, which are proliferating, can’t offer this.

Sports teams, gyms, and playing fields. One more reason why it is so important to try to persuade the suburbs that it is in their best interest to stay with the county system and not form their own districts. John Aitken and David Pickler are going to be key spokesmen.

Superior experienced teachers. The best Memphis and Shelby County schools are holding their own with private schools if the number of National Merit Scholars and the dollar amount of scholarship offers is any indication. In five years, the new Shelby County system could be competing with more than 50 charter schools, DeSoto County schools, private schools, and new suburban school systems. Good teachers, already a hot commodity, are only going to get hotter. The future Shelby County system must aggressively recruit and retain talent, and that will mean better pay, benefits, and fighting lies with facts and fire with fire when it comes to that.

Special programs. MCS spends nearly $11,000 per pupil because it serves so many students with special needs. And MCS, under Kriner Cash, has attracted hundreds of millions of dollars worth of foundation and philanthropic support. Can you “buy” college-bound students with programs such as the International Baccalaureate Program? We’ll find out.

Structure. Starting a school, much less a school system, is not easy, as Memphians learned in the busing years in the 1970s and as they are learning today with charter schools. Money, buildings, maintenance, transportation, and leadership can all go haywire. Why take a chance on your child’s education? Better to go with the established professional. At least that’s the argument.

Tax money. By no means should the new county system let it leak away to breakaway systems. For the middle class families, if you’re paying for Shelby County public schools anyway, you might as well use them. Why double-tax yourself?

Distinguished alumni. Thousands of them. If it worked for them, it can work for you.

Community spirit. New and different. Be a part of history. Move forward together. Pride in place. Idealism won’t convince everyone by any means — not even everyone on the transition team — but this has to be the pitch. Don’t underestimate the talent on the transition team or the willingness of people to give the big new system a shot for a variety of reasons.

Above all, compete, compete, compete. Everyone else is.

Categories
Opinion

Herenton Portrait Unveiled as New Schools Era Begins

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Willie Herenton was back in the Hall of Mayors Thursday for the first time in more than two years.

Herenton, joined by his 90-year-old mother and hundreds of friends and past and present city employees, was there for the unveiling of his portrait. He served as mayor for 17 years, longer than anyone in Memphis history. Mayor A C Wharton introduced him with his usual graciousness. Herenton, who showed emotion and his famous feistiness, spoke for about 35 minutes, recalling his youth in segregated Memphis and his razor-thin election in 1991.

“History will be kind to me,” he said, “because it will reveal the truth.”

Herenton’s portrait hangs next to those of his predecessors Dick Hackett, Wyeth Chandler, and Henry Loeb, among others. His is the only black face in the group. It was painted by artist Larry Walker and is inside an ebony frame, at the former mayor’s request.

Samuel H. Mays

  • Samuel H. Mays

By coincidence, or perhaps not, the ceremony came during a momentous 24-hour period. Late Wednesday, federal judge Samuel Hardy Mays adopted the consent decree merging the city and county school systems, writing that “it prevents years of litigation and establishes the basis for cooperative solutions based on good public policy rather than legal solutions imposed by the court.” On Thursday, the transition team for the school systems merger held its first meeting and the seven-member Shelby County Board of Education held its last meeting. Trite as it sounds, it really was the end of one era and the dawn of a new one.

Herenton will play a minor part in the brave new world of public education if his application for a charter school is accepted, and how could it not be? He is a child of Memphis, a Booker T. Washington High School graduate, and former teacher, administrator, and school superintendent. The proliferation of charter schools, possibly including one led by Herenton, strongly suggests that enrollment in the combined city and county system will decline and that there will be even more school choices than there are now. Suburban municipalities could also start their own systems after September 2013.