He made it clear he doesn’t think school consolidation will help the children,
and it will definitely hurt current Valdosta teachers and staff,
so he says don’t do it.
“We were scared.
We were intimidated because we had heard about all these consultants coming down,
and all these studies being done.
So we just thought that we would just sit back and watch
and this thing would eventually go away like a bad dream.
But folks I want you to know it’s not going away like a bad dream.
It’s becoming a nightmare.
Now we stand before you with one purpose in mind:
do not sign any petitions.
… If it comes to a vote, we want you to vote no.”
Friends of Valdosta City Schools, Inc.
P.O. Box 5514
Valdosta, Georgia 31602
allen306@bellsouth.net
(229) 244-8268
Sam Allen, Chairman
Valdosta City Schools Superintendent Emeritus
PUBLIC SERVICE ANNOUNCEMENT
June 30, 2011
Press Release:
Friends of Valdosta City Schools, Inc. (FVCS) will be holding a Press
Conference on the steps of Valdosta City Hall (216 E. Central Ave) at
10:00 AM on Thursday, July 7, 2011 to formally announce its
opposition to the current effort by the “Community Unification for
Educational Excellence” (CUEE) group to Consolidate the Valdosta
City School System with Lowndes County School System. We are
inviting all citizens of both Valdosta and Lowndes County who support
the opposition of Unification/Consolidation of the school systems.
While I think FVCS is making one of CUEE’s mistakes in thinking
this is all about Valdosta, FVCS’s event is something I can get behind.
Maybe FVCS will even come out with what they are for.
It’s interesting what paying people to collect petition signatures can accomplish.
The CUEE press release of yesterday is
on their web pages.
Here’s an excerpt:
9,000 and Counting!
Petition Drive Hits Key Milestone In Effort to Give
Valdosta Residents Opportunity to Vote on Unification
Plan to Attend Saturday Event at McKey Park to Join the Movement, Sign
Petition
(Valdosta, GA) The petition drive campaign giving Valdosta residents
the chance to vote on school unificationreached a key milestone Friday
when it topped its goal of 9,000 signatures.
The 9,000 signatures was the target set by the Community Unification
for Educational Excellence (CUEE),which launched the petition drive May
12 after three years of planning. The minimum number of validsignatures
needed to place the issue on the November ballot is 25 percent of
registered voters in Valdosta, or7,375. The target figure of 9,000
represents a 22 percent increase over the minimum required and nearly
31 percent of all registered voters.
It’s too bad they haven’t dedicated all this organizing to something
that might actually help education around here, such as
prison reform or preventing bright flight by squelching sprawl.
I had
heard that some Board members were elected with intention to support
consolidation but that I hadn’t heard anything about that from any of
them when they were running.
They didn’t say much about it when they were running, either.
Back in 2009, the only one who got elected who was asked about this issue, Jeana Bealand, pretty
much dodged the question at AAUW’s
Lowndes County Political Forum on 15 September 2009.
This was the forum that was the day after the VBOE meeting that drew 400 people
because of Superintendent Cason’s decision about President Obama’s speech.
Very few of those 400 people showed up at the forum to ask questions of their
likely school board members.
Maybe more people should take an interest in who is going to represent them on their school board.
Jeana Beeland answers a question about school system consolidation
Lowndes County Political Forum, AAUW, 15 Sep 2009
Video by Gretchen Quarterman for LAKE, the Lowndes Area Knowledge Exchange.
Tonight I went to the VBOE meeting and delivered the offical NAACP letter
stating our branch’s opposition to consolidation. I asked Chairman Warren
Lee if he would discuss with VBOE attorney Gary Moser and let me know
whether they are “allowed” to take a position on this. The reason I
asked this is because one of my friends says that Dr. Cason told her
that “they are not allowed” to take a position on this. To my mind,
employees might not be able to take a position, but elected officials
representing voters ought to clearly state their position on an issue
as important as school consolidation.
Mr. John Robinson pointed out that school board problems and biomass
are not the only issues around here, and for example the south side
of town needs money so people there can become more productive citizens.
At the 21 April 2011 Valdosta City Council meeting,
He specifically recommended getting
Valdosta Small Emerging Business (VSEB) up and running.
Let us try to come together and find some method —John Robinson
Regular monthly meeting of the Valdosta City Council (VCC),
Valdosta, Lowndes County, Georgia, 21 April 2011,
Videos by George Boston Rhynes for LAKE, the Lowndes Area Knowledge Exchange.
In response to the person exclaiming about the situation in the sixties:
What many of our members recall vividly from that period of time is how
black teachers and black principals were fired or demoted, some even went
to work as custodians. Our members and their families all experienced
this to some degree. Right now, Valdosta City Schools probably has fewer
black administrators that at any time since integration. We have taken
complaints whereby black professionals were passed over for promotion
or demoted or denied a position which was given to white candidates
with less experience, fewer credentials, and even in one instance, an
incomplete employment application. These stories are profound and leave
lasting impressions which cannot be ignored. It is very impolite for
the majority to tell the minority how to feel about this. Integration,
as Dr. George has clearly explained, did not solve all problems.
Our members have valid reasons for feeling the way we do, we feel
that the rights of all children to achieve are also interwoven with
the rights of all education professionals to be treated with equality
and fairness. Since we are having to fight so hard for equality and
representation in Valdosta City Schools, where we have several Board
members who represent minority districts, and a black Chairman, it is
impossible for us to believe that becoming even more of a minority in a
consolidated system will be beneficial. The struggles have been lengthy,
expensive, and emotional, and they continue today.
Alex Rowell, Lowndes High School student, said he’s been
volunteering at S.L. Mason, and:
I’ve been told, “you work better with black students because you’re black”.
These kids are working with each other, playing with each other.
…
Especially in these lower students,
I don’t see a separation.
I want to know if CUEE…
When I saw your graph…
You have Lowndes predominately white,
Valdosta predominately black.
Is one of your goals to integrate that?
Is the goal to have a more integrated racial system,
or what exactly do you propose to do?
I think the graph was
this one
supplied by Dr. George.
The question remains.
We have complaints that some people couldn’t understand
what Dr. Mark George was saying in
the previous post of his remarks at Monday’s Lowndes County Democratic Party meeting,
so here’s another version from a different camera.
Feedback, please.
He said the Chamber of Commerce said schools were not its issue.
Dr. George pointed out that it was the Chamber and the
real estate industry that largely produced the current situation
by funelling people to the county schools.
He said the unification project started with a request from
the Industrial Authority, who said it didn’t look good when
potential industry saw there was a black school system and
a white school system.
(The timing of this is interesting, because it comes after
Brad Lofton was hired as VLCIA Executive Director,
and other people formerly associated with VLCIA say they
were never asked by any potential industry how many school
systems we have.)
Dr. George discussed many other interesting points, such as CUEE’s
terminology drift from consolidation to integration to unification.
Camera 2: Dr. Mark George about CUEE @ LCDP 2 May 2011 Part 1 of 2:
Debate between proponents of school system unification (CUEE) and opponents,
at Lowndes County Democratic Party (LCDP), Gretchen Quarterman chair,
Videos by George Rhynes, Jim Parker, John S. Quarterman, and Gretchen Quarterman
for LAKE, the Lowndes Area Knowledge Exchange, Valdosta, Lowndes County, Georgia, 2 May 2011.
In this second video from camera 2,
Dr. George noted
that the Valdosta school system is internally segregated.
He said both he and Rev. Rose asked to have somebody put
on the CUEE council, and that that didn’t happen.
There’s more; you can watch it for yourself.
Here’s
Part 2 of 2:
Camera 2: Dr. Mark George about CUEE @ LCDP 2 May 2011 Part 2 of 2:
Debate between proponents of school system unification (CUEE) and opponents,
at Lowndes County Democratic Party (LCDP), Gretchen Quarterman chair,
Videos by George Rhynes, Jim Parker, John S. Quarterman, and Gretchen Quarterman
for LAKE, the Lowndes Area Knowledge Exchange, Valdosta, Lowndes County, Georgia, 2 May 2011.