Published on Black Agenda Report (http://www.blackagendareport.com)
Why Was Atlanta's Beverly Hall Indicted For Racketeering While Michelle Rhee Won't Be?
hall_vs_rhee.jpg [1]
By BAR managing editor Bruce A. Dixon
Atlanta's
black former school superintendent and 34 other black teachers and
administrators have been indicted for “racketeering” in a cheating
scandal. Why aren't others like former DC Schools chancellor Michelle
Rhee and her team indicted? Should we be rallying the racial wagons
around Dr. Hall and the other 34? No way.
Why Was Atlanta's Beverly Hall Indicted For Racketeering While Michelle Rhee Won't Be?
By BAR managing editor Bruce A. Dixon
Last
night former Atlanta superintendent of schools Beverly Hall, along with
35 teachers, principals and others, were indicted for racketeering. The
core “criminal” activity alleged is that teachers, principals and test
administrators, either under Hall's explicit direction or thanks to a
“climate” that endorsed such behavior altered the results of hundreds,
or thouands of standardized tests given to Atlanta's public school
children.
In
the political climate of Georgia, where black and white elites have
been campaigning to demonize teachers, discredit the very notion of
public education, and ultimately privatize it to get their hands on its
multibillion dollar assets and stream of tax revenue, Fulton County's
black district attorney has been able to convene a grand jury and morph
cheating on tests into criminal racketeering indictments. Why is this
happening?
Since
the advent of No Child Left Behind in the early 1990s, schools
districts have been forced by federal law to take up large portions of
the instructional year giving standardized tests, and publishing ranked
lists of the schools by test scores, with the lowest ranked schools
branded as “failing.” The remediation for so-called “failing schools” is
chiefly teacher firings, more tests, tying teacher pay and jobs to test
scores, more tests, firing principals and administrators, budget cuts
and still more tests, and finally, closing the school. Closed schools
are generally replaced with privately owned charter schools, often with
free or nearly free leases in the same buildings as the former public
school which are largely exempt from many of the requirements of public
schools like hiring qualified teachers, paying them a living wage, and
accepting all the local students who apply.
Since
scores on standardized tests, of course, track to income levels, and in
the US, where residential segregation along racial and economic lines
is the rule, majority black and Latino schools consistently get the
lowest scores, are most often labeled as “failing” and the most
frequently closed and replaced by favored charter operations. In this
climate of fear cheating has become a national epidemic [2], with reports of industrial scale test manipulation in Los Angeles, Houston, Washington DC and elsewhere.
Dr.
Hall pretty much implemented every misguided, corporate-inspired
“reform” that the business and privatization-oriented consultants
brought to her --- closing public schools in favor of charters,
excessive testing, even purchasing the tests from firms with connections
to the consultants who recommended them. Hall even helped Atlanta mayor
Shirley Franklin divert over a hundred million dollars a year in tax
revenues which should have gone to Atlanta's public schools into a real
estate and gentrification boondoggle called the BeltLine. Hall was in
every respect a loyal asset to the forces who have been demonizing
teachers and dismantling public education.
At
some point, the Chamber of Commerce, Invest Atlanta and other local
elite representatives realized that while Dr. Hall was perfectly willing
to give away the store in return for her six figure salary and perks,
something as radical as the utter privatization of public education
needs a crisis --- and crises need villains, with mug shots and orange
jump suits, preferably with waist and ankle chains. So after getting as
much as they could from Dr. Hall, they cheerfully doused her with
gasoline and set her on fire. The grand jury's lurid accusations,
dribbled out to the eager corporate-owned media over the last two years
have created a pervasive atmosphere of crisis, in which the Chamber and
its allies can get far more than any superintendent could have given
them.
Michelle
Rhee, the former chancellor of DC's public schools enjoyed a reign of
terror over a couple years in which she fired hundreds of teachers, and a
number of principals, and handed over public school properties to her
favorite charter schools, and ceaselessly berated parents and educators.
There are widespread allegations that she too fostered a “climate of
fear” under which teachers and administrators knew that if scores on
expensive, irrelevant tests did not rise, their schools would be closed.
But DC is not Georgia, and Michelle Rhee remains the darling of the
White House, corporate media and even cruise missile liberals like Bill
Maher and Jon Stewart. Rhee has made herself into the permanent
propagandist of the privatizers, from her stint at Teach For America
(her former boss at TFA succeeded her as DC schools chancellor) to her
one-person organization, Students First.
Georgia's
elite has long been uncomfortable with the inclusion of blacks in its
own ranks. The current Republican governor had to personally intercede
with formal and informal bodies to get Atlanta's black mayor a seat at
the table, for instance, in discussions over regional transit, even
though nobody could be a more loyal servant of the one percent than
Kasim Reed. Atlanta's black elite may be invited to some of the
meetings, and share some of the spoils, but they don't own local
corporate media outlets, where the constant association of black faces
in high places with embezzlement, scandal and fraud is a daily news
staple.
Would
Beverly Hall be under indictment if she was white? Maybe not, but this
is NOT an occasion to rally the racial wagons around her and the 34
indicted teachers and administrators, not a white face among them. Dr.
Hall was no friend of public education and no champion of Atlanta's
public school children or teachers. If Hall had real integrity she would
have spoken out years ago, and resisted the imposition of unfair
“standards” and the reliance upon standardized testing as the only
method to evaluate school and teacher performance. Dr. Hall could have
spoken up when Shirley Franklin diverted hundreds of millions in school
revenues to repay a bond issue aimed at gentrifying Atlanta. Dr. Hall
had plenty of chances to stand up for Atlanta's school children in her
decade in the top office. She put her career and perks first. Hall has
been indicted to create lurid headlines for a “crisis” that will get the
privatizers even more than she could have given them. The same goes for
the teachers and administrators under her.
Just
because her enablers have turned on her doesn't mean we should turn
toward her. As Roland Martin found out when he made noises suggesting
that black people should protest to get him his CNN commentator's job
back, it doesn't work that way.
Teacher
heroes are teachers who resist the turn to excessive testing, like the
teachers in Seattle. Teacher heroes are the thousands of Chicago
teachers who struck last fall in the face of Mayor Rahm Emanuel carrying
out Barack Obama's Race To The Top program, and who are resisting the
closing of more than 50 Chicago public schools this year, the largest
wave of public school closings in US history. We need more heroic
teachers, like some of those who are occupying the Department of
Education later this month. Dr. Hall is no hero.
Michelle
Rhee for her part, is a bigger villain on a bigger stage than Dr.
Hall's, and with better friends. If her fortunes since being dismissed
from DC are any indication, she has a long and lucrative career ahead of
her.
Bruce
A. Dixon is managing editor at Black Agenda Report and a state
committee member of the Georgia Green Party. He lives and works near
Marietta GA and can be reached via this site's contact page or at
bruce.dixon(at)blackagendareport.com.
1 comment:
NYCDOE also had a Superintendent with dirty digits in a cheating Scandal. In 2004, Dr. Marcia Lyles was Region 8 Super in Brooklyn. On my complaint NYSED's Bureau of Assessment requested that she arrange an inquiry into my allegations of Regents cheating and cover-up at Cobble Hill High School where I was chapter leader. NYSED determined that the scores I turned over in the 60s went "beyond any dispersion, magnitude or directionality that likely to be attributable to chance." Breaking the law, Lyles concealed this damaging evidence from SCI. How do we know? Commissioner of Special Investigation Richard Condon said so in his revisionist 2007 review: "The Region did not refer the NYSED letter to this office." Nevetheless, Condon with Chancellor Klein's blessing exonerated her from cover-up. Thereupon she was promoted to Deputy Chancellor and now sits clean and pretty in Jersey City as School Superintendent. And here's the kicker: Ignored in the case file is a May 10, 2004 letter written on behalf of Lyles by her LIS Kathy Pelles in which the pair lied to NYSED claiming that they sent the its unlikley-by-chance letter to Condon's office: "We immediately forwarded your letter to the Office of the Special Commissioner of Investigations for the New York City School District."
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