Author: mopress

  • 4 Million Children Might be News

    Saddle up the Messenger Hoss:
    4 Million Children Might be News

    By

    GREG MOSES

    CounterPunch 9-16-

    2004

    (7 a.m. Central Daylight Time)–The morning after
    Texas district judge John

    Dietz ruled that the state’s
    school system fails to satisfy criteria set forth in
    the Texas

    constitution, I’m browsing some of the “top
    headline” sources on the internet to see how the

    fate
    of 4 million Texas schoolchildren rates on the
    national news scale.

    “More

    than 130 years after Alferd Packer ate his five
    companions to survive a Colorado winter, a

    museum
    curator is making a case that the notorious cannibal
    was innocent of murder,” reads a

    report from the
    Associated Press that I find seven stories from the
    top at Yahoo’s US National

    News. But no news of Texas
    education in the total of twenty stories that are
    either listed as

    “top” or “more.”

    “Three men shot to death in a Willowbrook parking lot
    apparently were

    victims of a planned ‘hit’ that by a
    fluke occurred just as a village police officer drove
    past,

    law enforcement sources said Wednesday,” reads a
    story out of Chicago that gets number seven billing

    at
    Google’s US news page.

    “The Times Fills 2 Editing Posts,” reads headline
    number

    six under New York Times national headlines.
    The Education section also finds other things to

    talk
    about.

    With Hurricane Ivan consuming three of the top dozen
    stories at USA

    Today’s “Nation” page, it’s Southern
    weather that rules the day.

    Maybe we can find the

    headline at CNN US? Nope. But
    if you look under local news from the US Southwest you
    will find

    this number one headline: “Former anchorman
    out of prison.” Or this headline, ranked second:

    “Henna tattoos cause family pain.” The Education page
    leads with a story about college

    affordability.

    As the school buses pass my window here in Texas,
    taking kids to their

    unconstitutional destinations,
    I’m reading parts of the US Supreme Court decision in
    1973 that

    set the precedent for not putting Texas
    education on the national agenda. The Rodriguez

    case,
    which was the first of the “Edgewood” cases to be
    filed—-way back in the summer of ’68—-set

    the Supremes
    to fidgeting over the prospects of “wealth
    equalization.” They said they could

    handle a lawsuit
    where folks were completely deprived of some good
    because of poverty, but the if

    the High Court started
    getting involved in cases where relatively poorer
    people were only

    relatively deprived of such things as
    education, well you know, the great black-robed

    scions
    might have to stop taking summer breaks!

    The dissenting judges in 1973 were

    Thurgood Marshall
    and William O. Douglas, not bad company to keep on a
    morning such as

    this.

    “The Court today decides, in effect, that a State may
    constitutionally vary the

    quality of education which
    it offers its children in accordance with the amount
    of taxable wealth

    located in the school districts
    within which they reside,” wrote Marshall (with
    Douglas

    concurring). “The majority’s decision
    represents an abrupt departure from the mainstream

    of
    recent state and federal court decisions concerning
    the unconstitutionality of state

    educational financing
    schemes dependent upon taxable local wealth. More
    unfortunately, though,

    the majority’s holding can only
    be seen as a retreat from our historic commitment to
    equality of

    educational opportunity and as
    unsupportable acquiescence in a system which deprives
    children in

    their earliest years of the chance to
    reach their full potential as citizens. The Court does
    this

    despite the absence of any substantial
    justification for a scheme which arbitrarily

    channels
    educational resources in accordance with the fortuity
    of the amount of taxable wealth

    within each district.”

    “In my judgment,” continued Marshall, “the right of
    every

    American to an equal start in life, so far as
    the provision of a state service as important

    as
    education is concerned, is far too vital to permit
    state discrimination on grounds as tenuous

    as those
    presented by this record. Nor can I accept the notion
    that it is sufficient to remit

    these appellees to the
    vagaries of the political process which, contrary to
    the majority’s

    suggestion, has proved singularly
    unsuited to the task of providing a remedy for

    this
    discrimination. I, for one, am unsatisfied with the
    hope of an ultimate ‘political’

    solution sometime in
    the indefinite future while, in the meantime,
    countless children

    unjustifiably receive inferior
    educations that ‘may affect their hearts and minds in
    a way

    unlikely ever to be undone.’ Brown v. Board of
    Education, 347 U.S. 483, 494 (1954). I must

    therefore
    respectfully dissent.”

    But it was the refusal of Marshall’s peers that

    sent
    the issue of equalized education back to the Texas
    courts and a series of state-level

    rulings known as
    the Edgewood cases of the early 90s. Texas courts
    today are doing the work that

    national courts refused
    to do thirty years ago, and in the process historical
    contributions are

    being made to the human rights of
    children everywhere.

    For these reasons and others

    that might be given with
    more time and space, can we please ask the editors of
    the national desks

    to dig a little deeper into their
    Associated Press dispatches and post the ones about
    Texas

    education? After all, attention to the human
    rights of 4 million children today will bring you

    so
    many more avid readers tomorrow.

  • State Education Lapses to UnConstitutional

    Judge finds school funding neither adequate, efficient, nor giving local districcts

    “meaningful discretion.”

    See full text of rulings under Daily Buzz at Harvey Kronberg’s Quorum Report

    Again I repeat

    it is the people of Texas who must set the standards, make the sacrifice and give direction to their

    leaders. And the time to speak is now. These problems only get more difficult the longer we wait.–

    Judge John Dietz.

    See more at News8Austin

  • Painted Windows Aren’t Good Enough:

    MALDEF Stands its Ground in Texas School Funding Trial

    By Greg

    Moses
    Texas Civil Rights Review
    http://la.indymedia.org/news/2004/08/116354.ph

    p

    On a recent Friday, when Texas judge John Dietz summons attorneys “to the bench” in his

    Austin courtroom, thirteen well-suited lawyers come forward. There are lawyers for the state, who

    argue that the school funding system adopted by the legislature in 1993 is working as best it can.

    There are lawyers for wealthier school districts, such as West Orange Cove or Highland Park, who want

    the 1993 system shut down. And there are lawyers for the state’s impoverished school districts, such

    as Edgewood or Alvarado, who at first tried to stop this fight altogether, but who are now looking for

    ways to preserve, enforce, and extend the constitutional framework that the 1993 laws represent.

    The public file for this school funding case (soon to be known as Edgewood Five?) approaches the

    two foot mark. But on a day when parts go missing, the district clerk’s office is equipped with

    something called DMS, or document management system, into which all the public documents for this case

    have been scanned. And I am told there are, in addition, at least ten cd’s that the various attorneys

    have made with all their exhibits in pdf, excel, powerpoint, and whatnot formats, that they can export

    from their Dell laptops to bright-screen displays in court.

    With all the lawyers,

    paperwork, and documentary intrigue, the spectacle surrounding the school funding trial is Texas-sized

    and more to my wire-rimmed taste than the Sandra Bullock mansion dispute going on somewhere in the

    vicinity. Not that I wouldn’t mind seeing the movie star, or treating her to some sympathy about what

    it feels like to have your life occupied by (alleged) runaway contractors, but I’m more interested in

    how her vacant mansion works as a metaphor these days for where the whole story of Texas school funding

    begins.

    School history in Texas begins during the bad old days of statutory segregation,

    followed by the rising hopes of civil rights, fading now into ever-so-nuanced cycles of postmodernized

    vestiges, in which glaring inequalities between rich and poor neighborhoods become sites of

    administrative analysis, consulting contracts, and formulas for funding so arcane that in order to

    compute them, dude, you gotta get a Dell.

    The first three Edgewood rulings by the Texas

    Supreme Court (in 1989, 1991, and 1992) said that Texas had not yet come up with a constitutional

    method of funding education—a method that should be at once “adequate, suitable, and efficient.” The

    fourth Edgewood opinion by the Texas Supreme Court in 1995 said, finally, okay, the Texas Legislature

    in 1993 had finally passed a constitutional plan.

    Which brings us to the fifth Edgewood

    suit, more properly styled West Orange Cove v. Nelson, named for a school district and a commissioner

    of education. The school district is first among a list of almost fifty districts (hereafter referred

    to as richer districts) who claim that the state has so poorly assisted public education in Texas that

    local property taxes are doing all the state’s work and, therefore, that local property taxes have

    become state property taxes. Since state property taxes are unconstitutional in Texas, the richer

    districts want the very laws abolished that it took four Edgewood opinions to

    produce.

    The 1993 laws, known as Chapters 41 and 42 of the Texas Education Code, make it

    somewhat possible for school districts to take money raised from a mansion in one district and spend

    that money for education in another. Nearly fifty of these richer districts, in the precious language

    of legalese, pray to the court, to prevent the state from enforcing Chapters 41 and 42. If these

    districts succeed in shutting down the statewide system of re-allocation, they can go back to taxing

    and spending as they please, keeping their mansion taxes closer to home.

    I would be

    surprised and disappointed if this so-called “recapture” of mansion taxes bothered a wealthy Hollywood

    star, but it bothers enough other people in Texas, especially those who feel that children are born

    where they deserve to be born, whether in mansions or manufactured homes. For such people it is

    difficult to break the habit of thinking that neighborhood schools should rightfully mirror the ability

    of neighborhoods to pay. And when they see taxes raised in one place being “recaptured” and sent to

    another, they tend to think, like the Sheriff of Nottingham, that something has been

    stolen.

    On Friday morning, lead attorney for the Mexican American Legal Defense Fund,

    David Hinojosa, was so tired he could barely read his own questions from a page of prepared notes. He

    was speaking to the superintendent of the Edgewood school district, Richard Bocanegra. In the tableau

    of the closing hours of week three, as Judge Dietz mercifully called a five minute break, the MALDEF

    attorney and Edgewood superintendent were trying to hold onto a tenuous legal framework that had been

    more than 30 years in the making. Of course it was neither this MALDEF attorney nor this Edgewood

    superintendent who began the struggle way back then, but it is the MALDEF-Edgewood alliance that has

    tenaciously over the years moved Texas education through the series of Edgewood lawsuits into the

    equalizing practices of Chapters 41 and 42.

    Neither crisply nor with brightening eyes,

    Hinojosa and Bocanegra review their powerpoint slides, one by one. Here is a photograph of windows

    painted over, to keep the sunlight out and the cooling costs down. There is a parking lot splotched

    with standing water. Here is a portable classroom at Burleson Elementary. There is a photo of broken

    sills and mold at Cenizo Park. Cinderblock walls of a 50-year-old gymnasium are shown split open by

    shifting foundations. Here’s another photo of Coronado Elementary School’s gymnasium. Here are window

    air conditioning units spaced motel-style at Edgewood Middle School. There is a sump pump in the slab

    at Memorial High, because the school was built upon a landfill. Truman Middle School, Wrenn Middle

    School, deteriorating blacktop, ceiling tiles stained and broken from roof leaks, garbage cans catching

    water…

    “Mr. Bocanegra?” Hinojosa is circling toward a question that I hope he finishes

    before he falls out. “Given the insufficiencies of the resources, the challenging demographics of the

    students, and the inequities of funding, what prospects do you hold for the parents of your children

    and the children themselves?”

    After Bocanegra finishes his answer, I notice that the

    benches on the state side of the room look pretty empty. Gone are some of the heavyweight lawyers I’m

    used to seeing there. They have assigned this cross examination to what looks like the youngest lawyer

    on staff. She treads lightly with bouncing inflections. This is way different from some of the

    barracuda attacks that I’ve seen. When the witness is given back to Hinojosa, he mops up the day’s

    testimony by asking Bocanegra to explain what it’s like to take his prospective teachers on a campus

    tour.

    In the summer of 2001, MALDEF helped to convince Judge Dietz’s predecessor Scott

    McCown, to dismiss the West Orange Cove lawsuit. In a sparkling opinion, McCown guarded the gates to

    the state funding system, emphasizing the overwhelming practical value of the “recapture provisions”

    for the history of Texas education. In a concluding flourish, McCown declared that, “history is

    truth—Until equity was required, the State shamefully treated and woefully underfunded the property

    poor districts.” He did not see that the richer districts were as yet so stressed out by the funding

    system that they had lost t
    he
    ir ability to exercise local discretion over their tax policies. And he

    seemed worried that the logic of the plaintiff’s attack might undercut completely the hard won

    framework that the Edgewood era has produced for Texas (a state which Friday morning’s papers declared

    was now officially no longer mostly white.)

    An appeals court also dismissed the West

    Orange suit. But the Texas Supreme Court on May 29, 2003 remanded the case back to trial and demanded

    a thorough inventory of facts and issues. Furthermore, the court seemed to suggest that, if only one

    district can show that its funding has become so bound up by state priorities as to deprive that

    district of “meaningful discretion” in its tax policy, then school funding may well have turned into an

    unconstitutional state property tax.

    This time around, MALDEF is agreeing somewhat with

    the richer districts. Texas does not provide sufficient funds or meaningful discretion, especially to

    impoverished school districts. But unlike the richer districts, MALDEF pleads with the courts to find

    some way of preserving the hard-won Edgewood principles of equalization. In fact, MALDEF is asking the

    courts to place pressure on the state to increase its formulas for “special needs” and to make

    equalization an even more robust practice, especially when it comes to paying for facilities. When it

    comes to paying for buildings—as the slides from the Edgewood district were trying to show—there are

    still glaring disparities.

    There is some evidence that the Texas Supreme Court is not

    happy with the bad faith practices of state policy makers who have retreated from Edgewood more than

    they have built upon it. In its ruling of May 2003, the court quoted passages from its own majority

    opinion of 1995, written by Republican John Cornyn, who is now a US Senator: “Surely Texas can and must

    do better.” And then the court added, “Little change has been made.” Even Republican judges, it

    seems, can be ashamed at this level of injustice.

    What’s not so clear is how the Court is

    leaning with respect to the richer districts. In the early years of Edgewood the court had to strike

    down three funding regimes in three years’ time in order to impress upon lawmakers the importance of

    equalization and improvement in education policy. Now that they are facing the third challenge in a

    row from richer school districts trying to evade equalization, the court may want to draw a big, bright

    line for them, too. The court may be in a mood to say both to the state and to richer districts, look,

    we gave you some very clear principles, now get busy trying to build on them. But, somehow this

    scenario seems too good to be true.

    In plainer language, the court may find a way to say,

    why not try helping MALDEF and Edgewood in school instead of wearing them out in court? At any rate,

    it would be a perverse turn in history to punish the state by turning back the equity clock.

    Politically, such a ruling would signal to state policy makers that any time they want to break down

    the court-ordered enforcement of equity, they simply need to starve the total system of funds. Just

    because the state has adopted a passive-aggressive posture, doesn’t mean it can’t be klanlike.

    On the crucial issues of equalization and progress, MALDEF has found an ally in another

    set of players known as the Alvarado Intervenors, who claim that their commitment to “maintaining

    Edgewood mandates is intense and undisputed.” Like MALDEF also, the Alvarado Intervenors argue that

    the legislature has retreated from equalizing facility funds. As a result, impoverished districts find

    themselves “trapped in the vice” where the state demands more performance on one side and delivers

    insufficient resources on the other.

    On Tuesday the Alvarado Intervenors argued in a

    “bench brief” that the State’s bad faith could be proved in the difference between the standards it

    sets for students, on the one hand, and the standards it sets for districts on the other. While the

    state hands out tests that students must pass, it accepts from districts very low passing rates. And

    why does the state do this? Because policy makers know very well that if they demand higher passing

    rates, they will have to spend more money for teachers, materials, facilities, and support. It is

    time, argued the Alvarado Intervenors, that standards set the pace for state budgets rather than state

    budgets starving the appetite for standards. “What the constitution requires of the legislature with

    respect to education is to place it in a different and higher position than other budget items.”

    During a Friday morning recess, Alvarado attorney Randall B. Wood picks up his copy of

    the day’s Dallas Morning News, carefully folded into a tight rectangle. “Look at this,” he says,

    exasperated, pointing to a story about a South Dallas school district that keeps behaving scandalously

    and keeps getting away with it. “There is no accountability here. The state keeps doing nothing.”

    Faced with a state that says things are good enough today and with a coalition of richer districts who

    say it would be okay even to turn back the clock on equity, the Alvarado and Edgewood attorneys will

    return next week to try once again to keep the Texas courts moving in a forward

    direction.

  • Welcome Aboard New York Times

    Restitution for Black Farmers

    A New York Times Editorial
    Published:

    July 27, 2004

    In 1999, African-American farmers won a major civil rights settlement

    against the United States Department of Agriculture. They had argued that the loans and subsidies they

    received were substantially lower than those for comparable white farmers. What made matters worse was

    the fact that Reagan-era budget cuts closed the U.S.D.A.’s civil rights office for 13 years, so most

    of the complaints filed during that time were never heard. To its credit, the department conducted an

    internal investigation and discovered that racial discrimination had not only occurred but had also

    been structurally and historically embedded in its operations.

    What looked like a

    good settlement, promising prompt payment to black farmers, now looks like a failure, according to a

    new investigation by the Environmental Working Group, an advocacy group. Again and again, these farmers

    have run up against procedural hurdles that have effectively blocked most of them from receiving

    payments that were supposed to be automatic. Because of poor record-keeping, the U.S.D.A. seriously

    underestimated the number of farmers who had been discriminated against. It also did a terrible job of

    seeking out farmers who might qualify for payments. And it did nothing to help them get the documents

    needed to demonstrate the loan and subsidy support that neighboring white farmers had

    received.

    This is discrimination by a different name – a continuation, in effect, of the

    racism historically entrenched in the U.S.D.A. The department’s resistance and the inherent

    inadequacies in the original settlement have caused a staggering rate of farm failures among small-

    scale black farmers: three times the rate for white farmers. That has sped up the loss of farmland to

    development. In the past few decades, the U.S.D.A. has paid only lip service to the survival of small

    farms. It apparently pays only lip service to civil rights as well. The remedy for this inequity will

    not be found at the department. Carrying out the settlement with fairness and accountability will

    require the intervention of Congress.

    See: TAEX Basics at:

    http://pages.prodigy.net/gmoses/tcrr/taex.htm