Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Just imagine for a moment a white mayor proclaiming that, "The white folks are in charge here!"
1 posted on 04/17/2002 6:58:56 PM PDT by Lancey Howard
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies ]


To: Lancey Howard
Funny thing is, Mayor Street is a very smart man who has matured greatly over the past 25 years or so. He is way, way better than Wilson Goode ever was, and he should know better than to say this crazy stuff.
2 posted on 04/17/2002 7:01:29 PM PDT by Lancey Howard
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies ]

To: Lancey Howard
"The brothers and sisters are running the city.

Will they still be running the city when the heat comes down for mis-management, corruption, etc?

6 posted on 04/17/2002 7:11:53 PM PDT by What Is Ain't
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies ]

To: Lancey Howard
Not much of a recommendation.......the schools have been taken over by the state, the city is fighting to keep the wage tax, crime is rampant, corruption is in every corner, including the police force...... but the brothers and sisters are running the city..........
7 posted on 04/17/2002 7:17:52 PM PDT by WhyisaTexasgirlinPA
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies ]

To: Lancey Howard
The brothers and sisters are running this city. Running it! Don't let nobody fool you, we are in charge of the City of Brotherly Love .

Funny, being from the West Coast I use to think of Philadelphia as a place of much history and where our great founders walked and worked. Now when I think of Philadelphia, I think of riots and racist black Mayors.

12 posted on 04/17/2002 7:27:46 PM PDT by Joe Hadenuf
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies ]

To: Lancey Howard
"Just imagine for a moment a white mayor proclaiming that,
'The white folks are in charge here!'"

Yes, I remember when Al Haig said he was in charge,
"Yo, Bro Al-You're the MAN"

15 posted on 04/17/2002 7:37:21 PM PDT by APBaer
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies ]

To: Lancey Howard
Another major U.S. city where white flight is becoming the trend. Then we'll see how well the "brothers and sisters" are running things.
18 posted on 04/17/2002 7:43:12 PM PDT by southern rock
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies ]

To: Lancey Howard
Would that be "government of the brothers, by the brothers, and for the brothers"?

On the bright side, they can now officially be called racists, because they now have power. All those years that we have been told that blacks can't be racist because they have no power are over.

20 posted on 04/17/2002 7:47:31 PM PDT by PsyOp
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies ]

To: Lancey Howard
""The brothers and sisters are running the city. Oh, yes. The brothers and sisters are running this city. Running it! Don't let nobody fool you, we are in charge of the City of Brotherly Love . "

Yet another excellent reason why I'd never, EVER consider living in Philadelphia or its environs.

28 posted on 04/17/2002 7:55:52 PM PDT by RightOnline
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies ]

To: Lancey Howard
I'll bet that if W.C. Fields, could change his headstone, he would change it to: "Under the circumstances, I really am glad to be dead somewhere else rather than alive in Philadelphia."
35 posted on 04/17/2002 8:08:26 PM PDT by F.J. Mitchell
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies ]

To: Lancey Howard
Yes the brothers and sisters are ruining the city.
48 posted on 04/17/2002 8:25:38 PM PDT by MissAmericanPie
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies ]

To: Lancey Howard
"The brothers and sisters are running the city [into the ground]".
78 posted on 04/17/2002 9:03:20 PM PDT by Consort
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies ]

To: Lancey Howard
And in a related story:

42 Failing Schools in Philadelphia to Be Privatized The New York Times | 4/17/02 | Jacques Steinberg

PHILADELPHIA, April 17 — In what is believed to be the largest experiment in privatization mounted by an American school district, a state panel charged with improving the Philadelphia public school system voted tonight to transfer control of 42 failing city schools to seven outside managers, including Edison Schools Inc. and two universities.
The three members of the School Reform Commission appointed by Gov. Mark Schweiker voted for the plan, while the two members appointed by Mayor John F. Street voted against it. The vote capped a fiery three-hour meeting in which the two sides had split over whether Edison, the nation's largest for-profit operator of public schools, had the capacity and know-how to improve the 20 schools that it was assigned.

"I want this reform to succeed," Michael Masch, a vice president at the University of Pennsylvania and one of the mayor's two appointees to the panel, said at one point in the debate. "I am gravely concerned that the magnitude of the change being proposed is imprudent."

Moments later, James P. Gallagher, the president of Philadelphia University and one of the governor's three appointees, said, "We should push the envelope and be as aggressive as possible."

The panel's vote today represents a milestone in the decade-long growth of the movement to turn troubled public schools over to private operators. There is no better index of the impact of this effort than Edison's own expansion: over the last six years, it has gone from operating a handful of public schools to more than 130 in 22 states, with a combined student population that is larger than all but a few dozen urban districts.

All told, the Philadelphia panel voted to assign an outside manager to one of every six schools in the city. In addition to Edison, the other organizations involved include two colleges that are in Philadelphia: Temple University, which was assigned five schools, and the University of Pennsylvania, which received three schools.

The panel also tapped four other companies with various degrees of school administrative experience, though each was smaller than Edison. They are Chancellor Beacon Academies Inc., a for-profit company based in Florida that operates public and private schools (assigned five schools); Foundations Inc., a nonprofit organization in Philadelphia that offers after-school programs (four schools); Victory Schools Inc., a New York-based company that opened the state's first charter school (three schools); and Universal Companies, a new venture begun by the record producer Kenny Gamble (two schools).

How much responsibility those managers would be given in the schools that they have been assigned remains to be negotiated with the state panel, as well as with the teachers' union and the parents in those schools. But panel officials said that, in many instances, the outsiders would likely make sweeping changes in school curriculum, as well as seek to replace school administrators and many of the teachers.

After the meeting, Jerry Jordan, a vice president of the Philadelphia Federation of Teachers, said he regretted that the panel had said so little about how the schools would be redesigned by the outsiders.

"They didn't spell anything out," Mr. Jordan said. "It's like, `Let's see what works.' It shows a total lack of respect."

After the roll was called, several dozen student protesters, who have long argued that it was undemocratic for a for-profit company to operate a public school, chanted, "Shame!" and "I am not for sale!"

Beginning at daybreak, those same protesters had succeeded in shutting down the system's Art Deco administrative building on Benjamin Franklin Parkway by forming a barricade at the entrance. Neither police officers nor the building's 350 employees were willing to cross the line. As a result, the meeting, which had been scheduled for 1 p.m. at district headquarters, was delayed for two hours then was moved to the city's African American Museum, nearly a mile away.

Today's developments were the most significant here since late December, when Mr. Schweiker, a Republican, assumed control of the city school system, which had been operated by a board of education appointed entirely by Mr. Street, a Democrat. At the time, Mr. Schweiker said that only a bold approach could save a system in which more than half of the nearly 200,000 students had failed to achieve minimum proficiency on state reading and math tests.

The governor had also made clear at the time that he wanted Edison, which operates more than 130 public schools in 22 states, to play a major role in Philadelphia. Though the 20 schools that the company was awarded today was more than double the number it manages in any other district, the assignment was far more modest than the 60 Philadelphia schools that it said it was capable of managing.

Indeed, the governor had once argued that Edison should assume control of the system's central administration. Later, he retreated in the face of opposition from many parents and students, as well as the teachers' union and other labor groups representing school employees. They questioned Edison's academic and financial record.

At a news conference, James P. Nevels, the panel's chairman, said of Edison's role, "Things have not turned out as one would have expected."

Still, a majority of the panel members managed to pass a school reform plan in Philadelphia today that was more ambitious than those mounted in any other district.

The largest such plan previously was believed to have been in Hartford, where all 32 schools in the district were given over to the company Education Alternatives Inc. for less than two years in the mid-1990's. But largely because the Hartford experience failed relatively quickly, other districts have usually embarked on more modest experiments, with Edison now operating nine schools in Chester-Upland, Pa., outside Philadelphia, and seven in Clark County, Nev., the Las Vegas district.

In addition to the 42 schools that the Philadelphia panel assigned to outside managers, it also ordered that 28 other schools undergo substantial reorganization, with some becoming more independent charter schools but most remaining within direct control of the district. In the cases of the schools identified today for private intervention, the panel reserved the right to revoke a contract in instances where the schools fail to improve.

94 posted on 04/17/2002 10:00:17 PM PDT by VaBthang4
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies ]

To: Lancey Howard
If you changed the name to "Lee P. Brown" and changed the city to "Houston".... the story would still be true.
Virtually every department head in Houston City Govt. is a "brother or sister".... including the Metro board president, police chief, public works, etc.
And the City's financial health worsens with each passing day.
97 posted on 04/17/2002 10:10:43 PM PDT by TheGrimReaper
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies ]

To: Lancey Howard
The now PC sainted, late Harold Washington did the same thing in Chicago about 20 years back he said "we're in charge now"

Everything is racism, except hating whitey

99 posted on 04/17/2002 10:13:41 PM PDT by liberalism=failure
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies ]

To: Lancey Howard
Was Street boasting, or was he issuing a warning to visitors? I'll take it as a warning.
109 posted on 04/18/2002 12:04:28 AM PDT by Calico Cat
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies ]

To: Lancey Howard, all
Show me one majority "brothers and sisters" city in the country..or for that matter the world where "they" are "running it" whereby the city is prospering and doing better than before....I'll be waiting. "They" have run my hometown into the ground.

Save your Bermuda suggestions.

111 posted on 04/18/2002 12:22:43 AM PDT by wardaddy
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies ]

To: Lancey Howard
"The brothers and sisters are running this city. Running it!"

Not too racist of a statement, is it?

112 posted on 04/18/2002 12:24:28 AM PDT by usadave
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies ]

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article


FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson