Page A4 ¡Portiani» ©baeroer March 10,1999 Editorial Articles Do Not Necessarily Reflect Or Represent The Views O f P ortlanb ©bseruer Attention Readers! PteaM take a minute to eend us your comment*. W e re always trying to give you a better paper amt we can't do K without your help. Tell 1» what you «ke ami what nssiti Improvement... any suggestion* are welcomed and appreci ■tad. W a take criticism wedl (tat your powerful pana out NOW " * * * " " * your letter* to: Edltor.ReaderReeponee.P.O. Box 3 1 3 7 ,Portland. OR972O8 ^ n rtla n h (©bserfusr (USPS 959-680) Established in 1970 Charles W ashington Publisher Larry Jackson, Sr. E ditor Gary Ann Taylor Business M anager Joy Ramos. Copy Editor M ark W ashington Distribution M anager H eatherFairchild Graphic D esigner Tony W ashington D irector o f Advertising Contributing Writers: Richard Luccetti Lee Perlman, 4747N E Martin Luther King, Jr. Blvd., Portland, O regon 97211 503-288-0033 • Fax 503-288-0015 Email: P diobserva aol.com Deadline fo r all submitted materials: Articles .Friday. 5:00 pm Ads: Monday. 12:00pm POSTMASTER: Send Address Changes To: Portland Observer, P.O. Box 3137, Portland, OR 97208. Periodicals postage p a id at Portland, Oregon. Subscriptions: $60.00 p e r yea r The Portland O bserver w elcom es freelance submissions. M anuscripts and photographs should be clearly labeled and w ill be returned if accom ­ panied by a se lf addressed envelope All created design display ads becom e the sole property o f the new spaper and cannot be used in other publ ications or personal usage w ithout the w ritten consent o f the general manager, unless the client has purchased the com position o f such ad. © 1996 H IE PORTLANDOBSERVER. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED,REPRODUC'nONIN Know Who Will Fight For Your Children B y J eanne A llen P rlsidfn 1, C i n t m fos E ducation R eform Recent concerns about declining s tu d e n t a c h ie v e m e n t an d deteriorating schools - at the local, state and national levels - have strengthened the cry for réévaluation and reform o f our natio n ’s education system. The viewpoint on educational issues o f both elected and appointed S c h o o l B o a rd m e m b e rs , s ta te legislators and even county officials has been or likely soon w ill be, the focal point ofcom m unity discussions on how to im prove our schools to m ake them the best. All states and com m unities differ in their needs and approaches to education reform . M oreover, today school boards and other governing authorities are often extremely limited in w hat they can do to im prove schools. G overnm ent oversight and opposition from vested interests often ham string a b o ard 's ability to m ake substantial changes, but it is still critical that these governing bodies take a strong lead ersh ip ro le in introducing new and effective ideas ■ to their com m unities, and in working to im plem ent real reform. Because o f this, know ing as m uch as you can about your local can d id ates and members is crucial. G etting the Answers It is im portant not only to know where the candidates stand, but to make sure the right questions get asked, and to help b rin g issues im portant to you and the com m unity to the forefront o f public discussion. A ccountability - Should teachers whose students repeatedly fail to leam be held accountable? A ccountability becom es a difficult issue if and when in e ffe c tiv e te a c h e rs c a n n o t be rem oved from their jobs. In many cases, these teachers are m em bers o f powerful special interest groups, like the A FT or N EA, and their positions becom e nearly untouchable. The processes involved in the rem oval o f bad teachers almost seem designed to protect the teachers and not the cones being harm ed by ineffectual, uninterested and bad teachers, our to school? C harter Schools - do you approve o f p u b lic s c h o o ls b e in g ru n independent o f district o r county supervision? Should parents have the right to start one? Today, 34 states plus the D istrict o f C olum bia have passed charter school legislation. The num ber o f these schools has jum ped dramatically to over 1200 today, from ju st 1 in 1992. These schools serve over 300,000 students nationwide. In the years since the first charter school opened its doors, these schools have attained m easurable success and in m ost instances have surpassed both expectations and their traditional public school counterparts. S tandardized testing - Is the use o f standardized tests a valid and fair children. m easure o ot f academ ic achievem ent achtevem en o f our students? Is it fair to com pare the results o f student achievem ent year to year w ithin a single school an d b e tw e e n d iffe re n t sc h o o ls w ithin a district? A dvisors - W hat organizations w ill y o u r c a n d id a te or e le c te d representative rely upon most heavily for advice on educational m atters - Parents ? Unions? PT As? Community and Civic G roups? Some o f these groups have specific and vested interest in the direction taken by le g is la to r s an d s c h o o l b o a rd m em bers. N ot every decision is beneficial to the child. This is a very important question as it may also be an indication ofloyalty. Is this loyalty to an organization that protects jobs or one that benefits our kids? Remember, for the next few years the people elected to represent you, at both the local and state level, will play a critical role in the direction your children’s education will take. It is up to each parent to leam how each m em ber or can d id ate stan d s on education issues important to you. The Alarms Are Sounding .. .. ----------- B y H ugh B. P rice P resident N ational U rban L eague It should be clear now that the shooting death o f A m adou Diallo, an unarm ed law-abiding W est A frican imm igrant, by four w hite N ew York City police officers, has crystallized the anger over police m isconduct that has been building up in Black America throughout this decade. W HOLE OR IN PART W ITHOUT PERMISSION IS PROHIBITED. It ’ s also cleat that, in their anger and The Portland O bserver-O regon’s O ldest Multicultural P ublication-is dismay that some white police officers a m em ber o f the N ational N ew spaper A ssociation-F ounded in 1885, and don’t bother to try to distinguish the The N ational A dvertising Representative A m algam ated Publishers, Inc, law-abiding from the criminal among N ew York, NY, and The W est Coast Black Publishers Association • Serving them, blacks are not alone. Portland and Vancouver. Rail Y zaguirre, president o f the N ational Council o f La Raza, and Karen Narasaki, executive directorof ubscribe to w I P o r t ia n b © b w r u e r the National A sian Pacific American The Portland Observer can be sent directly to your home for only $60.00 L eg al C o n so rtiu m , g av e h ea rt- per year. Please fill out, enclose check or money order, and mail to: wrenching exam ple o f police abuses S ubscriptions aim ed at their com m unities during a T he P ortland O bserver ; PO B ox 3137 press conference the National Urban League convened in W ashington, P ortland , O regon 9 7208 D.C. February 25. N am e : _________ __ ------------------------------------------------------------- — Y zag u irre and N arasaki w ere Address:___________________________________________ _______— — — jo in ed by a broad cross-section o f City, S ta te :---------------- ------ -------------------------------- ------------------------- g ra s s ro o ts g ro u p s , c iv il rig h ts Zip-Code: ____________ ________ ______________ _— --------------------- organizations, and ordinary citizens who cam e to W ashington that day to T hank Y ou F or R eading T he P ortland O bserver urge President Clinton to becom e directly involved in resolving these issues and defusing this crisis. A be Foxm an, president o f the A nti-D efam ation League, K w eisi M fum e, president and CE O o f the N a tio n a l A s s o c ia tio n f o r th e A dvancem ent o f C olored People, Ira included m ore than 250 criteria. It G lasser, executive director o f the B y S enator B rady A dams w as a system that w as cum bersom e A m erican C ivil Liberties U nion, the “R evolution” is not a term one and slow to react to changes in the R everend Jesse Jackson, president often hears in discussions about o f the Rainbow/PUSH Coalition, and higher education landscape. budget allocation systems. However, C ongressm an John Conyers (D em .- U nder the new funding model, there is a quiet revolution underw ay M ichigan), shared the podium . each institution will retain its own in the O regon U niversity System The Reverend A1 Sharpton, the tuition and fee money. In addition, (O U S) and. w hile its focus is on attorney, Johnnie L. Cochran Stewart, each cam pus will share state general p r e s id e n t of th e N a tio n a l changing the w ay m oney is allocated O rganization o f Black Law Enforces, fund allocations based on a more to cam puses, its prom ise is for a th e R e v e re n d J o s e p h L o w e ry , student-centered m odel that uses dram atically revitalized system o f only tw elve key criteria (as opposed chairm an o f the Black Leadership public higher education for our state. Forum , and Edw ard Lewis, president to 250). These tw elve criteria look at T h e S ta te B o a rd o f H ig h e r o f Essence Com m unications, were differences in “cost-per-student,” am ong those present as well E ducation adopted this new budget based on the level o f instruction and So, too m ost poignantly, was Betty allo ca tio n system in resp o n se s to program costs. A freshman history G rim m ett, w hose son was slain by an calls from legislators, the governor student, for example, would be a lower avow edly racist cop in Pittsburgh, and from m any in the private sector PA last Decem ber. No one could co st th an a se n io r, e n g in e e rin g for a h ig h er ed u c atio n system that rem ain unm oved as she described student. O U S w ill look at each the pain o f her loss and appealed is b o th m ore resp o n siv e to p ublic institution’s enrollm ent using the directly to the President to lead the e d u c a t i o n a l n e e d s a n d m o re criteria as a filter to provide an nation out o f this crisis. ac co u n tab le for is p erfo rm an ce. allocation based on the actual student These people and others cam e to T he new system w ould accom plish W ash in g to n arm s are sounding. population served. b o th goals. Am erica m ust respond. A com panion initiative enacted In the past, ou r public colleges The racial crisis that exists in by the H igher E ducation B oard A m erican law en fo rce m en t w as a n d u n iv e r s i tie s w e re fu n d e d establishes performance benchmarks underscored the follow ing Sunday through a com plex system in w hich for each institution. Institutions will w hen G o v ern o r C h ristin e T odd all tu itio n m oney w as cen trally be encouraged to develop plans for W hitman, o f N ew Jersey, fired the pooled and then reallocated to the head o f the N ew Jersey State Police meeting the benchm arks and their institutions, along w ith state general for racist rem arks he m ade during a progress will be monitored. new spaper interview. fund m oney, using a model that Col. W illiam s said that certain m in o r ity g ro u p s w e re disproportionately involved in certain kinds o f drug trafficking: heroin, cocaine, and m arijuana were heavily Black people, their achievem ent, I am deeply concerned that the province o f blacks and Latinos. which are many. I pray that the people In saying this, however. Col. W illiams O regon legislature and residents o f o f O reg o n w ould b ecom e m ore steadfastly denied, as he had in the Oregon. It appears to be a racially s e n s itiv e to th e 1.7% A fric a n past that the state police engage in bias m ove how can a state with moral racial profiling-the notorious practice A m erican that live there. v alues and e q u a lity p e rm it the o f ’Driving W hile Black.” Som e have defen d ed C olonel elim ination o f A frican A m erican or Thank you W illiams, declaring he was merely Black History for one day. I suppose speaking the truth: that blacks and Rev. Clifton Zinney students study the contributions o f S Parents Parents - - W W hat hat roles roles do do parents parents play in the educational process? Does your local representative w elcom e and invite parental involvem ent and interaction in their proceedings? Are all deliberations and decisions m ade in the open and under public scrutiny? D o you know w here m em bers or candidates send their ow n children .lv H ispanics or» are zticr.rr'nnrtinn.tE d isp ro p o rtio n a tely involved in the drug trade. Y es. th a t is tru e . B u t th e documented fact o f the history o f the widely disproportionate stopping o f black and Hispanic motorist by New Jersey state police-the overw helm ing num ber o f those m otorist are not arrested-are powerful evidence that something else was being said as well. In fact, Col. W illiam s com m ents starkly reveal the attitude behind racial profiling: So w hat if m ost are law-abiding, stop enough o f them on suspicion and y o u ’ll catch the few who are doing som ething wrong. The new York police departments own statistics show that in the past two years, officers o f the city’s elite (and nearly all white) street crimes unit stnnned and and frisked stopped frisked 45.084 45,084 people. people. M ost were black and Hispanic. But that action resulted in only 9,546 arrests m eaning those 35,000 people were stopped and frisked on the streets because these officers dedicated to keeping the peace. W e also reject the odious notion that blacks and Hispanics should be glad to "trade” a reduction in their ci vil liberties for the reduction in crim e in theirneighborhoods. W e'vehadquite enough o f second-class citizenship. O ur coalition has m ade as the drafting o f guidelines for state and local law dealing with this crisis-such as the drafting o f guidelines for state and local law enforcem ent agencies to help them attack crim e w hile protecting citizens’ civil liberties. n ew s T h e m o rn in g o f o u r nei conference the President notified us that he considered the issues ofpolice misconduct “critical” and would take action to exam ine it. Attorney General Janet Reno agreed to meet with a group o f those who participated in the news conference and she also spoke about the gravity o f the issues o f police brutality at her own weekly news conference. These are steps in the right direction. O f course, they are only a beginning. Much more needs to be done. The alarms are sounding. This issue is going to tear at A m erica’s social fabric ifclearefforts to guarantee that law-abiding people o f color need have no reason to fear the police as well as criminals are not made. 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