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Volume 79 – Number 49

A. Philip Randolph Institute hosts 47th Annual National Education Conference

August 17-23, 2016

michiganchronicle.com

A fresh start for DPS?

The challenge remains daunting, but no longer hopeless

Michigan Chronicle Reports

Seeking solutions to end to what it calls a “parasitic divisiveness” which is having a devastating social and economic impact on working families, the A. Philip Randolph Institute (APRI) will hold its annual Education Conference. “The Power of Unity… All Workers Matter” is the theme of the conference which will be held August John Conyers 24-28 at the Detroit Marriott Renaissance Hotel in Detroit. APRI is a 50 -year-old labor and social justice organization which advocates on behalf of African American working men and women across the nation. Hundreds of labor union activists, celebrities, political and civic engagement leaders, Rev. Jesse Jackson, and “Birth of a Nation” producer Nate Parker are among conference participants.

Alycia Meriweather, interim Detroit Public Schools Community District superintendent — Photo credit:

By Keith A. Owens In many ways, after all the turmoil experienced by Detroit Public Schools over more than a decade, it seems that the only direction to go is up. With all the headline-grabbing news reports of dead rodents in school hallways and freezing classrooms, not to mention rapidly declining enrollment, it’s hard to imagine things getting any worse.

Several prominent labor leaders, including Clayola Brown, APRI president, and Gerry Hudson, executive president, SEIU, will address the conferees. Congressman John Conyers will lead a discussion which will include several other members of Congress including Bobby Scott and Sheila Jackson Lee (D-TX). Other speakers include Barbara Arnwine, Sirius XM Radio host Joe Madison, American Urban Radio Networks White House correspondent April Ryan, Melanie Campbell, national convener, Black Women’s Roundtable, and Nate Parker, director of the Cannes Film Festival award winning, critically acclaimed film “Birth of a Nation” and historian John Hope Franklin Jr. will also speak at the conference.

Fortunately, it appears that some steps toward measurable progress are being made. That’s the good news. The not-sogood news is that the mountain to climb is so steep – and the resources still painfully limited – that the task ahead can not afford any missteps or further miscalculations. There is little to zero wiggle room for error.

WHAT’S INSIDE

The extent of its role is ambiguously described in the legislation, but what’s not ambiguous about its description is that it’s not a school board. Its primary function is, as its name implies, to deal with finances.”

Senior Editor

This conference is to inform and train delegates on important issues directly impacting the black community. More than 500 labor and civil rights activists, including a delegation of youth activists ages 17-25 from across the U.S. will take part in activities.

On a more positive note, Rhodes said that much progress has been made in filling teacher vacancies with qualified teachers. “And just for the record, to say it the umpteenth million time, we are not going to hire any non-certified teachers, even though the law says we can. Not gonna happen,” he said.

Steven Rhodes —

Photo credit: Kimberley P. Mitchell/Detroit Free Press. Reprinted with permission.

One of the largest concerns among Detroiters was eliminating emergency management and returning the schools to community control with an elected school board. That long-awaited transition will occur during the November elections when Detroiters will once again be given the opportunity to elect their own school board.

Commission has to have a working relationship with the school board that fully recognizes the school board’s democratically mandated role in running those schools. We in the FRC are still working that out. It’s going to be a process. It’s going to take time. And when the school board comes in in January, it may have to be reset again.

“The people of this city want, and are entitled to local control,” said Judge Steven Rhodes, who began the first day of his appointed role as DPS transition manager by Gov. Rick Snyder on March 2.

“I understand why the legislature felt that some role for the Financial Review Commission was necessary. I supported that role here, just as I did in the Detroit bankruptcy case. But the FRC can’t be the school board. It can’t be a second school board. It has to play a lesser role.

“In order for the promise of local control to be fulfilled, the Financial Review

Meanwhile, the lives and futures of more than 45,000 Detroit children hang in the balance. Alycia Meriweather has been an employee of Detroit Public Schools for the past 20 years. She began attending public school in Detroit at the age of four. So it’s safe to say that Meriweather knows a few things about Detroit Public Schools. On March 7, five days after Rhodes began his tenure, Meriweather was appointed by Rhodes as interim superintendent of DPS (now DPSCD). All that experience was scant preparation for the perfect storm of catastrophes that came raining down like a swarm of screeching bats from practically her first day in office. “So here we are, and when you think about everything that’s happened since

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UNCF partners to build better futures in Michigan 5K Walk for Education, Aug. 27

Art is his business

Keith A. Owens

mission and most importantly, the students.

UNCF’s Michigan office will host “Michigan’s Building Better Futures™ Weekend” Aug. 27-28. The weekend features the 28th Annual 5K Walk for Education and UNCF Sunday, a our national faith and education initiative where UNCF supporters will join together to make an impact in the lives of Michigan students. “In a world where our students have to compete globally, we must prepare them. Education is the most important way we can leave a legacy for the next generation,” said Bishop-Elect Marvin Winans, pastor of Perfecting Church. “Historically black colleges and universities are important to the African American community because they’re taught in a way that is unique to the African American experience. UNCF has been the conduit to which many African American children have been able to access their goal of a college education. Perfecting Church has decided to lead the church community in supporting UNCF Sunday because we see ourselves as a ‘church of the city.’”

UNCF Michigan's Building Better Futures 5K walk participants enjoy the stroll. “We are so thrilled to expand the UNCF footprint in the Michigan area and to work with top business and religious leaders to make this year’s event a major success,” said Barbara Patton, UNCF area development director. “The loyalty of individuals and corporate employees is key to our continued success.

UAW-GM and General Motors have held the top fundraising trophy for the past 19 years, followed by UAW-Ford and Ford Motor Company, key examples of sustained commitment to hundreds of deserving college students from Michigan receiving needed scholarships. Local alumni continue to play an integral role in supporting the UNCF

“Ford Motor Company is a proud 2016 co-presenting sponsor of the UNCF Walk for Education. Our support spans 28 consecutive years, raising over $1 million to provide advanced education opportunities to students attending HBCUs and traditional colleges,” said Frederiek Toney, president of the Ford Customer Service Division. “UNCF is a facilitator of one of the most powerful tools for students to lift themselves and their families to higher economic equality. We know that many of the students who receive financial assistance are first-generation college students, making our efforts even more important. We look forward to continuing our partnership with UNCF to support this worthwhile cause.” Development Director Angela Bingham reminds why events like this are important and that the UNCF is just as vital today as it was when it was founded over 70 years ago. “UNCF is still needed because we are the nation’s largest and most effective minority education organiza-

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