Mc digital edition 3 30 16

Page 1

DPS kickback scheme comes at worst possible time

NSO to celebrate 60th anniversary with gala and fundraiser See page B-1

See page A-3

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michiganchronicle.com

Volume 79 – Number 29

March 30 - April 5, 2016

Go to Flint, Gov. Snyder

WHAT’S INSIDE

Michigan Chronicle Reports

Gov. Snyder’s approval ratings have been steadily dropping in the face of the Flint water crisis, and his testimony given before Congress did little to reverse that trend. Last week, a report landed like a bombshell in Lansing, delivered courtesy of Gov. Snyder’s own appointed panel of experts whom he assigned to get to the bottom of what went wrong in Flint.

Detroit’s religious community must work together to rebuild lives. See page A-5.

The answer they found, basically, was that Gov. Snyder was largely responsible for what went wrong.

Jason Cole, MMCA founder/president, breaking new ground for black companies. See page C-1.

DPS teachers protesting during the 'sickout'. Opposition to emergency management was a large part of the protest. Photo Credit -- Asha Johnson

Give DPS back to Detroit

Tug-of-war over self-governance is what lies ahead for DPS By Keith A. Owens Senior Editor

Now that the emergency funding package has been approved and Detroit Public Schools are no longer in danger of coming to a grinding halt next week, the real fight is back on center stage; the fight over local control.

Girls and women will benefit from the NoVo Foundation’s $90 million investment. See page C-4.

Celebrating black women, BLACK WOMEN ROCK! event to air on BET. See page C-5.

After all these years under emergency management, which by pretty much any measure you’d care to name has been a dismal failure, the argument against returning DPS to local control has become painfully thin, kind of like watching a schoolyard bully shrink and wither right before your eyes like a pinpricked balloon. While it’s true that DPS has had its share of embarrassing missteps and outright screw-ups over the years – something which some of the more adamant local control advocates prefer not to bring up – the glaring fact remains that the purpose of emergency management was to be the New Sheriff In Town. Everything was supposed to work better under

Sen. Gary Peters, speaking Monday morning about the Flint water crisis on WDET’s “Detroit Today” with Stephen Henderson, said that Gov. Snyder should “step up his game considerably,” adding that “if you are representing the people … you have to take that seriously and actually be out and listen to folks.”

the smooth, wise, guiding hand of an emergency manager charting a safe course through troubled waters toward more fiscally sound shores. Or something like that. The point being, this did not happen. Not even close. Because if it had, then obviously DPS would not have required this emergency bailout that just happened. Nor would DPS require more than $700 million over the

next 10 years – according to Gov. Rick Snyder’s proposal – just to point itself in the right direction. It might even be fair to say that if emergency management had provided the whopping success that was promised, then DPS would not have bled out 115,000 students since 2000, down from 162,000 then to 47,000 today. Not exactly a sign of confidence from the people.

See DPS page A-4

And that is the problem. No matter how many times he says he’s sorry, or that he was given bad information, Snyder has yet to do the one thing that just might demonstrate that he gets it, his critics contend. The Republican governor has been criticized by state and local officials for his response to the Flint water crisis, which prompted his office to assemble an investigative panel. In a report released by the panel, it found that the state is wholly responsible for the contamination

See SNYDER page A-4

Mayor Duggan announces 2 years of free college Detroit high school graduates Michigan Chronicle Reports

In 2013, the Detroit Regional Chamber and the Michigan Education Excellence Foundation (MEEF) took on that challenge and created the Detroit Scholarship Fund. Over the past three years, the Detroit Scholarship Fund has helped nearly 2,000 Detroit high school graduates attend community college, tuition-free.

Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan announced that from this day forward, every Detroit high school graduate will be guaranteed two years of tuition-free college education. It’s a commitment made possible through the Detroit Promise Zone, an authority Mayor Duggan and the Detroit City Council created last fall to dedicate a portion of tax dollars to permanently fund two-year scholarships.

Wanya Morris and Nyle DiMarco are among the standouts on this season’s “Dancing with the Stars.” See page D-1.

The governor is losing the people’s trust in Flint, if it isn’t already gone. Although regaining that trust is something the governor claims to be at the top of his priority list, he still has not done the one thing that holds the best chance for him to d e m o n - Gov. Snyder strate that he really does understand how serious this is, and that Flint matters. Gov. Snyder has not yet met with the people of Flint.

The Promise Zone will provide a tuition-free path to an associate’s degree at a community college for a graduate of any Detroit high school – no matter whether

private, public, or charter. The program will also enable many young Detroiters to begin their post-college careers free of debt.

The Promise Zone legislation requires a private organization to fund two years of scholarships before any taxes can be captured.

The MEEF and the Detroit Regional Chamber will continue to fund the scholarships for the next three years until the Detroit Promise Zone tax capture is permitted in 2018. “It doesn’t matter whether you’re a high school senior pre-

See FREE

COLLEGE page A-4

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