Thursday, April 22, 2010

Worst Foot Forward

At MCS budget time, it pays to make Memphis look poor.

Posted by John Branston on Thu, Apr 22, 2010 at 8:28 AM

Memphis is a city with no middle-class families, no economic progress, and no upward mobility. If you are non-white, you are probably poor. If you start poor, you probably stay poor. You're screwed, kids, but you'll never have to buy a school lunch.

Memphis doesn't have pockets of poverty. The whole city, except for a couple of pockets of East Memphis, is poor. That goes for Midtown, Whitehaven, Scenic Hills, Hickory Hill, and Raleigh. Shelby County, on the other hand, is not poor. That's where you should go. Memphis is not a place where you would want to live or start a career or send your children to public school.

These racist and inaccurate generalizations are not the work of some anonymous commenter on the Internet, extremist political candidate, or Forbes magazine. This is the Memphis City Schools profile on the Tennessee Report Card. Nobody poor-mouths the city of Memphis and MCS more than MCS and the Tennessee Department of Education. Misery Is Us.

Public school students are about to take "the Gateway," those make-or-break standardized tests that purport to measure their academic progress and fitness for advancement. The Memphis City Council should give its own exam to Superintendent Kriner Cash, who is asking the council to give MCS an additional $120 to $130 million or so over the next two years, plus $50 million to cover the "shortage" from last year.

All of that will likely mean a property tax increase for Memphis residents who already pay by far the highest property tax rate in Tennessee.

Memphis is already losing population and becoming increasingly isolated from the rest of Shelby County and Tennessee. A tax increase of a few hundred dollars a year isn't going to break many people, but it will send a message about how the city and the school system respond to a real budget crisis.

MCS has a billion-dollar-a-year budget. But before approving the schools budget in the coming weeks, City Council members should ask Cash some questions:

• What is the MCS enrollment, and how do you know? In public education, more students means more dollars. The Tennessee Report Card and the MCS website say it is approximately 105,000. Why, then, did the state Court of Appeals use an MCS enrollment number that was too high by 7,000 in its 2009 decision on school funding? And why did you say last week that the enrollment is 111,000 in a column you wrote for The Commercial Appeal?

• If MCS, as appears to be the case, has overstated enrollment for several years by several thousand students, why doesn't it owe the state and city a refund on the order of half a billion dollars?

• On the report card, enrollment is 104,829 in 2009 and 110,753 in 2007 and 116,528 in 2006. But there are more administrators (439 to 359), schools (199 to 194), teachers (7,259 to 6,438), and per-pupil spending ($10,394 to $9,254) now than there were three years ago. Why is that?

• The report card classifies 100,617 of the 104,829 students in MCS as "Title 1," which is federal government-speak for "high-poverty schools." Are you telling us that there is no middle class and no upward mobility in Memphis, a city that takes great pride in its entrepreneurship, flagship companies, and aspirations to become a "city of choice"?

No middle class? Members of AFSCME, the public employees union with deep Memphis roots, receive an average salary of $45,000 a year, according to union president Gerald McEntee. Many of those 7,259 MCS teachers and 6,700 city employees make more than that.

No upward mobility in a city where the mayors and most city and county division directors are black?

No way to get ahead in the home of the University of Memphis and the Superhub? FedEx doesn't hire all those college students and part-timers to screw up the package sort. They hire them because they can do a demanding job. None of them went to MCS?

• While 90 percent of the public schools in Memphis are classified as "high poverty schools," only 10 percent of the schools in Shelby County are high poverty. More than two-thirds of the students at Central and Ridgeway, both college-prep high schools in MCS, are considered "poor."

But at Germantown High School in the Shelby County system, only 25 percent are so classified. Is MCS poor-mouthing itself in order to maximize federal funding? Has a city school ever gotten off the poverty list, the way schools go on and off the "low-performing" list?

• Approximately 86 percent of MCS students are classified as "economically disadvantaged" and eligible for free and reduced price lunches. Have you ever audited this number, and how and when does MCS ask kids or their parents to document their family income?

A full-price lunch in a school cafeteria costs $2 and includes an entrée, two vegetables, bread, and a beverage. That's $10 a week, or less if you brown-bag it. If everyone is that poor, then why do you need a cell phone policy?

Imagine walking into a restaurant where the hostess greets you and says, "Hello, folks, I see you are non-white. Would you care to have a seat over here in our 'Free' section? Sit anywhere you want, but just make sure you all sit together." Would you put up with that?

• How many schools are less than two-thirds full? How many are less than half-full? Are any of them almost new?

Parents and students are mobile, and MCS has an open-enrollment policy, so some schools are winners and some are losers in the choice game.

The three biggest high schools — White Station (2,142), Whitehaven (2,124), and Cordova (2,057) each has more students than the four smallest high schools combined — Douglass (366), Westwood (500), Treadwell (498), and Oakhaven (513). What are you doing about this?

• How many students graduated from MCS high schools last year? Why isn't this number, which is the simplest indicator of student progress, readily available? Please spare us the complexities of the various ways of measuring the graduation rate and just provide the raw number of graduates for the last five years.

• MCS is scheduled to take over three-year-old Southwind High School, which is now a Shelby County school in an annexation area. Southwind is nearly all-black in a county system that is 37 percent black. Any idea what's going on here?

• How will the upcoming vote on reinventing county government affect MCS funding?

• Tennessee was one of two states to win federal "Race to the Top" funds this year. The state's share is roughly $500 million. How will the share of that coming to MCS be coordinated with the additional funding you are seeking from the City Council?

• Do you have bodyguards? If so, how many and why?

• You say you believe in openness, but your media staff requires reporters to submit Freedom of Information requests for the most basic information. And your idea of open seems to be public access cable TV, where you can talk about whatever you want for as long as you want. Why?

Asking questions about money for MCS inevitably provokes either legal challenges or passionate cries at City Hall and the school board to do right "for the sake of the children." Fair enough, but how about giving students and the rest of us a fair shake first?

Making Memphis City Schools appear bigger and poorer than it is may help the system get more local, state, and federal money, but it's killing the city and it's unfair to the students.

Comments (12)

Showing 1-12 of 12

Add a comment

Go get 'em, Branston! One of your best.

report   
Posted by Wintermute on 04/22/2010 at 2:11 PM

Nothing but net.

report   
Posted by tomguleff on 04/22/2010 at 2:29 PM

I wouldn't disagree that it has a negative affect, IF that is what's happening. One of this city's biggest PR problems is local media. For example, channel 3's Norm Brewer. If I saw one of his pieces (of $h!t) on primetime and didn't know any better, I'd hit the ground running for another place to live or visit. The Memphis Flyer is no saint either (the "Lost Horizon" cover story a few weeks ago was very inaccurate & bashed a lot of the huge improvements made to Downtown. Local media has been hijacked by "the Miserables".

report   
Posted by Johnny Ryall on 04/22/2010 at 3:18 PM

Brilliant, Branston. Finally a throwdown challenge to the bottomless sponge.
In tonight's first match we have Geoff Caulkins vs. RC Johnson. And in the title match, Challenger John Branston vs Kriner "Needmo' " Cash.

report   
Posted by danzo on 04/22/2010 at 6:22 PM

Can we make sure every elected official in Memphis gets a copy of this?

Great job. Now if we could just get some answers to these questions.

report   
Posted by mad_merc on 04/22/2010 at 7:33 PM

care to elaborate, tom?

report   
Posted by sbanbury on 04/24/2010 at 8:52 AM

Can somebody explain to me why we pay these exorbitant property taxes. Since moving here from NYC 8 years ago I feel like I am wearing property taxes around my neck.

report   
Posted by mjsjazz on 04/25/2010 at 1:38 PM

It's Memphis' way of keeping up with NYC, Boston, LA, Miami etc. If their taxes can be high, then ours can too!

report   
Posted by mad_merc on 04/25/2010 at 2:18 PM

The comments of John Branston further outline and highlight the decay of the management of the MCS system. His well written article is just a small part of what plagues us today in the river city. It is absolutely absurd to have the pawns and product of the liberal left movement (black, poor, uneducated masses of the intercity population) continue to be used to maintain inflated MCS funding and political posturing while continuing to produce substandard results. I continue to be perplexed when any call for oversight or audit of the MCS system results in cries of racism or worse. The facts simply cannot stand in the way of the calls of racism or underperformance. The current method of problem solving has allowed all of our competing cities to leap over Memphis in opportunities for all. We have become a laughing stock of infighting and political nepatism. Keep the people down, accept substandard results, keep the masses uneducated, scare them by telling them others will threaten the continued delivery of their government check- a check they have a "right" to recieve and then blame it on anyone other than themselves - that is Memphis! It is my hope that someone will finally ask a simple question: Why, after almost 50 years of the Democratic "Great Society" social movement, does Memphis have an ever growing economic and educational concentration camp so prevalent in the inner city that there is nothing provided by the city, the educational system, the political system, or the people themselves that will allow them to escape the bondage of complete social dependancy? It's no longer the problem of others! It is such a shame to understand the sacrifices that President Lincoln and others gave to free all people only to have the Democrat party and social programs re-enslave the same individuals. Its time to stop looking to others for answers and look in the mirror. Responsibility and accountability, individually and in government must be restored for this parasitic behavior to stop.

report   
Posted by memphiscap on 04/26/2010 at 2:29 PM

I just had to sign in to tell you Thank You for asking these questions! We can not fix anything as a city until we All ask these questions!

And it sure would be nice to get some answers!

report   
Posted by CdTigers on 04/27/2010 at 10:08 AM

On the money. Great article.

report   
Posted by AnonymousC on 05/04/2010 at 1:11 PM

I agree, the city council members need to take a look at this. I bought a house 4 years
ago, my house note was $843.00 and the city and county increased my taxed putting
my house note up to $902.00 in one jump. I am thinking, if I stay in this city, I will
end up paying $1,100 a month. That sucks. My taxes are now $1800.00 a year.
I think that is way too much on a $92.000. home. I bought a less expensive home, trying
to keep my note down and this is what happens because of poor management in this city.
No wonder everyone has a bad opinion of this city. I remember the way it was here in
the 80's it was so much nicer.

report   
Posted by leigh pearl on 01/12/2012 at 10:23 AM
Subscribe to this thread:
Showing 1-12 of 12

Add a comment

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

Readers also liked…

  • Delivered from Calipari

    Memphis' loss is, in fact, Memphis' gain, as an era comes to an end.
    • Apr 9, 2009

People who saved…

Most Commented On

  • The Time Is Ripe

    We may not get it, but a unified school system needs our best shot.
    • May 2, 2012
  • The Price of Free Music

    A smash at the Levitt Shell, not so much at Mud Island.
    • May 23, 2012
  • More »
ADVERTISEMENT

© 1996-2012

Contemporary Media
460 Tennessee Street, 2nd Floor | Memphis, TN 38103
Visit our other sites: Memphis Magazine | Memphis Parent | Memphis Business Quarterly
Powered by Foundation