State Representatives Upset With Birmingham BOE Situation
By: Stephen Crews
Updated: July 24, 2012
Birmingham School Board members may vote again Tuesday on a reduction plan. Some lawmakers want to protect jobs on the chopping block and a local activist says a state intervention in the school system is racist.
State Representatives Mary Moore and John Rogers did not speak directly about the racist remark by a local activist, but they do believe the state's approach is not right. The state board can override it the board's vote if they don't pass the plan.
There's anger from State Representatives John
Rogers and Mary Moore over State Superintendent Tommy Bice conducting
Tuesday's board of education meeting in the middle of the day. They're
also worried about their constituents and the students. State
Representative Moore says "He is disenfranchising all the people who
took time to vote for these school board members."
It
will be the fourth time, the board is expected to vote on a reduction
plan. State Representative Rogers says "What about these poor people,
fight for their jobs!"
State
Representative John Rogers wants to know why Dr. Bice isn't taking over
other school systems Rogers says are in the red. "He's not in
Huntsville, Mobile had a 13-million dollar deficit and is still in the
hole, but he's not there."
State
appointed CFO, Dr. Ed Richardson says it's a financial intervention
that other systems have avoided because they passed a reduction plan.
"If Birmingham had done this in early June as every other system had,
then we wouldn't be having this conversation today."
William
Muhammed, President of the Committee to Develop Birmingham, says the
state board's action is unconstitutional and racist. Rogers response to
that: "If it walks like a duck, quacks like a duck, it might be a duck, I
don't know, I'm saying it doesn't look right."
Dr.
Richardson says the standard to which Birmingham is being held is the
same as all the districts. "It has nothing to do with race, it's a
school system that has not met its standard."
And parents should know Tuesday when school will start. The board is expected to vote on that as well as make some policy changes.












