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Dothan Branch #5025 Offers
NAACP Concent Decree Information
To News
In A Press Release
November 30, 2006
NAACP PRESS RELEASE
The Dothan Wiregrass Branch #5025 of the NAACP is greatly concerned
about a series of articles by Debbie Ingram, which appeared in recent
resent issues of the Dothan Eagle on the Dothan Public School System.
The articles where full of half-truths and representations. One
of the most glaring misrepresentations where comments by Mr. Lucky
Martin who was supposedly speaking on behalf of the NAACP. Mr. Martin
does not have the authority to speak for the NAACP. The only spokes
person for the local NAACP organization is Mr. Wade Morrison, President
of the NAACP Dothan Wiregrass Branch #5025.
Failure to hire and retain minority teachers is a continuing Consent
Decree issue that could have been resolved many, many years ago,
if the Dothan City School system was sincere in complying with the
Consent Decree. Until it does what is required by law, the Federal
Court should maintain oversight.
The NAACP spearheaded the legal battle to have public school segregation
throughout the United States declared illegal by the U.S. Supreme
Court more than 50 years ago. Dothan was one of the last systems
to desegregate. The Consent Decree was necessary to compel legal
compliance. The Consent Decree remains necessary for Dothan to reach
and maintain legal compliance.
The NAACP has worked cooperatively with the Dothan City School System
in an effort to reach common ground to ensure that all children
regardless of race, sex, religion, national origin, or disability
receive equal equitable educational opportunities. The Law requires
this.
NAACP members worked diligently with the Dothan City School System
Unitary Status and Education Committee and made recommendations
on how to recruit minority teachers. We also recommended marketing
the educational successes of the public school system to dispel
the myth that private schools are better than public schools. Other
recommendations made by the committee included: reducing class size,
establishing effective programs to address the educational needs
of all students, improve school safety, increase educational funding,
enhance parental involvement, improve facilities inside the circle,
and recruit and retain qualified and culturally diverse teachers
who reflect the diversity of the student body. The NAACP worked
jointly with the Dothan City School Board in the establishment of
the Carver and Montana Street Magnet Schools.
White flight is not the result of the Consent Decree.
It is past time for the Dothan City School officials to stop blaming
the Consent Decree and go about the business of improving the academic
potential of all students. It is time to stop the mass confusion
that causes divisiveness in the schools as well as the community.
As of late, some white parents threatened to remove their children
from the Dothan City School System when the proposed merger of Northview
and Dothan High School surfaced. Such mass confusion had nothing
to do with the Consent Decree.
Parents who left the Dothan City School System to avoid integration,
religious or cultural reasons are not likely to return. The Consent
Decree did not cause such flight, and lifting the Consent Decree
will not bring those students back.
What does the Dothan City School System want to do that it cannot
do with the Consent Decree in place? Past programs have been approved
by the Federal Court as long as they were constitutional.
The NAACP strongly opposes policies, practices and procedures that
return to segregated schools or deny constitutional rights. The
educational goal is for all children to receive an excellent education;
history and law tell us that segregation is a certain path to inequality
for all students.
In the book We Can't Teach What We Don't Know, author Gary Howard
declares, "Diversity is not a choice, but our responses to
it certainly are." The nation's K-12 students are seeing an
ever-increasing mix of races among their peers, yet they are still
taught mostly by all-white teachers.
The Dothan City School System must prepare our students, both minority
and majority, to live and work in an increasingly diverse society.
How can they do that if teachers aren't representative of their
own students?
The growth of ethnic and minority student enrollment is creating
a critical need for hiring and retaining minority teachers to provide
positive role models for the students, inspiring a diverse student
body to achieve, encouraging parental involvement, and retaining
qualified minority teachers.
The contention that the Dothan City School System cannot find qualified
minority teachers is without merit. 6457 Blacks in the State of
Alabama received Education Degrees in 2003-2004. Other school systems
can find them. Why not Dothan? I continue to receive calls from
teacher applicants/former applicants some of whom graduated from
the Dothan City School System. They couldn't get hired here, but
had to go elsewhere and were hired.
Dothan should have complied with the Consent Decree many, many years
ago. Until it does what is required by law, the Federal Court should
maintain oversight.
The mission of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored
People, a non- profit civil rights organization, is to ensure the
political, educational, social, and economic equality of all persons
and to eliminate racial hatred and racial discrimination.
Questions: Contact Wade Morrison, President, Dothan Wiregrass Branch
NAACP, P.O. Box 683, Dothan, AL 36302.
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