(WND) As
Detroit – beset by violence, debt and social woes – prepares to
undergo a historic takeover by the Michigan state government, the city of
Atlanta could be sliding toward a similar fate.
Some are
quietly wondering whether Atlanta is in danger of becoming “the Detroit of the
South."
The city has
experienced an ongoing succession of government scandals, ranging from a
massive cheating racket to corruption, bribery, school-board incompetence and
now the potential loss of accreditation for the local DeKalb County school
system.
For several
years, problems of this sort have fueled political reforms, including the
creation of new cities in northern Atlanta suburbs. Due to the intensification
of corruption scandals in DeKalb, some state-level reform proposals could
become national news very soon.
‘Super-white majority’ cities
As a result
of the unsavory politics in urban Atlanta, northern suburban communities acted
to distance themselves. Beginning in 2005, many communities began the process
of incorporating into cities.
Thus far,
Milton, Sandy Springs, Brookhaven, Dunwoody, Chattahoochee Hills and Johns
Creek have done so.
These cities, after breaking away politically from urban
Atlanta, have become so successful that a libertarian think tank, the Reason
Foundation, has featured
Sandy Springs as a model of effective government. The Economist has also applauded the
northern Atlanta cities for solving the problem of unfunded
government pension liability and avoiding the bankruptcy that looms over some
urban areas. The new cities may soon be able to create their
own school districts, which would free them even further from the
issues besetting Atlanta.
While incorporation has been popular with residents of the
new cities, not all of Atlanta is as satisfied. The Georgia Legislative Black
Caucus filed a lawsuit in 2011 to dissolve the new cities, claiming they
were a “super-white majority” and diluting the voting power of
minorities.
A key leader
in the black community and a driving force in support of the lawsuit, who
wishes to remain anonymous, bemoaned the “disturbing tendency of black
electorates to not elect the smartest and brightest, or even the cleverest.”
Nonetheless,
he believes that there is a social contract between the northern and southern
parts of the county.
“So when you
allow powerful groups of citizens to opt out of a social contract, and form
their own, it may benefit the group opting out, but it hurts the larger collective,”
he said.
The lawsuit
would have canceled incorporation and tied the cities back into the very county
that they purposefully left.
State Rep. Lynne Riley, a Republican who represents one of
the new cities, called the
lawsuit “frivilous” and “disrespectful to the citizens of these
cities who are most satisfied with their government.”
The federal trial court rejected the lawsuit, and the court
of appeals affirmed the dismissal. However, an attorney for the Black Caucus
plans to file an amended
lawsuit.
Meanwhile,
the same concerns that spurred incorporation continue to mount.
Failing schools
DeKalb County
contributed to what the New York
Times called “the biggest standardized test cheating scandal in
the country’s history” in 2011.
Now, the
county is faced with losing its regional accreditation. Losing regional
accreditation is, by any objective measure, a devastating indictment of a
school board, with severe consequences for students and families within the
district.
When nearby Clayton County, Ga., lost its regional
accreditation in 2008, it was the first
school system in the country to do so in 40 years. The result in
Clayton, according to
the Pew Foundation, was that thousands of students left county
schools, the district lost millions of dollars and hundreds of teachers were
fired.
In response
to the Clayton County crisis, after witnessing the fallout and the harm to the
state’s reputation, the legislature acted to prevent a repeat. In 2011, the
Georgia legislature essentially gave the governor authority to remove board of
education members when a district was placed on probation by the accreditation
agency.
Last
December, DeKalb was placed on probation. Then, in January, the governor of
Georgia used his new authority and removed six members of the nine-member
DeKalb Board of Education.
This year, well after the accreditation issue broke open,
DeKalb school board elections were held. Four of nine board members were up for
reelection. Voters in one
of the four districts returned their incumbent board member for
another term, despite knowing that accreditation was at risk.
This week, a
federal judge sided with the governor and agreed that the six suspended board
members can be replaced. The decision places the dispute into the Georgia
Supreme Court’s purview.
As the issue looms, the mere mention of losing accreditation
has impacted the housing market in DeKalb, with at least one
potential buyer directing his realtor not to search for homes in the county.
School leadership
Recently, at the helm of the DeKalb school system stood
Crawford Lewis. The former superintendent has been indicted on
racketeering charges. Along with several of his associates, Lewis is
accused by the DeKalb DA of fraud, theft by a government employee, bribery and
a web of racketeering.
The charges arose out of Lewis’ practice of steering
lucrative government contracts toward favored companies.
According to
the indictment, Lewis also used government funds to pay for a hotel
room, which he used as the venue for an affair. Lewis had this affair with a
person who held the position of “Executive Director of the Office of School
Improvement.”
One of the
numerous complaints about the DeKalb school board was that it voted to pay for
Lewis’ legal defense. There had been a $100,000 cap on the costs allowed for
legal defense, but the school board waived it for Lewis’ benefit.
The CEO in charge
At the very top, the head of DeKalb’s government is the
position of CEO. The current CEO, Burrell Ellis, is being investigated for a
list of concerns, including alleged bid rigging. Police searched Ellis’s home
and office recently, and local news
outlets report that while no charges have been filed, search
warrants are reportedly aimed toward
potential extortion, bribery, theft, conspiracy, and wire fraud in connection
with private vendors who contract with the county.
Most recently, Ellis sought approval from the county ethics
board to establish a legal defense fund to benefit himself. The board
rebuffed the request.
A corrupt school board becomes a
civil rights issue
Instead of
being treated as a story about rampant, inexcusable corruption, the school
board fiasco has morphed into a civil rights issue. Atlanta’s NBC affiliate
reports that the Georgia NAACP “accused Republican Governor Nathan Deal of
being part of an alleged conspiracy to get rid of black office holders and deprive
black voters of their rights.”
State Rep.
Tyrone Books pointed out that criticism of the governor needed to include a
word about black politicians who supported the governor’s removal authority.
“How can we
complain about him when we have black folks standing there embracing the
removal of black officials?” asked Brooks, D-Atlanta.
The state legislature is trying to
prevent public funds from being used in the legal defense of the ousted board
members. Because the ousted board members see their positions as a
civil rights entitlement, the attorney’s fees required for their defense will
quickly rise, unless legislation puts an end to the entitlement.
One of the suspended board members, Eugene Walker, responded to
the judge’s ruling with a familiar appeal: “Minorities should not
feel secure if contrived allegations from anonymous sources with hidden agendas
can go to private agencies and to have their civil rights stolen away.”
DeKalb has changed from majority white to majority black over
the last several decades. As the
Atlanta Journal Constitution gingerly put it: “The county’s
transition from majority white to majority minority was politically rocky .”
Source: World News Daily, Suburbs Secede from Atlanta
'Detroit of the South'
bludgeoned by troubles: by John T.
Bennett, Published: 3/10/13
http://www.wnd.com/2013/03/suburbs-secede-fromatlanta/#eTqkgFss SBlIG3om.99
http://www.wnd.com/2013/03/suburbs-secede-fromatlanta/#eTqkgFss SBlIG3om.99
Comments:
Breaking off to form your new city
can cause new the problems.
In Dunwoody GA, voters are in a
squabble with the new city council over plans to waste about $4 million on
worthless projects, required by a little over $1 million in Obama Squander -grant
money, so breaking off into your own city does not necessarily insulate voters
from abuse. UN Agenda 21 implementation abuse is nation-wide with grant
requirements for on-road bike lanes, sidewalks to nowhere, complete streets,
green space, roundabouts, converting residential streets into commuter
boulevards and transforming our strip malls into parks. Our streets are too narrow for bike lanes. In Dunwoody, we just want the potholes fixed
and left turn lanes added to our main roads
On the school front, the cheating scandal
was incentivized by Obama’s “race to the top” bonuses and the accrediting agency
gets its direction from UN global Marxists.
So break out the torches and pitchforks and visit you elected officials
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party
Leader.
Norb-
ReplyDeleteThe Atlanta/DeKalb Public School Cheating scandal began during the Spring 2009 CRCT testing cycle. This test are used as a requirement of G.W. Bush's "No Child Left Behind" legislation of 2001. Obama has only been in power a few months. Facts don't matter to self-appoints "Leaders" though.
Are you really being abused by the City Council? Do you really want to do something that might "Save Dunwoody"? Support a new school district here, you will be "Saving" you property value if you do so!
Then again you might not have as much stuff to complain about, Herr Leader.