March 2, 2006
DEMOCRATS VS. BLACKS:
Black Flight: The exodus to charter schools. (KATHERINE KERSTEN, March 2, 2006, Opinion Journal)
Something momentous is happening here in the home of prairie populism: black flight. African-American families from the poorest neighborhoods are rapidly abandoning the district public schools, going to charter schools, and taking advantage of open enrollment at suburban public schools. Today, just around half of students who live in the city attend its district public schools.As a result, Minneapolis schools are losing both raw numbers of students and "market share." In 1999-2000, district enrollment was about 48,000; this year, it's about 38,600. Enrollment projections predict only 33,400 in 2008. A decline in the number of families moving into the district accounts for part of the loss, as does the relocation of some minority families to inner-ring suburbs. Nevertheless, enrollments are relatively stable in the leafy, well-to-do enclave of southwest Minneapolis and the city's white ethnic northeast. But in 2003-04, black enrollment was down 7.8%, or 1,565 students. In 2004-05, black enrollment dropped another 6%.
Black parents have good reasons to look elsewhere. Last year, only 28% of black eighth-graders in the Minneapolis public schools passed the state's basic skills math test; 47% passed the reading test. The black graduation rate hovers around 50%, and the district's racial achievement gap remains distressingly wide. Louis King, a black leader who served on the Minneapolis School Board from 1996 to 2000, puts it bluntly: "Today, I can't recommend in good conscience that an African-American family send their children to the Minneapolis public schools. The facts are irrefutable: These schools are not preparing our children to compete in the world." Mr. King's advice? "The best way to get attention is not to protest, but to shop somewhere else."
They can do so because of the state's longstanding commitment to school choice.
One of two things has to happen eventually, either Democrats will start representing their constituents and help pass the Ownership Society in its entirety, or else those constituents will drift into the GOP which already represents their interests. Posted by Orrin Judd at March 2, 2006 5:03 PM
Democrats in Congress are too busy sending their own kids to Sidwell Friends while consistently denying poor black children the opportunity to attend.
Posted by: pchuck at March 2, 2006 5:15 PMWhy would Democrats not give African-Americans those political stances requested by African-Americans? Perhaps they do and you just don't like what is being requested?
In Lousiana, Mississippi for instance, the majority of Democratic voters are African-Americans. It would seem that what you see is what get. Nationally they are 25% of the Democratic vote, and yet you speculate that white (or black for that matter) Democrats resist the policies that African-Americans desire. I think that is unlikely.
Posted by: h-man at March 2, 2006 5:16 PMPublic employee unions are more powerful within the party.
Posted by: oj at March 2, 2006 5:21 PM