Saturday, May 24, 2008

CCSD Invents Reverse Busing

Knowing the results of CCSD's methods over the last 30 years or so, one must be reminded of the innocently ominous tone of Sylvia Plath's "Mushrooms." In such a way has CCSD, with the full complicity of its school board, but not that of its District 20 constituent board, created de facto segregated schools on the Charleston penninsula.

In fact, under the radar CCSD has invented
REVERSE BUSING, in a stunning sleight of hand that will NEVER be covered by the Post and Courier and could not have been foreseen by the activist judges that mandated busing for integration during the seventies and eighties in places such as Charlotte.

Overnight, very
Whitely, discreetly,
Very quietly

Our toes, our noses
Take hold on the loam,
Acquire the air.

Nobody sees us,
Stops us, betrays us;
The small grains make room.
.......................................
So many of us!
So many of us!

So many of us, indeed, simply assume that the population of District 20's schools merely reflects the demographics of the penninsula's population. Nothing could be further from the truth.

Thanks to the legwork and brainwork of some concerned District 20 residents, the following statistics now make clear that very gradually over the course of school year after school year CCSD has participated knowingly in re-segregating the downtown schools. This while erstwhile civil rights attorney Gregg Meyers sits on its school board.

The estimates and numbers below are updated to 2006. The information used comes from US Census data, SC Department of Education data, and public data from CCSD sources. It seems unlikely that the situation has changed dramatically in the last two years.

The bottom line is this:
  • For the approximately 5,000 seats in District 20 schools, there are about 5,000 school age children (PK thru 12) living in District 20.
  • Roughly 1200 of these children live south of Calhoun Street.
  • The racial make up of the population of District 20 is approximately 51% Black, 48% White and 1% "other."
  • As recently as 2006 District 20 had an enrollment of 3100 students.
  • Of the 3100 students attending District 20 schools in 2005-06, only 2100 students were residents of District 20.
  • Nearly 1,000 students attended District 20 schools but resided outside of District 20.
Okay, Buist may account for some, but not for more than 300.
  • Approximately 1200 District 20 residents attended CCSD schools outside of District 20.
Why? That's nearly one-third of District 20 school-age residents, isn't it?
  • Nearly 1700 District 20 students attended either a non-CCSD school or were home schooled in 2005-06.
We don't need to ask why for that.
  • At least a third of District 20's nine schools, including its only high school, had between 30% and 80% of those school enrollments made up of non-District 20 residents.
  • From the information available each of the five District 20 elementary schools draw more than half of their enrollment from outside of their specific attendance zones.
  • At least 1200 students, and possibly as many as 2500, annually enroll or withdraw from a District 20 attendance zone to which they have not been assigned.
  • The vast majority of these out-of-zone school transfers relating to District 20 students and schools appear to have been allowed without anyone informing the District 20 Board.
  • The assumption is that at least 1200 students annually attend a District 20 school without the submission of an appropriate transfer request being processed by the District 20 Board as required by law.
Worried about saving on gasoline? Does anyone believe that CCSD doesn't bus these students into and off the penninsula every day?

Busing in the service of segregation. I submit that is against the law. Is anyone paying attention?

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

I thought Dr. McGinley and Mayor Riley said they were going green, if only to save taxpayers. Who's checking to see if this is just hype? Are they really doing something about this kind of waste? Not even counting the NCLB transfers, with so many kids on the road with extra legal transfers to non-neighborhood schools, CCSD must be wasting a hell of a lot of gas.

Anonymous said...

Here's the biggest and saddest joke of all. CCSD originally supported the constituent school district subdivisions just so they wouldn't have to bus public school kids all across the county. It was their insurance policy against racial quotas by saying each district was autonomous and unique. Who would have thought CCSD would end up doing on their own and voluntarily exactly what they feared most would come out of a federal court order some thirty or more years ago.

POPS said...

did i miss your discussion of segregation?