FORUM Private schools and public lies George ' Curry i Guest i Columnist The recent U.S. Supreme Couit ruling supporting the use of ! public dollars for vouchers to pri vate and parochial schools has J been a cause for gloating by some conservatives. But their excite ment cannot gloss over several important facts that show, when all is said and done, most black students will be no better off by the ruling than they were before. First, let's deal with the money. The Cleveland vouchers at the center to the court's ruling f pay a maximum of $2,250 a year to fewer than 5,000 families. j African Americans should not be duped into thinking that in the , aftermath of the Supreme Court's , mling, black students will sudden- \ ly be attending classes with wealthy white students and. according to their reasoning, receive a superior education. That's not going to happen. Let's look at George W. Bush's alma mater. Phillips Acad- ' emy (also known as Andover) in Massachusetts. It charged board- ( ing students $26,900 this past school year. So. if one of those v Cleveland students wants to attend Phillips Academy and can manage to transfer a voucher to there, he or she will still need to :ome up with another $24,650. Second, when African Ameri :ans leave the public school sys tem for private schools, they snroll in schools that are more racially isolated than many of the public schools from which they lave tied. A recent report issued ay the Civil Rights Project at Har vard University titled "Private school Racial Enrollments and Segregation" concluded. "Black ivhite segregation is greater tmong private schools than tmong public schools." The report, which is available in the project's Web site, notes hat 78 percent of the private school students in the nation arc ?vhite. But during the 1997-98 school year, the average black pri vate-school student attended a school that was only 34 percent vhite. By comparison, whites make jp 64 percent of public-school students. Even with that lower lercentage, the average African American public-school student tttends a school w ith 33 percent white enrollment. Among private schools, Catholic institutions - where almost all of the black students go - represent racial segregation at its worst. The Harvard study says. "Black Catholic school students attend schools that are, on aver age. 31 percent white; black stu dents in non-Catholic religious school-, attend schools that aver age 35 percent white; and black students in secular private schools attend schools that average 41 percent white." The report does not suggest that the racial segregation among Catholic schools is by design. To the contrary, the authors point out that many of the Catholic schools are still located in central cities where housing discrimination is still a fact of life. Catholic schools enroll about half of all private schools students, followed by evangelical Christian schools w ith about a third of the pupils and the rest,- attending secular private schools. Interestingly, most of the pri vate-school racial segregation in grades K through 12 does not occur in the South, where "white flight" was common during the early days of school desegregation in the 1960s. In fact, white enroll ment in private schools in the South is at 11 percent, which is I percent lower than the national average. This is at the same time that the South has the highest pro portion of black students in public schools with whites. That does not mean the end of white flight, especially in major cities. The report observes. "In school districts and metropolitan areas with higher shares of black students in the population, a high er proportion of w hites attend pri vate schools In all of our mod els, the strongest predictor of white private enrollment is the proportion of black students in the area" What is often overlooked in the discussion about vouchers in Cleveland is that part of the plan calls for inner-city students enrolling in cooperative suburban school districts. However, no sub urban district agreed to take any of the students. As the debate rages over vouchers and private schools, the reality is that private and parochial schools enroll only 10 percent of all students. That means 90 per cent of all students, whether they like it or not. will remain enrolled in public schools. The challenge is how to improve those schools, not find ways to rob public schools of their most motivated students and concerned parents. George E. Curry is editor-in chief of the NNPA News Sen ice and BlackPressUSA.com. Republicans stumble with outreach, again Armstrong Williams Guest . | Columnist The Republican Party's rela tionship with the black voting populace has been tenuous at best over the last 40 years - a fact that found perfect expression in the 2000 election, when 90 percent of the black voting populace cast their ballots for Democratic chal lenger Al Gore. Even in Bush's home state of Texas, 95 percent of black voters supported Gore, despite the fact that Bush pursued American blacks with more avidi ty than any Republican candidate of recent memory. Plainly, minorities continue to have difficulty trusting Republi can candidates - hangover from the party's opposition to retain civil-rights initiatives and affirma tive action. As America grows ever more diverse. Republican national leaders realize that unless they actively woo a larger percent age of the African-American and Hispanic vote, they will have dif ficulty remaining a stable govern ing party. President Bush has tried to lay the groundwork for a genuine give-and-take between the GOP and the ethnic community. In practice, however, these outreach efforts continue to be muddled by party leaders who are constrained by their own insular traditions. Exhibit A: the party's recent fail ure to support Minister Conrad Muhammad of New York. Some brief background: In his angry youth, Muhammad aligned himself with Rev. Louis Far rakhan and the Nation of Islam, where he proceeded to pump his fists at the powers that be. Now, as a calm, articulate 37-year-old. he desperately wants to be a part of the power structure he once denounced. To this end, Muham mad has openly courted the Republican Party leadership to back his bid to represent New York's 15th Congressional Dis trict in Harlem - an area that Muhammad feels is ripe for change. As for his past, he says he has shed the vitriol of his youth and now seems prepared to change the dominant power structure by join ing ir. He cites Congressman Bobby Rush (D-lll.) as an exam ple. "(Rush) used to say. 'Off the pig.' meaning kill police officers. That was the language of the times, but I'm sure that Congress man Rush does not feel that way today about our police. He is still fighting for his people, but he is doing it through the system. I have made a similar transition.' Dubbed the "hip-hop minis ter" by the citizens of Harlem for his rousing sermons and commu nity service. Muhammad serves as the executive director of CHHANGE (Conscious Hip-Hop Activism Necessary for Global Empowerment), an organization dedicated to correcting negative stereotypes in the new s media and pop culture. If elected, he could use that grass-roots credibility to build bridges between the Repub licans and the African-American voting populace. So why has the Republican leadership balked at the idea of supporting Muhammad, opting instead to back Independent Party veteran Dr. Jesse Fields? The official party line is that Muhammad needs to build his resume and atone for past com ments made during his tenure with the Nation of Islam. "That's absurd." snorted Muhammad, noting that the Republican Party didn't hesitate to seek his support in getting other white. Republican candidates elected. "When I was running around here campaigning for Mike Bloomberg, and I was at the Republican convention during the last presidential race, when I endorsed Gov. (George) Pataki while there was an African-Amer ican Democrat in the office, no one said anything about me need ing to atone. And while the party said they wouldn't support me as a candidate, they wanted me to go out and get the governor elected and build the party. So I think it is hypocrisy." And indeed, after conducting some research and polling, the GOP's national leaders concluded that there would likely be hell to pay if they backed a black man with strong views and a personal history that did not mesh with their own ideals. It is also worth noting that the Republican Party consists largely of those Southern politicians who in the past would have been opposed to civil-rights legislation. Plainly, they have dif ficulty looking beyond their own tradition. This is sad because Muham mad supports traditional Republi can values of empowering small businesses and injecting market dynamics into the public school system. It is sad because he repre sents the Republican Party's best chance at supplanting Rep. Charles Rangel. It is sad because President Bush has made a genuine effort to huild bridges to the ethnic com munity. to increase ethnic diversi ty within the GOP. and to earn the like and trust of the African American community. Most of all. it is sad because as America grow s ever more diverse, the GOP's national leadership appears ever more insular and stodgy. That means minorities will continue to reflexively vote for Democrats - making them the easiest group for both parties to take for granted. www.armstnmgwilliams.com 1 V KRT PHOTO BY DAVID TURNLEY/DETROIT FREE PRESS Conrad Muhammad, 33, (left), and Malik Shabazz, 22, reflect during a news conference in 1998 after the city of New York refused to issue a permit for their Million Youth March. The deadline for News is Monday at 5 p.m. I Unitarian :iUniversalist '?vi/1 Fellowship Sunday Forum 9 a.m. Service 10:30 a.m. Rev. Charles Davis. 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