Current Events > The Resegregation of Jefferson County

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FrisbeeDude
09/09/17 10:20:20 AM
#1:


https://mobile.nytimes.com/2017/09/06/magazine/the-resegregation-of-jefferson-county.html?#_=_

What one Alabama town’s attempt to secede from its school district tells us about the fragile progress of racial integration in America.

In 2013, a flier began making the rounds in Gardendale, Ala., a suburb of Birmingham. On it, a blond white girl wearing a red backpack and knee-high socks peered innocently at a question hanging above her head: “Which path will Gardendale choose?” Beside her was a list of communities in Jefferson County — Pleasant Grove, Center Point/Huffman, Adamsville/Forestdale, Hueytown — under the heading: “Places that chose NOT to form their own school system.” Below that was a list of four communities — Homewood, Hoover, Vestavia Hills, Trussville — that did form their own school systems and were “listed as some of the best places to live in the country.”

To outsiders, these names are meaningless, but local residents knew exactly what was being said. In Jefferson County, like in any other racially mixed metropolitan area in the country, the names of towns and neighborhoods can serve as code, a way of referencing race without being explicit. Homewood, Hoover, Vestavia Hills and Trussville and their schools were heavily white. Center Point, Pleasant Grove and the others listed next to the girl all had large black populations — some had shifted from majority white to majority black.

The flier was produced and sent out by a group of parents calling itself Focus (Future of Our Community Utilizing Schools) Gardendale. Focus was created in 2012 with a singular purpose: to split off Gardendale’s schools from the 36,000-student Jefferson County school district, where black students outnumber white ones. This process of breaking off is known as secession, and school secessions have become fairly common. Laws in 30 states explicitly allow communities to form their own public-school systems, and since 2000, at least 71 communities across the country, most of them white and wealthy, have sought to break away from their public-school districts to form smaller, more exclusive ones, according to a recent study released by EdBuild, a nonpartisan organization focused on improving the way states fund public education.

In Alabama, any town of more than 5,000 residents can vote to form its own school system, and over the years, members of Focus watched covetously as the neighboring white communities did just that. Gardendale, too, had considered secession for two decades but was deterred when feasibility studies showed that the town of nearly 14,000 could not support an independent school system, partly because the tax base could not generate enough revenue to replace its old and sagging high school. Gardendale lobbied Jefferson County to build a new multimillion-dollar high school, which opened in 2010, within the town’s limits. In this community of modest homes and nondescript strip malls, Gardendale High, with its Grecian pillars and soaring, windowed foyer, spoke to the community’s grander aspirations.


This struck a particular cord with me because Ruby Bridges, the first black child to attend an all white elementary school in the south just turned 63. That should really put into perspective how not too far removed from black people being state sanctioned second class citizens and how so many people in this country are fighting to this day to return to such a state
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UnfairRepresent
09/09/17 10:25:29 AM
#2:


FrisbeeDude posted...


This struck a particular cord with me because Ruby Bridges, the first black child to attend an all white elementary school in the south just turned 63.

:/
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^ Hey now that's completely unfair.
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FrisbeeDude
09/09/17 3:58:20 PM
#3:


Bump
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No one gets in the way of my frisbee games! NO ONE!
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Manocheese
09/09/17 4:01:40 PM
#4:


When white people move in, it's gentrification.
When white people move out, it's white flight.

There's just no pleasing liberals.
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