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The Koch Brothers And The Battle Over Integration In Wake County's Schools

Wake County Public Schools Protest

First Posted: 08/15/11 09:11 AM ET Updated: 10/14/11 06:12 AM ET

The stakes in the battle over the Wake County Public School System in North Carolina couldn’t be higher.

On one side are the billionaire brothers, Charles and David Koch, and the Tea Party and libertarian groups they fund. On the other, parents, students and community leaders who are bent on stopping measures passed by the conservative-led school board that they argue would re-segregate the county’s public schools, which had been a national model for diversity and integration.

Since 2000, Wake County has used a system of integration based on income. Under this program, no more than 40 percent of any school’s students could receive subsidized lunches, a proxy for determining the level of poverty. The school district is the 18th largest in the country, and includes Raleigh, its surrounding suburbs and rural areas. It became one of the first school systems in the nation to adopt such a plan.

But Wake County’s plan became a political flash point when five conservative candidates were elected to the new school board on a "neighborhood schools" platform that would dismantle the existing integration policy.

These candidates were endorsed by the group WakeCares, which has opposed the county’s busing and integration policy. WakeCares, in turn, has been the recipient of outspoken public -- and financial -- support from Americans For Prosperity, a political activist group funded in part by the Koch Brothers. Americans for Prosperity’s North Carolina state director Dallas Woodhouse told The Huffington Post that the group "did not spend a single dimeā€ on the 2009 Wake County school board elections. In an earlier blog, Woodhouse said the AFP "is on record as supporting the parents of WakeCares through significant financial contributions as well as other support."

In a story published by Newsweek earlier this year that questioned the Tea Party's role in the school board election, Woodhouse is quoted as saying Americans for Prosperity did "voter education and volunteer work on the school-board campaign.ā€ Woodhouse, in a follow-up interview with HuffPost, said "That was a mis-quote by Newsweek" and that "They framed it in the election, where what we had done is voter education and work on the issue after the election."

Independently of the organization, Art Pope, a wealthy conservative businessman in North Carolina and a national director of Americans for Prosperity, gave more than $15,000 to the Wake County GOP, which then used nearly all of that money on the conservative candidates running in the 2009 school board election.

The new school board touted their plan as one that would end busing and eliminate class, and subsequently race, as a factor for student school assignments. The "neighborhood schools" plan would assign students to schools closer to where they lived, meaning students from mostly poor and black communities would likely attend schools whose demographics were much the same. White children from well-heeled families would be more likely to attend schools filled with upper-middle class white children and enjoy more resources.

The elections led to heated protests. Under pressure from community groups and activists, the school board halted the plan for further review. It has since developed a number of alternative plans, though most of those would still have some re-segregating effect.

The NAACP filed a complaint with the Department of Justice in response, and there have been legal challenges based on the plan's constitutionality.

ā€œOur issue is how are the children, both black and white, going to be cared for,ā€ said the Rev. WIlliam Barber, who heads the North Carolina chapter of the NAACP. ā€œWhen we argue for diversity, it is not simply, 'People need to be in close proximity to each other.' Whenever you have racially identifiable, high-poverty schools, you also have corresponding with that under-resources and high teacher turnover.ā€

The complaint filed by the NAACP contends that "African-American, Hispanic and mixed-race students and their families, have been injured by the intentionally racially discriminatory actions of a five-member majority of the Wake County Board of Education," and that upon winning a majority, the new board "immediately took drastic steps to reassign non-White students to schools with a higher percentage of non-White students than their prior school, and to reassign White students to schools with a higher percentage of white students than their prior school.ā€

Following the NAACP's complaint, the United States Department of Education Office for Civil Rights launched an investigation into the "neighborhood schools" plan, and in January, Secretary of Education Arne Duncan chided the Wake County school board in a letter to The Washington Post.

"America's strength has always been a function of its diversity, so it is troubling to see North Carolina's Wake County school board take steps to reverse a long-standing policy to promote racial diversity in its schools," wrote Duncan, who warned against other school boards adopting similar plans. "I respectfully urge school boards across America to fully consider the consequences before taking such action," Duncan wrote. "This is no time to go backward."

Opponents, like the filmmaker and activist Robert Greenwald, say at the heart of the battle is a larger fight over publicly-funded education and the Koch brothers commitment to funding activism, which falls in line with their libertarian agenda.

"I don't want to be a panic or hysteric, but if you can have the Koch brother billionaires, multibillionaires, buying a school board election, where does it stop?" said Greenwald, who this morning released "Koch Brothers Exposed: Why do the Koch Brothers Want to End Public Education?", a short film on the Koch Brothers' role in the Wake County election.

ā€œThis money is buying ideology and that has a consequence," he said. "It's such a tough situation because here are local people with a school system that is working, that people are enjoying, that has created a good education, created diversity [and] created success."

Michael Evans, who until last Friday was the school district's chief spokesman, said that in March the board gave incoming superintendent Tony Tata the responsibility to come up with a new plan. But even as various plans are being developed and presented, the "neighborhood schoolsā€ plan has been tweaked. Students, for now, would not be sent back to their community schools. Evans said the hope is to make a decision on the new plan sometime in the early fall, to put in place the following school year.

Parents and opponents of the new board's actions are bracing for elections in October, fearing that if the conservative majority is maintained on the board, it will feel emboldened to push harder with their plans.

Rita Rakestraw, a Democrat who ran for a seat on the school board in 2009 and was defeated by an Americans for Prosperity conservative candidate, said that Democrats are gearing up for a tough pushback this time around.

"A lot of people are just disappointed, hoping that we can turn this thing around and vote in a better school board with these elections," said Rakestraw, who is now active in the Great Schools in Wake Coalition, a group that has been critical of the current school board.

ā€œIt's a crying shame that white conservatives from the Midwest and the Koch brothers would come into the South and pump millions of dollars into our elections to go back to segregated schools," she said. "They need to get their nose out of our business."

CORRECTION: An earlier version of this story indicated that Americans for Prosperity "bankrolled" the school board campaign. AFP did not directly provide funding. This reference has been removed and additional details about AFP and the role of Wake Cares has been added.
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The stakes in the battle over the Wake County Public School System in North Carolina couldn’t be higher. On one side are the billionaire brothers, Charles and David Koch, and the Tea Party and li...
The stakes in the battle over the Wake County Public School System in North Carolina couldn’t be higher. On one side are the billionaire brothers, Charles and David Koch, and the Tea Party and li...
 
 
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04:00 AM on 09/22/2011
Good luck wake county! I hope you win in your resegregation efforts! More people than you know support you!
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GlennWatson
Two million fans
12:13 AM on 09/21/2011
Why is it bad for white parents to want to best schools for their kids.
03:36 AM on 09/21/2011
I can't believe you just said that. You're joking, right? I'm white but I want ALL children to get a quality education. Not only is it the right thing to do, but integrating children and educating them together and equally makes for a better future for our country. All families want their children to go to the best schools. Part of what makes our country great is the diversity of races. Giving all children the opportunity for a good education and the chance to really excel makes America better.
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GlennWatson
Two million fans
01:25 PM on 09/21/2011
I am more concerned about my own children.
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stacyoh
08:36 AM on 09/21/2011
from what i've read and seen on the documentary, there was nothing wrong with the school district in the first place. if it isn't broke, don't fix it. this is a classic example of the american voters getting duped again. if election time is near, they have an opportunity to get rid of these people now that they have been exposed. vote 'em out!!!
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GlennWatson
Two million fans
01:24 PM on 09/21/2011
The School board was just elected five minuteness ago They said what they were going to if elected and then they did it.
12:23 AM on 08/31/2011
The point here is that a couple of billionaires can spend money you and I can't match to change the politics in a community in another state. This scares me because money is now free speech and those with more of it like the the Koch brothers have more free speech than you or I. Disgusting
11:09 PM on 08/30/2011
A lot of the conservative posts miss the point. When did money become free speech??? Why should out of state millionaires have the right to use their money to influence an local election. This is beyond the pale.
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GlennWatson
Two million fans
12:15 AM on 09/21/2011
Money and speech are the connected because speech costs money. Limiting a person's ability to spend money on political causes is the same as limiting their speech.
01:32 AM on 09/21/2011
So who gets to decide how much free speech is worth? Do we price it by the word, the phrase or by the number of minutes in a TV ad?

The Koch Brothers can buy and spend as much as they can because they are billionaires.

Can you do that? Can I do that?

Call up your local tv station and say you have a $1 and would like to rebut the $100,000 ad put on by them. If your ad runs, let me know.

Having more money than you or I gives them an unfair advantage and control of the dialog.

I don't have the same amount of money so I don't have the same level of free speech?
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stacyoh
08:39 AM on 09/21/2011
unfortunately, money became free speech when scotus ruled on citizens united.
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Kiffanik
02:54 PM on 08/22/2011
Segregation wasn't inherently bad just like integration wasn't necessarily good. The reason for the integration push was that the resources to fund education weren't being fairly distributed in a way that would support separate but equal. Thus it became "since our tax dollars are being used to fund these schools and we're not on the school board or involved in ensuring our children have the same quality as yours, we're coming over there with you". Once educational policy was re-written to discriminate economically instead of racially of course this was going to be the result. We need school board and city councils, all politics is local. It's time to stop ignoring these moves and motives, if it didn't do them any good they wouldn't spend so much money on making sure you don't become educated, aren't involved politically, etc. There's a reason our judicial system is tied to education, politics, and economy. Power hasn't changed its face in this country since the American Revolution, not sure why so many are blinded to that.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
realitycheck101a
The Matrix is an artificial construct...
11:15 PM on 08/19/2011
"Residential segregation didn't happen by accident. The U.S. federal government took many steps to channel resources and opportunities to whites and away from nonwhites, resulting in an enormous wealth gap that persists today.
In 1993, 86% of suburban whites still lived in places with a Black population of less than 1%. The 2000 Census showed that whites are still more likely to be segregated than any other group. Today, 71% of whites own their own home, compared to 44% of African Americans. Black and Latino mortgage applicants are 60% more likely than whites to be turned down for loans.
As housing gets more expensive and wealth gets passed down from generation to generation, the legacy of past discrimination persists, giving whites and nonwhites vastly different life chances." (PBS, "Where Race Lives")

Ā© 2003 California Newsreel. All rights reserved.

Follow these links if you want THE TRUTH. Find out WHY things are the way they are, and HOW they got that way ! ! !

http://www.pbs.org/race/000_About/002_06-godeeper.htm

http://www.pbs.org/race/006_WhereRaceLives/006_01-unclesam.htm

This link REALLY explains how the "downward spiral" destroys a neighborhood:
http://www.pbs.org/race/006_WhereRaceLives/006_03-spiral.htm
12:52 PM on 08/19/2011
I reside in Wake CountyNC - have a child in school I hate the distortion/slander in this article and video. The situation here is nothing like the way the Dem party (lost control of the district last elections) is portraying it in the national media. Dems here presided over an exclusionary system where poor/minorities were bussed all over to get the scraps at each school. Now we're seeing massive equitable access to quality classes. Up to 85% of highly qualified minorities were routinely kept out of all higher level courses. The TOP SCORING child in our school's 8th grade Algebra class last spring was a Black male who had previously been sent to the bottom track by his teachers but was let in under the new GOP placement policies. Poor/minority students all went straight to the bottom classes everywhere in the district. Now minority enrollment in the best classes has soared from near zero to near100% of qualified students. THOUSANDS of minority students are in quality classes for the first time EVER. The local Dem party locally has pulled out all the stops to get control of the district again and get this stopped. This is what you are seeing in the media - a concerted smear campaign selling the futures of thousands of minority children for political agenda. Its a raging battle here. But its not as reported by HP. www.newsobserver.com/2011/08/19/1421740/schools-work-to-get-all-fit-eighth.html
12:33 AM on 08/31/2011
I appreciate what this article talks about. Unfortunately, it does not deal with the issue being discussed, changing schools for folks based on the new plan.
11:42 AM on 08/19/2011
I currently reside in Wake County...black and against the current situtation. I read all these articles and it only points views based on parrties lines. I live in a "good school location", however my daughter went to school where kids were not bused five miles from school (someone stated on here), but more like 20 to 30 mins away from school. My daughter had a friend who lived downtown raleigh and went to school about 10 miles from durham county & she's 8! Some parents do not have cars...so if your child goes to school far, then it would cost more money for a cab and some schools are not near public transportation. These kids are tired..
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ApprxAm
Oh, dam_…the dam is broke!
08:12 AM on 08/19/2011
I wonder what the historical scores of this system since "integration" are? Atlanta School scandal aside...we can run our own schools....can't we?
03:50 PM on 08/18/2011
It obvious that we have not learned anything from the Montgomery Bus Boycott. We shut down a city down and force them to deal with us as consumers. Now we are not flexing out muscles as parents and consumers... We elect these people and we are the ones who can take them out of these positions... Exercise your voting rights. Calls these people and put them on notice. Better yet, write them and put them on notice... I bet you'll get a reactions from your politicians...
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GlennWatson
Two million fans
12:17 AM on 09/21/2011
Were'nt they just elected?
10:59 AM on 09/21/2011
Yes, they were....
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womenforaction
Julene Allen-Dell'Amor founder of Women for Action
12:48 AM on 08/18/2011
It's a shame our politicians don't have any backbone. Their wealthy backers are just pulling the strings. The Koch brothers and other wealthy business tycoons don't have enough private schools to manipulate, so why not influence the public education system.
11:00 AM on 09/21/2011
They would have back bone if we make them accountable... We hired them by voting for them...
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Dionita
Love is the new black.
01:52 PM on 08/17/2011
These people want their country back. And if they can’t take it back they will buy it back.
06:51 AM on 08/17/2011
Clearly this is an attempt to make schools better and keep out the saggy clown pants sideways cap trouble makers. They are just tired of seeing their neighborhoods turned into hoods. Good for them.
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manmythlegend
Facts aren't right or left. Facts are facts.
09:10 AM on 08/17/2011
When you say "saggy clown pants sideways cap trouble makers," Am I correct to assume you mean white kids on skateboards? Because the style for urban america is skinny jeans. If you're that "NonPC," Just skip the rhetoric and say "Blacks." You're so insulated, even your stereotypes are dated.

By "hood" do you mean violent crime ridden neighborhood? Give me an example of an affluent neighborhood that became a "hood" as a result of this schooling program. Just one. You know you can't. Parents willing to ship their kids to a better school district I would assume are interested in better education for their kids, or they wouldnt bother to do so. Unless by "hood" you simply mean black faces in your neighborhood.

You wanted to sound edgy, but instead came off as nothing more than a scared white guy with no logical basis for his views other than his own fears.
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Dionita
Love is the new black.
01:51 PM on 08/17/2011
Nonpc is a coward.
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papapj
..light as a feather..
05:08 PM on 08/18/2011
"You wanted to sound edgy, but instead came off as nothing more than a scared white guy"

They're all scared..every one of them who screams for their country back, and arms themselves to the teeth with guns that they think are going to save them....

fanned.
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treadway123
treadway123
12:20 PM on 08/17/2011
You just described every White Skate Boarder in my community! It's NOT just gangs who wear that type of cloths! Not every rapper is a gang member, some go on to be very famouse! Koch has NO bussiness going into other states an dictateing how they run their schools! It's time the Governors/Senators stop that by makeing laws prohibiting their interference in State/Local bussiness when they do not live in that district/state!
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FLECKENSTEIN44
Pointing out the hypocrisy of the Left and Right
11:28 AM on 08/22/2011
How about the federal government do the same and quit interfering into state and local matters. these are the guys that brought us the drug war and no child left behind and need to stay out of state affairs and local affairs.
07:17 PM on 08/16/2011
Whenever you have racially identifiable, high-poverty schools, you also have corresponding with that under-resources and high teacher turnover.ā€


And that, dear friends, is the sordid truth beneath all the efforts to maintain the "diversity" policy from the establishment. Sending poor and academically underprepared children to schools throughout the county allowed the school system to continue to dole out local bonuses to every teacher and allowed the Chamber of Commerce and the Homebuilders to claim that no school was "fallling behind" especially since parents who deliberately chose one neighborhood over another saw their plans go awry as school assignments divided neighborhoods and often families amongst an array of schools in the county. Unfortunately, the champions of diversity could not point to any real progress for children born and residing in low income neighborhoods in terms of increased graduation rates or academic preparation. Are neighborhood schools the answer? I'm not sure. But aside from anecdotal stories of success from a few students the data doesn't support that transporting students in a complicated calculus to keep school averages in an acceptable range benefitted students academically. And where's the support for community cohesion when schools used to be a community hub. Seems to me that schools with a preponderance of lower income, at risk or special needs kids need MORE resources applied consistently rather than annual "shakeups" in student assignments that only proved that the administration had indeed mastered some pretty sophisticated levels of mathematics themselves.
06:27 PM on 08/16/2011
"America's strength has always been a function of its diversity"

So I guess America wasn't very strong until 1965 when minorities started increasing from 10% of the population.

It's amazing with liberals. You just repeat some catch phrase over and over again - something like, "diversity is out strength" and they hold it as absolute truth, without being able to substantiate the claim at all.
04:30 AM on 08/17/2011
You forgot about the millions of slaves that built the USA
08:58 AM on 08/23/2011
.....built the USA? How so?