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Archive for the ‘Charters’ Category

(Editor’s note: at least one person failed to detect the parody in a recent posting about the Delhi Charter School, so leaving nothing to chance, we’re letting everyone know up front that the headline is tongue-in-cheek as are a couple of comments in the body of this story.)

Not only was Gov. Piyush Jindal not among the top six finalists in the recent Mitt Romney Vice Presidential Sweepstakes, it now turns out that Louisiana’s absentee governor is not even among the top 15 in what he does best: eliminating state jobs.

That may explain in part why Romney, who once said he likes to fire people, did not include Jindal on his short list of five potential running mates whom he called last week to let them know he had decided on Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin. Jindal was so far down that list that he didn’t even warrant a courtesy call.

Even though the Governor in-Abstentia has eliminated more than 6,000 state jobs during the months between June 2011 and June 2012, that wasn’t good enough to put him in the top 15 for placing workers in the unemployment lines who have mortgages, tuition costs, and other living expenses, according to a report just released by the National Governors’ Association and the National Association of State Budget Officers (NASBO).

Apparently, the 6,400 positions cut in this year’s budget were not factored into the equation. If they had been, that almost certainly would have vaulted Piyush to within a heartbeat of the presidency. State job losses, after all, appear to translate to economic gains in the eyes or our globetrotting governor.

“States go to great lengths to avoid layoffs,” NASBO Executive Director Scott Pattinson said, exposing the naked truth that he has not been to Louisiana since 2008.

For that matter, the Disappearing Governor hasn’t been in the state much since then himself.

Pattinson also pointed out that laying off employees is not always the best fiscal strategy. “Firing state government workers often does not result in money saved in the short term. Once required benefits and severance (unemployment payments) are included, states may not see savings for at least a full fiscal year.”

The study attributed the widespread layoffs of state government employees to a stalled recovery from the recession and “shifting political pressure.” That shifting political pressure alluded to may be traced back to the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), which is very up front in its advocacy of massive state employee layoffs and equally impressive tax breaks for corporate friends of all politicians of a Republican stripe.

To that end, Jindal, the Incredible Vanishing Governor, invisible to the naked eye, has been most compliant. While many corporate tax breaks and incentives were already in place well before he assumed office in January of 2008, he has nevertheless encouraged the continuance and expansion of those breaks—to the state treasury’s financial detriment of approximately $5 billion per year.

But have no fear, Ghost-Governor Piyush the Magnificent, upon his return—if he ever does return—is almost certain to pick up where he left off. With the announced closure of prisons and state hospitals, teacher layoffs in virtually every parish because of his ill-conceived voucher scheme, and deep cuts to the LSU medical school’s programs, he is sure to begin cutting into the lead of the states ahead of Louisiana in the layoff game.

If Piyush truly is a disciple of “trickle-down economics” (and Rush Limbaugh did refer to him as the next Ronald Reagan), then we can anticipate additional layoffs at the local level—by parish and municipal governments—as the excrement begins to flow downhill.

In case you may be curious, in no particular order other than alphabetical, here are the top 15 states in layoffs:
• Alabama
• California
• Connecticut
• Florida
• Maryland
• Massachusetts
• Michigan
• Missouri
• Nebraska
• Nevada
• New Mexico
• Ohio
• Oregon
• South Dakota
• Washington

It should be pointed out that there was no significant edge for one political party over another in the layoff Race to the Top (where have we seen that before?): The party representation is as equal as possible, given there is an odd number of ranking states. Eight of the top 15 states have Republican governors and seven of the governors are Democrats.

And lest political observers worry about the state’s rankings, not to worry.

We’re pretty sure that Louisiana easily ranks No. 1 in the number of days in which the Phantom of Governor’s Office has been out of state.

That’s gotta count for something.

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The clock has run out on Gov. Bobby Jindal and like the Honey Badger, he’s now yesterday’s news insofar as any aspirations either one may have had for bigger and better things.

Realistically, time had run out on Louisiana’s wunderkind some time ago even though like a loyal trooper, he keeps soldiering on—perhaps hoping for a prestigious cabinet position like Secretary of Health and Human Services, something he denies aspiring to.

“I would not consider a cabinet post,” he sniffed like the spoiled little boy that he is after being passed over for the vice presidential nomination by Mitt Romney. “I consider being the governor of Louisiana to be more important and the best job there is.” Well, it is the only job he has for the moment and if he doesn’t challenge Mary Landrieu in 2014, we’re stuck with him through 2015.

Break out the champagne.

We can only surmise that Secretary of Education is out of the question since both Romney and Paul Ryan advocate that department’s abolishment in favor of state and local control (read: vouchers), although Romney has tempered his position somewhat.

But Jindal’s real quandary is not that he was passed over for vice president, but that he needs desperately to advance his career quickly—before all his “reforms” as governor come crashing down around him, doing even more damage to his reputation than that disastrous response to President Obama’s State of the Union Address in 2009.

That image as the crusading reformer who gets things done against all odds is already beginning to wear thin in Louisiana and it’s only a matter of time before the national media begin to take a critical look at his administration. The Washington Post and New York Times already have.

Beginning with his repeal of the Stelly Plan only a few months into his first term—the move is costing the state about $300 million a year while benefiting only couples earning more than $150,000 per year or individuals making $90,000 per year—through this year’s veto of a car rental tax renewal for New Orleans, Jindal his consistently found ways to cut taxes while doling out tax breaks to corporate entities.

In 2011, the legislature could not muster the votes to override a Jindal veto of a cigarette tax renewal and the renewal had to go before voters in the form of a constitutional amendment—which easily passed.

While he defiantly categorizes tax renewals as “new taxes,” to which he is adamantly opposed, he has no compunctions about cutbacks to higher education that force colleges and universities to increase tuition. He considers the tuition hikes as “fees,” not taxes.

While turning up his nose at federal grants for early childhood development ($60 million), broadband internet installation in rural parishes ($80.6 million) and for a high-speed rail system between Baton Rouge and New Orleans ($300 million), Jindal, upon slashing funding for parish libraries throughout the state, apparently saw no inconsistency in suggesting that the libraries apply for federal monies in lieu of state funding.

The grumblings began ever-so-slowly but they have been growing steadily. The legislature, albeit the right-wing Tea Party splinter clique of the Republican Party, finally stood up to Jindal toward the end of this year’s legislative session and refused to give in on the governor’s efforts to use one-time revenue to close a gaping hole in the state budget.

Other developments that did not bode well for the governor include:

• A state budget that lay in shambles, resulting in mid-year budget cuts of $500 million because of reductions in revenue—due largely to the roughly $5 billion per year in corporate tax breaks;

• Unexpected cuts to the state’s Medicaid program by the federal government which cost the state $859 million, including $329 million the first year to hospitals and clinics run by Louisiana State University—about a quarter of the health system’s annual budget. Those cuts will mean the loss of medical benefits for about 300,000 indigent citizens in Louisiana;

• Failed efforts to privatize state prisons, even though he did manage to close two prison facilities and a state hospital without bothering to notify legislators in the areas affected—a huge bone of contention for lawmakers who, besides having their own feathers ruffled, had to try and explain the sudden turn of events to constituents;

• Revelation that he had refused to return some $55,000 in laundered campaign funds from a St. Tammany bank president;

• Failed efforts to revamp the state employee retirement system for civil service employees. State police were exempted—perhaps because they form his security detail. And despite questions about the tax or Social Security implications, Jindal plans to plunge ahead with implementation of the part of the plan that did pass without the benefit of a ruling by the IRS—a ruling that could ultimately come back to bite him;

• A failed effort by the Sabine River Authority to sell water to a corporation headed up by two major Jindal campaign contributors—Donald “Boysie” Bollinger of Lockport and Aubrey Temple of DeRidder;

• A school voucher system that is nothing less than a train wreck, a political nightmare. State Education Superintendent John White, after Jindal rushed the voucher program through the legislature, rushed the vetting process for the awarding of vouchers through the Board of Elementary and Secondary Education, abetted by members Penny Dastugue, Jay Guillot and Chas Roemer—quickly turning the entire process into a pathetic farce;

• A school in New Orleans run by a man calling himself an “Apostle,” a school in Ruston with no facilities—classrooms, desks, books or teachers—for the 165 vouchers for which the school was approved, tentative approval of vouchers for a school in DeRidder that could not even spell “scholarship” on its sign and for a school in Westlake that teaches that the “Trail of Tears” led many Native Americans to Christianity, that dragons were real, that dinosaurs and humans co-existed at the beginning of time (6,000 years ago, the approximate age of earth, according to its textbooks), that slave owners in America were kind, benevolent masters who treated slaves well, and that the Ku Klux Klan was a helpful reform-minded organization with malice toward none (Don’t laugh, folks; this is what many of these fundamentalist schools who qualified for vouchers are teaching.);

• Then there’s that charter school in Delhi that held girls to a slightly higher standard than boys. Any girl who became pregnant was expelled and any girl even suspected of being pregnant may be ordered to undergo an examination by a doctor of the school’s choice. The boy who gets her pregnant? Nothing. No punishment, no responsibility. Only after being subjected to public exposure, ridicule and criticism did the school alter its policy;

• A state legislator who said she approved of vouchers for Christian schools but not for an Islamic school in New Orleans because this country was founded on the Christian principles of the founding fathers, neglecting for the moment that the founding fathers were for the most part, Deists;

• And to top it all off, White smiles condescendingly and tells us that the criteria applied for approval of vouchers for these schools is part of the “deliberative process,” a catch-all exemption employed by the administration when it doesn’t wish to provide what are clearly public records—an administration, by the way, that touts its so-called “transparency.” Fortunately for the public, the Monroe News-Star is taking White’s pompous behind to court over that decision. (Confidentially, it is the humble opinion of LouisianaVoice that White never had any criteria and that he is creating policy and criteria on the fly because he simply is in way over his inexperienced, unqualified head as the leader of the agency charged with the education of our children. And that perhaps is the most shameful aspect of the entire voucher system and the single biggest act of betrayal on the part of a governor equally overwhelmed by the responsibilities of public office—especially an absentee governor.)

So as the Jindal Express rumbles down the track like a bad motorcycle going 90 miles per hour down a dead-end street (with apologies to Hank Snow) and things begin to unravel on the home front, just where is this absentee governor?

Well, it seems that rather than remain in the state and address the problems that are piling up and growing more complex with each passing day, he seems to prefer to spend his time stumping for Romney—or auditioning for a cabinet position he says he won’t accept—after seeing his chances for the vice presidency fall by the wayside.

A mature governor, a caring governor, a capable governor—one who is truly concerned about the welfare of his state—would defer from flitting all over the country spouting rhetoric on behalf of his presidential candidate in favor of remaining at home and addressing problems that are very real and very important to the people who elected him. Romney, after all, never once voted for Jindal.

There could be only one motive for turning his back on nearly 600,000 voters who first elected him in 2007 and the 673,000 who re-elected him last fall: he doesn’t really care about Louisiana and its people; he cares only about Bobby Jindal and those who can help him in the advancement of his political career.

If Gov. Jindal was truly concerned about the welfare of Louisiana, he certainly would have provided us with an encore of his hurricane and BP spill disaster performances: he would have headed straight to Assumption Parish to grab some TV face time at the Bayou Corne sinkhole and then flown away in a helicopter even as a ghost writer busied himself penning a book sequel: Failed Leadership and Fiscal Crisis: the Crash Landing.

That’s the very least he could do.

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If you think the approval of 165 vouchers for the New Living Word School in Ruston, with its lack of instructors, classroom space and textbooks, was a little over the top, you might wish to take a look at the Light City Christian Academy in New Orleans.

Light City, like New Living Word, was approved for only about half the vouchers requested (163 requested, 80 approved) but the fact it received even one should raise a few eyebrows.http://cenlamar.com/

And then there’s Delhi Charter School about 300 miles to the north in Richland Parish which feels that girls who get pregnant are not entitled to an education but looks the other way in considering discipline for the young fathers.

Schools in Westlake and DeRidder were disapproved after first having been approved for vouchers while one in Baton Rouge failed a state fire marshal’s inspection this week and will be forced to relocate.

State Education Superintendent John White and Gov. Piyush Jindal’s new approach to public education seems to be creating far more problems than it is solving.

But back to Light City Christian Academy, the school that teaches grades K-7, which will be siphoning off taxpayer dollars intended for legitimate public education.

“Light City Christian Academy…has been awarded 49 new scholarships and 31 to students who are continuing from the Orleans Parish program during the 2011-2012 school year,” according to information provided by the Louisiana Department of Education. The average tuition for the 80 students is $4,555 each, or a total of $364.400 per year.

It is not, however, The Light City School of Prophets that received the vouchers as erroneously reported in another blog, but its affiliated school, Light City Christian Academy. The confusion is understandable, however, since Leonard Lucas Jr. founded both organizations, as well as some three dozen other corporate entities in New Orleans.

Light City Christian Academy is operated by the same organization that runs the Light City School of the Prophets, an adult training program run by Lucas, a former one-term state representative who in 2002 received 5 percent of the vote in the New Orleans mayor’s race.

In 2009, Lucas, in an announcement containing numerous grammatical errors, announced his candidacy for New Orleans city council, a race he also lost.

He also founded the Light City Church and referred to himself as “Apostle.” His church became the focus of considerable negative publicity when, following Hurricane Katrina, he claimed credit for organizing the rescue of more than 1,000 residents, for gutting more than 1,000 homes, businesses and churches, and for bringing back more than 2,000 residents to work in jobs that paid $1,500 to $2,000 per week, none of which held up to scrutiny.

His Light City School of the Prophets web page reads thusly:

“The Light City Church School of the Prophets is a training institute for those who sense the flow and pull of the prophetic upon their lives. The mandate of the school of the Prophets just as it was in the Old Testament days is to train men and women effectively in the prophetic. It is a time of proper training, mentoring, and developing of the spirit in the prophetic realm. It is a time that you are taught how to hear from God, how to speak the mind of God, and how to nurture the gift of prophecy.

“Those individuals that accept the challenge to attend must have an understanding that they are yielding themselves to the tutelage of Apostle Leonard Lucas Jr., who walks in the fullness of his calling and wears the mantle of an Apostle and Prophet. If you believe this is the calling upon your life, we invite you to join us for dynamic teaching and thought provoking sessions. Classes are held every Friday at 7:00pm at Light City Church, located at 6117 St. Claude Ave. Please call 504-301-4593 for more information.”

The same web page announces a mentorship training class on Aug. 17. “Join Apostle Lucas for this life changing mentorship course designed to accelerate your anointing in the prophetic,” it says.

Delhi Charter School, meanwhile, has attracted the attention of the American Civil Liberties Union because of the school’s unusual policy over teen pregnancy. Delhi Charter, with 600 students, apparently does not subscribe to the theory that female students have the right to a discrimination-free education.

The policy not only prevents pregnant female students from attending school, but can even force girls to take a pregnancy test to continue attending school if administrators so much as “suspect” they might be pregnant.

“The school reserves the right to require any female student to take a pregnancy test to confirm whether or not the suspect student is in fact pregnant,” says the policy. The policy also gives the school the power to refer the student to a school-designated physician.

“If the test indicates that the student is pregnant, the student will not be permitted to attend classes on the campus of Delhi Charter School” but may be required to enroll in a home study course during the duration of the pregnancy.

Nothing in the policy addresses any disciplinary action against any male student who may have had a part in getting a female pregnant. Apparent the Old Testament doctrine that gives men dominion over women holds true at Delhi Charter School.

The ALCU, however, thinks otherwise.

“The (school’s) complete disregard for Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, the federal law that prohibits sex discrimination in federally funded education programs and activities, is astonishing,” the rights organization said in a prepared statement. “Title IX … explicitly mandate(s) that schools cannot exclude any student from an education program or activity…on the basis of such student’s pregnancy, childbirth, false pregnancy, termination of pregnancy or recovery therefrom.”

The ACLU statement also said the policy also “treats female students differently from male students and relies on archaic stereotypes linked to sex and pregnancy.”

So apparently, if Delhi Charter School adheres to its policy of not taking action against male students, then it would be reasonable to assume that no males had any involvement in the pregnancy. The only possible course of action then would be for the girl to claim Immaculate Conception.

If the school administrators truly believe in the Immaculate Conception, that claim could place them in quite a quandary. Would they dare deny the possibility?

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“I actually support funding for teaching the fundamentals of America’s Founding Fathers’ religion, which is Christianity, in public schools or private schools. I liked the idea of giving parents the option of sending their children to a public school or a Christian school. We need to insure that it does not open the door to fund radical Islam schools. There are a thousand Muslim schools that have sprung up recently. I do not support using public funds for teaching Islam anywhere here in Louisiana.”

–State Rep. Valerie Hodges (R-Denham Springs), on having second thoughts about her vote in favor of House Bill 976, Gov. Piyush Jindal’s school voucher bill, that he subsequently signed into law as Act 2.

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If one were to set out to find the perfect example of religious intolerance on the part of someone who espouses the principles of religious freedom the place to go would be Louisiana Legislative House District 64.

If you thought when David Duke faded into political obscurity, Louisiana had finally rid itself of the international embarrassment of bigotry and religious intolerance, then you sadly underestimated the buffoonery of one Valerie Hodges.

Valerie Hodges is a first-term Republican state representative from Denham Springs. Her biography on the legislature’s web page lists her occupation as an accountant, as vice president of Straightway Ministries in Baton Rouge and co-pastor of Destiny International in Denham Springs.

When Rep. Hodges voted for House Bill 976 which was subsequently signed into law as ACT 2 by Gov. Piyush Jindal, she envisioned widespread approval of vouchers for schools like Faith Academy in Gonzales (approved for 80 vouchers); BeauVer Christian School in DeRidder, the school that was unable to correctly spell “scholarship” on its sign (119 vouchers); Dreamkeepers Academy (4) and Evangel Christian Academy (80) in Caddo Parish; Eternity Christian Academy of Westlake, the school that teaches the existence of the Loch Ness monster as a means of disproving evolution (135 vouchers), Old Bethel Christian Academy in Caldwell Parish (59), Angels Academy (106), Greater Baton Rouge Hope Academy (28), Hosanna Christian Academy (200), Jehovah-Jireh Christian Academy (30), Riverdale Christian Academy (30) and Trinity Christian Academy (25) of East Baton Rouge Parish; Gethsemane Christian Academy (8) and Lafayette Christian Academy (4) of Lafayette Parish; New Living Word School (315) the school with no classrooms, no teachers and no books, of Ruston; Holy Ghost Academy (29), Life of Christ Christian Academy (91), Light City Christian Academy (117) and The Upperroom Bible Church Academy (167) of Orleans Parish; Family Community Christian School in Franklin Parish (54); Claiborne Christian School (28), Northeast Baptist School (40) and Prevailing Faith Christian Academy (26) of Ouachita Parish; Cenla Christian Academy (72) of Rapides Parish; Boutte Christian Academy (85) in St. Charles Parish; Family Worship Christian Academy (66) of St. Landry Parish; Northlake Christian Elementary School (20) and Northside Christian High School (30) and The Upperroom Bible Church Preschool and Academy (3) of St. Tammany Parish; Lighthouse Christian High School (18) of Vermilion Parish; Faith Christian Academy (38), Heritage Academy (10), Victory Christian Academy (8), and Islamic School of Greater New Orleans (38) of Jefferson Parish.

Wait. What?

Islamic School of Grea…sputter, sputter…Islamic?

Hodges, joined by Rep. Kenny Havard (R-Jackson) was quick to disavow Jindal’s voucher program if Islamic schools were to be eligible for taxpayer-funded vouchers.

It’s perfectly okay to shell out money to religious schools to teach that Nessie is real—a modern-day dinosaur that proves that the earth is only 6,000 years old and that evolution is a lot of hooey. But don’t even talk about some missing link.

Religious, after all, means Christian, right?

“I actually support funding for teaching the fundamentals of America’s Founding Fathers’ religion, which is Christianity, in public schools or private schools,” Hodges huffed. “I liked the idea of giving parents the option of sending their children to a public school or a Christian school.”

Snake chunkers okay, Islamics not so okay.

But wait. Did she really say the Founding Fathers’ religion was Christianity?

Yes she did. But while she may take at face value the teaching that mother earth is only 6,000 years old, it seems her American history is no better than her ancient history.

The Founding Fathers were, for the most part, Deists, not Christians.

For the benefit of Rep. Hodges, Deism teaches that the universe was indeed created by God but that He assumes no control over life, exerts no influence on natural events and provides no divine revelation. In short, He left us to our own devices to work things out as best we can.

Also for Rep. Hodges’s erudition, the First Amendment says, “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof….”

It is those few words that prohibit the establishment of a state church-words on which the principle of separation of church and state is based.

No mention of Christianity, Hinduism, Buddhism, Islam, Hare Krishnas, Moonies, Dianetics, Scientology, or any other specific religion. Just that there shall be no law prohibiting the free exercise of religion—whatever that religion may be.

Rep. Hodges apparently subscribes to the Animal Farm political philosophy (with apologies to George Orwell) that all religions are created equal but some religions are more equal than others.

As evidence of Rep. Hodges’s narrow view of religion as a Bible wrapped in a flag affixed to a bayonet, we have this quote from her: “We need to insure that it (the voucher plan) does not open the door to fund radical Islam schools. There are a thousand Muslim schools that have sprung up recently. I do not support using public funds for teaching Islam anywhere here in Louisiana.”

Wow. A thousand? Really?

We were unable to substantiate quite that many. We did, however, find that one little school in Kenner: the Islamic School of Greater New Orleans that put in its application for 38 vouchers.

But you know what? Its application was withdrawn before HB 976 was even passed.

We’re still looking for the remaining 999.

Whoa! Wait a minute here. Did you notice that 999 is 666 upside down?

But please don’t tell Rep. Hodges.

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