Showdown on new district

House to vote on southeast BR school separation

A plan to set up a new school district in southeast Baton Rouge, which has rocketed through the Legislature, faces a showdown vote in the state House on Thursday.

The two-bill package has passed the Senate Education Committee, the full Senate, the House Education Committee and, for one of the bills, the House Appropriations Committee.

All of that happened in three weeks, which is high speed by legislative standards.

House approval on Thursday would likely pave the way for final approval of the package before the session ends June 4.

“I think we have a very good shot at this,” said Norman Browning, president of Local Schools for Local Children, a community group that is leading support for the new district.

But one of the proposals, House Bill 299, is a constitutional amendment.

That means it requires the support of 70 House members, not the 53-vote majority needed for rank-and-file bills.

In addition, some of the earlier votes have split along party lines, with Republicans generally behind the package, and Democrats making up most of the opposition.

The House has 58 Republicans, 45 Democrats and two independents, which means GOP backers need the help of Democrats to gather 70 “yes” votes for the constitutional amendment.

However, nearly two dozen of those Democrats may be off the table.

State Rep. Patricia Smith, D-Baton Rouge and chairwoman of the 23-member Legislative Black Caucus, is helping to lead opposition to the breakaway district.

Backers contend the change is needed because the East Baton Rouge Parish school system, which is rated “D” by the state, has failed parents and students for years.

Smith, EBR school leaders and other critics argue that the breakaway district would leave the current system in shambles and as one used mostly by black students from poor families.

She said opponents are working hard to ensure that the plan is stopped in the House.

“I think that we will be able to do that,” Smith said.

The package includes the constitutional amendment and Senate Bill 563, which spells out details of the new district and requires 53 “yes” votes for approval.

Both must be approved for the package to move forward.

If the plan is approved by the Legislature, it would be submitted to voters statewide on Nov. 6.

It would require majority approval statewide and in East Baton Rouge Parish to take effect, likely on July 1, 2013.

Both bills won lopsided approval in the Senate on April 25.

The constitutional amendment, which needed 26 votes, passed 29-7.

All of the “no” votes were Democrats. But seven other Democrats voted “yes” on the ballot measure.

The breakdown on Senate Bill 563 was nearly identical on a 30-8 vote.

The two-bill package passed the House Education Committee on May 9 on a 12-6, party-line vote.

Senate Bill 563, which was reviewed for cost issues, cleared the House Appropriations Committee on May 14.

The vote was 11-8, and generally broke along party lines.

Two Democrats voted for the bill. One Republican opposed it.

Browning said backers are contacting House Republicans, Democrats and independents, including members of the Legislative Black Caucus.

“We worked very hard to not make this an “R” and “D” issue,” he said, a reference to party labels.

“This is about the fact the EBR system is just not delivering,” Browning said.

The new district would extend southeast from the Interstate 10/12 split, south of I-12 and east of I-10 to the parish lines.

It would include seven elementary schools, two middle schools and one high school.

About 6,800 students attend the 10 schools now.


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Comments (10)


1) Comment by ABayouBoy - 22/05/2012

@Attila, I have to agree with you up to a point. Certain individuals do not want to improve their teaching abilities, or they fear that they will be unable to meet the new standards by the elimination of tenure. And that goes for the children who are trapped in the EBRS system. A lot of improvement is needed to repair the broken wagon that is stuck in a rut, but it can be done. I feel for the good teachers who might be losing out on their tenure. But if they are truly good at their jobs, and want what is best for the kids, and, also enjoy teaching for the rewards of seeing their students better themselves, then they will be OK with the new system.

2) Comment by 8.3 - 21/05/2012

Norman Browning neglects to mention that Woodlawn High school's performance scores are really not significantly better than any other high school in the current system excluding BRMHS where the students in the new district will not be able to attend. Compared to the nation and first world countries, even the best (Zachary, ad nauseum) stink. Face it, Louisiana is populated by ignorant losers, degree of income makes little difference and y'all are willfully making 50 years of pitiful and shameful progress worse. Basically, you enjoy &^%$^ yourselves. The top 10% will always do well and the vast majority of those will find opportunities out of state since they are astute enough to understand the reality. You think the economy will get better by application of the principles of stupidity? As a smart ambitious guy, Jindal is working very hard to achieve national fame before the train wreck, obviously results don't matter, only appearances.

3) Comment by pahoo - 21/05/2012

To BRmoderate: All the area residents DO NOT want this. I live in the area and I DO NOT want this.

4) Comment by Attila - 21/05/2012

The legislative black caucus is not concerned with the educational system in EBR. Their only objective is obstructionism, and showing whitey that they have the clout to deny him his rights. They are perfectly happy with the status quo as evidenced by their opposition to this bill, and their reluctance to do anything of substance to improve it. Their children have trouble achieving so their answer is to bring everyone down to the lowest common denominator. Why am I not surprised.

5) Comment by bbblsu - 21/05/2012

I am a LSU economics graduate and unbiased follower of this plan. Not that it should matter, but I am a black male, married with 2 preschool-aged children. I no longer live in the Baton Rouge area but will always consider it home. I can say the state of the public school system is the #1 reason as to why my family and I moved away. It is so sad that this has become a racial issue. If anyone should be playing the race card here, it should be the PROPONENTS, not the opponents, as the current EBR school system is somewhere in the 80% (and growing) minority range. Unfortunately, this imbalance has created an unhealthy learning environment for children of all races. A drastic change will be required eventually. Is this that change? I'm not sure, but at least it gets the ball rolling. The House has a responsibility to allow the true democratic process run its course and allow this to be voted on by the people in the fall.

6) Comment by nimby? - 21/05/2012

responsible , caring parents want what is best for their children now , not after they graduate . in trying to save the world we deny those who appreciate and truly want an education . every child deserves an education , but as the saying goes "you can lead a horse to water but you can't make him drink" ....

7) Comment by BRmoderate - 21/05/2012

I don't think so HM... This could be close especially since the race card has been played. The area residents want it and I do not hear EBRPSS offering counter-proposals so I say vote yes

8) Comment by HMaltravers - 21/05/2012

Like most of what happens in the legislature, it was a done deal before it was ever made public.

9) Comment by 8.3 - 21/05/2012

Vote NO for SB 563!

10) Comment by 8point6 - 21/05/2012

Vote yes for SB 563!