Wolf’s Save Our Schools blog

Former journalist and local school board member Carol A.O. Wolf has been active in discussions at several of the popular community news web sites in the last year. Now she has launched her own blog — Save Our Schools. In the blog’s sidebar Wolf has a couple of quotes that give a reader some idea of […]

Former journalist and local school board member Carol A.O. Wolf has been active in discussions at several of the popular community news web sites in the last year. Now she has launched her own blog — Save Our Schools.

In the blog’s sidebar Wolf has a couple of quotes that give a reader some idea of where she’s coming from:

Va. Code § 2.2-3700.B, in part:

The affairs of government are not intended to be conducted in an atmosphere of secrecy since at all times the public is to be the beneficiary of any action taken at any level of government.

******

“Thought that is silenced is always rebellious. Majorities, of course, are often mistaken. This is why the silencing of minorities is necessarily dangerous. Criticism and dissent are the indispensable antidote to major delusions.” ~ Alan Barth, The Loyalty of Free Men, 1951.

Barth (1906-1979) served on the editorial board of The Washington Post for thirty years.

Click here to visit Save Our Schools.

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Carol A. O. Wolf endorses Robert Grey

We received the following from District 3 school board representative Carol A.O. Wolf regarding her support of Robert Grey in the mayoral election. The “Robert Grey for Mayor” signs in my yard have prompted friends and neighbors who support Mayoral candidates Dwight Jones or Bill Pantele to ask why I am supporting Grey and not […]

We received the following from District 3 school board representative Carol A.O. Wolf regarding her support of Robert Grey in the mayoral election.

The “Robert Grey for Mayor” signs in my yard have prompted friends and neighbors who support Mayoral candidates Dwight Jones or Bill Pantele to ask why I am supporting Grey and not their particular candidate.  Since I value their opinions and support, I would like to let everyone know my reasons.

Just as Colin Powell noted in his recent endorsement of Barack Obama for President, the time has come for a new generation of leadership for the nation, that time has come for the City of Richmond as well.  I believe Robert Grey  is the one man who has the necessary skills and knowledge to help our city move from the “Politics of Meanness” into the “Politics of Meaning.”  His leadership style is one of collaboration — not confrontation.

I am sure you are aware, Mayor Wilder and I have had some major disagreements during the past four years.  Given that history, I am perhaps the least likely person to support a candidate allegedly anointed by Mr. Wilder or one suspected of being beholden to the movers and shakers in our business community, much less a member of the “Gang of 26” who wanted to abolish elected School Boards in favor of appointed boards. (http://www.styleweekly.com/article.asp?idarticle=18035)

Grey is no more anointed by Wilder than I am.  I have known Grey for the past 23 years and during that time, I have seen ample evidence that he is his own man, unbought and unbossed.  Any allegiance some may perceive he has with Mayor Wilder stems from the fact that Grey  was raised right —  to be polite, to respect his elders and to give back to the community.  Even so, Grey is not blind to the foibles and failures of the Wilder Administration. (http://www.inrich.com/cva/ric/search.apx.-content-articles-RTD-2008-10-18-0109.html)

Grey is not a man given to public displays of self-importance or bully-pulpit pronouncements, nor is he a career politician possessed of a rock-star persona.  Honestly, I think we’ve all had more than enough of that already.  We need someone who is not only smart, but who has a steady hand and a professional demeanor to guide the city through the next four years.

Two of my dear friends, the late Oliver W. Hill, Sr. and the late U.S. District Court Judge Robert R. Merhige, Jr., each expressed to me their hope that Grey  would someday choose to enter politics. Both saw Grey as someone who had the personality, awareness and connections to unite the black and white communities in our city.

For far too long, our city’s slow stroll into the future has been made all the more difficult by the constant turf wars between Wilder supporters and Henry Marsh supporters.  Jones’ candidacy is evidence that these wars continue.  For the last four years, I have watched Wilder and Pantele go at it in City Hall.  I am both disappointed, and incredulous, that Wilder and Pantele are still at odds over whose budget should control what happens with our tax dollars.

I was also disappointed that Jones did not speak out on the Chesterfield ballot problem in February, especially since he represents Chesterfield, Henrico and Richmond in the General Assembly.  And, do not get me started on Jones and Pantele’s involvement with the Industrial Development Authority.  There are far too many unanswered questions that linger. Click here: Style Weekly : Richmond’s alternative for news, arts, culture and opinion.

I believe Grey when he says that “Dwight Jones and Bill Pantele have been part of the problem in Richmond, and to make Richmond move forward, we need real change in leadership – not just people who want to talk about it around election time.  We can’t keep doing the same thing, with the same people, and expect different results. We need change at city hall and we need it now – not when Pantele and Jones feel like getting around to it.”

And, the last thing this town needs is a run-off election that pits a black man against a white man.  Robert Grey is a man who can represent us all and lead our city (at last!) into the future.

As a lawyer, and the first African-American  president of the American Bar Association, Grey knows there is a legal and moral imperative to make our schools comply with the Americans with Disabilities Act.  He wants to create a comprehensive Career and Technology High School so more of our children can get the skills necessary to be successful in the 21st-Century.  And, he has promised to work with the Performing Arts Center  to explore ways to create more opportunities for our children with artistic talent.   Click here: Style Weekly : Richmond’s alternative for news, arts, culture and opinion.

His commitment to public education is real. His mother, Barbara Grey, is the hard-working and visionary principal who brought to life Richmond’s first model public schools. Her excellence and high expectations as an educator helped establish Fox, Mary Munford and John B. Cary Elementary as schools of choice for parents and children in Richmond.  Robert attended  A.V. Norrell and Baker Elementary Schools, Chandler Middle School and was graduated from John Marshall.

As to concerns about Grey’s ties to the business community, I see those as an asset.  As I continue to worry about what effect the $700 billion Wall Street bailout and the $3 billion Virginia shortfall will have on the next City of Richmond budget, I think Richmond needs to nurture every possible friend we can have that will help stabilize not only Richmond’s — but the region’s economy as well.

One of the big hopes many people had when Wilder came into office was that he could help foster and nurture greater regional cooperation.  I see Grey’s ties to the business community as critical to helping that happen.  He is the consummate professional and we need his leadership in City Hall.

If any other locally elected reps. want to weigh in on this or let us know who they’ll be voting for on November 4, drop us a line.

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Valerie Catrow

Valerie Catrow is editor of RVAFamily, mother to a mop-topped first grader, and always really excited to go to bed.

Carol Wolf writes about Richmond schools

Current School Board Representative Carol A.O. Wolf had an op-ed in Sunday’s Times-Dispatch about the impact on Richmond’s schools by the landmark Brown v. Board of Education decision; the Fan District Hub has published a longer version of Wolf’s piece online. It reads, in part: The late and great Oliver W. Hill, Esq. was my friend […]

Current School Board Representative Carol A.O. Wolf had an op-ed in Sunday’s Times-Dispatch about the impact on Richmond’s schools by the landmark Brown v. Board of Education decision; the Fan District Hub has published a longer version of Wolf’s piece online. It reads, in part:

The late and great Oliver W. Hill, Esq. was my friend and mentor for the past 25 years and my most valued and vocal constituent for the past six.

Thanks to Mr. Hill’s inspiration, unyielding expectations of excellence, and the unfortunate fact of his blindness, I received a most special education as one of his privileged “readers.”

“We” read every word of Simple Justice, Richard Kluger’s 798-page legal history of the Brown vs. Board of Education case and subsequent legal decisions. Several times.

To be sure, over the years, we read many other books, including Mr. Hill’s autobiography, The Big Bang: Brown v. Board of Education, and countless legal and political articles. But, we always returned to Kluger’s Simple Justice.

On our third time or fourth time through, I asked why we were re-reading it. His answer was, as always, honest and direct: “Because we are not finished yet. We’ve barely begun.”

And, it was on that day, when I finally “got” what he meant, that he exacted the only promise he ever asked of me. “Do not ever engage in a discussion of the re-segregation of Richmond’s schools – they’ve never been de-segregated.”

Since Mr. Hill and I had ongoing discussions of whether our schools were better because of Brown and what he thought we needed to do to fix them, I feel safe proffering the following answers:
Short answer: No. Our schools are not better off.


Click here for the entire piece.

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North Richmond News

Wolf will decide by Wednesday about write-in campaign; seeks public input

In a comment on North Richmond News, 3rd District school board representative Carol A. O. Wolf writes that she will decide by Wednesday whether to launch a write-in bid to represent the North Richmond community; Wolf failed to submit enough qualified signatures to get on the ballot, and Norma Murdoch-Kitt is currently the only candidate […]

In a comment on North Richmond News, 3rd District school board representative Carol A. O. Wolf writes that she will decide by Wednesday whether to launch a write-in bid to represent the North Richmond community; Wolf failed to submit enough qualified signatures to get on the ballot, and Norma Murdoch-Kitt is currently the only candidate running in the 3rd District.

From Wolf’s comment:

I need to decide by this coming Wednesday whether to mount a write-in campaign or to sit this one out and allow Norma Murdoch-Kitt to have a “walk-on” to serve as Northside’s School Board member for the next four years.

I have already heard from so many of you who have called, dropped by or sent e-mails urging me to battle on for a multitude of reasons. Many of you have offered to help.

Serving on School Board involves far more than simply representing one’s district, therefore I am asking to hear from citizens throughout the city. I would appreciate it if you could let me know what district you live in when you post a comment.

In addition to asking for your help with this decision, I would most appreciate hearing from citizens across the city concerning their thoughts are on what the SB’s priorities should be during the next few months leading up to election.

Please weigh in with what you think of the Richmond School Board and what you would like to see happen to improve the quality of education in the City of Richmond.

Respectfully,

Carol A.O. Wolf
Third District Member
Co-Chair Student Disciplinary Committee
Member, Finance Committee
Member, Legal, Legislative, Policy and Communications Committee

Personal e-mail: Wolfies@aol.com

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North Richmond News

Style has more on Wolf’s legacy

As news circulates that three-term School Board representative Carol A.O. Wolf failed to qualify for the November ballot, Style Weekly has details on her consistent advocacy for children with disabilities and for government accountability. Norma Murdoch-Kitt will be the only candidate on the ballot for the 3rd District School Board race; Murdoch-Kitt failed to qualify […]

As news circulates that three-term School Board representative Carol A.O. Wolf failed to qualify for the November ballot, Style Weekly has details on her consistent advocacy for children with disabilities and for government accountability. Norma Murdoch-Kitt will be the only candidate on the ballot for the 3rd District School Board race; Murdoch-Kitt failed to qualify for the ballot last election and ran an unsuccessful write-in campaign against Wolf.

Here’s Style Weekly on Wolf:

“I’m done,” says Wolf, emotional after discovering on Monday that 14 of her petition signers had been found not to meet the requirement of being registered voters in the 3rd precinct where she serves.

She says she will not mount a write-in campaign to retain her seat: “It’s not respectful of the system — of the process.”

“Ultimately, it’s me. I talked about accountability,” Wolf says, noting her eleventh-hour attempt to make the election filing deadline last Tuesday after losing a petition sheet full of names. Wolf congratulated Norma H. Murdoch-Kitt, who will now run unopposed for the seat.

During her three terms in office, Wolf pushed the school system to comply with federal with the Americans with Disabilities Act. Late last year, she was appointed as the lone member of a School Board subcommittee charged with finding money to help the school system comply with that law and a lawsuit settlement.

Most recently, Wolf lobbied City Council and Mayor L. Douglas Wilder for additional money to pay for improvements to bring the school system into ADA compliance.

Both versions of the budget (Wilder and Council are at odds over whose budget is legal) include $5 million earmarked exclusively for ADA improvements. That money is in addition to approximately $2 million Wolf’s subcommittee helped secure from other sources.

“I was a voice for responsibility and reform and I shall continue to be,” says Wolf.

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North Richmond News

Wolf fails to get on ballot for November election

As reported this evening on the Times-Dispatch website: Three-term Richmond School Board incumbent Carol A.O. Wolf won’t be on the ballot for the Nov. 4 election. She was one of nine of 27 potential candidates, and the only incumbent, to be disqualified today by the city voter registrar’s office. “I knew I was racing the clock,” said Wolf, […]

As reported this evening on the Times-Dispatch website:

Three-term Richmond School Board incumbent Carol A.O. Wolf won’t be on the ballot for the Nov. 4 election.

She was one of nine of 27 potential candidates, and the only incumbent, to be disqualified today by the city voter registrar’s office.

“I knew I was racing the clock,” said Wolf, who said she found herself 50 signatures short of the 125 required less than four hours before the filing deadline last Tuesday.

She ultimately submitted 140 signatures, but more than 15 were thrown out because the signers were not registered voters. Wolf had to scramble for signatures at the last minute because she believes some were left at a student disciplinary meeting and accidentally shredded.

“I’m going to continue to be a voice and an activist for public school reform,” she said. “I’ll just have more time to do it.”

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North Richmond News

Ex-School Board Member Rips Maurice Henderson

From the blog of ex-School Board member, Carol A.O. Wolf: Upon learning that RPS had some of the worst SOL math scores in Virginia, Maurice Henderson, the vice chairman and 5th District member of the RPS School Board, had the gall to tell Richmond Time…

From the blog of ex-School Board member, Carol A.O. Wolf: Upon learning that RPS had some of the worst SOL math scores in Virginia, Maurice Henderson, the vice chairman and 5th District member of the RPS School Board, had the gall to tell Richmond Times Dispatch reporter Zachary Reid: “There’s no alarm here ….There’s no […]

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Byrd Park

Former School Board member has ideas for new superintendent

Carol A.O. Wolf, a frequent commenter on North Richmond News and the 3rd District’s former School Board representative, offers some thoughts about how new school Superintendent Yvonne Brandon could deliver in her role in a Back Page editorial in the latest issue of Style Weekly: The proposed closing of Chandler Middle School for failure to become […]

Carol A.O. Wolf, a frequent commenter on North Richmond News and the 3rd District’s former School Board representative, offers some thoughts about how new school Superintendent Yvonne Brandon could deliver in her role in a Back Page editorial in the latest issue of Style Weekly:

The proposed closing of Chandler Middle School for failure to become accredited presents a perfect opportunity to expand middle school choices and simultaneously make significant progress to ensure our schools comply with the Americans with Disabilities Act.

If Richmond Community High School were to close and relocate to the Chandler building, the school system could easily add a middle school component to Community’s curriculum and provide an additional rich and rigorous middle school choice for Richmond families.

Another easily attainable reform would be to add a middle school component to Franklin Military Academy. If such a concept works for Benedictine High School, why shouldn’t public school parents have that choice? Brandon and the School Board could even place Franklin (and its expanded middle school) in the Chandler building and relocate Community High to Franklin’s current location.

Franklin is fully compliant with the disabilities act, as is nearly Chandler. Still, each building would need to be upgraded to provide state-of-the-art technology for 21st century learning opportunities. Similarly, Henderson Middle School is nearly compliant and if the School Board and Brandon were to accept City Councilman Chris Hilbert’s offer to find money for a middle-years International Baccalaureate (I.B.) program at Henderson, we would have yet another choice middle school.

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North Richmond News

Are Our Schools Better Off Today?

Are Our Schools Better Off Today? Where Do We Go From Here? By Carol A.O. Wolf The late and great Oliver W. Hill, Esq. was my friend and mentor for the past 25 years and my most valued and vocal constituent for the past six. Thanks to Mr. Hill’s inspiration, unyielding expectations of excellence, and the unfortunate […]

Are Our Schools Better Off Today? Where Do We Go From Here?

By Carol A.O. Wolf

The late and great Oliver W. Hill, Esq. was my friend and mentor for the past 25 years and my most valued and vocal constituent for the past six.

Thanks to Mr. Hill’s inspiration, unyielding expectations of excellence, and the unfortunate fact of his blindness, I received a most special education as one of his privileged “readers.”

“We” read every word of Simple Justice, Richard Kluger’s 798-page legal history of the Brown vs. Board of Education case and subsequent legal decisions. Several times.

To be sure, over the years, we read many other books, including Mr. Hill’s autobiography, The Big Bang: Brown v. Board of Education, and countless legal and political articles. But, we always returned to Kluger’s Simple Justice.

On our third time or fourth time through, I asked why we were re-reading it. His answer was, as always, honest and direct: “Because we are not finished yet. We’ve barely begun.”

And, it was on that day, when I finally “got” what he meant, that he exacted the only promise he ever asked of me. “Do not ever engage in a discussion of the re-segregation of Richmond’s schools – they’ve never been de-segregated.”

Since Mr. Hill and I had ongoing discussions of whether our schools were better because of Brown and what he thought we needed to do to fix them, I feel safe proffering the following answers:
Short answer: No. Our schools are not better off.

Mr. Hill often stated that it was a “sad fact” that although the Warren Court used the Nine-to-Nuthin’ Brown Decision to open the front doors of the schoolhouses of k-12 education, Richard Nixon’s appointment of William H. Rehnquist and Richmond’s own Lewis F. Powell, Jr., to the U.S. Supreme Court helped render the Five-to-Four Milliken Decision (July 25, 1974) which essentially gave those schoolhouses legal back doors for great masses of the white and black middle class to escape the problems of our nation’s cities in favor of life in the suburbs.

In his dissent to the Milliken Decision, Justice Thurgood Marshall noted that poor Negro children would continue to receive “the same inherently unequal education in the future as they have been unconstitutionally afforded in the past.” Justice Marshall further noted that “In the short run, it may seem to be the easier course to allow our great metropolitan areas to be divided up each into cities — one white, the other black — but it is a course, I predict, our people will ultimately regret.”

Those who knew Mr. Hill well know that he was not a man given to recriminations. He maintained a cordial “Virginia Gentleman” relationship with Justice Powell. Yet Mr. Hill dryly noted on many occasions that, even though Powell, as chairman of the Richmond School Board, had not supported Virginia’s “massive resistance” to school integration, the board under Powell’s leadership did nothing to integrate Richmond’s schools. In 1961 when Powell stepped down as school board chairman, “precisely two black children” attended school with white students in the city.

Ironically, compared to what it didn’t do for public k-12 education, Brown actually flung open the doors of higher education for African-Americans and for women as evidenced by ever increasing numbers of accomplished and successful attorneys, doctors, business leaders, educators, scientists, authors, journalists and, yes, politicians. Still, we have far more African-American males in our prisons than in our colleges and universities.

Richmond’s problems are not unique. All one has to do is read the newspaper of any major city in this nation to see that we all share the same urgent and sad challenges.

Despite dramatic academic progress and the real and hard-won achievements of dedicated teachers, students and families, we still have a shameful graduation rate, an abysmal dropout rate, sky-rocketing out-of-school suspension rates, and virtual total non-compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, thus denying “simple access” to our one in six citizens with disabilities.

Where do we go from here?

Before anyone goes crazy enacting NCLB sanctions and dismantling public education as we know it and the good people of our nation intend it, I suggest we revisit the Milliken decision and reconsider not only what Richmond and the region, but what the rest of our nation’s cities, might be like today had that decision gone the other way. Can we find a way to recapture that missed opportunity for equality?

We can all begin by re-reading Simple Justice. Why?

As Mr. Hill said: “Because we are not finished yet. We’ve barely begun.”

*

Ed Note: Carol Wolf posted this piece as part of her comment to my post about the new civil rights monument to be unveiled on Monday. It is reprinted here with the author’s permission. An excerpt of it was previously published by the Richmond Times-Dispatch.

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Final candidate roundup for Council, School Board and Mayor

The Times-Dispatch has complete lists of the City Council and School Board candidates who met the filing deadline, as well as a look at the seven mayoral candidates. In the Third District, which covers most of North Richmond, the final candidates are: City Council: Jonathan Davis, Chris A. Hilbert (incumbent) School Board: Norma H. Murdoch-Kitt, Carol A.O. Wolf […]

The Times-Dispatch has complete lists of the City Council and School Board candidates who met the filing deadline, as well as a look at the seven mayoral candidates.

In the Third District, which covers most of North Richmond, the final candidates are:

City Council: Jonathan Davis, Chris A. Hilbert (incumbent)

School Board: Norma H. Murdoch-Kitt, Carol A.O. Wolf (incumbent)

On the mayoral front, the Times-Dispatch says seven people met the filing deadline:

Rodney D.C. Barnes — South Richmond resident and owner of Tri-Coastal Management Group, a residential and commercial contracting company based in Colonial Heights.

Paul Goldman — Lawyer, former state Democratic Party chairman. Former longtime aide to Mayor L. Douglas Wilder, he helped craft the new independent mayor’s office. Ran unsuccessfully for the City Council in 2006.

Robert J. Grey Jr. — Lawyer and former American Bar Association president is leading effort to oversee recommendations for regional improvement.

L. Shirley Harvey — South Richmonder and City Council member from 1994 to 1996, representing the 6th District. Ran unsuccessfully for state House in 2005.

Dwight Clinton Jones — Represents 70th District in House of Delegates as a Democrat. Pastor, First Baptist Church in South Richmond. Former chairman and member of the Richmond School Board.

William J. Pantele — Lawyer and Richmond City Council president for the past two years. Has represented North Side’s 2nd District on the council since 2001.

Lawrence E. Williams Sr. — Architect and resident of Church Hill. Finished fourth in a four-way race for mayor in 2004. Has run unsuccessfully for the City Council.

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North Richmond News