Mark Norris sees himself as the Bobby Fischer of the Tennessee Legislature: the smartest guy in the room, the game as everything, the lack of respect for the opposition, and the obsession to win.
This was never more obvious as when the Senate Majority Leader from Collierville filed his legislation to amend Tennessee law, ostensibly to bring order and process in the event that Memphians decide at referendum to dissolve the charter of Memphis City Schools.
He sees it as checkmate, but in time, we think the legislation will be seen for the ruse that it is – designed to lull Memphians to sleep while he’s thinking a number of steps ahead, three years to be exact.
Stacking the Deck
Senator Norris’s bill did not require the countywide referendum – essentially giving non-Memphians a veto over Memphis voters – that he had said repeatedly that he would demand. We don’t see the reason for the high fives by those who seem to think Mr. Norris has made a major concession.
It set up an almost three-year planning process led by a 21-member commission dominated by Republicans (suburban Republicans, who are a different breed from Memphis Republicans). There is no requirement that the membership of the commission should reflect the proportional representation of Memphians and non-Memphians.
According to the bill, Shelby County Mayor Mark Luttrell, Shelby County Schools chairman-for-life David Pickler, and Memphis City Schools Board President Freda Williams (who voted against charter surrender) will appoint five members apiece and Speaker of the Senate Ron Ramsey (yes, that Ron Ramsey), and House Speaker Beth Harwell (yes, that Beth Harwell) will appoint three.
Pretense of Progress
In other words, no appointments will be made by anyone who supports the decision by the Memphis City Schools Board of Commissioners’ majority to dissolve its charter and force consolidation with Shelby County Schools. In addition, no appointments were given to the main local funder of schools, Shelby County Board of Commissioners, nor any appointments to Memphis Mayor A C Wharton Jr.
To make things worse, the bill also amends Tennessee law to allow the Legislature to create special school districts and municipal districts in Shelby County. In other words, Mr. Norris and his minions maintain control over the decision by the transition commission, because they have the power to recreate what is essentially the same public education setup we have today.
In other words, they’ve kept their trump card: the law amends the law that prohibits more special school districts in Tennessee, but only so that the special district can be created in Shelby County. In other words, the Tennessee Legislature can always step in and create a special school district for today’s county schools and allow the countywide system to be for Memphis.
Shell Game
Put another way, Mr. Norris and his similar thinking colleagues, Curry Todd, Brian Kelsey, and Ron Lollar, have kept the power to create the special school districts that triggered this entire controversy in the first place. It’s a point often lost in the rhetorical blizzard from the opponents to charter surrender. It was the Shelby County Schools’ obsession with special school district status that tripped the wire and required the Memphis City Schools Board of Commissioner to move decisively to protect the children in their classrooms.
These same opponents complain that city board members did not have a plan when its majority voted to dissolve its charter. Meanwhile, Shelby County Schools leaders have not rolled out a plan either although it’s more their obligation than the city board members.
Knoxville Democratic Representative Harry Tindell summed it up well when he said the Norris bill is a “huge Trojan horse that will do irreparable harm” and a “giant shell game.” In other words, this is no time for Memphians to relax the pressure and down shift political efforts to ensure that Memphians have the full right to self-determination.
Civil Rights Issue
Because of all this, we’re hard-pressed to understand the enthusiasm by some Memphis leaders to Norris’s bill. Essentially, it gave Memphians what they already had – the right to decide the future of Memphis City Schools at the voting booth – and abandoned his push for a countywide vote. It was hard to imagine that any legislative interference to the right of self-determination could have survived a court challenge on 14th Amendment grounds.
We hope that people are right that the shift away from a countywide vote indicates room for negotiation, but we don’t hold out much hope. First, we question the good faith of Mr. Norris and his supporters, and second, we think he’s pursuing an age old political tactic: when in doubt, appoint a committee and buy time to defuse emotions and attention.
Meanwhile, while the main game is being played out in Legislative Plaza, the new occupants of the governor’s office are watching closely and urging calm. Governor Haslam is talking regularly to Mayors Wharton and Luttrell, both of whom had preferred the development of a plan before a referendum vote, but once legislators began to take steps to block Memphians from voting or to make the vote countywide, Mayor Wharton spoke assertively in favor of the referendum, recognizing that Mr. Norris and other like-minded legislators were on the verge of turning an education debate into a civil rights battle.
Wrong Kind of Attention
We predict that as the reality of Mr. Norris’s bill sinks in, it will be seen more and more as an attack on the civil rights of Memphians. We believe it’s a concern shared by Governor Haslam, who is loathe to have his honeymoon period defined by a civil rights battle that will attract increasingly more negative national attention.
So far, the governor has divided the child by giving both sides words to hang on, but considering his political base, his attitude and careful phrasing indicate that Mayor Wharton’s phone conversations have not been wasted, but undoubtedly, Governor Haslam also relies upon his own experience as mayor of Knoxville. It’s hard to find a mayor of a major city that hasn’t dealt with interference from state and federal governments and he also remembers that no one in the Legislature injected themselves into the consolidation of Knox County and Knoxville schools in the 1987-88 school year.
That said, we predict that in the end, he lines up in favor of the Norris bill and couches it in rhetoric supporting a plan.
(The Flyer’s Jackson Baker does a fine job of parsing Mr. Norris’s bill and politics. Click here to read. Mediaverse’s Richard Thompson’s comments were insightful – and apparently we both like chess. Click here to his post. Meanwhile, John Branston of the Flyer continues his good coverage of this issue. Click here to read.)
It seems that the moment is upon us (Memphians) where we have to decide whether we want to take a step toward a brighter future or revert backward to a troubled past rooted in classism, racism, and disenfranchisement. A brighter future would be realized by ignoring all the rhetoric and fear tactics and by placing priority on the needs and rights of our children.
We can submit ourselves to the dire state of our city that we read and hear in the media daily or we can begin to undertake the massive responsibility of steering the fate of our city in a new direction. The best investment that Memphis can make in turning the tide is one in our youth.
We need to stop predicting the storm and begin building the arc.
Am I correct to think City Council blinked last week?
I think their meeting (that was delayed until this week) was the last chance to save this. I think the Collierville/Nashville/Blountville Compromise (possibly aka the Haslam/Wharton compromise) is going to allow an unfavorable (to Memphis) bill to pass before the vote.
I hope I am wrong but I feel like they blinked and we lost and no one is acting like they know it yet.
I’m not sure what Anon 11:54 is saying. The surrender vote WAS an attempt to steer us in a new direction, to give a brighter future to our youth.
If passed, this bill basically says that the anti unification forces will have the power to pull the plug on Memphis voters after one year, if we vote to surrender the Charter. But that doesn’t mean much because the legislature can let Pickler, Norris and company have their special district anytime before the 3 years is up anyway, negating the City voters desires.
Therefore, we are disenfranchised.
I hope that we as City voters vote to surrender and by a big margin. For one thing, it can help us in any possible court cases against the State legislation and/or against the “planning commission.”
Also, it will show this sham legislation for what it is, a naked power grab. It has the potential of giving us the upper hand in publicity and public opinion nationwide, just as Bull Conner, George Wallace, and other segregationists gave momentum to the Civil Rights movement.
By the way, which Memphians are supporting the Norris legislation?
yadda yadda yaddqa
we as a people…
violatin my riights agin!
yawn.
next crisis, please. this one has just jumped the shark.
i/o, wasn’t that what you were saying in 1968?
You can’t annex your way to first place.
Well now that we have all the political power arrangements lined up and analyzed and know who’s on whose team and have reopened all our old political scabs, maybe we should get back to figuring out what is best for the students of Shelby County and why.
Per any appointed commission, I cannot see how this legislation will stand in court seeing as the city as a financial supporter of the system will not have the ability to appoint representatives to the committee. This only further reinforces the notion that for all their talk, the county and state leaders are hardly concerned about the students of the MCS.
nope.
in ’68 I was saying ‘What the $#%@###$%-they cancelled Star Trek?
Now THAT was a crisis!
but as with all such, it all worked out in the end.
I am firm in my belief that Mid Americas Big New Warehouse will be able to glean the minimal number of relatively drug free pullers loaders and stackers from the current and future crop of high school ‘graduates’ to serve the Purple and Red’s airplanes at 3 a.m. whoever runs the school..er..’system?’ for lack of a better word.
If anyone cares to join me, next time the weather breaks, I’m thinking of going out and knocking the jockeys off some rich people’s lawns.
‘the county and state leaders are hardly concerned about the students of the MCS.’
and cutting and running like the current school board is of course MUCH different?
It’s Bobby Fischer, not Bobby Fisher. This post today is too tired to comment on. I vote we talk about something else.
IO,
For lack of a more lengthy reply- yes. Admitting the current system is broken at the cost of one’s political career is not simply abandoning these students.
ChrisA: Thanks for the spelling help. Thanks also for not commenting. I think we’re too tired to have heard it. We’ll be talking about this for awhile since it’s the most important thing happening in this city right now and we feel that we’d be remiss not to focus on it.
“I’m not sure what Anon 11:54 is saying. The surrender vote WAS an attempt to steer us in a new direction, to give a brighter future to our youth.”
I shouldn’t have been so vague, I suppose. The school board vote to surrender the charter was an initial step. However, Memphians now must be motivated to get out and vote- well at least before Norris pushed through this bill.
At some point we (the populous) need to stop following the lead of the political power and start directing them.
I don’t disagree with anything that you wrote Anon 1:05.
Yes, the City Council did blink misguidely believing thst Norris and Company were capable of operating in good faith or in the best interest of the community as a whole. But the blame cannot rest solely on the City Council when the Memphis Mayor also fails to stand up for us. Seriously, this man is a trained attorney and did not realize how stacked this bill was against us. Or even more sadly, actually believed that individuals who have shown no interest to and who have repeatedly failed to operate in good faith would suddenly do so if you stayed using your best option.