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Thinking Out Loud

A discussion with editorial page editor Allen Johnson.

September 8, 2009

How dare the president speak to school kids!

From birthers to the “Obama’s a secret Muslim terrorist conspiracists” to now this: The Subversive Propagandist Speech that Will Poison Our Children’s Minds and Lead Them Irredeemably Down the Path of Socialism.

The mounting furor over a planned speech today by the president of the United States seems hardly a cause for such alarm.
Even so, some critics have treated the speech, which will be broadcast by satellite to schools nationwide, as some sort of manifesto against the flag, mom and apple pie.

“This speech is clearly political in nature and has no place in the classroom,” North Carolina Republican Chairman Tom Fetzer said in a statement last week.

“Our focus should be improving our students’ test scores, not the President’s approval rating.”

Fetzer’s, by the way, was one of the milder pronouncements.

Mark Steyn, a Canadian author and political commentator, charged on Rush Limbaugh’s radio show last week that the president is attempting to create a cult of personality.

Syern went on to compare Obama with Iraqi despot Saddam Hussein and North Korean dictator Kim Jong Il.
Glenn Back urged parents to pull their kids from school the whole day in protest (that’ll learn ’em; who needs education anyway?)

Florida Republican Party Chairman Jim Greer said he “was appalled that taxpayer dollars are being used to spread President Obama’s socialist ideology.”

Child, please.

The planned theme of the president’s speech: working hard and staying in school.

Among presidents who have delivered similar talks in the past was Ronald Reagan, and most recently, George H.W. Bush, in October 1991.

Democrats complained then that the Bush speech was political even though he merely encouraged students to embrace education as “cool” and stay away from drugs.

There were off base then, but at least they weren’t comparing Bush Sr. to foreign dictators.
Actually, President Obama is pretty good as a motivational speaker and his talk could especially resonate with public school students.

Many of these students are racial and ethnic minorities.

The ones who are typically struggling the most are black males, like him.

If he can grow up to be president, they can, too, but they won’t get there by seeing being smart as radioactive.

The president’s speech was released Monday in time for parents and others to preview its content.

Meanwhile, Guilford County Schools has instructed its principals to show the satellite telecast, but parents may choose to have their children opt out by sending a note to their teachers.

Guilford County Republican Chairman Bill Wright offered an equally logical reaction. “I think it’s good any time the president can speak to kids directly,” he told the News & Record’s Mark Binker.

If the president delivers an academic pep talk as advertised, Wright said, he has no problem.

Make sense to me.

But since Wright isn't shouting at the top of his lungs, is anybody listening?

 

September 6, 2009

A railroad runs through it

This week's column:

 

Sometimes all you need to solve a potentially serious problem is common sense and a pair of strategically placed stop signs.

 
That’s how the railroad giant, Norfolk Southern, addressed the inherent danger of two active downtown railroad tracks laid uncomfortably close to two active downtown nightclubs.
 
Now flanking the tracks on either side are stop signs that include warnings to look both ways before crossing. “Which sort of indicates that a train might be coming and you ought to look,” says Chris Maney, a special agent with the Norfolk Southern police force.
 
Not realizing they were still being used, some people were parking on the tracks, both of which serve massive freight trains, one of them several trains a day. In one of the more harrowing cases, a tow truck struggled to free a car that had become wedged so snugly between the rails that it wouldn’t budge.
Fortunately, the truck eventually pulled the car loose, sparing the poor owner the sight of a locomotive doing him that favor.
 
The clubs in question are the Lotus Lounge and Club Rain. One track runs across the road between the two night spots. The other, even busier track winds between Club Rain and a car detailing shop and is almost close enough to the neighboring properties you can reach out and touch a passing train.
No one would ever build an establishment that close to a railroad right-of-way today, says Capt. Wayne Scott of the Greensboro Police Department. But the tracks and buildings are carry-overs from “horse and buggy” days, when attitudes about trains and safety were obviously more casual.
 
Apparently, about as casual as some people’s attitudes today about where to park while they party.
Why would someone be so, well, stupid as to leave his car on a train track?
 
The answer may lie in deceptive appearances. The tracks closest to the Lotus Lounge on West Lewis Street are rusty and overgrown with weeds. Some people may assume they are abandoned. There also was no marked railroad crossing, no warning signs and no indication to motorists that the public street ends and becomes a private drive as it crosses the tracks.
 
Otherwise, it’s hard to imagine anyone would park there not knowing for certain that a train won’t come. Whatever their logic (or lack thereof), people have.
 
Beyond the safety problem were the repeat calls to police, who have better things to do with their time, especially on Friday and Saturday nights.
 
Thankfully, the railroad posted the new signs last week n response to an earlier News & Record editorial about the area with the signs.
 
It came as a pleasant surprise. When initially contacted, Norfolk Southern hadn’t seemed all that interested. “At this point, we don’t plan to put up anymore signs,” Robin Chapman, a railroad spokesman, said in August. “It’s just common sense you don’t park on railroad tracks.”
 
Except that people do, as they did earlier this summer. “We dealt with several cars that night,” Capt. Scott recalled about June 27, after the Super Jam concert at the Greensboro Coliseum.
Club Rain has since lost its liquor license, but it’s still safe to assume that some new night spot will succeed it on that site, just as two others preceded it.
 
Acting city Transportation Director Adam Fischer said he wasn’t aware of the problem. “My first response would be kind of like the railroad,” he said last week. “Why are you parking there in the first place?”
But he also agreed that some additional signs from the city would be helpful, maybe even a barrier. “At the minimum, we need to post 'No Parking’ signs,” Fischer said.
 
Both Fischer and the railroad spokesman, Robin Chapman, are right, when they note that parking on tracks on a hunch that no trains will come is inherently dumb. But so is texting while driving an automobile, or running a red light.
 
Trains, in particular, are big, noisy things that ring bells, blow horns and flash lights to let you know they’re coming. Even so, in 2008, according to the state Department of Transportation, there were 69 collisions involving trains and vehicles in North Carolina, resulting in eight deaths and 27 injuries. There were 36 incidents involving pedestrians, resulting in 17 deaths and 19 injuries.
 
The most recent incident occurred a week ago today, when an Amtrak train struck a pedestrian in downtown Raleigh. The engineer blew his horn, and two of the pedestrians ran into the woods. But a third person remained on the tracks and was hit, suffering “substantial injuries.”
 
The best anyone can do is post more signs and hope and pray common sense arrives before the next
 

 

September 3, 2009

Good city manager choice ... now don't screw it up

Memo to Greensboro City Council:

Congratulations.

You have found a new city manager.

You have approved his hiring by a commanding  8-1 majority.

And if first impressions are any indication, Rashad Young is a very good choice to succeed Mitchell Johnson.

He is smart and personable and excellent on his feet.

And he is uncommonly experienced for a 33-year-old.

Neither Johnson nor Johnson's predecessor, Ed Kitchen, had been a city manager before taking the job.

Young has, and for a reasonably large city in Dayton, Ohio.

So far, so good.

Now don't screw this up.

For Young to do his very best work he will need a clear vision from you and consistent feedback.

Johnson got neither.

You should set specific, measurable goals for him. And you should evaluate him on that basis.

You have said this was a good idea before, then you didn't follow up.

You confused and frustrated Johnson with mixed signals and conflicting orders.

You have a clean slate now and a golden opportunity to get this right.

Don't blow it.

 

 

 

 

 

 

August 28, 2009

Seeing black and white ... and red ... in the new city manager hire

The hiring of a new city manager, predictably, has generated a lot of traffic among online commenters.

Just as predictably, a lot of it is mean-spirited and racially tinged.

Some of the same people who argue that they neither see race (they are colorblind nor consider something that should matter in such decisions) immediately zeroed in on the obvious fact that Rashad Young is an African American.

So what?

The more relevant questions are:

Was he the best candidate?

And can he deliver the best results?

Said one comment, drenched in ominous, “Invasion of the Body Snatchers” tones:

Greensboro Mayor — black
Greensboro Police Chief — black
Greensboro School Superintendent — black
Guilford Co. Manager — black
New Greensboro City manager — black
I don’t hear any blacks advacating (sic) for more diversity in Greensboro’s leadership.

First, a pair of corrections:

Greensboro does not have a school superintendent; Guilford County does.

In addition, the county manager, Brenda Jones Fox, might be more than a little surprised to learn she’s black.

Second, the mayor is black, but a majority of voters citywide elected her, in a town that is majority-white.

Third, school Superintendent Mo Green was hired by a majority-white board (six white, three African American), as will be the case with the new city manager.

Heck, even county commissioners chairman Skip Alston was elected to the position by Democrats and Republicans, on a majority-white board.

Relax. No need to jump to conclusions — and certainly no need to jump off the Lincoln Financial Tower.

We don’t even know who else was in the field but the guy at least deserves the benefit of the doubt.

Despite his relatively tender age, his resume is strong.

Unlike the previous two Greensboro managers he will come into the position with actual experience in the top job.

He has gotten good reviews from the Dayton business community.

He has had to wrangle with unions.

Open your minds and your eyes wide enough to see more than black and white.

That’s so 1950s.

 

August 27, 2009

Coming clean on "Star Trek"

I have seen “Star Trek: The Wrath of Khan” at least a hundred times.

I own three versions of “Star Trek: The Motion Picture”: a VHS tape, a DVD and special “Director’s Cut” DVD, even though it is arguably one of the worst Trek films ever made.

I still get pumped when Commander Riker stares down a Borg ship and orders “Fire!” at the end of the Season Three  cliffhanger of the TV series, “Star Trek: The Next Generation.”

I have seen the new movie twice (and counting).

I own two “Star Trek” encyclopedias (yes, they make those) and one “Starfleet Technical Manual” (as if I’m gonna need to change a flat on my starship anytime soon).

The point is, I know my Trek.

That’s part of the reason I recently jumped at the chance to explore the logic (or lack thereof) of a proposed a Starfleet Academy — at N.C. A&T

John Hood of the John Locke Foundation apparently shares my passion.

John announces in his current column that he is ceasing a run of old “Star Trek” titles (or slight variations of them for his columns on North Carolina politics.

John and I once debated on this blog the politics of Trek versus “Star Wars.”

For the record, I’m still right and he’s still wrong.

And I haven’t asked, but I would be shocked if John didn’t have some input into the Civitas Institute’s Trek parody lampooning the Star Fleet Academy idea.

Update: John Hood replies:

"Nope. I was outraged that they didn’t give me a chance to respond, on behalf of my hero Earl Jones."

 

 

 

 

August 26, 2009

Is Skip Alston maturing as a leader?

The State of Our Community luncheon debuted its panel discussion format today.

My humble verdict: It’s the right way to go, an improvement over the succession of prepared speeches in the past.

Except there were still prepared speeches.

The panelists were apprised of the questions ahead of time for reasons that escape me.

That's not necessary (these folks know their stuff) and it saps some of the energy from the event..

Mayor Yvonne Johnson read most of every answer from prepared notes. School board Chairman Alan Duncan used some notes..

But Skip Alston, chairman of the county commissioners, used no notes, except in his opening remarks.

And he came across as the most quotable, most memorable and most effective of the three.

That’s more than a little ironic, since Alston had said beforehand that he did not like the new format and  that he suspected it was intended to set him up

But the format actually does play to Alston’s strengths, as I predicted in Tuesday’s post. (I admit, I got lucky).

He is good on his feet.

“At first, I didn’t like this format,”  Alston said afterward. “ ... But I kinda like it. Do it more often than once a year.”

Maybe even every month, he added.

Alston came across as forceful, clear and statesmanlike.

He showed again why he has the tools to be one of the county’s most effective public officials.

If only (as they say in sci-fi movies and comic books) he would use those special powers for good.

When he does, he can cut an impressive figure.

He did Wednesday.

Not that I bought everything he was selling.

Alston made some very good, if familiar,  points on Wednesday:

  • The need to eliminate duplication and to increase efficiencies by combining more city and county services.
  • The need for more ongoing communication and collaboration among city and county governments — “to check our egos at the door” and “talk more to each other than talking about each other.”
  • He even flatly stated that the Guilford County Schools need more money. “I know that they are hurting,” he said. “They need all the funds they can get.”

But some of the pronouncements don’t square with how Alston has conducted some of his business.

There was scant communication to the media or anyone else when Alston and commissioners Vice Chairman Steve Arnold several months ago engineered a clean sweep of top county administrators, including the manager, deputy manager and attorney.

But it would be dishonest not to give Alston and Arnold their props for cutting county spending, avoiding a tax increase and conceiving an intriguing new incentives policy that would be more consistent and benefit more businesses, especially smaller ones.

At one point on Wednesday, Alston came close to sounding like a country pastor.

“We may have come over in different ships,” he said, quoting an old saying.

The mayor said Amen tand the congregation chuckled.

“But we’re in the same boat now.”

One even dares wonder if Alston has begun to find his voice as not just a politician, but a leader.

If he finally commits to practicing what he preaches more than some of the time, who knows?.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

August 25, 2009

The state of Skip Alston and Steve Arnold

The annual State of the Community luncheon tomorrow will unveil a new format.

Instead of the traditional speeches from business and elected leaders, this year we'll be treated a panel discussion including the school board chairman, the county commissioners chairman and the mayor.

It's a welcome new wrinkle that ought to add more life and spontaneity and get some folks talking to one another who need to be talking more to each other anyway.

Plus, the speeches tended to veer at times into less-than-compelling territory.

For instance, Kirk Perkins, bless his heart, thanked nearly everybody in the Triad his speech when he was commissioners chairman, including his wife (not that there's anything wrong with that).

Current commissioners Chairman Skip Alston has been quoted as expressing some suspicions about the new format as a way to put him on the spot.

Actually, the format plays to his strengths. Alston is very good on his feet.

Plus, the luncheon comes at a time when has some very intriguing topics to address, including a proposed new county incentives policy.

Conceived primarily by commissioners vice chairman Steve Arnold, the policy extends tax breaks to nearly all businesses that invest in capital expansions.

It is smart and visionary, and well worth trying, if it passes legal muster.

And Arnold has pitched it as a countywide concept that he hopes the High Point and Greensboro governments also might adopt.

Our editorial board has given both Alston and Arnold grief for the havoc they wreaked in county government in recent months.
And they deserved it.

But they may be on to something here.

And the potential to use the policy as a branding mechanism for the county and a means to get local governments working more cooperatively is promising.

Even if the policy doesn't pass legal muster, Arnold and Alston deserve credit for trying.

And they should keep trying.

Arnold shocked us a couple of weeks ago by dropping by unannounced and making an impassioned case for the policy.
Arnold, who at times in recent years had seemed bored and aloof as a commissioner, was open, visibly excited, even effusive.

I felt for a moment as if I'd been transported to an alternate universe.

But it was real, and encouraging.

I don't excuse Arnold and Alston for the sweeping changes they've made, for better or worse, with little openness to the public or the media.

But I also bellieve in giving credit where it is due.

 

 

 

 

 

 

August 24, 2009

UNC's health care reform plan

The UNC system is moving ahead with its own version of health care reform.

And, apparently, its own public option.

Effective in 2010.

More thoughts on Patricia Sullivan

Several years ago I had the opportunity to spend three hours with her, including lunch in the newly expanded and renovated Elliott Center.

I didn't know what to expect. She had impressed me as choosing her words so carefully that I wondered if I'd learn anything new about her that day. I did.

She didn't have the personal magnetism or charisma I had seen on other campus leaders, but she seemed totally at ease in that setting.
And her interaction with students was natural, not the forced, made-for-the-media glad-handing you sometimes see in these cases.

She was proud as punch of the place, and seemed genuinely excited that UNCG was working to provide a fuller, more enjoyable college experience for its students.

That was, in fact, the most unguarded and relaxed I ever saw her, eating on a tray in the student union cafeteria.

.

 

 

Class in the classroom

I am pleased to have the opportunity to team-teach a media seminar at N.C. A&T this semester with WFMY's Sandra Hughes.

She is as graceful  and engaging in the classroom as she is on the air.

Sandra is down-to-earth, self-deprecating and  very easy to work with.

(She also picked up the students'  names twice as fast as me.)

It's a nice break to be able to deal with journalism issues as opposed to skills courses, which I still enjoy.

Right now we're dealing with the impact of  CBS's "60 Minutes" and the legacy of its creator, Don Hewitt. Fun stuff.

I only wish the seminar didn't have to be at 8 a.m.

 

 

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