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The Curse of Arrowhead and the Death of Good American Education

NFL junkies like myself are aware of an old curse that has afflicted the fortunes of Kansas City Chiefs football teams ever since they tore down their old complex and built Arrowhead Stadium. This curse, The Curse of Arrowhead, is perhaps not as virulently toxic as having Dan Snyder LBO your favorite team. However, it supposedly explains why the team stopped being competitive in Super Bowls after building the new stadium in which to play their games.

The year was 1985, Kansas City Schools had been taken to court and a Federal Judge, with the customary modesty that befits the modern judiciary, decided that he would do a much better job of running the organization than a bunch of people who, you know, had formerly taught or something. Like the alien invaders at the end of Rush’s 2112 Suite, Judge Russell Clark assumed control. Since, the Curse of Judge Clark has laid low the fortunes of Kansas City Schools.

Using Civil Rights Act jurisprudence as a legal gravamen, he imposed a $2B, 12 year mandate on The State of Missouri. Kansas City proceeded to massively upgrade its physical capital and institute a forced integration program. The latter proved challenging, owing to the paucity of non-minority students attending school in the district, but Judge Clark plowed ahead.

To fund this ambitious project in civic fascism, Judge Clark raised property taxes by 150%, and imposed a 1.5% income tax surcharge. When the taxpayers of Missouri could no longer pony up the rest, he went to the state government and hit them up for the balance. The results remind the objective reader more of The Recovery Summer than the Platonic Academy. Paul Ciotti writes of the experiment below.

For more than a decade, the Kansas City district got more money per pupil than any other of the 280 major school districts in the country. Yet in spite of having perhaps the finest facilities of any school district its size in the country, nothing changed. Test scores stayed put, the three-grade-level achievement gap between blacks and whites did not change, and the dropout rate went up, not down.

(HT: The Cato Institute)

We fast-forward to the present and see an even more tragic and human result from the feckless, arrogant and fascist enstupidation of Federal Judge Russell Clark’s unmitigated Progressive hubris. Today, 10 years after the mega-funded educational fiasco, Kansas City still struggles. The billions of dollars have been dissipated in a manner reminiscent of a drunkard leaning over a urinal. The schools still fail, the money has long gone, and the new generation of children stand there and eat the unintended consequences of unmitigated big-government hubris.

Like many who compete for good grades, Micah Chaney imagined this moment in her life to be different. She envisioned a “rise to the top,” where the finest colleges waited to be wowed. Now with her education in the Kansas City School District nearly complete, can she still see it? “No,” Micah, 16, told the school board last month. The auditorium fell silent. “I just don’t think I’m that prepared.”

(HT: Rick Montgomery, The Kansas City Star)

Montgomery continues to describe the woeful management that occurred both with and without enlightened Federal Judges to make all the trains run on time.

In fatter fiscal times, the budget pie was portioned, by and large, to feed grown-ups or fulfill judges’ orders. Some slices were carved to fight social ills related to gangs, drugs and homelessness. Or to take advantage of federal grants awarded to groups promoting, say, sexual abstinence. Student achievement? In many classrooms, success was just the cherry on top, if success occurred at all.

That so many of the neediest kids were seen as commodities was an open secret. Their economic needs and learning issues meant more public dollars and grants for the city schools. Yet the district’s overall scores in math and communications seldom reached half the levels targeted in recent years by the state of Missouri.

(HT: Rick Montgomery as cited above).

Now, with yet another Superintendant, their 26th in the last 40 years, Kansas City, Mo faces all the same problems that Judge Russell Clark came to save them from. Only now, they have no money to solve them with and no Federal Judge to Shanghai taxpayers into forking over more loot. Schools have been closed, teachers have been laid off. If I had to guess, this new superintendant will last about 1.5 years as well. Roman Barracks Emperors had better prospects during the 3rd Century AD. Cives on the Roman sportulary had better future prospects than the citizens sending their kids to Kansas City Schools.

Some would read this blog cynically, accuse me of being a San Diego Chargers fan or something, and just write all of this off as bias. Except that the failures in Kansas City can teach an object lesson and the idiotic philosophies from whence these terrible spending initiatives sprung still dominate the policy conversations involving education in America. John Derbyshire describes how the public school system his children attend plans to abuse a $700M government grant.

$219.7 million: New standards and assessments, revised curriculum. $177 million: Programs still to be determined that comply with federal education reform priorities. $113.6 million: Improvements at failing schools. $110.3 million: Training of teachers and school principals. $64.2 million: New data systems to track student performance.

(HT:NRO)

Given that description of expenditures, I see no possible way to insure this money will be spent wisely or in a manner consistent to the needs of children. Yet education gets funded without oversight and everyone assumes that the tooth-fairy will make these officials use it for the children. In Los Angeles, CA the LAUSD opens a $578M “Taj Mahal” school; The Robert F. Kennedy Community Schools. Reactions predictably differ.

“There’s no more of the old, windowless cinderblock schools of the ’70s where kids felt, ‘Oh, back to jail,’” said Joe Agron, editor-in-chief of American School & University, a school construction journal. “Districts want a showpiece for the community, a really impressive environment for learning.”

However, parent groups want to know if this big, impressive building will actually help their children learn.

“New buildings are nice, but when they’re run by the same people who’ve given us a 50 percent dropout rate, they’re a big waste of taxpayer money,” said Ben Austin, executive director of Parent Revolution who sits on the California Board of Education. “Parents aren’t fooled.”

Thus educational spending has been and still remains a completely unaccountable government spending piggy-trough. Nobody tells the education lobby no. They can’t ever seem to make it passed all the “underprivileged” children serving as human shields. This hits at the true tragedy of our soul-sucking educational establishment.

These children will never stop being underprivileged or having special needs. If their needs ever got fed, and the children could truly stand on their own, this would be a loss to the American educational bureaucracy. Kids that read, write, have goals and don’t take Ritalin just don’t justify a big enough budget…

X-Posted At: THE MINORITY REPORT

COMMENTS

  • itrytobenice

    They were milking the he!! out of the rest of us, taking *far* more funding than we were, but it was never enough.

    They wasted and wasted and wasted. It was typical of people on the dole. Whatever they had, they just wanted more. Victim, victim, victim. When they had rooms full of computers left in their boxes until they were obsolete, while the rest of us didn’t have so much as one computer in the whole school, did *any* of them say…”Hey, maybe we’re not doing a good enough job managing our money”?

    No. Just gimme, gimme, gimme.

    Well, get over yourselves, people. You reap what you sow. You took money that was needed for education in other districts and squandered it. Life lesson number 1: You won’t teach your children any usable skill or knowledge if you’re too selfish and foolish to see that your whole underlying premise is greed and an insatiable appetite for the wealth of the state at your disposal.

    And Judge Russell Clark can’t suffer enough to pay for his hubris and stupidity. And I promise you, until the day he dies his pride will never let him acknowledge the terrible price the people had to pay for his autocratic vanity.

    • http://theminorityreportblog.com Repair_Man_Jack

      I picked them as the rediculous example….100 other cities would run the same scam if they could. This is the educrat holy grail.

      • http://www.examiner.com/x-1597-Charlotte-Law--Politics-Examiner Mike gamecock DeVine

        The Falcons managed to stink in Fulton County Stadium and the Georgia Dome. We only finally had two consecutive winning seasons in 2009-10 after we got new ownership. Not sure about the history of Chiefs ownership and haunted houses but we used to like Len Dawson.

        We are very sure of the evil of self government in education and even taxation being usurped by federal judges and wish we knew if the KC ruling were ever appealed to the SCOTUS? Was it?

        This USC Gamecock is absolutely sure that our baseball killed the 1801 Chicken Curse with their first men’s national championship in this past summer’s College World series victory over UCLA, the university with the most national championships in all NCAA sports.

        more later

        • http://www.examiner.com/x-1597-Charlotte-Law--Politics-Examiner Mike gamecock DeVine

          Yes, Braves-Gamecock generally loves MLB and College football more than other sports, but we love most all sports. The futility of Atlanta’s NFL expansion franchise in the late 60s-2000s (with few exceptions before Home Depot’s Arthur Blank bought the dirty birds) caused us to seek out excellence in our childhood via Johnny U and the 1969 Super Bowl. We remained a Colts fan with diversions based on favorite players like Earl Campbell, Randall Cunningham, and especially Dan Fouts and Air Coryell’s passing game. But none won a Super Bowl.

          The Falcons at least finally went to one and then the Panthers arrived as a quality-from-day-one Jerry Richardson franchise that lost gloriously to Brady’s Patriots. Then our Colts won another with Manning. We pull for Tebow in Denver.

          I was always a Braves fan first thanks to little league, trips to see Hammerin’ Hank etc especially since the Gamecocks football team has had only sporadic success since winning their only conference championship (6-0 in the ACC in 1969) and since the glory days of USC basketball under Frank McGuire ended in the 70s.

          It was only after living in Columbia for 11 months a few years ago that I really came to like college football better than the NFL..

          I have to admit that today, I like the Panthers better than the Colts or the Falcons.

          But if the Braves or Gamecocks (in any sport) are on the tube, that is where you will find me plotting my next attack on Democrats and liberal judges…

        • Flagstaff

          since the 1971 season, but they haven’t made a return appearance in the Super Bowl.

          Owned by Lamar Hunt, now owned by son Clark and other close family. I don’t know if any outsiders were left shares when Lamar died (2008?). Clark seems to be in charge.

          New management in 1989. The 1990′s were pretty good. 2003 was a wild ride. New management in 2009. Hope springs eternal.

          I don’t remember a “curse of Arrowhead,” but they’re now in the “new” Arrowhead, “New Body, Same Soul” and what they don’t mention “higher prices.”

          Price perspective: Box seats in 1972 were $8, reserved seats were $7.

          Two construction strikes held up the completion of Arrowhead, creating excess costs that resulted in the elimination of the “rolling roof” that was planned to cover either the football or baseball stadium. IIRC, the total cost of the stadium was $35 million. I don’t know if that included the baseball stadium or not.

          The state of Missouri and Jackson County, MO, put $300 million towards the recent renovation of the stadium. The Hunt family put in $125 million. I don’t think either party claimed that it would improve the educational experience of Jackson County kids. But they’ll have a nice place to watch football if they can afford it, or on TV if they can’t.

          • Flagstaff

            The first Super Bowl (not called that then) was played in January of 1967. I was flying in Viet Nam that day, and I listened to the AFRS radio broadcast on the am radio that was standard equipment on a C-130 navigator’s work station.

            Junius “Buck” Buchanan was the biggest player on the field, at 6’7″ and a “massive” 275 pounds. Nowadays, that’s just a big Tight End. Inflation strikes in more than one way.

            http://www.kcchiefs.com/team/chiefs-history/1970s.html

          • http://www.examiner.com/x-1597-Charlotte-Law--Politics-Examiner Mike gamecock DeVine

            My brother taught theology at Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary there for 10+ years before moving to Birmingham a few years ago. Loves the city. I have always loved the Royals. Glad they sent us Scherholtz for the Braves in the 90s-00s

          • Flagstaff

            pathetic since a few years before George Brett retired. They had a great run from about 1976 through 1985. They always came up about one play short until ’85. Even Brett couldn’t pull them through in ’80.

            Schuerholtz was the biggest loss they had. Ewing Kauffman should have let him have part ownership to keep him.

            The Chiefs have a chance, just because they have brought in new management (Scott Pioli) and it doesn’t take that much to turn around a team in a 16 game season. I’m afraid we need a quarterback, though. Matt Cassel just doesn’t seem to have it under control. Without Tony Gonzalez, his targets have trouble getting open, too. Good for Atlanta, though.

          • http://theminorityreportblog.com Repair_Man_Jack

            When I was a wee lad growing up in Richmond, VA, I was attending a scouting function and got to shake hands with ex-KC Chief Willie Lanier. You don’t shake hands w/ Mr. Lanier. He envelops your hand. He was huge.

            He also retired back to his home town of Richmond and in many ways was a pilalr of the community. It’s cool to look back on meeting someone who successfully had that complete an existence.

    • Flagstaff

      After the Pendergast machine lost its power to prevent it, the state took over operation of the Kansas City police department.

      But it happens elsewhere. By 1985, I’d been away from Kansas City for 13 years (although I have a replay of Friday’s Chiefs game on the computer right now). By then I lived in Michigan.

      In the early 70′s, the federal court in Detroit (I believe) ordered a cross-district busing integration plan for the Detroit schools. Kids put up with long, long bus rides to go to and return from school.

      I don’t know how much it cost, but it didn’t work, either. My son went to school in the rural suburbs, so we didn’t experience it first hand.

      I have no enlightening comment. I do recall that Thomas Sowell wrote a book about how to fix our national education system. I think it starts with “eliminate the existing system.”

  • renny

    the professiional academics and controllers of university education schools indoctrinate teachers to believe they are social engineers and the facilitators of social justice instead of the leaders in drilling skills, like reading and math, into youngsters and inculturating in them the wisdom engenderd by 1000′s of years of Western civilization.

    In 1972, the pres. of the NEA (my union) announced teachers were now the social engineers of the future, and from that came a devaluation of memorization and drill in elementary school subjects and the substitution of the non-academic curriculum of No’s–no smoking, no drugs (while the public schools of the US became the drug distribution centers of the nation), no unwanted pregnancies (while they championed condoms be handed out to grade school boys), no fat (while the nation embarked on an obesity bender for 1/2 a century), and no bigotry or intolerance (as race relations have become for the MSM traditional “story” fodder even as we have become a more integrated and non-segregated society).

    None of the no’s have ever worked–as 1/4 of adults STILL smoke–and in exchange, students didn’t learn to read or calculate, to the extent that colleges need to recruit foreign students for math and engineering curriculums because American students are too stupid to enroll to become doctors or scientists.

    Like revolutionizing the GOP, education needs a grass roots movement to displace the social engineers and return education to the learning of skills and culture in order to continue the US as a top-ranked society with a prosperous future.

    I am still doing my small part, but I am a dinosaura among the radical educationalists that populate academia and call themselves professionals when they are really merely the elite.

  • Ann_W

    It is mostly ignored because most Conservatives live in school districts that aren’t horrific and most Liberals get bribed to support the unions over the kids.

    Someone needs to pick up this issue and beat it until things start to change. School choice is the only long term solution I see. Pointing out the hypocrisy of liberal law makers destroying the DC scholarship program that would allow some poor children to rub elbows with their children at the good schools would be a great place to start.

    Maybe along with the history of Progressives, Glenn Beck could mix in some stories about these poor kids stuck in these schools that drain away their futures.

  • stephaniet

    So you were. But it sounded a *lot* like the Indianapolis public school system…