VOL. 61, No. 28
www.tsdmemphis.com
July 12 - 18, 2012
Romney fails to move local NAACP president
Dickerson: GOP still dropping ball on black voter potential
Special to The New Tri-State Defender
by Tony Jones
Memphis Branch NAACP President Dr. Warner Dickerson was not the least bit impressed by Republican presidential candidate Willard “Mitt” Romney’s speech to the NAACP’s National Convention in Houston on Wednesday morning. And if the GOP is ever going to regain strength in the AfricanAmerican community, 2012 won’t be the year, said Dickerson, who was in HousWarner ton for Romney’s Dickerson pitch. Romney directly addressed the issue when he began, saying, “With 90 percent of African-Americans voting for Democrats, some of you may wonder why a Republican would bother to campaign in the Mitt African American Romney community, and to address the NAACP. Of course, one reason is that I hope to represent all Americans, of every race, creed or sexual orientation, from the poorest to the richest and everyone in between.” But there is another reason, the for-
Vote! Vote! Vote!
AT A GLANCE
• Early voting begins July 13 and runs through July 28. • Election Day is Aug. 2, 2012. • Positions on the Aug. 2nd Ballot are: Assessor of Property; County Commission – District 1, Position 3; District Attorney General; General Sessions Court Clerk; Shelby County Board of Education – District 1 through District 7; State Senate – District 30 and District 32; State Representative – District 83 through District 99; U.S. Congress – District 9.
Mayorʼs gambit right on time COMMENTARY
Mayor A C Wharton Jr. and City of Memphis Attorney Herman Morris pulled a proverbial rabbit out of the hat this week with a legal opinion that the newly established city of Memphis photo library cards would meet the standard for the new voter identification law established by the Tennessee General Assembly. The luster and magic of the act had short-term appeal as State Election Coordinator Mark Goins quickly issued a statement of clarification, stating that the library cards were NOT acceptable as identification for Memphis, Shelby County or State of Tennessee voters. “The legislature clearly intended that only state or federal photo IDs can be used, which prevents us from accepting county or city IDs,” said Goins in his written statement. “Our office remains ready to assist any voter with questions about how they may obtain a free photo ID for voting from the Tennessee Department of Safety and Homeland Security.” According to Goins, “Examples of acceptable forms of ID, whether current or expired, include driver licenses, U.S. passports, Department of
Safety photo ID cards, U.S. military photo IDs and other state or federal government photo ID cards. College student IDs are not acceptable. Nowhere in the photo ID law is a city or county ID listed as an example of an acceptable ID.” Mayor Wharton indicates that the fight is not over. In fact, he suggests that it is just Bernal E. beginning, with many voters, Smith II particularly elderly and African-American voters in Shelby County, facing the possibility of being disenfranchised by the new voter identification law. At the root of this battle stand the constitutionality and legality of the law itself and similar laws like it that have been enacted by Republican-dominated state legislatures around the country. The claim is that these laws were put in place to reduce voter fraud and ensure fair elections. However, much research shows that these laws do little to reduce fraud, serving instead to negatively impact elderly and minority voters.
“No more tears, mama.”
• Notice of voter precinct changes: see pages 8-10. • Early voting locations, times, page 11. • Ballot information, page 11. For more information, visit http://www.shelbyvote.com/.
It would be naïve to not relate these new laws to an obsession by the Republican Party to derail President Barack Obama’s quest for a second term.
• Bluff City Classic operators vow to regroup. See Sports, page 16.
Family members releasing doves in memory of 3-year-old Maurice Brown Jr. (Photo by Nicole R. Harris)
Infant’s death stirs giving spirit Special to The New Tri-State Defender
by Nicole R. Harris
Shaunte Edmond
• Memphis-bred dancer, choreographer on the move. See Entertainment, page 12.
MEMPHIS WEEKEND
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
SUNDAY
H- 8 3o - L - 7 2o H- 8 7o - L - 7 3o H- 8 8o - L - 7 4o Scat. T-Storms Scat. T-Storms Scat. T-Sto rms REGIONAL TEMPS LITTLE ROCK NASHVILLE JACKSON, MS
Friday H-92 L-72 H-82 L-70 H-86 L-70
Saturday H-91 L-72 H-83 L-71 H-88 L-71
Sunday H-92 L-74 H-88 L-72 H-89 L-71
TPC hits the road with draft of unified schools plan Special to The New Tri-State Defender
- INSIDE -
• Young Entrepreneur fashions bow ties. See Business, page 5.
SEE VOTE ON PAGE 2
by Michaelantonio Jones
SEE ROMNEY ON PAGE 3
• The FBI, Co-Intel-Pro and the Invaders. See Opinion, page 4.
75 Cents
“It’s a shame that they wouldn’t let that baby rest in peace,” noted a female resident of a nearby apartment complex. Moments earlier, dozens of mourners fled the sanctuary of Progressive Missionary Baptist Church. Inside, at what was supposed to be a homegoing celebration for three-year-old Maurice Brown Jr., a verbal altercation erupted, prompting Memphis Police officers to intervene and escort several attendees from the church premises. Maurice Brown Sr. reported his son missing on July 1, with Brown saying the disappearance happened while he was asleep. Excruciating hours passed as the search went on for the toddler. Police found his lifeless body in a dumpster, roughly one mile away from the home where he was staying with his father. Currently in jail without bond, Maurice Brown Sr. is charged with first-degree murder in the death of Maurice Brown Jr. So many unanswered questions: How, when and most importantly – why? Still, one thing is evident: the spirit of giving is not lost among Memphians. Hundreds of family members, friends and supporters attended the funeral service for Mau-
The dumpster in which the body of three-yearold Maurice Brown Jr. was found has been removed, with a teddy-bear memorial in its place. (Photo by Tyrone P. Easley)
rice Brown Jr. on Saturday, July 7. In addition to those who came to show emotional support, area Maurice businesses Brown Jr. stepped in to alleviate the financial burden on the family. “It’s just the right thing to do,” noted Charles Lurry of CL Escort Services, leaders of the funeral pro-
cession. R.S. Lewis & Sons Funeral Home donated services, the 3-foot6-inch coffin and called on area vendors to assist with arrangements. Including the burial plot donated by Elmwood Cemetery, a monument given by Crone Monument Company, and a Monticello vault gifted by an anonymous donor, the total cost for the funeral service was apSEE DEATH ON PAGE 2
Houston High School’s auditorium was sparsely populated with a collection of parents, teachers, bus drivers and other concerned citizens – all gathered to hear a presentation from the Transition Planning Commission. While the focus of the Tuesday (July 10) evening community meeting was to inform citizens of the TPC’s recommendations on how to structure a combined Memphis City SchoolsShelby County Schools system, the issue that most seemed to float to the top was money: How much it will cost to carry out these recommendations? How will the plan be paid for? And what will it cost the employees and communities of both school systems? TPC member Christine P. Richards stressed that the commission is not chartered to answer questions on municipal tax increases. It’s draft plan has a $57 million budget gap and Richards pointed out that the TPC has recommended three funding options: ask the city of Memphis for funding by securing $55 million via a legal ruling for the maintenance of effort from fiscal year 2009 (strategically allocating $11 million over 5 years); ask the state for funding; and ask the county for funding. Shelby County Mayor Mark Luttrell, a TPC member, told the session’s attendees that the City of Memphis is not required to pay anything. He emphasized that the plan by the TPC is only a recommendation and that it first must be approved by the state and then by the unified school board. Neither, he said, is required to accept the plan in full or as is. A contingent of Shelby County School bus drivers at the session did not take kindly the fact that they have job security until the July 2013 merger date. In an effort to cut as little out of the classroom budget as possible, the TPC has recommended that the Memphis City Schools custodial services and SCS bus drivers be outsourced to save money. Visibly upset, the SCS bus drivers decried the recommendation as being only about money and numbers. They said it did not take into account the livelihoods of the drivers or the human cost of such a decision, such as severing the relationships the drivers have forged with students over the decades, especially with the special needs students. Claiming that the TPC chose cost of service over quality of service, the SCS bus drivers also asserted that Durham bus company, the company that MCS contracts with for bus services, doesn’t care about the children, only dropping them off. Mayor Luttrell said that while some of the decisions on what to cut were SEE SCHOOLS ON PAGE 2