From the category archives:

From the Editor

By Amber Campbell

How many times have you looked at your child and known that you’d do anything to give her the best chances for health and happiness? That you’d break any barrier blocking his way to success?

What if you knew that the quality of your child’s education was determined by your zip code? Or the color of their skin?

That American schools are more segregated by race and class today than they were 43 years ago when Martin Luther King, Jr. was killed?

That they were less likely to graduate from high school or go to college than other kids in your own city?

That in some districts – like Seattle’s – a black child has a better chance of dropping out than attending a high-performing public school?

Kelley Williams-Bolar – 40-year old Ohio college student and single-mom of two daughters – knew all that and more, like that a high-quality, well-funded public education is not just a cornerstone of a democratic society, but also its great equalizer.

Which is why the teacher-in-training was recently convicted of a felony and spent nine days in jail for using her father’s address when she registered her children at a better, safer and whiter school than the low-performing, predominantly black one in her own community where – in a segregated district much like Seattle’s – neighborhood children are forced to attend.

County Prosecutor Sherri Walsh charged Williams-Bolar with grand theft and falsifying records — a third-degree felony. She was convicted on the felony charge, and sentenced to five years in prison. The judge suspended all but 10 days of the jail time, instead ordering three years of probation and 80 hours of community service.

Williams-Bolar isn’t the only struggling with issues of equality in education more than 50 years after the Brown v. Board of Education decision declared “separate educational facilities are inherently unequal.” Our own former Rainier Valley neighbor Sable Verity has had to make her own tough choices:

As a mother of two black kids in public schools, I sympathize with Williams-Bolar. My kids are lucky. When I realized that- simply because of our zip code my kids were going to be tracked into schools where they likely would not be successful, and likely would not go to college as a result- I moved my family to a different school district. It cost more in living expenses. It put us farther away from family and peer groups. But they’re getting the education they’re worthy of. Not everyone can do that. I don’t fault Williams-Bolar for her decisions or her circumstance. Sometimes things are beyond our control. For what it’s worth though, I was only able to get a higher paying job and move because I had a kick-ass education growing up. More.

What do you think? Is Kelly Williams-Bolar the Rosa Parks of our time? What difficult decisions have you faced in an effort to secure the best possible education for your child?

In Seattle, only 10% of black students attend a high-performing elementary school, and south-end schools tend to be of significantly lower-quality compared to the rest of the city. Photo/do communication

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Dear Readers,

This week I watched with pride as President Obama addressed the nation from my Alma mater, the University of Arizona, and implored each of us to use the Tucson tragedy as inspiration to be better:

To be better in our private lives, to be better friends and neighbors and coworkers and parents.

As he spoke, I couldn’t help but think of one particular act of kindness that followed those terrible events of last Saturday. I share it with you because, while it may be overlooked among so many other acts of heroism, I think it illustrates one of the most courageous and even instructive in our efforts at healing our own communities:

The parents of suspect Jared Loughner are also getting support – even from strangers. People have been dropping off cards and flowers at the home of Randy and Amy Loughner Wednesday. One of them was nurse Lisa Campbell, who lives about three miles away and doesn’t know the couple. She brought by a card and flowers. Campbell said in the card were her name and phone number – in case they wanted someone to talk to.

Admittedly, this story probably strikes such a cord with me because, in my own attempts to comprehend such senseless violence, I often shake my head and wonder (like I know many of you do), “Where are the parents? What failure was it of theirs that allowed something so horrible to happen at the hands of their child?”

And those may be perfectly worthy questions, which is why it makes the actions of people like Lisa Campbell (no relation) all the more profound, and timely as we celebrate the life and memory of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., a man who – when he saw suffering – did what he could to help, no matter who it was that needed him or why they were in pain.

So, on the 82nd anniversary of Dr. King’s birthday, may we all have the courage and compassion to do the same in our own communities, with our own neighbors who, at first glance, may not appear to want or even deserve it.

Amber Campbell
Editor/Publisher

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Dear Readers,

As I reflect on the last 1,095 days of the Rainier Valley Post (who’s counting?!), I am at once humbled by and overwhelmed with gratitude for all those who have helped make this valuable community resource such a success, including:

  • The fabulous sponsors that help power your RVP;
  • and last, but certainly not least, the many friends, neighbors and community leaders who have given so generously of themselves, especially Andrea Gerber, Andrea Ptak, Betina Simmons, Bruce Perham, Carla Jones, Charleete Black, Christi Muoneke, Commandr Whitehead, Cookie Boudin, Daphne Schneider, Denise Gloster, Diana Vinh, Don Davis, Fatima Azami, Flora Lewis, Frank Tower, Greg Anderson, Gregory Davis, James Koutsky, Jeannie O’Brien, Jenna Walden, Jennifer Duong, Jennifer Gaer, Jourdan Keith, Julie Antos, Helen Thomas, Linh Thai, Mariana Quarnstrom, Mark Beavon, Mark Solomon, Mona Lee, Naomi Michel, Nina Bowman, Pat Carr, Pat Murakami, Rochelle Vinson, Sarah Valenta, Shelton Wright, Susan Davis, Wyking Garrett, Yalonda Gill Masundire and Yun Pitre.

Thank you for three great years; here’s to another 10!

Amber Campbell
Editor/Publisher

P.S. If you haven’t yet become a member, won’t you please consider doing so today? Click here for info.

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by Amber Campbell

I know it’s not nice to gloat. Or say things like “I told you so,” but sometimes an occasion calls for just that sort of smug superiority.

Like today, for instance.

KING 5 has just now picked up the Save-Columbia-City-Cinema-stock-sale story previously reported by everyone and their mother, which makes it even more disturbing that the writer was able to get it so wrong:

Seattle’s Columbia City Theater is on the verge of shutting down.

The owner and his employees are asking for your help to keep it open. They’re hoping people will buy stock in the theater. They say 50,000 shares or dollars are needed to keep the theatre running.

The money is needed to renovate the building and keep it up to current Seattle fire code. January 1st is the deadline to get the money in.

“If you care about cinema, then you’ll invest in the cinema,” said a theater employee. “It’s more of a community investment.” Read more.

Note to Big Corporate Media: While Columbia City Cinema and Columbia City Theater are both proud sponsors of your RVP, they are also two separate businesses with different owners that happen to be located within a block of one another. From Columbia City Theater:

As the signage implies but your headline, link and reporting fails to acknowledge, there is a difference between Columbia City Cinema and Columbia City Theater. They are two separate local businesses, one which shows films and another which is a live music venue. While you are reporting about the Cinema, your headline and your link improperly states that is Columbia City Theater which is in danger of closing. This is not the case. Please change the headline and link (which goes to the Theater, not the Cinema’s website) to reflect the business that the story is intended to be about.

PS: Only theater geeks spell “theater” t-h-e-a-t-r-e.

UPDATE (12 pm): KING5.com has corrected its error, but without a correction or redaction notice. Stay classy, Big Media!

UPDATE (12:35 pm): KING5.com has added lame excuse for correction notice to bottom of brand new story at different link. One more time: Stay classy, Big Media!

11 am screen shot from king5.com’s local news section.

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Ed’s note: Garfield High School seniors Cally Shine and Maia Lee have written a a stunning, brutally honest, stop-you-in-your-tracks article about youth violence in Seattle that every Rainier Valley resident should read.

By Cally Shine & Maia Lee, Garfield Messenger

It’s heavier than he imagined. Black and cold, the serial number scratched off the barrel. He holds it in his palm, marveling at how the metal doesn’t warm from the moisture of his sweaty palms. His fingers strain to reach the trigger, his index clawing at the air for confirmation. It’s smaller than the ones he sees stashed in the back-seats of cars, or laying dormant underneath the steps of apartment complexes, and he tries not to be disappointed. His brother said that he will have to grow into this one.

You’ll know what I mean when you use it he said over his shoulder as he strolled to the idling Cadillac, the one with the tinted windows.

His brother is always saying things like that over his shoulder as he slides into strangers’ cars. He handed it to him roughly, but he knew that his brother had made sure it wasn’t loaded. Read more.

Fifteen-year-old Pierre LaPoint was walking along Rainier Avenue South to a bus stop that would have taken him home on the night of August 5, 2008, when he was fatally shot in the stomach. Despite his godmother’s word that Pierre was not gang-affiliated, the Seattle Police Department made a statement saying his death was “likely gang-related.”

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By Amber Campbell

Yesterday, Seattle Mayor Mike McGinn started the day on KUOW’s Weekday call-in program talking about everything except the back-to-back shootings of and by children this week in southeast Seattle.

On Monday night, a teenager was grazed in the back in a drive-by shooting at one of the city’s most dangerous corners – Rainier Avenue South and South Henderson in Rainier Beach. There were no arrests.

Less than 24 hours later, near the same intersection, a 10-year old boy shot himself while trying to rob another kid on the bus.

Meanwhile, the mayor spent his monthly hour with Steve Scher – who failed to even ask about the tragic events of the night before – discussing what he called “important and serious” issues like transit, sewage, transit, sidewalks, transit, etc.

One caller – a Broadview neighbor – said that her community found sewage issues “gut wrenching”.

Really?

I find the message that the mayor’s silence sends to the kids in our community gut wrenching.

Seattle Mayor Mike McGinn at last year’s candidates forum in Columbia City. Photo/David Mullarkey Images

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