BREAKING: Birmingham BOE Conducts Civil, Productive Meeting
The Birmingham School Board conducted a civil and efficient meeting Tuesday night, perhaps tempered by a judge’s ruling that the state does have authority over the district and that Superintendent Craig Witherspoon will keep his job during the takeover.
State Superintendent Tommy Bice presided and was clearly in control, setting the tone from the beginning.
“This is a business meeting,” he said. “It’s not a forum tonight … We have an agenda, and we will follow that agenda explicitly. We want to make sure we get through the business part of this meeting in an expeditious way.”
Bice also took pains to be respectful — even deferential — to board members. The fact that public comment was scheduled for the next meeting on August 28, and that community activist and firebrand Frank Matthews left the meeting, also contributed to the relative calmness of the proceedings.
Matthews was wearing a hat that said “God’s Gangster” and had been shouting, “We gonna shut this [takeover] down” and complaining about a “gay Nazi takeover.”
At times, Bice provided key context to quizzical board members, explaining the accreditation process to board president Edward Maddox, and the new state school calendar law to board member Tyrone Belcher.
The board got through more business at Tuesday evening’s meeting than it had at any meeting since the spring, if not earlier. And some of the most reliable foes of Witherspoon and the state takeover went as far as explicitly complimenting Bice.
Board member Virginia Volker praised him for moving the state beyond the Adequate Yearly Progress testing standards of the No Child Left Behind accountability regime. “Thank you for that leadership,” she said.
Board member Alana Edwards told Bice, “I’ve really enjoyed my experience with you.”
The atmosphere at the meeting was a drastic change from that of recent months, during which the board has achieved national notoriety for dysfunction, grandstanding, and personal infighting.
A group discussion between board members and their lawyers regarding the state takeover and Judge Houston Brown’s Monday ruling, however, is still pending.
Rubio says U.S. will ‘aggressively’ revoke visas for many Chinese students
The announcement to revoke visas is the most drastic move yet to curtail the numbers of international students studying in the U.S.
Trump administration cancels plans to develop a bird flu vaccine
The Department of Health and Human Services is ending a $766 million contract with the vaccine company Modern to develop an mRNA vaccine for flu strains with pandemic potential, including bird flu.
Federal trade court blocks Trump from imposing tariffs under emergency powers law
The ruling from a three-judge panel at the New York-based Court of International Trade came after several lawsuits arguing that Trump has exceeded his authority.
Tate brothers face rape and trafficking charges in U.K.
British prosecutors have approved 21 charges against self styled misogynist influencers, brothers Andrew and Tristan Tate, including rape, assault, and human trafficking.
Shooting outside Jewish museum raises questions about shifts in political violence
If the suspect in the recent D.C. case planned to kill people because of their Jewish faith, this would represent a major anomaly in lethal, antisemitic violence.
Peruvian farmer loses landmark climate case against German energy giant
A Peruvian farmer has lost a decade-long legal climate case against Germany energy giant RWE. Saúl Luciano Lliuya claimed the company's emissions had contributed to glacial melt threatening his Andean hometown.