One jilted politician went out with a flourish, reminding those who wish to rebuild Louisiana’s elementary and secondary education that the disease that has kept it back can be difficult to eradicate, and its effects may linger.
The rump Orleans Parish School
Board, unlike all other districts in the state that have their elections in
off-presidential election years, have its conducted during presidential
election years. One casualty was outgoing president Thomas Robichaux, in a landslide.
It had partly to do with race, since the district he had won in the
post-Hurricane Katrina aftermath political chaos was majority black and he is
white who faced black opponents, but was exacerbated by the board’s
decision earlier this year to raise taxes, which was opposed largely by
black residents.
So, Robichaux decided to manufacture
an issue out of nothing as a parting gift. No stranger to giving the
citizenry a Bronx salute, on the
issue of ethics, he gave it another when he spearheaded a move to for the
half-dozen schools the district still controls to prohibit the teaching of “creationism”
or “intelligent design” in science classes or to allow teachers to use
textbooks that in the Board’s opinion did that.