The NAACP has long played a leading role in the struggle to close the gap in 
educational achievement between people of color and whites, and between poor 
and middle class students. The NAACP advertises itself as the oldest, the 
biggest, and the baddest civil rights organization of the face of the earth. And it 
has a long tradition and very deep roots in the black community.

However, since the Minneapolis NAACP branch was taken over by a faction 
supported by the Democratic Party in mid-1999, the Minneapolis branch has not 
organized a K-12 education committee to do the kind of educational advocacy work 
that one might expect a branch of the NAACP to do. Most of the active members of 
the organization who did not support the post 1999 leadership were kept off 
of committees and eventually became inactive or quit the NAACP.  Attendance at 
monthly branch meetings dropped from an average of about 30 to 40 from 1998 to 
mid-1999 to 15 in early 2000 and 10 in the first part of 2002.

In 2002 Ron Edwards was a candidate for branch president. Edwards and his 
supporters recruited and continue to recruit new members who regularly attend 
branch meetings, which has forced the elected leadership to recruit new members 
and make an effort to turn out its supporters to the branch meetings. 
Attendance at branch meetings has increased to upwards of 40 in recent months. 

Since mid 1999 the Minneapolis NAACP branch presidents have maintained a 
secret liaison with leaders of the public schools establishment, through which a 
tentative agreement to settle the educational adequacy lawsuit was made in 
2000.  

It is also evident that at some point prior to August 16, 2002, the branch 
president (then Shalia Lindsey) made a commitment to contract with the state to 
operate Parent Information Centers, but did not inform the branch about the 
proposal for NAACP Parent Information Centers until October 2002. Complete 
information about the proposal for NAACP Parent Information Centers was not 
available to branch members for review until the latter part of April 2003. 

The branch membership meeting on June 28, 2003 was the first opportunity for 
branch members to support or reject the Parent Information Centers project 
after the proposal was made available to the entire membership. A motion to 
instruct the branch executive committee to not open the centers and to return the 
money it had received from the state to open the centers was ruled out of order 
by the chair, Albert Gallmon.  However, the ruling of the chair on that 
motion was challenged and overturned by a two-thirds majority. The motion to back 
out of the Parent Information Centers project was put to a vote and approved by 
a two-thirds majority.

A letter dated June 30, 2003 to the Minneapolis NAACP branch executive 
committee from the office Kweisi Mfume, president and CEO of the NAACP approved of 
the plan for NAACP Parent Information Centers, but with caveats that suggest 
that he was unaware of what transpired on June 28, 2003. The Branch expressed 
its opposition to moving forward with the Parent Information Centers project, 
but the Branch Executive Committee is moving forward with it anyway.

The cozy relationship between the branch presidents and the people who run 
the schools in Minneapolis has been OK with the majority of the branch executive 
committee, and apparently with the NAACP leadership at the state, regional 
and national level. I doubt that an appeal to the NAACP leadership, by itself, 
is likely to bring about an intervention in support of the position adopted by 
the branch membership. And if the national NAACP leadership intervenes in 
support of the branch executive committee on this issue, it is going to cost them 
something, and the more the better. That is why I am speaking out publicly on 
this issue and encourage other NAACP members to do the same.

-Doug Mann, King Field
TEMPORARY REMINDER:
1. Don't feed the troll! Ignore obvious flame-bait.
2. If you don't like what's being discussed here, don't complain - change the subject 
(Mpls-specific, of course.)

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