FLY SCOOP :: ARE HBCU SCHOOLS COMING TO AN END?

Article by Mea contact mealee@flypaperblog.com
VIA CNN & ESSENCE MAG
Originally featured in our weekly Online Magazine FlyPaper
I went to a well known HBCU (Clark-Atlanta University) in the state that Sen. Harp represents and the thought of these beloved institutions losing their identities by being absorbed into other non-HBCU establishments has got the blood traveling backwards in my veins. These institutions were established at a time in our history when black people were not allowed to, or had issues with, attending traditional places of higher learning.
They have a long history of tradition and I would hate to see that ripped from them. We all have seen mergers and know that rarely are both organizations that are combining allowed to keep their separate identities. Usually one entity mostly conforms and is absorbed into the other. Assimilation is only the beginning. If the HBCUs agree to the Senator’s idea, they stand to lose not only their identity but the battle that they have been fighting since their doors opened. Who they are and what they have stood for, the reasons many students (such as myself) have decided to attend these places for education, will mean nothing.
President of Clark-Atlanta University, Carlton E. Brown, sat down with ESSENCE to talk about his feelings on the proposal and how if the HBCUs accepted it, it would spell out an impending doom.
ESSENCE asked Carlton E. Brown, president of Clark Atlanta University, whether HBCUs can weather the storm. The following is an edited version of that interview:
ESSENCE: There have been rumors about Georgia’s HBCUs downsizing. What’s really happening?
Carlton Brown: The most important thing to understand is that nothing is happening to HBCUs that is not also happening to every other institution in America.
All of our major donors have been calling us this year, informing us that they have been losing money. This past fall, we enrolled 200 fewer students than we expected, not because of a lack of desire to attend but because of their inability to meet the bill. ESSENCE: ‘House of Payne’ star graduating
ESSENCE: What is the response from African-Americans to this merger proposal from Republican state Sen. Seth Harp?
Brown: When things are going well, people become comfortable. You might even say complacent. Watch what HBCUs are saying about Obama’s budget cuts »
When these issues are raised, they begin to naturally react and think about all the differences that these institutions make in the lives of communities. These institutions pride themselves on building the kind of relationships with students that are transformative.
ESSENCE: Do you feel as if this proposal is a political or economic issue?
Brown: It’s become both. In a time of economic decline, everyone looks for what they think is a reduction in cost. It’s like reducing your police force.
But by that kind of reduction, you increase unrecoverable costs: There is more death and destruction. The same thing is true when you’re talking about these kinds of institutions.
ESSENCE: Is there another answer to save money other than merging?
Brown: The bottom line is that states should be called to support these institutions at the level that they should have been supporting them the last 100-plus years. ESSENCE: ACORN in the hot seat again
ESSENCE: What’s your take on Sen. Harp’s explanation that the merger would end signs of Jim Crow segregation?
Brown: I would oppose that. At the point of desegregation, the logical and just approach would have been to close the white institutions, which existed to perpetuate discrimination. ESSENCE: Weighing in on the HBCU controversy
ESSENCE: If the proposal becomes reality, what do you think it would mean for HBCUs?
Brown: I think it would be the beginning of the end for them.






















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