At SRC meeting, praise for Ackerman, scorn for Inquirer

December 09, 2010|By Martha Woodall and William K. Marimow, Inquirer Staff Writers
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  • Superintendent Arlene C. Ackerman and board chief Robert L. Archie Jr. acknowledgethe applause at the start of the School Reform Commission public session.
  • Superintendent Arlene C. Ackerman and board chief Robert L. Archie Jr. acknowledgethe applause at the start of the School Reform Commission public session.
  • Among the speakers were State Rep. Ronald G. Waters (D., Phila.), left; J. Whyatt Mondesire, leader of the Philadelphia chapter of the NAACP; and Urban League president Patricia Coulter.

Amid a standing-room-only crowd Wednesday, School Reform Commission Chairman Robert L. Archie Jr. and a parade of witnesses, including business owners, educators, and legislators, praised School Superintendent Arlene C. Ackerman's commitment to minority business and assailed The Inquirer's coverage of her decision to award a no-bid emergency $7.5 million contract for school safety.

"I do not believe that she steered work to any particular vendor as The Inquirer reported from unidentified sources," Archie said.

Archie also criticized The Inquirer for failing to provide the historical background of the school district's antidiscrimination policy, adopted in March 2003. And, he said, The Inquirer failed to report that the school district has set a goal that 20 percent of its contracts be awarded to firms owned by minorities and women for professional services, procurement, and design and construction work.

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"There is still work to be done," Archie declared, "and I'd like to commend Dr. Ackerman for taking on this additional task . . . for implementing the SRC's antidiscrimination policy."

More than 400 people crowded into the second-floor auditorium for the commission's meeting at the school administration building at 440 N. Broad St. Downstairs, an additional 30 or more people who could not get into the packed room observed the session on a large projection screen that had been set up in the atrium.

Speakers including J. Whyatt Mondesire, president of the Philadelphia chapter of the NAACP, and Councilwoman Blondell Reynolds-Brown were fiery in their defense of Ackerman and blistering in their criticism of The Inquirer. Mondesire called the newspaper's headlines "contemptible" and said the NAACP was prepared to defend inclusion in "the boardroom, the courtroom, the living room - wherever there is a need."

On Nov. 28, The Inquirer, citing unnamed sources with extensive business experience with the school district, reported that the superintendent had interceded to remove a contractor that had begun surveying 19 persistently dangerous schools for the installation of surveillance cameras.

The work was then awarded to a minority-owned company, IBS Communications Inc., based in Mount Airy. Ackerman said in an interview that she had not directed that the work go to IBS, but rather had told her staff to make sure the best minority firm received the contract.

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