RUSSIAN MUSIC TEACHER JAILED FOR NINE YEARS
SET UP
RUSSIAN MUSIC TEACHER JAILED FOR NINE YEARS
SET UP
RESTORE THE REAL ART OF RHETORIC!
For an alternative pedagogy of liberation
By Stephen Wilson
LET'S FOUND A NEWSPAPER OF A DIFFERENT KIND!
Streetwise is not a newspaper that takes on issues critical to homelessness. It is merely a creature of the millionaire class who have no desire to change this corrupt system. |
HELPER GROUPS WHO ASSIST THE HOMELESS
By Thomas Hansen, Ph.D.
There is something like an informal, loosely organized (but sometimes very formal) network of volunteers, social workers, college students, and everyday citizens out there on the street trying to help homeless people. For want of a better term, I have been using the term “helper group” because it is clear enough and also general enough it can cover people coming from social service agencies, college departments, churches, and other sources to help people.
There are many types of helper groups out there, and there is no directory of all of them—at least not yet. Instead, there are listings by type and—like many of the services for the homeless—most information for newly homeless persons is communicated through word-of-mouth networks.
Getting to know some of the members of the helper groups is a very interesting endeavor and very rewarding also. The members represent a wide variety of ages, races, backgrounds, and personality types. Not all helper group members want to be interviewed—some groups have avoided being interviewed for some time now—and still others love to talk and want to give so much information they will be contacted for future articles about not just homeless needs but also community building and political information pieces to be written in the future.
Simply, people who are out on the street a lot to help others see and hear a great deal more than persons who are “not out there” observing Chicagoland persons and their interactions. So are the helper group members who we meet out on the street always there or simply once in a while?
Some helper groups send people out to assist the homeless on a regular basis. A well-known example of this is the Night Ministry in Chicago—famous for taking much-needed food, coffee, hot chili or soup, information about healthcare and other resources, and strong moral support. This is an example of a formal network meant specifically for helping homeless and poor persons out in the community. They maintain a fixed schedule of trips out into the streets such that on a given night, persons in need will know where to be to get clean socks, a hot meal, snacks, and many other items and much good advice (https://www.thenightministry.org/).
Less formal helper groups consist of persons traveling on behalf of their church congregations. There are many of these groups, and there are also a myriad of on-site helpers.
A more formal helper group on the north side is Saint Ita Catholic Church in Chicago. It is an on-site operation. They deliver a variety of services, including a soup kitchen and a food pantry. They provide hygiene products, such as toilet paper, paper towels, lotion, razors, shaving cream, deodorant, tampons, and laundry detergent. They also distribute foods such as canned ravioli, tuna, instant coffee, sugar and creamer (https://www.saintita.org/).
There is a huge network of these on-site agencies, churches, and offices available in the Chicago area and there is a website with listings of soup kitchens, food pantries, and helper groups providing clothing also. The Greater Chicago Food Depository maintains the listings of all such organizations (https://www.chicagosfoodbank.org/).
Speaking to dozens of helpers to the homeless (and to others in need) I am privy to a great deal of information about the kinds of help available to people, the kinds of help not available to people, and the sorts of personalities of helpers out there on the street. Some of these people like to be interviewed, some are afraid to be interviewed, and some are just too darn busy to be interviewed about how and why they try to help.
So who are these helpers? One of the most resourceful persons I know is Dave, whose group travels up and down Clark Street and the surrounding area on Monday (sometimes Tuesday instead) to deliver burgers and other sandwiches, good will, and snacks. Dave and his friends met with me several times so that I could talk to them about different sorts of helper groups, where they are located, and how people find out about them.
“Word of mouth is the number one way people find out about us,” said Sheila, Dave’s partner. She said about herself, “I am his partner in crime and I am the one who organizes things and keeps everybody moving.” Dave laughed and admitted she is the one in the helper group who holds things together and does all the planning. “All I do is ride my bike and hand out food,” he said. While this is not the case—they joke all the time and say their sense of humor has maintained them for 10 years—they obviously enjoy the work and meeting the new homeless people, especially.
“I like to get my hands on new homeless people and get information to them right away before they hear a bunch of the nonsense out there,” she stated. She added, “I love to encourage people, give examples of persons who have come back to the real world and made it.”
There is another group on the north side traveling to pray with homeless and other persons in need. There are often social work students from the universities who seek homeless persons to complete surveys on needed items and on concerns of persons living on the street. Most of the MSW students in Chicago have internships, apparently, and they sometimes take part in helper groups both formally because of school requirements and because they get interested in assisting the individuals they meet when out there doing class projects. Although the class projects end, the students seem to be drawn naturally to the role of helper.
Yet another helper group delivers sandwiches up and down North Broadway Street, bringing burritos, bottled water, and other items to persons in need. Some new members have recently signed onto this helper group. Like many helper groups, none of their members have been interviewed.
There are many other informal groups traveling—sporadically—around with smaller items like sewing kits, snacks, vitamins, and bottled water—so essential lately in the terrible temperatures. One does not always catch all of the names in a group, and the helpers know that. They are not necessarily there to become famous. Instead, they are just trying to get resources to people who need them. Not all of them want to be known, and not all of them want to reveal any sort of personal information about themselves.
Readers should understand that many, many helpers (with various roles) often construct a sort of “firewall” when working with the homeless and other disadvantaged populations in which there may be many persons with addiction, violence, depression, and confusion issues.
Typical examples of firewall devices are: not giving homeless persons one’s cellphone number; not letting a homeless person use that phone to call anyone, even if there is an emergency; not giving homeless persons one’s home address; not sharing personal information—such as whether the helper has a wife or children or is gay or is a full-time employee as opposed to a volunteer; not committing to any political opinion—such as ignoring and avoiding comments about the mayor or the president; not providing the homeless person with their correct name or the name of their employer or college or major or significant other’s name or even the next destination of the helper on a given evening.
Other ways to hold back and secure the firewall are: never giving cash to the person in need; not allowing the person in need any item they need the most (e.g., aspirin, coffee) as a way to establish limits and show authority; not maintaining a consistent schedule of help offered out of fear this could make the homeless person too dependent. Other helpers avoid discussion of their motivation for helping, avoid talking about religion, and avoid telling people “in the real world” about their volunteering.
The “firewalls” are a known phenomenon. An expert on homeless persons in the Northeast, David Wagner talks about the reluctance of some helpers to provide too much information (No Longer Homeless: How the Ex-Homeless Get and Stay Off the Streets, 2018). Wagner also talks about how some homeless people do not want to “look homeless” and how they shun others who do somehow. Homeless people see themselves in those other individuals, according to Wagner.
I asked my friend Dave why these firewalls are important, and I got the answer I dreaded. “Stalking is a major problem,” he confided. I’ve had people camped out in front of my apartment building before …and my landlord went ballistic.” Dave also said, “It’s one of the first rules they make you agree to when you sign on to help.”
He explained how in the case of his helper group, the leaders tell new people to share NO information whatsoever, no real names, no addresses, no phone numbers, no nationalities or neighborhoods or alma mater. If the people being helped don’t like this, they are referred to the leaders of the helper group.
The helper groups are not necessarily all well-oiled organizations with rigorous schedules. Not all of the helpers are forthcoming with personal information. Not all of the helpers are personable, and not all of them are interested in being interviewed.
Helper groups. Some of them are very secretive, and some of them are well organized. Some of them are sporadic in their service to the homeless, and some of them are more spiritual in how they assist persons in need. However, all of them share the goal of providing homeless persons and others with some relief from the hard life of living with no home.
CORE founder Jackson Potter, who now teaches after serving as the CTU chief of staff, shaped the CTU's political strategy to align itself closely to the Democratic Party & the machine. |
Substance
News & Education Reform
Substance News founder George Schmidt |
It's hard to
think that next month will mark the second year anniversary of the death of
Chicago Public Schools historian and Substance News founder George Schmidt. His
remarkable reporting, teaching and mentoring and all around knowledge of the
history of Chicago public schools made him a giant without the mourning that
John Lewis has received. But George was no less fearless battling the education
reform monster and corrupt union politics. Now that I am into books - reading,
writing and documenting so many extraordinary ones that have been written by
teachers, historians, journalists and others, I lament not picking up a book
and reading the memoirs of George Schmidt. I ran across this little insight
into the history of ed reform people in Chicago when Martin Koldyke started the
AUSL schools. I noticed that his son was greenlighting corrupt public-private
deals between the Chicago Park District and the private Latin School when he
sat on the park district. This tells a lot about what George knew and what people
need to know. The ruling class control the public education narrative by
publishing the Sun-Times and Chicago Tribune which ultimately promotes union
busting and corporate ed reform. Reading Substance was a paper of the public
school teachers and students. Something I have hoped to continue with my humble
news blog Second City Teachers. Enjoy! - Jim Vail, editor
By George Schmidt
As I’ve
posted before at various points and on substancenews.net, Koldyke is one of the
main leaders of corporate school reform in Chicago. His original smokescreen
was the Golden Apple Foundation. The Foundation began awarding the “Golden
Apple” academy awards for “excellence in teaching” in the 1980s, by the way.
Chicago’s public television station, WTTW, was part of the Golden Apple hype by
1990. Every year, they aired a ceremony which was basically like the Academy
Awards. Some teachers ate it up. It turned out there was a lot of phony stuff
about the program.
(Disclosure:
I was a semi-finalist one year; I was told by one of the judges that I didn’t
make the final cut because they were afraid I would “pull a Jane Fonda” at the
TV show. At that time, I had pioneered the “Macintosh Computer Classroom” at
Amundsen High School and among other things was featured in a four-page Apple
promotional on using the Macs in classrooms…).
Within a few
years, the Golden Apples had evolved into as much hype as anything else. One
friend of mine who won one told me she did everything but audition for the
“show,” changing her wardrobe, practicing a certain kind of telegenic lesson,
and even losing some weight while her kids (at one of Chicago’s “better” high
schools) worked overtime on their nominating letters.
By the early
1990s, Koldyke, in partnership with then mayor Richard M. Daley, had become the
Chicago “School Reform Authority” chairman. As such, he was overseeing the
mandated “reform” programs in Chicago, using powers that still lingered from
the old “Chicago School Finance Authority.” Koldyke was a right wing ideologue
the entire time. The “Reform” authority paid a quarter million dollars a year
for an expert “consultant” to evaluate Chicago’s “reform” initiatives. The
consultant: Chester Finn, then a professor at Vanderbilt.
As Koldyke
became more powerful through the corporate “school reform” leaderships in the
1990s, he also began pushing each successive flavor-of-the-year “reform”
thingy. For several years, that was “small schools.” At one point, I was union
delegate and on the leadership team at Bowen High School, one of the most
challenging urban high schools in the United States. (Example: we had seven
present or former students murdered during one school year, 1997 – 1998; I was
at that time “gang security coordinator” at the school and knew each of those
students; one I watched die with a bullet through his heard just outside the
building a week before Christmas 1997).
Against
those realities, Koldyke was demanding that all large urban high schools be
broken up into “small schools.”
It finally
came to a confrontation in the Bowen High School social room, where Koldyke had
demanded that he get to meet with the school’s leadership. That was about nine
of us. My job was basically to be bad cop, since a lot of people had to protect
the school from Koldyke’s predatory whims.
So…
At a certain
point I just said that if “small schools” was such a sure fire way to improve
American public high schools, why didn’t Kodyke go to his own community on the
North Shore (he lived in the New Trier High School District, Wilmette and Winnetka)
and bring the gospel of “small schools” to the rich white suburbs — I listed
several huge high schools from the most affluent Chicago suburbs — and then,
five years from now, return to Chicago and tell us how it went at New Trier,
Glenbard West, etc. Because, I said, it seemed that “small schools” was only a
prescription for schools like Bowen that served black and brown children of the
poor…
Koldyke went
ballistic. “I will not be called a racist by someone like you!” he bellowed. He
talked about how his son was coaching baseball at DuSable (another inner city
high school) and how much he and his family had done for people in the inner
city. He never, of course, answered my question, which was centered on the
class diferentiations and demanded to know why we just weren’t provided with
the same resources that they had at places like New Trier, Glenbard West, etc.
During those
years, I was also a regular on WTTW TV shows like “Chicago Tonight” as the
voice of Chicago’s rank and file teachers (who were not part of the union
leadership). I had run for president of the union in 1988 and 1994, getting
about 40 percent of the vote despite all the vote stealing and other
Chicago-style issues.
One night I
was on the show with Koldyke. As usual, he was pontificating as only a
multi-millionaire who is used to having his ass kissed can. I spoke and pointed
out that most of what he had just said was based on not knowing what he was
talking about — abstractions that had nothing to do with the real world of
Chicago high schools, our classrooms, and our kids.
Koldyke was
furious, and the show’s moderator, Elizabeth Brackett, stopped letting me
speak. The camera crew caught on and when I watched the video later, they kept
zooming on my shaking my head as Koldyke spouted another stupid pontification.
I was never invited to any of those shows again, and within a year my name was
blacklisted from all Chicago corporate media. We joke about it — I am the
Voldemort for the Sun-Times, Tribune, “public” radio and TV, etc.
I covered
the press conference when the Party Line of the Plutocracy was changed from
“small schools” to “turnaround.” Without batting an eye, Koldyke stood with
Mayor Daley and people from the Gates Foundation and announced that “small
schools” was over and that “turnaround” was the next sure thing. I asked a
question to Daley, who had been the “principal for a day” at Orr High School
during the small schools years. “Are you going to apologize to the Orr teachers
you’ve met when they are all fired when turnaround starts in June?…”
George Schmidt |
At that
point, Daley’s press secretary announced that the press conference was over.
In June, all
those loyal Orr High School teachers who had dutifully done “small schools”
were dumped so that Koldyke’s AUSL could begin the next experiment —
“turnaround.” Part of that was to utilize the extra dollars that CPS gives each
turnaround ($300,000 in “start up” funds even though nothing is really starting
up, plus $420 per pupil for five years) to bribe a few parents for a year or
two. As a result, every year, when AUSL is challenged, a couple of sad people
get up and give the same speech at the Board of Education — “I was against
turnaround, but now I see how it really was the best thing!” Some of them are
put on the payroll (like a local preacher who had stormed against turnaround
until AUSL gave him a job for a couple of years at Orr “School of Excellence”).
Others are just given a couple of crumbs.
But their
salvation narrative is always ALWAYS the same. Turnaround is the bright light
that they didn’t at first see, etc., etc.
Anyone who
wants to take the time can watch a few of those testimonials from the May 28,
2014 meeting of the Chicago Board of Education, or read our coverage of them at
substancenews.net. They have been the same since ten years ago, when the scam
was first used at Dodge “School of Excellence” (the school Barack Obama chose
to use for his photo ops when he announced that Arne Duncan was going to be
U.S. Secretary of Education in December 2009). It’s been used ever since. And
always they get away with it because we are among the only people to point out
that these “parents” are reading from a script provided by AUSL. Later, like
those before this year’s crop, they will be dumped.
Last night
at the Chicago Teachers Union meeting I was talking with one of the organizers
from the West Side. I said we should do a satiric video of one of these AUSL
turnaround testimoniais:
My child was
raped and murdered at that old school, but once AUSL arrived with turnaround he
was brought back to life and is now reading a book a day…
Etc.
Thanks for
asking. Martin Koldyke may not be as prominent nationally in the corporate
“reform” world as Gates, Broad and the Waltons, but his version of reality may
be even more important. After all, AUSL is the national “turnaround model”
promoted by Arne Duncan and the Ed Dept.