to the 21st century - College of Liberal Arts
Transcription
to the 21st century - College of Liberal Arts
Au,stin ,l\merican-$tatrsman statesman.com - austin360.com OIL AMERICAN DIGEST SUNDAY, JUNE 20, 2010 • SECTION F Joe Barton is our expert on spewing and siphoning • F2 I MARCHING ORDERS Arnold Gan:ia Jr.: Advice and insignia are good as gold for newly commissioned officers • F2 MODERNIZATION HUNTSVILLf • CAPl'Ihl PUNISHMENT fast forward lirry Kolvoord AMI':ItJ '·\ N- S'!,\'rF~SMN-l 'Marie and I fit together, but the world with its self-perpetuating divisions doesn't fit us yet.' Silent stares in death chamber challenge eyes, ears of reporter As a witness to the end of a 32-year saga, veteran police journalist faces own psyche at David Lee Powell's last breath DEBRA MONROE Austin author who adopted her African American daughter 12 years ago. Her new memoir is titled 'On the Outskirts 01 Normal: Forging a Family Against the Grain: By Tony PIohetski r\" II':HJC\N·~~m\I'ES.\1..\N 'The independent network is a huge piece of it. ... And it appeared to be a nonstarter for the Pac-lO: BIG 12 SCHOOL OFFICIAL Suggesting that the decision by the University 01 Texas to stay in the Big 12 was all about the money, despite protests to the contrary. 'It's hard not to feel their pain. A mother should never have to bury her child: ART ACEVEDO Austin police chief, on lamily members of late officer Ralph Ablanedo who attended the execulion of his killer, David Lee Powell. Ablanedo's mother, sister, brother, and widow were among the family members who made the trip to the Huntsville Unit. Tm ashamed of what happened in the White House yesterday. It is a tragedy .. , that a private corporation can be subjected to what I would characterize as a shakedown: JOE BARTON u.s. House member from the Dallas area, apologizing lor the fact that BP was pressed to promise $20 billion in oil spill compensation. Barton, a top recipient 01 oil industry political donations, withdrew his apology hours later, reportedly after fellow Republicans threatened to replace him as an energy panel leader. Olivier Doulilry AlJACA I'KES.'l 'I hear comments sometimes that large oil companies are really companies that don't care, but that is not the case in BP. We care about the small people: CARL-HENRIC SVANBERG BP board chairman, whose awkward English (his native language is Swedish) added to his company's public relations woes. He later apologized for speaking 'clumsily' and said he meant to say BP knows how deeply the spill 'affects the lives of people who live along the Gulf and depend on it for their livelihood: 'They don't want Washington, D,C., trying to make all of us look alike. No offense, but I don't want (Texas) to look like Connecticut.' RICK PERRY Texas governor. telling San Antonio TV station KENS one of the reasons he likes being associated with the tea party movement. MOST POPULAR NEWS STORIES ON STATESMAN.COM SUnday through Thursday: J. Man charged in road rage incident William E. Doolilli. pllolos Modern high-rises in Mexico City are just one sign of how far the country has come in the past 30 years. Rural roads, radio and telegrams have given way to toll roads. cable TV and cell phones. This is the second in an occasional series on Mexico during a year when that country marks the 200th anniversary of its independence and the 100th anniversary of the Mexican Revolution, and is once again facing major challenges and change. Find Part 1 with this story online at statesman.com. Sj'ECIAL TO TilE A' I}OJ11{ ·"N·S["TJi:-)MA~ Thirty years ago, an elderly colleague with much experience in Mexico and the Southwest said: "Chihuahua is like New Mexico was 50 years ago," His assessment may have been correct then, but, today, I think Chihuahua is a lot like the New Mexico of the present. Let me explain. . My first professional experience as a young geographer in Mexico involved driving across the border at Nogales, from Arizona into the state of Sonora, in 1977. This town didn 't appear to be anything special, as I grew up in Texas and was familiar with border towns, The big surprise was the l80-mile drive south to Hermosillo. The road. classified as a "highway," was narrow, with two lanes and numerous potholes. Detours off the "pavement" and across dry streambeds were common . Accidents were frequent, even catastrophic. I saw the results of three that day, one a fatality. Roadsides were unattractive. Trash was everywhere. Paper, plastic bags, cans and garbage were deposited as casually as one might flick a cigarette butt out of a car window. Broken bottles glistened in the sunlight like a cheap, sequined party dress. Gas stations were horrible, with driveways worse than the roads and gas pumps that were old and in disrepair. The most commonly available gas from Pemex. Mexico's nationalized petroleum dealer, was the leaded 81 octane Nova that everyone called "No va," meaning "no go" in Spanish. Mexican-manufactured and imported cars with low-compression engines didjust fine on Nova. American cars with high-compression engines knocked, sputtered, never got up to full speed and frequently just would not run . Most cars more than 2 years old spewed smoke and showed signs of work by shade·tree mechanics. Diesel huses used far long intercity travel were manufactured under no environmental regulations. Clouds of gritty black smoke followed them like tails OID dogs. Large trucks had colorful names such as "EI Guapo" (Handsome) and "EI Rey del Camino" (King of the Road) painted prominently on the front bumper or over the windshield, See MEXICO, back page A vaquero in the Mexican state of Sonora mixes the old - spurs - with the new - modern tennis shoes. Free markets and globalization have helped bring Mexico into the 21st century. William E, Doolittle is the Erich W. Zimmermann Regents professor in the Department of Geography and the Environment at the University of Texas. Since 1977, he has made 64 separate trips to Mexico, lasting from a few days to a few months, He has been in every state at least twice; 17 trips were made to the state 01 Sonora alone. ~ EDUCATION Old divisions of race and status play into East Austin division over grant decision ,ummi :'\N·ST,'\n:'\IA:-.I ,s'1'AIW 2. Powell executed for 1978 slaying of revived: Horns, others to stay 4. Austin schools among Newsweek's 'Best' 5. Motorcycle rally is over, but accident reports still being tallied Compiled by American-Statesman staff Rodotfo Gonzalez A:>.Il':I1I( 'AN·S"li\Tt S\i A:\' The clock above the Huntsville Unit entrance shows the official time that David Lee Powell was pronounced dead of lethal injection for the 1978 killing of Austin police officer Ralph Ablanedo. By laura lleinauer police officer 3. Big 12 HUNTSVILLE - Covered with a white sheet and minutes from death, David Lee Powell had already begun craning his head toward me and others as we filed into the crowded witness room. The prison door slammed shut behind us, and Powell - his strapped-down arms stretching out and with intravenous lines in them - continued a pierCing stare at the family of the Austin police officer he killed more than three decades ago. With only a window and a few feet between them, he looked at each, appearing to almost greet them by name - if only through eye contact. Here I was, standing in the Texas execution chamber about to watch a man die. My stomach was in knots. I held my yellow legal pad to my chest. For weeks leading up to Tuesday's execution, I'd contemplated whether to be in the witness room, watching and listening as Powell, who fatally shot ollicer Ralph Ablanedo in 1978, drew his last breath. I knew that I valued the principle of allow· ing media members to witness executions that peopte should know as much as possible about how capital punishment is carried out to help make informed opinions about statesanctioned executions. I also felt a commitment to writing the final chapter of a story that has continued for 32 years - my entire lifetime. I've covered Austin police since 2002 Ablanedo has remained legendary in the department - and I'd written about his death See EXECUTE, back page From th'e19th to the 21st century in three decades By William E. Doolittle STAFF .. Ask some in East Austin - particutarly in the area around the old Johnston High School - what they think about the Austin school district, and they'll tell you a story of racism, neglect and bias against charter schools. Some will say that the district's latest decision not to support an area charter school effort to secure a highly competitive anti-poverty grant is just another chapter in that tale. But what exactly are the sources of the tension now between this particular part of old East Austin and the school district, and is criticism of the superintendent deserved? Daniel Llanes. a neighborhood advocate, says the mistreatment dates as far back as when the city's minori ty population was forced to the east side of the city - when schools were segregated and hard-working families couldn't get loans to buy homes. Then there was school busing - when students who were sent to integrate schools on the west side of the city suffered from feelings See SCHOOlS, back page --------------7 1 --------~\L-- • Austin American-Statesman INSIGHT Sunday, June 20, 2010 F4 MEXICO: Traveling, carrying money are no longer a hassle Continued from F1 ed every few miles. Accidents are rare because of safer road conditions, less traffic congestion cashing traveler's checks. Only major hotels and stores accepted credi t cards. The only way to handle money in Mexico today is with plastic. Credit cards are widely accepted, except in the local mom-and-pop stores. ATMs are everywhere. Need cash? Stick your debit card in the wall and pesos come out at the best exchange rate possible. Small specialty shops and open-air or covered markets stm prevail in small towns and large cities, bu t "big boxes" have appeared, like and better cars and trucks. Mexican-owned stores Soriana, Liverpool and Franchised Pemex stations reflect the entrepreneurial motives of individual businessmen Suburbia or u.S.-owned Wal-Mart. Need a coffee shop? There's Starbucks or an OXXO and an Italian Coffee Company (two Mexican-owned As free markets and globalization arrived, so did Mexico. It still has its share of bad roads, but it now has an excellent toll road system. Straight, low gradient, constantly maintained four-lane divided highways have cut driving times from days to hours. Solar·powered and satelli te-lInked emergency telephones are locat- Rodol10 Gonzalez :\~IEml ',\N·:-'T:\Tl':~\I,\\I From left, the murdered police officer's mother, Betsy Ablanedo, sister, Irene, and other family members arrive for the execution of David Lee Powell at the Huntsville Unit. EXECUTE: Journalist focuses on observing, note-taking as images burn into his memory Continued from FI for years. I'd met his family and fellow officers many times. Last month, I also spent an hour interview- ing Powell on death row with fellow reporter Chuck Lindell. It was the first time in his three decades behind bars that Powell had granted a newspaper interview request. Furthermore, I thought about people who'd been touched by Ablanedo's death and the 36 jurors who had agreed in three different trials that Powell should be executed. I reasoned that they deserved to know how he spent his final moments. But other aspects of the assignment loomed large. I've carried certain images in my mind from stories I've covered involving death dur- ing my decade at the American-Statesman. Some of the most haunting came from wading the streets of New Orleans during Hurricane Katrina five years ago. But nearly always, the bodies I've seen were and are identical to Shell and Exxon stations .in Texas, complete with paved driveways, new and well-maintained pumps and integrated conve- nience stores - and they accept all credit cards. The only gasoline available today is high-octane, unleaded, which exceeds Environmental Protection Agency standards. I recently overheard an Australian visitor to Mexico City say: "Air is cleaner here than in Sydney." Gone, for the most part, are the old, decrepit and poorly maintained air-polluting clunkers. Today, one can purchase a Honda, Mazda, Mercedes, BMW, or evena Fiat, Seat or Renault. I attribute these changes to increased prosperity, free trade and migration. Mexico has long been considered a country with a developing economy, but it is now near or at the top of that category. Mexicans have more money now than in the past, and they cross the border into and out of the United States with remarkable ease and frequency. The San Marcos outlet malls are one of the top 10 destinations in Texas for visitors from Mexico. Canadian and American truckers drive into Mexico, and an increasing number of Mexican truckers drive north. Following modern norms, they no longer christen their rigs with outlandish names. Radio used to rule the rural airwaves in Mexico. Television became available nearly everywhere in the 1980s. Antennae sprouted from rooftops like scrawny aluminum shrubs but received very few channels. These were counterparts) on the next corner. Water? No need to worry any longer about "Montezuma's revenge"; purified bottled water is available everywhere. Want some marijuana? Look for it elsewhere. Jllegai drugs have long been produced in and transported through, but are rarely sold and consumed in, Mexico. Thirty years a~o, hardly anyone in Mexico knew anything about marijuana. Not anymore. Violence over drugs is rampant in Mexico today and totally understandable. Suppliers and transporters will fight to monopolize the illegal business as long as there is a demand, and the demand for drugs has always been in the United States, not in Mexico. As we learned with prohibition, attacking the problem from the supply side is a fool's errand for simple economic reasons. We shouldn't blame Mexico for our problem. Mexico, however, has the right to blame us for creating their problem. Mexico has changed much in the past 30 years. Figuratively and literaJly it went straight from the 19th into the 21st century. I am honored to have been there duriug the three glOrious decades. common in urban areas, with scores of news, sports and entertainment channels from all over Europe, as well as the U.S. and Mexico. Telephones were nonexistent in rural Mexico 30 years ago. The only way a family member Erich Schlegel 200!) n lI~ N.mI1lCI\N ·S' n\'n:SM .\~ Sandra Paulina Garai, 14, of Guadalajara, Jalisco, shops at the San Marcos outlets, one of the top to pesos was a hassle, but not as difficult as 10 Texas destinations for visitors from Mexico. where we met up with Ablanedo's family. Tagether, we started making our way through several corridors to the witness area. Continued from FI • statesman.com sister, irene, were among the first to enter the of isolation and a loss of cultural and neighbor- dimly lit and soon-to-be crowded room - both in wheelchairs. Betsy Ablanedo clutched a box of tissue in her lap. Ablanedo's brother, Al'mand, and patrol partner, Bruce Mills, followed them inside, along with Ablanedo's widow, Judy, and sons, Steve and David. With note pad in hand - journalists aren't permitted to take tape recorders or other electronic trade-tools inside - I went in. hood identity, and students who stayed first began to see how much the education they'd been getting had differed from other parts of the city. "We had accepted what we had and we were proud of it," said Johnny Limon, another community activist and Johnston High graduate. "But when they started busing kids from the west side in, and they started coming in and that they were recruiting students from the old Johnston, for a fresh start. They were ecstatic when they, along with everyone else, heard about a huge new federal grant program aimed at turning around distressed neighborhoods. The fact that Geoffrey Canada's Harlem Children'S Zone, which rlins community cen- Find more about the Austin school district's grant decision with this story online_ One of my first missions was to study the doing all these renovations and bringing in these top teachers ... we noticed that maybe ters and charter schools, was presented as the Powell. Did he appear in pain? Did he show we were missing something, that maybe we model for reforms was all the more thrilling. any remorse? I saw no obvious outward signs weren't being treated as well as the rest of the of either. community." we have been doing," said Susana Almanza , Standing behind David Mills, I could still easily see Powell's gaze. A Bible-clutching clergyman was at Powell's Then there was the issue of Allan Junior High, which had been converted into an elementary school because so many students were who lives in the area and works for Southwest Key. Carstarphen appeared not only to support the feet inside the green-walled room, resting a bused to other parts of the City, but was never idea of possibly working with charters, when hand 011 one of Powell's lower legs. A warden wearing a cowboy hat stood near Powell's head. A microphone dangling from the ceiling above Powell allowed us to clearly hear what was being said. "Do you want to make a statement?" the warden asked. Powell said nothing. He continued his blank gaze. Then the lethal dose began. Another quest was to watch the reactions of Ablanedo's family. I made a.few notes. "Judy crying, holding hand of son" I wrote. And at another point, "Bruce (or Armand'?) asks Irene if she is OK. She says, 'Yes.''' About nine minutes after the drugs started turned back to a middle school when the school board ended cross-town busing in 1998. "It left a big hole in our community," Limon said. "Students would seem to do OK in neighborhood elementary schools, but something happened when they went away." At Johnston High School, principals came and went; by 2005, 11 had left in 12 years. Parts of the school were in disrepair - the library was at one point housed in the gymnasium and the school wasn't even connected to the Internet until 2001. The following year, the district removed the Liberal Arts magnet program from Johnston; that move and policies that allowed hundreds of students to ltansferout of the school each year she took the step of soliCiting outside help In struggling schools, but she also hired Ramona Treviilo, a former charter school operator, to be her chief academic officer and just got back from a trip with several trustees to look at charter schools in other parts of the country. Southwest Key drew up a plan, asked for meetings with the school district and waited. Then came the news that the district would be partnering with another group - this one focused on the St. John and Coronado Hills neighborhoods in Northeast Austin - and not Southwest Key. What went wrong? Was the snub because Southwest Key runs a charter school and Austin - unlike Houston and San Antonio and flowing, a doctor was summoned inside. He were described by some as proverbial nails in the school's coffin. It was closed by the state in "6:19," he said. 2008 after it failed for five consecutive years to meet state academic and dropout standards. A prison employee flung open the door, and family members began retreating from the room. As they were led out, Irene Ablanedo, who had been vocal about her desire to watch Powell die and was now half-smHing, asked her mother if she was OK. "Yes, fine," she said. As for myself,l was unsure then - . and f'm The school has reopened as East Side Memorial High School, including Global Tech and Green Tech high schools, one of which administrators say they believe will be rated academically unacceptable this year. Meanwhile, Southwest Key came on the scene, albeit quietiy. Starting as a nonprofit that provided education and shelters to children of illegal immigrants, the group had of. fices in Austin, but most of its focus waSOn tbe Rep. Mark Strama, D-Austin , and had met re- U.S.-Mexico border. In 2007, it opened a community center a stone's throw from the old Johnston High School campus, and in 2009, it opened a charter school - the East Austin College Prep Academy. And though the work it did with the shelters Stirred controversy for years, recently old foes, illcluding the League of United Latin peatedly with district Officials throughout the last school year. Carstarphen maintains that she is very much open to any partnership with groups that will improve Austin schools and said no decisions had been made on the request for proposals from community partners - one of which is Southwest Key .._- to run programs in Austin ered around a bank of TV cameras. American Citizens, have become supporters. schools. The sentence had been carried out, I told them. Powell was dead. All of which set the scene for the 2009-10 schOOl year and arrival of a new Austill superintendent, Meria Carstarphen. Southwest Again, they find themselves waiting for an answer, but whether it will be the one they're looking for is just as uncertain. tplohetsk'@states Key officials were hopeful, after accusations Iheinauer@statesman,cOfl);445-3694 c::::::,:::::m :a::.::': ::'__ Democratic strategist Donna Brazile tried to rebut criticism that President Barack Obama isn't doing enough to control the response to the Gulf of Mexico oil spill, suggesting on ABC's "This Week" June 13 that Obama has been hamstrung by congressional action 20 years ago. Brazile said Congress created a policy that puts BP - not the federal government - in charge of the response. "The administration has I ..' ...... been constrained by the Oil Pollution Act of 1990, which basically gives the responsi· ble party the lead role in trying to not only fix the problem, but contain the problem," she said. cleanup." According to the report, the act granted the president three options in the wake of an oil event: federalize a spill and perform cleanup immediately; monitor the spiller's response efforts; or direct cleanup actlvities. BP ultimately is liable for the cost of cleaning up the spilled oil. The Oil Pollution Act caps additional economic damages at $75 million, but BP has said it will pay all legitimate claims, and some Democrats in Congress want to lift the cap and apply it retroactively. Under the law as it stands, BP will be paying for the cleal1:up, and the federal government ultimately has authority over how the cleanup proceeds. We asked Brazile, a native of New Orleans who still has family living there, whether there was something we were missing. Brazile told us she was painting alit that the 1990 act, and options the president had, may have contributed to the government not takevery reason to take the lead and not wait," Brazile said. "Perhaps they waited - and I used the reference to the act - as one reason why they did not take the initial lead." The act explicitly gives the federal government the authority to decide who's in charge of the clean-up - - the polluter or the government. We rate Brazile's statement False. otber cities across the country --- has yet to embrace charters? Could statements from some board members who have said they are against parhlering with a charter prevent the administration from ever recommending one? Or is it Simply, as the district suggested, that the Southwest Key proposal wasn't pulled together? Southwest Key did not have the early support that the St. John group did. In addition to local foundations like Sooch and Webber, the SI. John group worked early on to secure the support of the University of Texas, the City of Austin and local politiCians, including state unsure now -the extent to which the image _ _ _J _______ _ 11()IJr1J.A(T "We said this fits in perfectly in the work of Powell dying will linger. That night in my hotel room, scenes from that day replayed in my mind as.! fell asleep. But in thal moment at the prison, I focused on my job. As the family prepared to walk outside, I scurried past them and rushed to give the news to my media colleagues, who had gath- n com' 445 3605 By Aaron Sharockman ing the lead sooner. "The administration had room - the color, the smell. I wanted to see pressed his stethoscope against Powell's chest, ihen looked at a clock. Governnlent has power to take charge of spill response government's role in oB spill response and SCHOOLS: 'We weren't being treated as well,' one community activist says Ablanedo's mother, 87-year-old Betsy, and contain the problem.' act "strengthened and clarified the federal eventually giving way to cell phones. One can now make and receive international calls from everywhere in Mexico except extremely remote Shortly before 6 p.m., they got the call that the court had denied Powell's appeals. Within and were searched. Then we were led into a narrow hallway toward the execution room, constrained by the Oil Pollution Act of 1990, which basically gives the responsible party the lead role in trying to not only fix the problem, but to perform proper cleanup," according to a Congressional Research Service report. The Carrying money was a problem for travelers to Mexico 30 years ago. Changing dollars The five media witnesses climbed the stairs to the unit that houses the death chamber administration has been authority in an oil event, not less, "When rep prison offiCials, who were still awaiting a deci- minutes, we were making our way to the death chamber. My stomach began its churn. Statement: 'The (Obama) sponding to a spill, many considered the lines of responsibility under the pre-OPA regime to be unclear, with too much reliance on spillers could contact me from Texas in the '70s was by telegram. Land lines spread during the '80s, in their office while we waited. Donna Brazile We wanted to see whether Brazile's inter~ people who were already dead - not dying in front of me. I wondered how watching Powell's death would impact my psyche. By late last week, I'd decided to attend. Several Statesman reporters, photographers and videographers arrived at the prison by midafternoon Tuesday. I checked in with sion from the U.S. Supreme Court, which was reviewing Powell's final appeal. I set up shop Sorting out tile truth In politics pretation of the act - passed in the wake of the Exxon Valdez spill off the.Alaskan shore - is right, particularly when it comes to decidIng who has the lead role after a spill. In general, the act gives the president more replaced by huge satellite dishes, which in turn were replaced by smaller ones. Cable is valleys and deserts (my phone works in Mexico, but not Vermont). PoHHFacriom Dave Martin AS.~)( ;1:\'1'1-:111 'H~~"S Orange Beach, Ala., is among many Gulf of Mexico shores affected by the -BP oil spill. The 1990 Oil Pollution Act gives the government authority to take the lead in responding. Politi Fact Texas Find PolitiFact coverage of Texas issues produced by the American-Statesman staff at PoIitiFactTexas.c:om. Contact PolitiFact Texas at lWItter: @politifacttexas Fa~ Politi Fact Texas E-mail: pOlitifact®statesman.com ~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::lt:::~I:::~JC::~__:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::~~::::~~;;::::::::~ \ - , I