News Corner

Equity is Bad Policy

EQUITY IS BAD POLICY

By Hessie Harris

Some Virginia High School Asian students were not informed that they had the distinction of scoring in the top 3% of the nation on the  PSAT, the college entrance exam.  Such accomplishment enhanced their chances of early acceptance into elite colleges and receiving other significant scholastic perks. The reason given by the schools for the delay/failure was to prevent other students, who did not score as highly. “from feeling bad” or “having hurt feelings. 

The question is, What is a respectable score on the exam? Clearly if not only the top 3% got into college, but higher education could not be sustained. 

What occurred in Virginia represents discrimination against high achieving Asian students and the bigotry of low expectations against the rest to maintain the illusion of equity.

Were the schools really concerned about an expected huge gap, they could have informed the students of the self-help available to them. The information is on the internet. Performance is improved by awareness and preparation. Informing all students would avoid an allegation of stigmatization.

On-line, there are free articles that give tips, advice and instruction on taking the entrance exam.  Also, there are reasonably priced “How-To” manuals listed that include more such information AND practice exams.  Those manuals are also available in local bookstores.  In addition, there are mini prep courses available for students who will be taking the exam.  They are of various prices.  However, surely Fairfax County ‘s budget could include funds to pay for or subsidize the cost if need be.

That contrast, with times gone by when such resources  were not available to Black students who, by law or policy, attended segregated schools  and lived in segregated  neighborhoods where there were no bookstores   Black students  were not welcome in areas where they did exist.

Black students were not told of prep resources, and neither were their teachers or school administrators.  All that was known was that “there was this test” that had to taken  to get into college.  However, they could not “study” for it as it was a reflection of all they had learned to date.

One student, of working-class parents, simply could not accept that there was a test that could not be prepared for. After walking nearly a mile over unpaved ground to the “local library”, the very tired student asked at the Information Desk if there were ANY BOOKS on test taking.

The employee smiled brightly and pointed to a shelf of large leather bound books. But a comparatively small white brand-new paperback book titled “How To Take Standardized Tests” was incongruously at the front of the shelf.

The student sat down and read it for several hours.   The first section was titled “Number Series”.   The reason that was so memorable was because that was also the first section of the entrance exam.  After the exam, students congregated outside the exam room.  Most were shaken and upset   They were not ignorant but just had never been exposed to the concept of number series.   The student, also an avid reader, scored over 250 points higher than peers. No, the score was not in the top 3% but respectable enough for college admission.  That student was yours truly.

__________

Hessie  L. Harris is a Member of the Maryland Republican Central Committee from Montgomery County

 


MoCo LOCO!

By Stacey Sauter

MOCO LOCO

While the Montgomery County Council gets drunk on power, we suffer the hangover.

We can all agree that pollution is bad. Regardless of income, education, or political affiliation, most people act on it in varying degrees, perhaps even grudgingly conceding that County-mandated paper straws and a five-cent tax on plastic bags are small, eco-friendly prices to pay for protecting the environment. But make no mistake. Those kinds of seemingly benign acts are just the foothold the Montgomery County Council needed its residents to accept before grabbing the stronghold they’ve truly been aiming for: becoming the first East Coast county to mandate mass electrification as their solution for climate change. Which is exactly what happened on November 29th, 2022, when the Council unanimously passed Bill 13-22, a.k.a. Comprehensive Buildings Decarbonization. Barring few exceptions, by December 31st, 2026, this bill will require nearly all new residential and commercial buildings to be built with all electric systems. That’s all electric. No gas. No consumer choice in the matter. And all before the Maryland Public Service Commission (“PSC”) completes a state-mandated study on “the capacity of each [utility’s] gas and electric distribution systems to successfully serve customers under a managed transition to a highly electrified building sector.”

In fact, two of the biggest stakeholders – Pepco and BGE (respectively owned by Exelon), while supportive of cleaner energy, both felt it was premature for the county to enact the law ahead of PSC’s expected September 2023 findings. In its official objections, Pepco stated, “We, respectfully, oppose the legislation, based on the timeline that is set forth, which does not provide an opportunity for a study to be conducted to help inform the goals and outcomes of the proposed legislation.” BGE added to Pepco’s concerns by formally stating, “this legislation would implement a significant change in energy usage, prior to the issuance of a critical electric grid readiness study mandated by state law and without the understanding of the readiness of the electric grid to accommodate such change.”

Why is the supermajority, progressive Council so eager to get ahead of its vaulted all-electric building standards despite genuine concerns by utility providers that our current grid can’t support the measure? The simple answer: it’s not as much about clean power as political power, by which the Council is presently inebriated.

Case in point. Even while the bill’s sponsor, former Councilmember Hans Riemer, touted that Bill 13-22 meant “new construction will be cheaper to build, cheaper to operate and safer for residents,” the County’s own Office of Legislative Oversight (“OLO”) held a different opinion as stated in their Economic Impact Statement on Bill 13-22: “In general, the commercial building sector likely would be negatively impacted due to higher upfront costs and various risks (e.g., uncertain relative energy prices and lower than anticipated energy savings), which would increase the likelihood of certain market actors receiving a net negative return on their investment in building electrification.” If you look at the list of organizations that officially opposed Bill 13-22, you’d clearly see they agreed. The OLO concluded their summary with the warning “that the change in building code has the potential to reduce, both private sector capital investment and the County’s competitiveness in the commercial building sector.”

Translated into simple terms: when it comes to commercial development, we’re going to take a hit. Northern Virginia is already eating our lunch in terms of business development. Consider that three major companies – Amazon, Raytheon, and Boeing – when recently expanding or relocating their businesses to our greater metropolitan area, each bypassed Maryland in favor of Northern Virginia. Already onerous taxes and overbearing regulations are partially to blame. But so is Maryland’s woke culture – the vanguard of which emanates from Montgomery County with its hard, leftist agenda.

For now, your existing gas stoves, gas grills, and furnaces are safe. But the hangover is coming, so take some aspirin and hold on to your wallets my friends. In addition to a strained electric grid, rising energy bills due to less competition, and the passing-on of all-electric building costs, there’s the real possibility that a current Biden Administration push to ban gas stoves will find its way here forcing homeowners to go electric whether they want to or not. If we thought it was hard to attract businesses to move here, existing ones to grow, and new ones to start, wait to see what the super majority in Annapolis likewise does with their aggressive climate activism. Our economy will doubtless suffer with these overly strident climate measures, and Marylanders fed up with the Nanny State and the cost of living here will say adieu. As one famous billboard in Seattle once said, “Will the last person leaving turn out the lights?” In our case, perhaps, the flickering lights.

Your feedback and participation in helping us to fight this and other such measures are truly welcome.

__________

Stacey Sauter is a Republican former candidate for the Maryland House of Delegates, a REALTOR and member of the Montgomery County Republican Party Communications Committee. She can be reached at [email protected]

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Huge Lunar New Year Success

Huge Lunar New Year Success!

Dennis Melby and Xi Van Fleet

Hundreds of folks, Republicans and their friends, attended the 2023 Lunar New Year event in Gaithersburg. Great food, Chinese Dancers and Singers, commentary from party officials and speeches by Viet Doan, Jenny Zeng, Edward Bartlett and humor from Emcee Dennis Melby kept the night moving. Keynote Speaker Xi Van Fleet received a standing ovation.

The room was packed, the food was great and the entertainment was first class. Make sure you stay up-to-date with our events. Watch for the Spring MCGOP Convention March 25. Details coming soon.


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