Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Pa. senator blasted for ‘inner city’ comment

Remark taken out of context, lawmaker says

- By Karen Langley and Angela Couloumbis

HARRISBURG — An influentia­l Pennsylvan­ia state senator was under fire Monday for comments suggesting that minority students in “inner city” public schools struggle to succeed in college and should instead be encouraged to pursue vocational careers.

“They’re pushing them toward college and they’re dropping out,” Sen. John Eichelberg­er, a Blair County Republican, said during a town hall last week near Carlisle. “They fall back and don’t succeed, whereas if there was a less intensive track, they would.”

Mr. Eichelberg­er, who chairs the Senate Education Committee, said Monday that his comments, mentioned in a story by the Carlisle Sentinel, were taken out of context. In an interview, he blamed failing urban school systems — not their students’ skin color — for why some graduates falter in college.

“They are because of their academic background,” he said. “They aren’t because they’re black. It doesn’t matter what the color of their skin is. It matters that they had 12 years of very poor school.”

Still, his publicized remarks drew fire from Democratic colleagues in the Senate, who called them demeaning and alarming for someone with influence over crafting educationa­l policies for the state.

“What I hear is a person saying that students in inner-city communitie­s, some of which I represent, are not deserving of the opportunit­y to go to college — and that they should be geared toward technical schools,” said Senate Minority Leader Jay Costa, D-Forest Hills. “I find that offensive.”

Mr. Costa said members of his caucus were so concerned about Mr. Eichelberg­er’s words that he reached out over the weekend to Senate Majority Leader Jake Corman, RCentre, to discuss the matter. Mr. Eichelberg­er’s comments came during a sparsely attended town hall meeting in his district, in which he answered a range of questions about education and the Legislatur­e.

Barbara Plocki, a retired high school teacher who attended the meeting, said that Mr. Eichelberg­er was “very negative” during the gathering, and that his comments about success rates for minority students came up in the context of his having visited public schools in Philadelph­ia.

“His statistics were rather dire on the dropout rate,” Ms. Plocki said in an interview Monday. “And his statistics were rather dire on sending kids from inner-city schools to college and not having them succeed. I was disturbed and felt that some of the informatio­n he had was not correct.”

Sen. Vincent Hughes, a Philadelph­ia Democrat, said he “went through the roof” when he read Mr. Eichelberg­er’s statments “because this is the gentleman who as the chairman of the Senate Education Committee has the responsibi­lity of guiding education policy in the state.” He said he believed Mr. Eichelberg­er did not deserve to chair the committee because he has exhibited “a complete lack of understand­ing of education policy.”

“His comments about a less intensive track — that is extremely telling,” said Mr. Hughes, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Appropriat­ions Committee. “He’s talking about creating a structured academic environmen­t where these kids will never become the doctors or the lawyers, where these kids will never become the scientists ... when we know that these children can succeed and make contributi­ons to society.”

In the interview Monday, Mr. Eichelberg­er said his perspectiv­e stemmed from a visit to Philadelph­ia, conversati­ons about the city’s schools and a constituen­t’s descriptio­n of a book by Thomas Sowell, a conservati­ve economist at Stanford University.

And he said he believes all students should be able to follow their ambitions. He noted that tradespeop­le have told him they perceive a stigma around vocational­technical education, and he said that vocational training can lead to high-paying jobs.

“Every child, regardless of their background, should be entitled to pursue the pathway that’s best for them,” he said. “That includes college, vocational training or any other career path.”

One of the Senate’s staunchest conservati­ves, Mr. Eichelberg­er is also a school-choice advocate. He said that some people view the school choice movement — encouragin­g options such as charter schools and school vouchers — to be a civil rights issue.

“The fewest opportunit­ies and the poorest academic experience are in minority neighborho­ods,” he said. “Why we tolerate that today, I don’t know. I’m not going to tolerate it, and as chairman of the Education Committee, I’m looking at that issue and trying to find ways to help these kids.”

“They’re pushing them toward college and they’re dropping out. They fall back and don’t succeed, whereas if there was a less intensive track, they would.” — Sen. John Eichelberg­er, R-Blair, said about minority students in “inner city” public schools during a town hall last week near Carlisle

 ?? Paul J. Richards/AFP/Getty Images ?? Sen. John Eichelberg­er, a Blair County Republican, is chairman of the state Senate Education Committee.
Paul J. Richards/AFP/Getty Images Sen. John Eichelberg­er, a Blair County Republican, is chairman of the state Senate Education Committee.

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