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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – With 52 percent of Perry County’s children living
in poverty, the four schools educating those children also are suffering hardships.
“Trying Times: Perry County Schools,” is The University of Alabama Center
for Public Television’s documentary that tells the story – through the
people of Perry County – of Alabama’s legislative pitfalls, the repercussions
from 2003’s failed Amendment One tax reform plan, and Gov. Bob Riley’s
2004-05 fiscal year budget.
“Trying Times: Perry County Schools,” airs Nov. 16 at 8 p.m. and Nov.
18 at 9 p.m. on Alabama Public Television. During the course of the story, Dwight
Cammeron, CPT director and producer, follows the fears and anxieties of several Perry
County educators and administrators, plus one overworked maintenance supervisor.
With 70 percent of property ownership in the county maintained by nonresidents,
a shrinking tax base from which to derive funds and 14.2 percent of county residents
unemployed, John Heard, Perry County’s superintendent, remains optimistic that
his schools will “not have to worry about funding and focus on achievement.”
This story unfolds through profiles of teachers who may soon loose their jobs because
money is short and provides intimate portraits of their personal and civic concerns
alongside the county’s attempts at patching its funding problems.
During the course of the documentary, attempts to raise property taxes, which would
have made the county’s taxes the highest in the state, and tacking $10 onto
court fees, both fail.
A lack of both industry and a solid infrastructure and expectations by the state
for the county to meet the expectations of its more affluent counterparts are outlined
by a grim-faced Albert Turner Jr., Perry County commissioner.
“What we have is a recipe for division with 99 percent of white children in
private schools and 99 percent of black children in our public schools,” Turner
said.
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