Transcripts For KQED PBS NewsHour Weekend 20160111 : vimarsa

KQED PBS NewsHour Weekend January 11, 2016

The citi foundation. Supporting innovation and enabling urban progress. Sue and edgar wachenheim, iii. Corporate funding is provided by mutual of america designing customized individual and Group Retirement products. Thats why we are your retirement company. Additional support has been provided by and by the corporation for public broadcasting, and by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. Thank you. From the tisch wnet studios at Lincoln Center in new york, hari sreenivasan. Sreenivasan good evening and thanks for joining us. The United States has made a show of force to bolster south korea, five days after what north korea claimed was its First Hydrogen bomb test. Which has yet to be confirmed. Today, the u. S. Air force flew a nuclearcapable b52 bomber based in guam on a lowlevel flight over south korean air space. It was escorted by american f 16s based in south korea and south korean fighter jets. The u. S. Military calls the exercise a demonstration of commitment to its ally, south korea. The United States remains steadfast in its commitment to the defense of the republic of korea and maintaining the stability on the Korean Peninsula to include extended deterrence provided by our conventional forces and our nuclear umbrella. Sreenivasan after visiting his military headquarters, north Korean Leader kim jongun said last weeks test was a self defensive step from, quote, the danger of nuclear war caused by the u. S. Led imperialists. Mexican authorities want to question Actor Sean Penn about his stealth interview with Mexican Drug Cartel leader Joaquin El Chapo guzman. Rolling stone magazine published penns article late yesterday about his visit to one of guzmans hideouts in october, three months after guzman had escaped from prison. In a video answering questions submitted by penn after the visit, guzman denied he was responsible for the high level of drug addiction in the world. translated no, that is false, because the day i dont exist, its not going to decrease in any way at all. Sreenivasan the u. S. Has asked mexico, which recaptured guzman friday, to extradite him to face u. S. Charges for trafficking heroin, cocaine, marijuana, and methamphetamine. President obamas chief of staff said today guzman is partly responsible for the heroin epidemic across the u. S. I was appalled by his bragging to the interviewers in Rolling Stone that he moves more heroin than anybody in the world. Sreenivasan france is commemorating the victims of all of last years terrorist attacks that killed almost 150 people. French president Francois Hollande and the mayor of paris unveiled a plaque in memory of the victims at the ceremony today in the citys place de la republique. Last week marked one year since islamic extremists killed 16 people in the offices of the magazine Charlie Hebdo and in a kosher market. Last november 13th, terrorists affiliated with the Islamic Militant group isis killed 130 people in attacks on paris cafes and a concert hall. One suspect directly involved remains at large. Sreenivasan for the past decade, the United States has encouraged cuban doctors and nurses working outside cuba to defect to the United States. Since 2006, the u. S. Has approved more than 7,000 applications, according to the state department and department of homeland security. Now, the Obama Administration is considering ending the program as part of the normalization of u. S. Cuban relations. Reuters White House Correspondent jeff mason first reported the story and joins me now from washington. How did the program work, how did we get 7,000 applicants in the system . Well, the program basically works by allowing cuban doctors who are overseas because of incentive by the government to apply at u. S. Embassies for entry into the United States. And the state department gives these em bas eyes and u. S. Officials abroad pretty wide latitude to approve those applications and to get those applications going. So its a program that is actually very proud of because it sends, or it is basically exporting their medical professionals abroad to help in places that really need it. They also earn money from doing that. So they certainly, the cuban government certainly saw it as a pretty big slap in the face. Sreenivasan i remember hearing about how many cuban doctors were there in africa to treat ebola. Almost every Natural Disaster that happens around the world, you always hear of a large number of cuban doctors that are there. Yeah, thats right. The cuban doctors are known for bringing being skillful medical proaksals and something the cubans are proud of. So sort of poaching them away into the United States was one of the many thorns in the side, in that relationship both for cuban cuba and among many that are throrns in the side of the United States as well. Some of the dock tors that were defecting also complained about the fact that they werent getting paid what these Foreign Countries was paying cuban. Right, i mean it was a moneymaker for cuba. One of the examples is they send cuba sends a lot of medical professionalsalsals to venezuala in exchange for oil. And the cuban doctors themselves, though they were probably making a more Competitive Salary than they were back at home, they were thot taking in all the revenue that the cuban government was taking from sending those people abroad. So that was indeed one of their complaints and one of the reasons that they took up this opportunity from the United States. Sreenivasan as we start normalizing relations, has that encouraged people to sairks you know what, lets go ahead and put in our applications now, cause almost a surge in the last year. Or what is the cuban government doing about this . The cuban government actually has clamped down on the number of doctors that they allow to leave cuba and to participate in these program as broad. And that is actually something that lead the United States, which as i reported, has put this program under review. That is being, included in part of that he are view right now. So the cubans have taken some action to reduce those numbers because of the poaching and because of the number of people leaving. Routers white house cor correspondent jeff mason, thanks. Thank you so much. Sreenivasan more than 60 years after the Supreme Court declared separate but equal schools unconstitutional, the United States is still a long way from fully integrated public schools. Racial isolation remains a problem not only in the Southern States where segregation was once the norm, but also in states like new york. For example, the u. C. L. A. Civil rights project has found new york state has the highest concentration of black and latino kids in schools that are less than 10 white, schools that are often in lowincome urban areas. In tonights signature segment, we look at a voluntary Integration Program in rochester, new york, where suburban communities have welcomed city kids to their schools since the 1960s. This story is part of chasing the dream, our continuing coverage of poverty and opportunity in america. Sreenivasan in the suburbs of rochester, new york, parents and students pack the gym for a Varsity High School basketball game. Senior tyreek sizer number 3 is a starting guard and an honor roll student at irondequoit high. Hes attended schools in west irondequoit since second grade and says he feels at home, but he doesnt live in the School District. Since he was seven years old, sizer has traveled from his familys home in rochester, a 45 minute bus ride each way to school. Hes part of urbansuburban, the oldest voluntary School Desegregation program in the country. At first, i didnt realize that i was coming into this opportunity. Sreenivasan its become an opportunity for 700 minority students from rochester to attend schools in the primarily white suburbs, where the schools are consistently rated higher performing. I feel like i would have been good staying in the city School District, but i dont feel like it would have been as beneficial as coming here. We have basically the best of the best here, so you have a lot of resources. Sreenivasan and tyreek has thrived taking advanced placement classes, Winning National awards with the schools business club, and applying to college for next year. I think the impact is immeasurable. Sreenivasan Theresa Woodson is the administrator of rochesters urbansuburban program. It started 51 years ago, in 1965, to increase racial integration in the region. West irondequoit was the First District to sign up, accepting 24 minority students from the inner city that first year. This year, the district has 137 students from the city. Overall, in west irondequoit, the students are 74 white, and 27 are economically disadvantaged, qualifying for assistance such as free or reduced price lunch. By contrast, in the city of rochester, 10 of the students are white, and 91 are economically disadvantaged. It isnt easy for a city kid to get into a district like west irondequoit. Only about 10 to 15 of kids who apply through urbansuburban are accepted. The program is not based on quotas or lottery or firstcome firstserved. There has to be space available. Sreenivasan besides a students academic ability, parental engagement is a key factor for admission. Their level of commitment, their level of participation is really the glue that holds all this together once their child is selected. Sreenivasan victoria sizer is tyreeks mother. She wanted Something Better for tyreek after her oldest daughter attended city schools. The communication wasnt really there. When my daughter was going to 12th grade, the counselor didnt, i didnt hear anything about colleges or how the process starts about her going to colleges. And it was so frustrating. Im like, there needs to be a change. Sreenivasan she heard about urbansuburban from another parent and applied. It took her two years to get tyreek in, and sending her young child to a school far away was nerve wracking. It was just a scary process going, because were African American, is he going to be okay . Is he going to transition okay . Are they going to treat him right . All that was going through my mind. But that was a chance i was going to take. But when he got to the school, and i felt like he was safe, and it was a welcoming community, it was like so relieving. Sreenivasan she found immediate acceptance when another mother called her early in tyreeks first year. It was like, we want to invite tyreek over for a playdate. Which im like, a play date . What is a play date . She was like, oh, he could come over and spend some time with her son. Sreenivasan for victoria, urbansuburban provided an opportunity she couldnt, while raising five children and working as a nurses aide. Administrator Theresa Woodson says one of secrets to the programs success is that it was not imposed on rochester by politicians or judges. The suburbs chose this approach. Thats the key for us, that, you know, that its voluntary. No court mandates. That the suburban districts that are participating are doing so because they see the benefit. Sreenivasan the benefit of increasing their own diversity at no additional cost state funding follows the student to the suburbs and picks up the tab for busing. Still, for most of the past 50 years, the program has been modest in scope with only six of the 17 suburban districts surrounding rochester taking part. West Irondequoit School District superintendent jeff crane says theres always been a small, but vocal opposition to urban suburban. I will get a call at least one or two calls that are against this program each year, and sometimes thats hard to hear. Sreenivasan around the 50th anniversary last year, officials pushed to expand the program. In the town of spencerport, west of rochester, public hearings were divisive. A common complaint was that only children of color were eligible. Im also not happy that we cant seem to come up with some sort of equitable solution to being able to help people in this program without excluding other people. Im talking about excluding caucasians from this program. Theres no reason that you should exclude those people from the city School District as well. Sreenivasan crane says the debate forced School Officials to update their admission criteria to focus on poverty, not only race, and starting next school year urbansuburban will be open to any student in rochester, regardless of ethnicity. We changed our mission statement, not only to decrease voluntarily racial isolation, but also to help deconcentrate poverty. By doing that, we took away some of the pointed arguments that the program was racist in setting about a racial isolation problem. Sreenivasan five new districts did opt to join urban suburban last year, including spencerport, where the school board unanimously approved joining despite the controversy. Sixth grader zavannah alvarez is one of 17 new students there. Her parents, ramon and itza alvarez, say the divisiveness over the program in spencerport has not affected how their daughter has been treated. When i talk to the counselor, she doesnt see her just like this kid that came from the city. Shes part of her, you know, one of her kids. And she talks to her like one of her kids. If you are treating my daughter like that, im all for it. Sreenivasan in the first few months, the alvarezs say zavannahs getting more rigorous instruction. She takes math twice, i believe, in a day. Before it was just once. So now shes getting that extra. That extra help she needs. And shes doing well. Sreenivasan for zavannah and her older brother christian, who attends an urbansuburban program in another district, theres been a big adjustment to a grueling schedule. The kids wake up at 4 30 in the morning to get ready, to be out on the bus by 6 00. Its a long bus ride. But you know what, i like it, because it teaches them responsibility. And when they get older and they get a job, their careers, theyre going to have to wake up early anyway. Sreenivasan even in its 51st year, rochesters urbansuburban program serves only 700 kids in a district of nearly 30,000. Its the smallest of the eight interdistrict transfer programs across the country and about 40,000 students participate. The largest is hartford, connecticut with 19,000 kids. University of rochester education professor Kara Finnigan says while research on these programs is limited, it has shown positive academic and social benefits. Its really one of the only policy tools we have right now. This kind of program that allows kids to cross district boundaries whether its through urbansuburban kind of program or through interdistrict magnets. These are the only opportunities we have to really address some of the inequities around opportunity and outcomes because of the boundaries. Sreenivasan the rochester area remains racially isolated. The percent of schools that are intenselysegregated more than 90 minority grew more than fivefold over the last 20 years. I think that there probably are ways that the program could grow, but its never going to solve the problems in rochester. Really you need investment in places to make them thrive. And you need opportunities within the city that kids from the suburbs will want to go to just as much, because theyre wonderful opportunities in whatever programs they offer. Sreenivasan Rochester Teachers Union president Adam Urbanski supports the idea behind urbansuburban but says the program cherry picks the highest achieving city kids and has not led to broader changes. Unwittingly, this is contributing to the delay of the real solution. And, therefore to the widening gulf between the haves and the havenots. I want us to do things that can be scaled up and not have programs that end up as a boutique exception to the sad norm. None of us involved in this program have ever said to anyone this is the answer. This is just one of the ways in which we start to deal, as a society, with the issues were all faced with. Sreenivasan with the addition of new districts, rochester urbansuburban is expecting to increase its enrollments in the coming years. This coming fall the program will go both ways, and send kids from the suburbs to select city schools. I just think as a county as a whole, that were all interconnected, and i think when were working in unison, and were rowing in the same direction, to benefit all kids, regardless of where their address is, i think thats the key. Sreenivasan at 17, tyreek sizer no longer takes the bus to school, instead driving a family car the sixandahalf miles from home with his younger brother and friends. After a decade going to school in west irondequoit, tyreek believes being in a more diverse environment will pay off. It does get a little challenging knowing that youre probably like the only African American in your class, but at the end of the day, i feel like this prepares me better for college. Sreenivasan his first choice is syracuse university, where African Americans make up about eight percent of the student body. What happens to students growing up in mostly segregated inner city schools . Watch our race matters conver

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