Post-Katrina, New Orleans Rescues a Drowning Public School System

Before Hurricane Katrina, the public school system in New Orleans was notoriously corrupt and under-performing. The state deemed a staggering 64 percent of the city’s schools to be “academically unacceptable” in 2005, and even earlier this year the pre-Katrina school board president, Ellenese Brooks-Simms, was sentenced to prison for accepting bribes in return for her support of an algebra software program.

Now, five years after Katrina devastated the city, the previously failing public schools in New Orleans are in the midst of some radical improvements, making Orleans Parish a model for struggling school districts around the nation. In November 2005, the state instituted an experimental Recovery School District, by which the Louisiana legislature took 107 under-performing Orleans Parish public schools under its control and turned them into charter schools. Now, over 75 percent of New Orleans students are in charter schools — the highest percentage in nation.

Paul Vallas, the outgoing superintendent of the Recovery School District, told Newsweek the city “used Katrina as an opportunity to build — not rebuild, but build — a new school system,” which he described as “overwhelmingly publicly funded, predominantly privately run.”

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HuffPost Readers Rename ‘The Recovery Summer’ — Which Suggestion Is Your Favorite? (PHOTOS)

Earlier this week, we asked HuffPost readers to come up with a more appropriate name for the last few months, which the Obama administration rather hopefully dubbed “The Recovery Summer.”

(To suggest your own name for “The Recovery Summer” click here.)

With soaring jobless claims, seesawing leading indicators and growing concerns about a double-dip recession, we thought it was an ideal time to skip the political sloganeering. After sifting through responses from HuffPost readers, we’ve chose the best of the batch. We’ve also offered a quick bit of explanation about why we think each name is particularly apt.

Which HuffPost reader suggestion is your favorite? Check them out and vote below:

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Federal Reserve Worried About Recovery, Takes Small Steps

WASHINGTON — As recently as two months ago, the Federal Reserve sounded optimistic about the economic recovery. Now the central bank is taking a new step that shows it is clearly more worried, but economists say it probably won’t help much.

The Fed said Tuesday that it would spend a relatively small amount of money – about $10 billion a month, economists estimate – buying government debt. The move is designed to drive interest rates on mortgages and corporate borrowing at least a little lower and help the economy grow faster.

In a statement after a one-day meeting, the Fed said the pace of the recovery “has slowed in recent months.” After its last meeting in late June, the Fed was rosier, saying that the recovery was “proceeding” and the job market actually improving.

The decision to buy government debt, using proceeds from Fed investments in mortgage bonds, was a shift from earlier this year, when the Fed was laying out plans to roll back some of the measures it took during the financial crisis.

At that time, the Fed was also preparing a strategy to begin raising interest rates again, a step taken to keep a growing economy from overheating. Now, though, the Fed has decided to keep its benchmark interest rate near zero.

“I don’t think they are going to raise interest rates until it is very clear that unemployment is moving definitively lower and that doesn’t look likely until late 2011,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics.

Economists pointed out that buying $10 billion of government debt in a $14 trillion economy is a relatively small move, and they said they did not expect it to have a dramatic impact.

“The Fed talked loudly but carried a small stick,” said Joel Naroff, president of Naroff Economic Advisors.

He said that while the financial system has the money to lend, banks are unwilling or unable to find suitable loans to make. Until they do, he said, “the recovery will be softer than anyone hoped for and there may be little the Fed can do about it.”

With interest rates so low, Congress, economists note, has more power than the Fed to stimulate the economy. But with midterm elections nearing, Congress is divided on whether the best move is short-term government spending, tax cuts or some combination.

On Tuesday, the House, called back from its summer break for a one-day session, pushed through a $26 billion bill to protect 300,000 teachers, police and other workers from layoffs this year. President Barack Obama signed it almost immediately.

The Fed action also came on a day when new figures showed worker productivity in the U.S. dropped this spring for the first time in more than a year – a sign that companies that want to grow may need to hire more people.

Investors reacted positively to the Fed statement. Stocks were down sharply before the announcement but made up ground after it was announced at mid-afternoon. The Dow Jones industrial average finished down about 55 points.

Treasury prices rose slightly because the Fed plan would reduce the amount of government debt on the market for others to buy.

The Fed said it would buy two-year and 10-year Treasurys by using the proceeds from debt and mortgage-backed securities it bought from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. It said that it would buy additional government debt as its existing Treasury bonds mature.

In 2007, before the recession and financial crisis struck, the Fed balance sheet was roughly $860 billion. It responded to the emergency by flooding the financial system with cash, expanding the balance sheet to about $2.3 trillion.

Rather than rolling it back, as the Fed had hoped to do as the economy improved, the Fed will keep the balance sheet steady while shifting its holdings out of mortgage securities and into more government debt.

“The news is positive but not meaningful,” said John Merrill, chief investment officer of Tanglewood Wealth Management in Houston. “The money is a pittance.”

The central bank said it expects to start buying the government debt Aug. 17 and planned to publish details Wednesday.

From March 2009 to this March, the Fed bought up $1.25 trillion in mortgage securities and $175 billion in debt from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The goal of these purchases was to drive down mortgage rates and bolster the crippled housing market. The Fed also bought $300 billion of government debt between March and October 2009.

The Fed’s balance sheet has stayed at roughly $2.3 trillion since March.

Economists are skeptical that cheaper credit or even more government aid will get Americans shopping more and businesses to hire. They also say some jobs in construction and other housing-related fields, and in manufacturing, will never return to pre-recession levels – a shift in the basic structure of the economy.

High unemployment, lackluster income growth, sagging home values and tight credit are all restraining the pace at which Americans are spending, usually a major source of powering the economy.

___

AP Business Writers Martin Crutsinger in Washington, David Pitt in Des Moines, and Bernard Condon in New York contributed to this report.

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lil twist

MTV.comEminem And Ludacris Should Collaborate, According To ReadersMTV.comEminem can chalk up at least part of his success to the collaborations on Recovery, including tag team efforts with Rihanna, Pink and Lil Wayne. …
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Kent Conrad, Senate Budget Chairman, Wants To Extend Bush Tax Cuts Without Paying For Them

WASHINGTON (Reuters) — A fiscally conservative Democrat who chairs the U.S. Senate’s budget committee on Wednesday said he supports extending all of the tax cuts that expire this year, including for the wealthy.

“The general rule of thumb would be you’d not want to do tax changes, tax increases … until the recovery is on more solid ground,” Senator Kent Conrad said in an interview with reporters outside the Senate chambers, adding he did not believe the recovery has come yet.

Conrad’s comments are sympathetic with Republican arguments against raising taxes amid a fledgling economic recovery. They frame a debate gaining steam over whether stimulus to bolster the economy’s recovery, or deficit reduction, should be the top policy priority.



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Biden: White House Wanted Bigger Stimulus; Republicans Howl Immediately (VIDEO)

Vice-President Joseph Biden said on Sunday that the administration understood the need to pass a larger stimulus package upon entering office but chose to scale down their ambitions in order to win GOP votes.

Appearing on ABC’s “This Week,” Biden endorsed the viewpoint held by Keynesian economists like New York Times columnist Paul Krugman (who he referenced by name), acknowledging that the stimulus passed was likely too small. But, he added, there would have been no package at all had it not been made smaller and, subsequently, more palatable to moderate Republicans.

“There was a reality,” Biden told host Jake Tapper. “In order to get what we got passed, we had to find Republican votes. And we found three. And we finally got it passed.”

“I think it would have been bigger [if not for that],” he added. “I think it would have been bigger. In fact, what we offered was slightly bigger than that. But the truth of the matter is that the recovery package, everybody’s talking about it [like] it’s over. The truth is now, we’re spending more now this summer than we — I’m calling this … the summer of recovery.”

The notion that the stimulus was, in all likelihood, too small for the crisis it was supposed to mend is hardly controversial among sober-minded political and economic observers. The White House, after all, continues to press Congress for additional (marginal) stimulus packages — underscoring what the president clearly feels is an additional need to jolt the economy.

But Biden’s comments are already being jumped on by Republican strategists, who have spent the past year ridiculing the stimulus as a massive, wasted, $800 billion check. Kevin Madden, a longtime consultant and confidant of Mitt Romney, predicted television ads attacking the White House for Biden’s remark.

As for the argument that the stimulus (even undersized) hasn’t had its desired effect, Biden cast blame on a miscommunication campaign that has kept the public in the dark.

“People don’t know a lot of what’s going on in the Recovery Act,” Biden said. “Understandably, because there has been so much stuff that has been flowing our way.”

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Haitians Press On Amid Slow Pace Of Quake Recovery : NPR

Americans have donated more than $1.3 billion for Haiti after the country’s Jan. 12 quake. Thousands of charities are helping the recovery effort. But plans to move survivors out of encampments into more suitable housing seem months, or even years, away.



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Dylan Ratigan Rips GOP Congressman Kevin Brady Over Wall Street Greed

Rep. Kevin Brady (R-Texas) looked uncomfortable when MSNBC host Dylan Ratigan introduced him Tuesday afternoon to talk about unemployment benefits and Wall Street greed. Brady’s discomfort proved well-founded.

Ratigan tore into the Texas Republican, who voted against the extension of unemployment benefits but for the Wall Street bailout known as the Troubled Asset Relief Program. Brady repeatedly attempted to deflect Ratigan’s harsh line of questioning on the nature of Wall Street by arguing that potential — not actual — tax increases are stifling capital investment and thus job creation, but the MSNBC host didn’t let up.

“I know you have an issue with the government, but I’ve got an issue with a private industry that’s using the government to rape my country of its money, and I’d like to try to put a stop to that,” Ratigan said.

“We are facing higher taxes in energy and income and capital and dividends,” Brady argued, not for the last time. “All those tax proposals are what’s keeping our recovery from gaining steam–”

“That’s a lie. That’s a lie,” Ratigan shot back. “What’s keeping our recovery from gaining steam is the fact that the financial industry is stealing America’s money, depriving this country of any investment whatsoever, and that is the entire basis of our system, and the government has converted it from an investment vehicle into a vehicle for it to steal money for its rich friends.”

The MSNBC host ended the segment on a frustrated note, complaining that Brady simply retreated to his talking points. “I’m done with you,” Ratigan said, after he challenged Brady to answer his questions and his guest resumed talking about possible future taxes.

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U.S. G20 Message: Stimulus Money Is Vital To Economic Recovery, Don’t Pull Back Yet

TORONTO — World leaders must work together to make sure the global recovery stays on track, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said Saturday.

Geithner made his remarks as President Barack Obama has warned his counterparts from the Group of 20 nations to not reel in measures to stimulate their economies too quickly. The United States fears doing so could endanger the global recovery.

Nations like Germany, Britain and others are shifting their focus on cutting deficits – especially in the wake of Greece’s debt crisis, which rattled world markets.

Asked if the global economy could slip back into another “double dip” recession, Geithner said the answer to that question hinges on decisions made by world leaders. “It is within the capacity of the people who are going to be in those rooms together in the next few days to avoid that outcome,” he said.

But Geithner’s insistence that nations continue stimulus spending to avoid another global recession was not bolstered by America’s own actions at home.

On Thursday, Senate Republicans defeated a jobs bill that included unemployment extensions, provisions for the elderly and poor, state funding for medicaid, and various tax cuts. Republicans threatened to filibuster the legislation and because Democrats were short of the 60 votes needed to overcome the legislative block, they did not vote on the bill.

But Geithner did not mention the failed stimulus bill at home as he told politicians from the world’s largest economies that global economic recovery depended upon government spending.

Geithner told the Toronto audience that one of the mistakes made in the 1930s was that countries pulled back their recovery efforts too soon, prolonging the Great Depression, he said.

He said the United States doesn’t want to see that happen again. “What we want to do is continue to emphasize that we are going to avoid that mistake,” he said. “It’s only been a year since the world economy stopped collapsing … it will take some time to heal.”

Although the world economy has recovered from the worst financial and economic crisis since the 1930s, many challenges remain, Geithner said.

“The scars of this crisis are still with us,” Geithner told reporters. “If the world economy is to expand at its potential, if growth is going to be sustainable in the future, then we need to act together to strengthen the recovery and finish the job of repairing the damage of the crisis.”

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Geithner’s G-20 Remarks

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Dan Dorfman: 2010 Recovery Could Be a Mirage

Here’s a good article from The Full Feed from HuffingtonPost.com

Talk to the banking and brokerages types with bullish leanings and they’ll tell you in no uncertain terms that you’ve got to be bonkers to pay heed to anyone forecasting a double-dip recession. Those who rule out a double dip generally insist the economy is on the upswing and that two biggest economic worries — the housing bust and high unemployment — will take a decided turn for the better before year end. They also seem to share the thinking of former Federal Reserve Chief Alan Greenspan, who argues that a double dip is unlikely.

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Dan Dorfman: 2010 Recovery Could Be a Mirage

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