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I can’t help but tear up when I pass

Vernon Sikes Herald ColumnistVernon Sikes Herald ColumnistDuring a recent meal with friends, the subject suddenly became melancholic after one asked if we'd been by to see what the hill looks like after the Mississippi Chemical Corp. (MCC) administration building had been torn down.
“I'm telling you,” said one, a former MCC employee. “As I drove on the (Mississippi 3) bypass and saw that it was gone, I couldn't help but tear up.”
As the others, all former and long-time MCC employees, expressed their sorrow, I had to confess that although I'd never worked there, the void left by the demolition of that once-grand complex is heart-wrenching. How sad it is to see the deserted site where men and women once spent decades of their lives not only in building a company, their careers and their families, but in investing in and growing a community.
The overgrown hill upon which the building sat, once impeccably manicured and symbolic of prosperity and stability, is now mostly scrubland. Flimsy barriers erected by the property owners block the winding access road that once saw hundreds, perhaps thousands, of vehicles ascend and descend on a daily basis.
Life has a way of doing  things like that. No matter who or what it is, as soon as you start to counting on it and to figuring it'll be around forever, it's gone.
Jerks your feet right out from under you.
Things change, and as hard as we fight it or deny it, everything keeps on changing without ever skipping a beat.
When yours truly moved to Yazoo City in 1967, Yazoo City High School (YCHS) was already legendary. Willie Morris, a YCHS graduate, was already on a roll. One of the school's most promising students, Haley Barbour, had graduated some four years earlier, and the school's curriculum and faculty was known to be the best when it came to college prep.
In those years, one of Yazoo City's greatest assets was its public school system. People came to live in Yazoo City partly because of the city's excellent schools. Parents supported the schools. The community's leaders supported the schools. School support was a given.
Things were good for a few decades.
But at some point, things took a turn for the worse.
Chaos, misguided ideals and ineptness in the school system's leadership began to eat away at the foundations of the schools in their charge. The white flight drained the schools of students and state funding. Traditional values were gradually replaced by alternate lifestyles. Family situations in a changing society posed threats that weakened a once grand curriculum, and Title One designation, a cash cow among public schools, became one of the school district's primary goals.
According to news reports, gangs now roam YCHS's halls and police presence has become common place. Hopefully, there are some successful teaching stories still to be had there, but all we hear of now is mostly about teachers who are throwing up their hands because discipline is a thing of the past.
It's easy for a person to say he knows what the problem is and how he would change it, but we all know about the difference between saying it and doing it.
How do you fix Yazoo City's struggling school district? To be successful at that would demand that you fix our struggling home situations, our unemployment problems, our crime problems, our progressively decreasing church memberships, our health and fitness needs, our housing needs and just about everything else that you need to have a healthy community.
Having spent 24 years teaching in YCHS's classrooms, it breaks my heart to read and hear about such chaos and instability in a once-grand school district. I count it an honor to have been a faculty member in such a fine school. Never in my wildest dreams did I ever imagine that conditions would get so bad.
I grieve for those students who are genuine about their desire to learn but can't because of the interruptions. I grieve for those teachers whose dreams of a successful teaching career have been challenged. I grieve for the administrators whose intentions are sterling and in the best interests of the students, but who can't lead due to the challenges coming from outside the schools.
As one person said during last week's community prayer and praise service, it's something that's gone far beyond Man's ability to fix. We need to pray daily for God to fix Yazoo City's school system.
Yazoo City High School has undergone some tremendous changes in the last three or four decades. Unlike MCC's administrative building, it's still standing.
It's been a long time since I walked its halls and felt the thrill of education it once held.
And every time I drive past the school, I can't help but tear up.

 
Letters to the editor

Dear Editor,
The decision by the present school board not to renew the teaching and coaching contract of Mr. Archie Carlyle was a planned and calculated act of politics. This kind of thing has been happening for years.
They didn’t follow policies or procedures in this matter. The state’s report on the district asked the board to stop interfering in this kind of situation, but it seems they didn’t get the memo.
My mother always put her 11 children first in making decisions for their futures. It is clear this board did not do that.
Mr. Carlyle’s only crime was putting his students first. I feel like Jesus, when he told the people at the well, “He who is without sin cast the first stone.”
I and the 800 people who have signed the petition calling for Carlyle’s return can find no fault in his dedication to our community. We are being laughed at across the state, and on Facebook and Twitter.
Our community is losing faith in our ability to work in a productive and successful district. The Yazoo Herald’s sports editor called it a “travesty.” I ask the question, where are all those Christian folks, his co-workers, his pastor and his fellow church members?
Where are the athletes, past and present, and most of all where are the parents? He has mothered and fathered when you were unable to make it to a game or on the road, giving your children heart-to-heart talks of motivation and encouragement both in the halls of our schools and on the streets of this community. Now he deserves your support in this critical matter.
This affects us all, black and white, because the future of our community is at stake. I am asking everyone to show as much concern about this matter as they do during election time.
Mr. Clifton Jones, I sat on the school board when you and your wife in a 3 to 2 vote were denied what you rightfully deserved. When you first ran for alderman you were the only politician I ever spent an entire day with, walking the streets because I believed in you. When I ran for mayor as an independent, I endorsed McArthur Straughter in the primary. Many people thought I was crazy, but I was exercising my rights.
Mr. Aubry Brent Jr., I followed you from Vicksburg to Belzoni and saw people commit perjury to defeat you. When citizens support a candidate, they want something in return. As a citizen with the 800 petitioners, we are calling in our wager. Just get the record of the board of that decision, which is public record. Check the timeline of the action, and you will be amazed. Next month you will appoint or reappoint a board member, but before you do we deserve answers.
If you find me wrong I will come back and sit before you and the school board and give a public apology. Everyone deserves their day in court, and Mr. Carlyle certainly does.
What you do or don’t do will determine the caliber of teachers and coaches willing to come into our community and work with our children.

Johnny Staples

glo-baker

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