Sunday, February 13, 2011
AKRON MOM, PENNSYLVANIA DAD, JAILED FOR 10 DAYS FOR WANTING A BETTER EDUCATION FOR THEIR CHILDREN- Parents Learn That Wanting A Quality Education Cost
American Courts Are Sending The Wrong Message About Disparity In The United States Education System- “SEPARATE AND UNEQUAL” is O.K.
Let’s take a step back in time to remember the infamous case “Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka”, now let’s fast forward to the present, the cases of Summit County v. Kelley Williams-Bolar and The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania v. Irwin Jacobowitz.
Outrage pours out over courts, schools, administrators, and educators punishment of parents who seek a better quality education for their children. No longer is race the leading factor separating children from a quality education, it is their parent’s financial status, parent’s tax bracket, the neighborhood in which they live, and who they know. Don’t jail the parents for wanting a better education for their children, jail school officials for not providing one-“POOR CHILD LEFT BEHIND.”
Many in affluent neighborhoods may applaud the latest Summit County court decision, but overall the lack of education or a poor quality education for our youngest citizens in our country destroys the economy. Summit County Judge, Patricia Cosgrove, sentenced Akron mom, Kelley Williams-Bolar, to 10 days in jail on felony charges after she was convicted by a jury and sentenced to 5 years in prison (two terms). Ms. Williams-Bolar was convicted on record tampering so that her children could attend Copley-Fairlawn Schools. The Copley-Fairlawn School district maintained that the mom lied on affidavits by swearing that her two children lived at her father’s address. Her father lived in the school district and paid school taxes. The district spent $6,000. of tax payer dollars for a private investigator to follow Ms. Williams-Bolar.
Dad, Irwin Jacobowitz, is too familiar with Ms. Williams-Bolar’s situation, he too was sentenced to 10 days in jail in Chester County Pennsylvania in 2007. Mr. Jacobowitz was thrown in prison in Pennsylvania for 10 days for advocating for his son, diagnosed with autism, to receive an appropriate education without being restrained in school. After serving the 10 days in prison, Mr. Jacobowitz was marched into court with shackles on his ankles and wrists, in front of school officials, his wife, and three children aged 8, 6, and 4.
In response to America’s failing schools, the American public has expressed its’ discontent for legal cases that punishes parents who advocate for a better quality of education for their children. Education reform centers on the existence of better quality schools. On January 25, 2011, President Obama spoke about restoring the nation’s schools to a position of prominence and excellence. How long can our children wait?
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