Another building for District 150?

Am I the only one who was flummoxed by the Journal Star story today that District 150 is applying to get the old Social Security Administration building on Knoxville?  Cindy Fischer (Interim Superintendant) is reported to have explained that the district could use it to expand the Transition to Success Academy, currently housed in White Middle School. 
 
Isn’t this the district that is looking to combine primary and middle schools so they can get rid of some of their buildings?  Just as recently as May 19, the Journal Star reported that the district is considering closing schools to “close its budget shortfall of $19 million over three years.”  So why in the world would they want another building?
 
Just because the purchase price may be free doesn’t mean that the building won’t cost money to maintain and operate.  And office buildings aren’t exactly laid out conducively for a school; are the kids going to sit at modular office cubicles instead of school desks?  I would imagine there would need to be a fair amount of renovation before it would be adequate for a school setting.  And what about location?  There’s no greenspace for children to play, and it’s right on state route 40 — one of the busiest arteries in the city. 
 
Hopefully, the Human Service Center will decide they want the building and make this discussion moot (they get first dibs).  But if they don’t want it, District 150 should also pass it up.  There’s nothing free about owning property, and the last thing the district needs is more expense.

Felt: Jilted G-Man

I’m getting a bit tired of the glorification of W. Mark Felt, alias “Deep Throat.” The Journal Star editorial board published their paean to Felt today (“Deep Throat did service for nation”).

The editorial excuses all of Felt’s illegal actions and questionable motives with an ends-justify-the-means apology. “There were crooks in the White House,” they exclaim. Yes, and apparently there was a crook in the number-two position at the FBI as well — a guy who was bitter about being passed over for the top spot at the Bureau and wanted to take revenge; a guy who was convicted for violating American’s civil rights; a guy who thought the Bureau was so corrupt that he couldn’t go through proper channels, but didn’t mind drawing a paycheck from them; a man who broke the law and his trust with the President by leaking classified information.

The Journal Star (and many others) forgive all these indiscretions. They point out that Felt was later pardoned for his civil-rights violation conviction. So what? Nixon was pardoned, too.

The truth is, Felt is no better than Nixon. He’s just a jilted G-man, not a hero. And a paper that laments that “America’s judicial system . . . was at stake” under Nixon’s administration shouldn’t be celebrating vigilante justice in the FBI.