Le Journal

Président de la Communauté des Communes de Corte centre Corse, Antoine Orsini, quitte la politique
Elu pour la première fois au conseil municipal de Corte en 1989, Antoine Orsini, hydrobiologiste à l’Université de Corse, est président de l’intercommunalité de Corte centre Corse depuis 2020. Après 37 ans d’un engagement politique soutenu et actif, il a décidé de ne pas briguer un nouveau mandat électif. Cette décision, Antoine Orsini l’a « mûrement réfléchie ». Dans un communiqué, le président de la Communauté des Communes de Corte centre Corse affirme cependant qu’il ne s’agit pas d’un « renoncement ou d’un désengagement », mais il estime qu’après 37 années d’élu pour le bien commun, son parcours doit prendre fin. À la tête de la 4C, Antoine Orsini a conduit de nombreux chantiers, que ce soit au niveau de la gestion des déchets ménagers que de la gestion de l’assainissement avec, par exemple, la fin des travaux de la station de traitement des eaux usées de Muracciole-Vivario ainsi que la réfection du réseau d’eau et le réseau d’assainissement de la vieille ville de Corte. L’avant-projet de construction de la Station de traitement des eaux usées de Rospigliani a également été lancé cette année. Le troisième grand dossier porté par Antoine Orsini durant cette mandature a concerné la GEMAPI (Gestion de l’Eau, des milieux Aquatiques et la Prévention des Inondations). Après avoir renouvelé la convention avec l’ONF, il a lancé une étude de faisabilité concernant l’entretien et le nettoyage des berges des rivières. Antoine Orsini relève donc des années d’engagement « au service de notre commune, de notre territoire, de ses habitantes et de ses habitants. J’ai eu l’honneur d’exercer les fonctions d’adjoint au maire pendant dix-neuf années, et celles de président de la communauté de communes du Centre Corse durant six années. Ces responsabilités, je les ai assumées avec sérieux, humilité et détermination », explique-t-il, avant de poursuivre ... CNI en libre accès. Primu media pure player di Corsica Per voi, incù voi in ogni locu. Premier média pure player corse. Pour vous, avec vous partout

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California’s Failing Schools Would Distress Martin Luther King Today
Monday is a national holiday to celebrate the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Across the nation, tributes will be paid to the man who willingly went to jail to ensure that we would overcome civil rights injustices. Boulevards, parks and libraries bear his name. Statues of him stand across the nation. So many honors for a man who inspired us to dream. It’s been: • seventy-two years since the 1954 Supreme Court ended schoolhouse race segregation with Brown v. Board of Education. • sixty-three years since the historic 1963 March on Washington Dr. King led. One of the march’s key demands was school integration. • forty-three years since the 1983 publication of “A Nation at Risk”. Intended as a wakeup call, it warned us that “the educational foundations of our society are presently being eroded by a rising tide of mediocrity that threatens our very future as a nation and a people.” How do African American students fare today? Consider these California facts: There are 281,645 African American students across all California TK-12 traditional district and independent public charter schools—5% of the state’s 5,806,221 million students. Only 33% meet or exceed proficiency levels in Reading (English Language Arts-ELA); only 20 % in Math. California spends almost half its entire multi-billion budget on education, and Governor Newsom boasted in his State of the State address about boosting education spending even more in his proposed 2026 budget. Yet, Newsom’s years as Governor reveals he has been a detriment to educational success for African American students as reflected in the California Smarter Balanced state testing results. The shocking takeaway is that learning outcomes for African American students have actually decreased since Newsom was first elected Governor in 2018 in both Reading (-0.44%) and Math (-0.48%). So, as we honor the legacy of yet another Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. holiday by going to parades where politicians wave to crowds, these statistics should shock the conscience of every Californian. If education is the key to the American Dream, then African American children in the Golden State have been abjectly prevented from attaining such. Yet, Sacramento—dominated by Democrat One-Party rule which bends to the will of the powerful teachers’ unions and the alphabet soup of education special interests, continues in its paralysis on doing anything substantive to turn around these shameful conditions for the millions of kids trapped in failing schools. What it does, rather, is throw more money at the problem while celebrating diversity, equity and inclusion by continuing to name schools after the civil rights leader. Each year on the King holiday, I pen a column showcasing how, overwhelmingly, schools named for Dr. King fail to meet basic academic benchmarks established by the state for Reading and Math. It is usually received as a scream into the abyss of government sponsored failure, but my hope is always that—one year—the tide will turn and a national emergency will be called by the responsible politicians and elected leaders in charge of this systemic failure. Today there are 20 schools named for Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr– including both traditional district schools and independent charter schools. Undoubtedly, every school should excel. But naming a school for a national hero should bear an even greater expectation that all who enter that school should excel. At Sacramento’s Martin Luther King, Jr. Elementary School—just blocks from the State Capitol where the Governor, Legislature, Superintendent of Public Instruction, State Board of Education meet to decide education policy—only 31% meet or exceed Reading standards and only 27% in Math. The “good news” is that these outcomes have risen almost 4% for Reading, 2% for Math in one year. Yet, at this rate of “closing the academic gap”, it would take almost a century for African American children to get to the promised land of educational equality and…

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“60 Minutes” Finally Airs Sharyn Alfonsi’s Infamous El Salvador Prison Piece Tonight, While “CBS Sunday Morning” Also Fights Back
CBS is finally airing Sharyn Alfonsi’s banned “60 Minutes” segment tonight You can still watch it here because two weeks ago, the network had already sent the show to Canadian TV. New CBS chief Bari Weiss was heavily criticized for pulling the piece about Donald Trump sending Venezuelan prisoners to a torture chamber prison in […] The post “60 Minutes” Finally Airs Sharyn Alfonsi’s Infamous El Salvador Prison Piece Tonight, While “CBS Sunday Morning” Also Fights Back appeared first on Showbiz411.
