Newark School Chief Cami Anderson Ditches Rowdy Meeting After Remarks About Her ‘Brown Baby'

City's School Chief Ditches Rowdy Meeting After 'Brown Baby' Remarks
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Things got seriously personal at a school board meeting in Newark, N.J., this week.

Hundreds of parents, teachers and community activists gathered Tuesday night to discuss Newark Superintendent Cami Anderson’s plan to improve education in the city, according to New Jersey Spotlight. But it wasn’t long before speakers began insulting Anderson, and after about two hours, she reached her breaking point.

New Jersey Spotlight says Anderson left the rowdy meeting after a community activist made a comment about the Caucasian leader’s biracial child. “Do you not want for our brown babies what you want for your brown baby?” Natasha Allen reportedly asked Anderson.

The meeting continued in the superintendent's absence.

This incident comes about a month after Anderson unveiled her “One Newark” plan, which would expand the presence of charter schools in the district and close several community schools. While Anderson has said the plan is designed to increase dwindling enrollment and improve failing schools, critics see it as an attack on public education and complain that it was put together without public input.

The plans were developed behind closed doors without meaningful community input,” Ras Baraka, a New Jersey councilman and candidate for Newark mayor, wrote in Patch in December. “The state appointed superintendent claims that her plan will assure all students access to an excellent school, but the reality is that there are failing charter schools and failing public schools.”

Anderson is not an elected official. She was appointed by the state in 2011. Newark School District has been controlled by the state of New Jersey since 1995.

Earlier this month, Anderson came under particular scrutiny after five Newark principals, who had criticized the "One Newark" plan, were suspended from their jobs. The principals recently filed a federal lawsuit over the incident, claiming that their First Amendment rights were violated and seeking a restraining order against Anderson, according to the New Jersey Star-Ledger.

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Before You Go

The State Of New Jersey Schools
Abandoned Classroom(01 of21)
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Jada Bailey, one of the two courageous students who invited Gov. Christie to tour Trenton Central High School, seated in an abandoned classroom. These pictures are part of the “A Blind Eye: The Immorality Of Inaction" photo exhibit. In October, the New Jersey Healthy Schools Now Coalition set up the exhibit in front of the New Jersey state house to protest the conditions in some resource-starved schools.Note: All photo captions courtesy of New Jersey Healthy Schools Now. (credit:Photo by Andrew Wilkinson, www.wilkinsonmedia.net)
Food Preparation Room(02 of21)
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Food preparation room, Elementary School No. 20, Paterson.
Rain Soaked Hallway(03 of21)
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Seven Alford, one of the two courageous students who invited Gov. Christie to tour Trenton Central High School, standing in a rain soaked hallway. (credit:Photo by Andrew Wilkinson, www.wilkinsonmedia.net. )
Staircase(04 of21)
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Trenton Central High School Principal Hope Grant escorts a visitor up the staircase known to students as “The Waterfall.”
Staircase(05 of21)
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Trenton Central High School staircase known to students as “The Waterfall.”
Roof Leak(06 of21)
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Trenton Central High School Principal Hope Grant points out the roof leak that feeds rainwater to the staircase known to students as “The Waterfall.”
Mouse Droppings(07 of21)
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Mouse droppings in an in-use classroom, Elementary School No. 20, Paterson.
Hallway(08 of21)
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A hallway used by students in Trenton Central High School.
Urgently Needed School(09 of21)
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The site of the urgently needed Gloucester City Elementary School. Students are currently attending school in a previously condemned building.
Long-term Use Trailors(10 of21)
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Thirty-one long-term use trailers at Phillipsburg High School. The new high school is yet to be built.
Abandoned Site(11 of21)
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The abandoned site of the Hazel Marshall school in Paterson, needed to relieve severe overcrowding.
Hallway(12 of21)
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Hallway wall, Elementary School No. 20, Paterson.
Bathroom(13 of21)
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Bathroom used by students, Elementary School No. 20, Paterson.
Classroom(14 of21)
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Warped floorboards in an in-use classroom, Elementary School No. 20, Paterson.
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Exposed wall switch in a student bathroom, Elementary School No. 20, Paterson.
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Temperature inside an in-use classroom, October 7, Elementary School No. 20, Paterson.
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Broken window in an in-use classroom, Elementary School No. 20, Paterson.
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Teacher bathroom, Elementary School No. 20, Paterson.
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Trenton Central High School cafeteria.
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Classroom used by students, Trenton Central High School.
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Main entrance, Trenton Central High School.