
On Monday night, theย Durham County Board of Commissioners announced a โbroadย investigation of all issuesโ pertaining toย the county managerโs accusation that a commissionerย targeted him with racist comments.
County Commissioner Wendy Jacobsโsย acknowledgment that county manager Wendell Davisโs feelings were hurt by the alleged comments was met with a round of boos and catcalls by the capacity audience, comprised mostly of African American residents.
Normally, fewer than a half-dozen residents attend the commissionersโ meetings.
Last week, the INDY reported onย Davisโs February 11 letter accusing Commissioner Heidi Carter of an โinherent biasโ towardย him and โall people of color in general.โ In response, the commissionersโ chambers were filled to capacity with African Americans and others who called for an investigation into or censure of Carterโs alleged comments.
Among other things, Davis said Carter had aimed disparaging remarks at him during a February 3 work session when, according to his letter, she said the county could have completed a funding plan to improve Durham Public Schools facilities โsooner, were it not for the manager.โย
Omar Beasley, chairman of the Durham Committee on the Affairs of Black People, called for an investigation, telling commissioners that residents have a right to know what happened.
โWe ask that it be taken seriouslyโbecause it is seriousโand investigated impartially so that the facts are revealed,โ Beasley said. โAnd as citizens, we are entitled to know what happened here and what outcomes will result.โย
Resident Andrea Hudson told commissioners that โhere we have a black manโ making what he felt were โvalidโ claims of racism, and there needed to be an outside investigation. โIf not,โ she said, โthen basically youโre letting white supremacy reign.โ
Jackie Wagstaff told commissioners that she served with Carter on the school board in the 2000s, and Davisโs letter rang true.
โGo back and look at the minutes and documents,โ said Wagstaff. โThe vote was always on racial lines. I understand what Wendell Davis has written, and I wish I had written it first.โ
Several residents were peeved after reading Davisโs claimย that Carter told him soon after taking office, โYou work for the Board, and when we tell you to do something, you better grin and bear it.โ Davis likened her remarks โto a time in American history when people of color were slaves and of more recent history, when people of color suffered under Jim Crow and segregation laws.โ
More than a few of the mostly middle-agedย and older African Americans in attendance agreed.
Edward G. Bell toldย commissioners that Carterย โdenigratedโ Davis and spoke to him as if โhe is not qualified to do what he does unless he does exactly what sheโs telling him to do. He has done his job in an exemplary manner.โ
Civil rights veteran E. Lavonia Allison, who led the Durham Committee before stepping down in 2011, said there was something to Davisโs claims, adding thatย racism is so ingrained in every thread of American lifeโhousing, education, and the likeโthat many times white peopleย donโt even realize that their comments are racist.ย
Davisโs letter has convulsed local politics with an election coming next week.
Several of Carterโs defendersโincluding school board chairman Mike Leeโargued that Davis had political motivations for writing the letter and ensuring it circulated to the press. (Davis did not leak the letter to the INDY.) In a Facebook post, Lee, who is black, said Davis was using racism to obscure his real goal: defeating Carter so he could get his contract renewed next year.ย
The Peopleโs Alliance has reaffirmed its support of Carter, as has city council member Jillian Johnson, who is black.ย
Carter, who is running for a second term as a commissioner after serving 12 years on the school board, told the INDY last week that Davisโs letter โcontains misquotes and fabricationsโ while making โbaseless claimsโ against her. She says it wasnโt racism but frustration that fueled her comments about school funding. She thinks Davisโs letter served two purposes: retaliation for her criticism and to influence the outcome of the March 3 primary.
Despite calls for an investigation, censure, or an apology, Carterโwho last week told the INDY that she realized her experiences are shaped by white privilegeโreiterated that her concern about education, not racism, was at the heart of her remarks on February 3.
โIโve listened carefully, and I hear your concerns,โ Carter said. She said she took the allegations seriously, but she was โdeeply disturbed and disappointedโ that the county manager did not speak to her in private or in a closed session with the board instead of lodging โharsh, unsupported allegations, and in such a public way,ย two weeks before the elections.โ
She said her intent was not to diminish Davisโs leadership, but if that was the impact, โplease know that I did not intend them that way. โฆ But I want to be clear, and it is important to my integrity that I say this: I unequivocally deny the misquotes in the letter and that my actionsย were ever racially motivated. That is simply not true.
โMy relentless and passionate advocacy for our schoolchildren is because I believe that public education is the system where we actually have the greatest opportunity to address racial inequities. I will not apologize for this advocacy.โย
Contact staff writer Thomasi McDonald at [email protected].
Correction: This story originally said that the Durham Association of Educators had rescinded its endorsement of Commissioner Brenda Howerton. That is not accurate. In addition, Heidi Carterโs comments from the meeting have been expanded and clarified, and the first paragraph has been altered to more accurately reflect the boardโs actions.
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When you have a chip on your shoulder, you bridle at any “authority”; yet, that is the way we govern, Wendell. The Commissioners are elected by the people, and the people have authority over YOU, Weldell. Get a clue.