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The Carr brothers, Jeff and Greg
The Carr brothers, Jeff and Greg
The Betrayal of Historically Black Colleges
For decades, states have been funding their white campuses while starving their Black ones. In Tennessee, that could finally change.
September 24, 2021
Nashville
The student was crouched on a catwalk over a Tennessee State University theater when he received the signal over his walkie-talkie, minutes before midnight: The occupation was a go.
He scrambled down a ladder and unlocked the doors to the administration building’s loading dock, allowing hundreds of student protesters to pour in from the cold February air in 1990.
The operation was directed by jeff obafemi carr, then a senior and president of the university’s student government. Administrators at the historically Black university had failed to meet a deadline to respond to students’ demands for modern dorms, reliable hot water, and safe lighting.
Carr’s flair for the dramatic would ensure national headlines. A theater-and-speech major, he knew just where to plant a co-conspirator, armed with provisions, before the building was locked. Students barricaded themselves inside with chains and locks. Helicopters whirred overhead, and helmeted police officers stood by, before a truce was reached and long-promised repairs began.
The students declared victory. Over the next few years, a new student center and performing-arts center went up, and buildings across the campus were renovated.
Those improvements, though, masked a far-deeper problem that is only now, 31 years later, being fully recognized. In April a joint legislative committee concluded that the university had been shortchanged by as much as half a billion dollars in state funding since 1957. As a result, the university is once again facing hundreds of millions of dollars in deferred maintenance, leaving parts of its campus crumbling.
Jeff obafemi carr led a 1990 protest of campus conditions as the student-government president at Tennessee State U. (left). He is now an interfaith activist in Nashville (right).
“I hear students talking about the same issues we complained about 31 years ago,” said carr, now a spiritual leader and community activist in Nashville, on a recent visit to campus (carr lowercases his names as a sign of humility).
At a moment when the nation’s spotlight is shining on the achievements and promise of historically Black colleges, the attention is exposing cracks in their foundations. Tennessee State and HBCUs across the country are recognizing the impact that decades of discriminatory investments have had on their campuses. State governments have, through their unequal approaches to matching federal grants, essentially padded their predominantly white land-grant institutions while starving their historically Black ones.
Now, three decades after activists at TSU first captured national attention, those longstanding inequities have been brought to light by another Tennessee State alumnus, who entered the university just as carr was about to graduate.
Harold M. Love Jr., now a Democratic state representative from Nashville, heads the joint legislative committee that unearthed the disparities in Tennessee’s higher-education funding. Love and carr strolled across the campus with a Chronicle reporter on a sultry mid-August day, when temperatures soared into the high 90s.
Harold M. Love Jr., a member of the Tennessee House of Representatives
“You’ve done a good job of digging,” carr told Love. “It’s going to take continued pressure from everyone to hold the state accountable. If you don’t hold its feet to the fire, it’s out of sight, out of mind.”
They chatted with students who’d just finished moving into their dormitories, excited to be back but wishing the air conditioning worked better. When Love was a student, in the early ’90s, “there were hot days when the AC wasn’t working and cold days when the heat wasn’t working,” he said.
On the surface, the campus has greatly improved from the days when Love and carr were students. At the main entrance, white columns line a courtyard that connects two renovated, red-brick buildings, forming a welcoming campus center. A state-of-the-art Health Sciences Center opened in June, and construction is underway on a 700-bed residence hall.
But much of the campus is in disrepair. Greenhouses that were shredded in a tornado last year remain unfixed, alongside the remains of an agriculture center where livestock research was once conducted. In one academic hall, a computer-science suite lies vacant, waiting for repairs to an HVAC system whose leaking water has seeped through the floors. In another, patches of plaster curl from a ceiling damaged by leaks, and cracks spider-web across the floor.
Learotha Williams Jr., who teaches African American and public history, tells a story about a colleague who, years ago, rigged up a funnel and hose to drain a roof leak into her wastebasket. “I walked in and asked her if she was brewing moonshine,” Williams joked.
Another history professor, Erik Schmeller, recalled “cutting off the fingers of gloves to work” in a cold section of Crouch Hall, an academic building that dates to 1967. In Holland Hall, where he now works, windows don’t open and the air conditioning struggles to keep up with the sweltering heat, he said.
The computer-science offices in the university’s McCord Building are currently unusable due to a leaking HVAC system.
Perhaps the worst jolt to the university’s infrastructure came in the fall of 2019, when a lightning strike in Nashville damaged underground wires in the campus’s aging electrical system, leaving thousands of students without consistent electricity and hot water for months. Students circulated an online petition that demanded tuition refunds.
When roofs leak and the power goes out, Love said, it’s natural for critics to accuse university leaders of shoddy management. “No president puts off maintaining the electrical grid,” but the university “did not have the money to keep it maintained,” he said. “It was doing the best with what it had.”
How did the conditions at Tennessee State end up worse than those at other universities in the state, whose buildings are newer, electrical systems modernized, and dorms more likely to offer amenities like shared kitchens and semiprivate bathrooms? The answer lies, in part, with how the nation’s land-grant universities are compensated.