In this
case the News and Review covers what the Sacramento Bee ignores.
Speaking of that whole Waiting for ‘Superman’ cult: What was Sacramento’s
first couple doing this election season while hundreds of millions of dollars
were on the line for Sacramento schools? Roving the country, trying to screw up
other people’s school systems, of course.
Michelle Rhee, patron saint of the teacher-bashing movement, has been using
her Sacramento-based StudentsFirst organization—a 501(c)(4) “social
welfare” organization, of course—to funnel money into ballot measures in
several states.
In Michigan, StudentsFirst
funded anti-union groups trying to defeat a ballot measure that would put the
right to organize unions for private and public employees into the state’s
constitution. It’s a right that is recognized in the United Nations’ Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, but apparently not one that Rhee thinks Michigan
teachers (or any other workers) should have.
“I love teachers. Effective
teachers,” she told members of the Michigan state Legislature while lobbying
against the measure. By “effective” Rhee means teachers with high test scores:
exactly the kind of evaluation system she instituted as chancellor of the
Washington, D.C., schools before her boss, Mayor Adrian Fenty, was
unelected and Rhee had to follow. The same kind of system that Raymond was
warning about in his critique of Race to the Top.
StudentsFirst also poured money
during this election into a Georgia ballot measure that, if passed,
would make it possible for charter-school companies to get approval from state
officials, even if local school boards turn them down. Rhee’s group is one of
the biggest contributors—at $250,000—along with Alice Walton, heiress of
the Walmart fortune.
And StudentsFirst backed another
ballot measure in Bridgeport, Conn., to turn control of the
schools over to that city’s mayor. Rhee’s husband, Sacramento Mayor Kevin
Johnson, personally flew out to Bridgeport to stump for the measure—because,
again, nothing important was going on with schools or elections in Sacramento
that was more deserving of his time.
Johnson was dubbed by the local
newspaper, the Connecticut Post, as “a national leader in education reform”
when he came to town. And according to the local reporter, “Johnson said he
wished his city was about to switch to an appointed board.” Yeah, bet he did.
Sacramento’s meddling mayor,
however, was not appreciated by one of Bridgeport’s local school-board members:
John Bagley, also a former NBA player, who played against Johnson back
in the day.
“Don’t come into my house and mess
with my right to vote!” Bagley wrote in the Post.
“I guess he’s an OK mayor of
Sacramento … although I’m not familiar with the politics of a city 3,000 miles
away from here,” Bagley said. “Because ’KJ’ decided to fly in from California
and support the ongoing efforts to disenfranchise my friends and neighbors, I
think he should be whistled for a technical foul. I wish he was here to go
one-on-one concerning the subject of democracy.”
You know, actually, it sounds like
Bagley understands Sacramento politics pretty well.
Read the entire column by Cosmo
Garvin at Sacramento News and Review. http://www.newsreview.com/sacramento/superintendent-man-the-meddling/content?oid=8292087
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