California
judge Rolf Treu ruled Tuesday in the Vergara v.California case that California teacher
tenure laws deprive students of their right to an education that is
guaranteed under the state Constitution
and violates their civil rights. The decision is a major defeat for teachers’
unions and will presumably lead to challenges of tenure laws in other states. The ruling overturned five state statutes
giving California teachers firing protections and rights to tenure and
seniority.
The implementation of the ruling has been stayed while under
appeal.
The Sacramento Bee editorial board and Bee columnists Marcos
Breton and Dan Walters, along with their candidate Marc Tucker each applaud the
court ruling. Note what they say in their columns. They applaud this defeat of
the teachers unions, they do not deal with the critical issue of adequate
school funding.
What do the sides agree upon?
It is clear that many students in California receive a
substandard education and that failing schools are concentrated in poor and
minority neighborhoods. The judge cites
the long history of successful law
suites Serrano V. Priest I, II. III, and more that mandated changes in state
funding to provide equal funding. There
is also general agreement that teacher quality is a significant factor in
improving education.
The problem is that the remedy of the corporate
“reformers” and of the court does not resolve the basic issues. It deals with teacher placement, tenure, and
freedom of speech, not the adequate funding of schools. It may at most respond to the 1-3 % of poor teachers in the classrooms.
California is one of a number of states that require in their state constitution that the state provide adequate public education. This has been reaffirmed numerous times in
Serrano v. Priest 1,2,, 3 and cited again in this court ruling.
What is the current status of school funding ?
In spite of over this
40 years of court rulings, California has avoided equity of funding . This may
be resolved in the next 8 years with the
new Local Control Funding bill, but we
don’t know.
Since 1978 Prop. 13 tax
cuts, California has been inadequate in its funding of public schools. California’s
per-pupil spending was $1,421 below the national average in 2011,
placing it 36th in the nation. During
the crisis the k-12 budget “solutions”
cut some billion dollars from the schools In 2007/2008
California spent $9,158 per pupil, before the economic crisis, and in
2008/2009, California spent $7,712 per
pupil. Californians have larger classes and fewer teachers than
other states.
This
year’s state budget will finally return
us to our pre recession levels of funding for schools. The new funding is a result of a teacher union led campaign – along with
union allies- working to pass Prop. 30 a temporary 5 year tax on the
wealthy to benefit the schools and to fund a limited number of other social services, Schools are beginning to receive these funds
and to recover.
Where were the corporate “reformers” and the Democrats for
Educational Reform, Student First, Michelle Rhee crowd during the campaign to fund the schools
?
Absent.
Instead of working for adequate funding they pursued the Vergara case. That is, they assert that the problem isn’t poverty nor underfunding schools. We don’t need to raise taxes. Rather, the
problem is teacher unions.
There is scant evidence to support this assertion. These
corporate funded reformers, many of the Democrats, are the same forces that brought us No Child
Left Behind, Race to the Top, and test based “accountability.”
This is a classic neoliberal switch of issues - recognize and promote an economic “crisis’, then propose a ‘ solution’ that corresponds to your narrow
self interest.
So, the problem is inadequate schools for some students and
the corporate “solution’ is to blame bad
teachers and to assault teacher unions.
In the Vergara v
California case the corporate “reform”
crowd has won the first step in the courts and they have to date lost the debates with the voters.
This is a war of positions.
The battles continue from year to
year. Which side are you on ?
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