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Supersized Dollars Drive 'Waiting for Superman' Agenda
In 1972, two young Washington Post reporters
were investigating a low-level burglary at the Watergate Hotel and
stumbled upon a host of unexplained coincidences and connections that
reached to the White House. 
One of the reporters, Bob Woodward, went to a high-level government source and complained: "The story is dry. All we've got are pieces. We can't seem to figure out what the puzzle is supposed to look like."
To which the infamous Deep Throat replied: "Follow the money. Always follow the money."
Sidestepping Democracy
For nearly 40 years, "follow the money" has been an axiom in both journalism and politics-although, as Shakespeare might complain, one "more honour'd in the breach than the observance."
It is useful to resurrect the axiom in analyzing the multimedia buzz and policy debates swirling around the movie Waiting for "Superman." In education, as in so many other aspects of society, money is being used to squeeze out democracy.
Waiting for "Superman" and its surrounding campaign reflect an influential trend that has proven adept at dominating education policy in both Republican and Democratic administrations. This bipartisan alliance unites 20th-century conservatives closely aligned with the Republican Party, who made the bulk of their money before the dawn of the digital era, and 21st-century billionaires more loosely aligned with the Democratic Party, who generally made their fortunes through digitally based technology. These two groups can be described as analog conservatives and digital billionaires.
Despite their differences, both groups embrace market-based reforms, entrepreneurial initiatives, deregulation, and data-driven/test-based accountability as the pillars of educational change. Under the banner of challenging bureaucracy and promoting innovation, both groups chafe at public oversight and collective bargaining agreements. Above all, both rely on money to get their way.
Two decades ago, challenges to public schools were spearheaded by groups such as the Christian Coalition, a grassroots, church-based phenomenon that sought to abolish the U.S. Department of Education and to elect religious conservatives to take over local and state school boards. Today's bipartisan corporate reformers tend to sidestep democracy altogether by abolishing school boards, promoting mayoral control, and hiring corporate-style CEOs who answer to a city's power elite. No longer preoccupied with abolishing the U.S. Department of Education, they instead use their wealth to effectively control it and to dictate reform.
Hedge Funds Bullish on Charter Schools
This developing alliance is evident in Waiting for "Superman" and in the transformation of the charter school movement that the film champions. Originally, charter school reform emerged out of progressive and union-sponsored efforts to promote innovation that could improve public schools, particularly in urban areas. But in the past decade privatizers, including fabulously wealthy hedge fund managers, have come to dominate the charter school movement and shape its policy agenda.
But first about hedge funds-those masters of the universe known for their financial speculation and insane levels of compensation. (The top 25 hedge fund managers took in an average of $1 billion each in 2009-enough to pay for 658,000 entry-level teachers.) Encompassing the lower and east side of Manhattan and extending north to Greenwich, Conn., is a kingdom that New York magazine has dubbed "Greater Hedgistan." Of the world's hedge funds with more than $1 billion in assets, a significant majority is based in Greater Hedgistan.
Smack dab in the middle of Greater Hedgistan is Harlem.
These two worlds-one rich, white, and powerful; the other poor, African American, and Latino but located on prime real estate-meet in the charter school world, although not as equal partners.
"Charters have attracted benefactors from many fields," a New York Times article noted almost a year ago. "But it is impossible to ignore that in New York, hedge funds are at the movement's epicenter."
Charters are edging out traditional public schools in Harlem and other poor neighborhoods-and the charters are overwhelmingly controlled by hedge fund directors and finance capitalists who sit on the boards of directors that are legally responsible for running the charter and establishing its financial, educational, and personnel policies. (There is more than a little irony that New York, home to one of the fiercest battles for community control of schools in the 1960s, is now a prime example of rich white billionaires controlling the education of low-income children of color.)
Take the board of trustees of the Success Charter Network, which, along with the Harlem Children's Zone, is featured prominently in the film. Of its nine members, seven are involved in hedge funds or investment companies. The eighth is CEO of the Institute for Student Achievement, and the ninth is a managing partner at the NewSchools Venture Fund, involved in both for-profit and nonprofit charters across the country. No community, parent, or teacher representatives sit on the Success Charter Network board of trustees.
There is no single reason why charter schools have become the must-be-involved cause among the hedge fund and finance capital crowd. Real estate obviously plays a role, as Harlem and the South Bronx are the poor neighborhoods most ripe for gentrification now that so much of Brooklyn has come under the reach of condos, trendy restaurants, Trader Joe's, and Ikea. (In New York City, no deal ever goes down that doesn't involve real estate.) And, just as clearly, there's old-fashioned altruism and missionary zeal at work. "What you're seeing is for the under-40 set, education reform is what feeding kids in Africa was in 1980," an education reformer said in explaining Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg's $100 million donation to the Newark public schools in September.
Another explanation is that the hedge fund crowd is comfortable with the charter way of doing business-overwhelmingly nonunion, which means that management gets to call all the shots; a guaranteed cash flow in the form of public dollars per student; minimal public oversight; lots of data and test scores; and an educational ideology based on a free-market model of schooling.
The minimal public transparency and oversight of charters is particularly in sync with the hedge fund culture. Infamous for their secrecy, hedge funds operate largely beyond public scrutiny. Their securities tend to be issued in "private offerings" that are not registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission, whose regulations were established in 1933 during the banking crises of the Great Depression. Nor are they required to make periodic reports under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. And, to play the game, you have to be rich, with millions of dollars to invest.
Charter schools are the type of entrepreneurial initiative that "electrifies" hedge fund managers, according to Whitney Tilson, a finance capitalist, founding member of Teach for America, and board member of the Knowledge Is Power Program (KIPP). "With the state providing so much of the money, outside contributions are insanely well leveraged," he told the New York Times.
Ravenel Boykin Curry IV of the money management firm Eagle Capital Management, who helped found the Girls Prep charter schools in New York, told the Times that charter schools are "exactly the kind of investment people in our industry spend our days trying to stumble on, with incredible cash flow, even if in this case we don't ourselves get any of it."
Charter schools have also become a way to network and hobnob with elite powerbrokers and celebrities (who knows what deal might emerge from such networking)-all in the name of helping poor people.
And, of course, there is money to be made. Harlem Children's Zone (HCZ), for instance, is one of the most financially well-endowed education reform efforts in the country. Following the film, in which its founder, Geoffrey Canada, emerged as the most charismatic of those featured, HCZ received millions-including $20 million from Goldman Sachs in mid-September. New York City is also contributing $60 million toward a $100 million new school.
HCZ had net assets of $194 million listed on its 2008 nonprofit tax report. Almost $15 million was in savings and temporary investments, and another $128 million was invested at a hedge fund. Given that most hedge funds operate on what is known as a 2-20 fee structure (a 2 percent management fee and a 20 percent take of any profits), some lucky hedge fund will make millions of dollars off HCZ in any given year.
Politics and Profits Make Reliable Bedfellows
Historically, charter and voucher initiatives have received their most consistent support from pro-Republican, traditional conservatives such as the Walton Foundation of Wal-Mart fame and the Bradley Foundation, based on the fortune of the Allen-Bradley Company in Milwaukee. This was especially true under the Reagan and both Bush administrations, when vouchers for private schools seemed the stronger of the voucher/charter "school choice" reforms. Vouchers were never popular with voters, however, and so much of the emphasis shifted to the more politically palatable charter reform-with corporate-oriented Democrats and digital billionaires jumping on to the school choice/charter bandwagon. Take away the Gates, Walton, and Broad foundations, Teach for America alumni, Democrats for Education Reform (DFER), and a few essential hedge fund and investment managers, and the pro-corporate charter movement would shrink significantly.
DFER is a national political action committee that promotes charter and other "school choice" options. The movie's central narrative metaphor-highly emotional public lotteries-turns out to have been perfected during a political strategy and public relations campaign engineered by Success Charter Network and DFER. A look at DFER and its relationship to Success Charter Network uncovers how the politics of charters operate in the real world rather than in the sanitized Hollywood version.
First, there are the personal connections-rich people rarely leave their fate to ping-pong balls and lotteries. John Petry, for instance, is on the boards of DFER, its nonprofit arm, Education Reform Now, and the Success Charter Network. Joel Greenblatt is on the DFER board of advisors and is chair of the Success Charter Network board.
Flooding the Zone, Bamboozling the Media
More interesting are the joint political efforts of the organizations, such as the 2008 effort "Flooding the Zone." This campaign makes clear that the charter lotteries have more to do with political propagandizing than with serving the needs of children and families.
The Flooding the Zone campaign was jointly decided upon by the leaders of Success Charter Network and DFER (and, allegedly, a group of parent activists that appears to be moribund now that this year's lottery is over). The campaign's purpose was to "go ‘on offense' to provide political cover" to increase the number of charters in Harlem, create a hospitable climate for charters to take over space in public schools, and promote the concept of parent choice.
The strategy was to create a groundswell of publicity for the charter lotteries and to "flood the zone" in Harlem with pro-school choice messages. No effort was spared, with hundreds of thousands of leaflets, multiple mailings to families, ads at bus stops, posters, and literature drops. Lacking a membership base, DFER used "an army of field workers, many high school students who were hired to blanket the neighborhood with materials." Success Charter Network coordinated the information and DFER coordinated the political rally.
A recent article in the New York Daily News reported that Success Charter Network spent $1.3 million on marketing between 2007 and 2009, with most of that going to the leaflets, posters, and mailings that were part of the Flooding the Zone campaign.
Flooding the Zone makes clear that the Success Charter School lottery was a conscious public relations effort. Given the political and economic clout behind DFER and Success Charter Network, and the inherent drama of a winner-take-all lottery, it's not surprising that Waiting for "Superman" used the lottery as its dramatic heart.
DFER's "Done Waiting" campaign, meanwhile, is a partner in the film's social action campaign, along with a who's who of traditional conservatives and digital-age billionaires including the Walton Family Foundation, the Broad Foundation, and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. (On the local level, groups such as the United Way and Stand for Children are coordinating efforts.) The Done Waiting partners, meanwhile, include not just charter organizations but also groups focused on vouchers for private and religious schools.
DFER prefers to play a behind-the-scenes role. The same is not true of the foundations that have emerged as the forces behind the corporate reform agenda that now dominates education policy discussions.
Although names like Rockefeller, Ford, Annenberg, and Carnegie traditionally have dominated foundation-funded education reform, in recent years a new group of foundations has emerged-Gates, Walton, and Broad, in particular. And all three are deeply involved in campaigns promoting the educational perspectives of Waiting for "Superman." (Gates is featured as an education "expert" in the film, which does not include an interview with a single public school teacher.)
Gates-whose education grants in the last decade approach the $3 billion mark-has been so dominant that he has been dubbed the country's education czar. Given the imperial nature of foundation-driven reform, the czar moniker is particularly appropriate. (Gates, with a net worth of about $53 billion, saw his worth increase by $13 billion alone last year, according to Forbes magazine.) Foundations, although benefiting from their status as nonprofits and thus essentially subsidized by U.S. taxpayers, are private institutions with private boards, able to make behind-the-scenes decisions and sidestep public accountability for the success or failure of their programs.
Given the realities of school funding, with public dollars focused on essential services, schools and districts-and even the U.S. Department of Education-often look to foundations to fund new initiatives. Add in grants to organizations such as Teach for America or the Charter School Growth Fund (which received $12 million from Gates this July), and the foundations have inordinate power in determining the future of public education.
"What we've done is create a new nobility, where basically the lords and ladies decide who gets the money," argues Barbara Dudley, head of the Veatch Foundation in the early 1990s, former director of Greenpeace, former president of the National Lawyers Guild, and currently an adjunct professor at Portland State University. "It is not democratic and you can't pretend that it is."
Education's role in strengthening our democratic institutions is a long-standing tradition in this country; it isn't a mistake that the right to a free public education is enshrined in every state constitution in the country. Yet many charter school promoters don't feel the need to make even a rhetorical nod toward democratic concerns.
The NewSchools Venture Fund, for instance, issued a 10-year report on its $100 million investment in nonprofit and for-profit initiatives and called the report "Investing in a Revolution." Although the words "entrepreneur," "entrepreneurs," and "entrepreneurial" show up 84 times in the report, the words "democracy" or "democratic" do not appear even once.
Which leads to a fundamental and unaddressed question: Should the American people put their faith in a white billionaire boys club to lead the revolution on behalf of poor people of color?
As educational historian Diane Ravitch notes, the corporate-based reform agenda undermines community and democracy and is subject "to the whim of entrepreneurs and financiers." The obsession with schools as a business, she notes, "threatens to destroy public education."
"Who will stand up to the tycoons and politicians and tell them so?"



17 Comments so far
Show All"The corporate-based reform agenda undermines community and democracy and is subject to the whim of entrepreneurs and financiers. The obsession with schools as a business . . threatens to destroy public education. Who will stand up to the tycoons and politicians and tell them so?"
People have told them. The difficulty is that there is no leverage to get them to hear and change their ways. Most of the elites don't care if public education is destroyed. They just want to keep themselves and their whims as the ones to be in charge and make the decisions
Davis Guggenheim who directed "Waiting for Superman" and "An Inconvenient Truth" is a self-described lefty liberal. Sadly, many affluent liberals, (Oprah Winfrey is another) are all on board for charter schools. All the politicians, whether D or R, are for school choice, charters and school vouchers. If it was not for the billionaires, rich libertarians, the right wingnutters and hedge fund managers, the politicians would not be pushing this bogus school choice crapola. Teachers and their unions are regularly smeared, demonized and swiftboated. The teachers' unions are portrayed as the big Satan and if only we could get rid of the unions, everything would be wonderful and we would have Nirvana.
Gov. Christie tries to portray NJ schools as failing in spite of the fact that NJ schools are in the top tier of schools in the US, rating number 2 or 3 best in the country. Of course, the schools in high unemployment, high poverty and high crime areas such as Camden and Newark are struggling and have tremendous problems. Instead of closing the schools and firing the teachers, how about doing something about the poverty. A strong social safety net and universal health care would go a long way toward alleviating these problems but that seems to be impossible in America. Christie and many NJ Democrats are pushing charter schools and school vouchers. Christie is out to destroy the unions by killing tenure and gutting collective bargaining rights. NJ has a highly rated school system with its unions while many of the states with much poorer performing schools have weak or non-existent teachers' unions. So blaming unions is a total fraud.
"NJ has a highly rated school system with its unions while many of the states with much poorer performing schools have weak or non-existent teachers' unions. So blaming unions is a total fraud"
California is now at the very bottom of the educational rankings, 49th or so. And it has very strong teacher unions.
If only the teachers unions in California were so strong that we could prevent drastic underfunding by the State and stupid regulations (NCLB, RTTT) from the Feds. Alas, not so, and many of our so-called allies have jumped on the charter bandwagon. Follow the money, indeed.
Mikep, then are you blaming teachers' unions for CA's poor performance? I thought that the problem in CA was that schools were under funded because of the draconian caps put on property taxes.
From edlawcenter.org:
California's Proposition 13, a property tax cap passed in 1978, has devastated the state's public schools. The tax cap has been a major factor in a 30-plus year decline from California's status as first in the nation in student achievement to almost dead last.
According to researchers from Rand, K-12 spending per pupil in California fell significantly under Proposition 13, dropping from more than $600 above the national average in 1978 (when Proposition 13 was passed) to more than $600 below the national average in 2000. This has forced many school districts in the state to cut programs such as music, physical education, and art; reduce class offerings; and cut positions, such as librarians and counselors.
California now has the second-highest student-teacher ratio of any state. And by 1999–2000, about 15% of the teacher workforce consisted of newly employed teachers, the majority of whom were not yet formally trained and certified. These relatively underqualified teachers have been concentrated in urban schools, in low performing schools, and in schools with high percentages of low-income and minority students.
Test scores in California public schools are now close to the bottom. Rand researchers analyzed scores on the National Assessment of Educational Progress on reading and mathematics for 4th and 8th graders in all 50 states from 1990 through 2003. California fared worse than every state except Louisiana and Mississippi."
CA's poor performance cannot be blamed on teachers' unions, it's the poor and lousy school funding formula.
I wasn't blaming anyone for anything, JerzyJoe. I was just making an observation, that's all. The suggestion was made that there is a correlation between strong teachers unions and better education, between right-to-work states and lower educational standards. I simply noted an instance where that doesn't appear to be true. I certainly agree that prop 13 is a major reason for Calif's decline. California's decline in education is not the fault of the unions, it's the fault of the voters. I will note, however, that the overwhelming majority of these same voters were educated in public schools, taught by union members. Whatever values they have were learned in public schools. And I will further note that, by the way, the majority of these very same voters are Democrats, not Republicans. And I will further note that during the past 30 years the Democrats in California have made absolutely no effort whatsoever to challenge or modify Prop 13, despite clearly having the votes to do so. Not drawing any conclusions, just observations by someone who has lived in Calif for nearly 60 years, and who, by the way, went to public schools in Calif, from kindergarten to grad school at UC.
I strongly favor public education. I strongly support unions. And I sent my kids to private schools, because their education simply couldn't wait until the voters get it together. ;)
Thanks for the excellent response. In my initial post on this thread, I was just countering the notion being proposed by Christie and the other GOP governors, that teachers' unions are some how the problem. Too many New Jerseyans and Americans seem to have the attitude that unions hurt education. Waiting for Superman certainly portrays the unions as an obstacle to good education. Christie has put a cap on property taxes and this can only cripple education in NJ.
I know that some critics object to phrases like "disaster capitalism" or "predatory capitalism" because plain old vanilla "capitalism" itself is intrinsically disastrous and predatory.
Such critics are bothered by both the redundancy, and the potential for legitimizing capitalism by implying that there's a benevolent strain distinct from these malignant forms.
So to make this point, I'll call it "advanced", or "acute", capitalism.
Capitalism in the "acute" phase is not merely omnivorous, it's cannibalistic-- and emboldened. And the more it devours, the more frenetically it beats the bushes, turns over rocks, and gnaws through formerly sacrosanct protective walls and levees to obtain fresh nourishment.
The privatizing of government itself, the consummation of the corporate state, is the ultimate expression of this rapacious impulse.
So it's no surprise that public education has been picked off, and is now being cannibalized: inexorably devoured and fully commodified by our capitalist masters, and in the process stripped of its now-superfluous and gratuitous capacity for cultivating intellectual life, free thought, and critical thinking-- i.e. "the humanities".
The Enlightenment no longer computes; it's simply not cost-effective, and it's inimical to a hyper-rationalized hollow authoritarian State.
The transmogrified version of public education replaces "schools" with juvenile jails and programming/testing centers in service of hive-mind conformity and an assimilated life in corporate or military wage-slavery. Don't be fooled by the residue of highly-regulated fun in sport, recreation, and after-class activities, or the colorful construction-paper cutout classroom and window dressing.
And our Elected Misrepresentatives, the professional/administrator class, and power elite commentariat will bow, smile, and cheer as public schools slide down the gullet of the marauding capitalist beast. They are never more sincere and self-righteous than when they're offering Panglossian reassurance to the querulous underclass that all is for the best in this best of all possible worlds.
Gee, if I were to be the CFO of a for-profit school, what would I do to maximize profits? I’d notice that two expenses could be cut significantly: teachers and classrooms. We can definitely cut here, thanks to the Internet. The lectures of one instructor can be sent out to untold students, who could “go to school” at home. The cost of the laptop and the Internet service would be a lot cheaper! Software can provide tests and grade them automatically. As for more personalized instruction, such as grading papers, there are a lot of English speaking Indians who could do that far more cheaply than what we’re paying teachers. Imagine, no union, no pensions, no benefits, high-quality labor for a fraction of what we’re paying out now.
True, we might need to keep some facilities open for those who would be left home alone. We’ll have to work on that. But certainly, in those facilities, we could hire people who merely supervised the students as they do their studies on the computers. They wouldn’t have to be trained teachers or anything. They could be more like security guards.
Robert Scholes, a historian of English instruction, said the computer was invented by the devil. Good call.
'The lectures of one instructor can be sent out to untold students, who could “go to school” at home.'
Better, a single manual could be created by 'experts' to cover everything worthwhile, and to unify America.
Great idea! But that would come further down the line. All this must be done incrementally.
Elizabeth - I am terribly torn on the educational model you mention. My wife works for an online virtual high school, and I believe it serves a purpose in the overall scope of education. The founders of the school point out that at any given time, there are some 5 million high school aged children in our country who are not enrolled in any school. This virtual academy was supposedly started to reduce that number.
Many of these are young single Moms, children in rural areas who just don't fit in, and others who may not have had the best high school experience. This program gives them a chance to earn a high school degree - and yes, they are provided laptops and internet service.
We can argue whether the founders of the school were genuine or not with their mission statement, but I do believe it reaches at least some of the target audience and provides them with an opportunity they may not otherwise get. Trying to survive without at the very least a high school degree is near impossible.
(As an aside, that may not apply to Idaho - where I live. I just learned we have no requirement for elected state officials to hold a high school degree, and we have the largest proporation of elected officials who indeed do not have a high school degree - but I digress...)
I am in no way arguing this model should be used for all students - in fact I think it is only useful for a small percentage of the popultation. I believe you can learn much more in a cooperative face-to-face learning environment. But there is value in it and I just wanted to put the idea out there.
I also believe our traditional classrooms and brick and mortar schools need to be dramatically rethought - not via hedge fund managers, but via the ideas and ideals of those like Jonathan Kozol, Alfie Kohn, Diane Ravitch, and others.
Thank you for your list of educational thinkers. I've read a bit of Kohn but not the others, so I really appreciate your post--not just for the list, but for your thoughtful analysis.
At this point, in teaching at a community college and a state university, I've been rather strident that I want on-site classes, mostly because I've found that the persuasiveness of my personality, such as it is, does not strike students nearly as forcefully if I am attempting to do so on-line. I've been told repeatedly that message boards can replace in-class discussions, but have never found this to be true; nor has anyone I've talked to about the matter who is doing more than duckspeaking. Luckily, most instructors prefer on-line classes, as they don't have to go to class or get to know their students.
I teach inductively. I try to get my students to think, to react, to consider their reactions. I work to have my students see themselves as a community. I find on-line supports useful for those who will not speak in a classroom, but for the most part, I see on-line teaching to be a bloodless affair.
Yes, on-line teaching has its uses, as you point out, in certain populations. But for God's sake, if it is mainstreamed, any attempt to teach critical thinking is even more in danger than it is now.
Dear Elizabeth H.:
I had a job about a year ago to tutor for 30 whole hours for that NCLB program. The place where I tutored did not believe in putting the student with the same tutor each time. How were we suposed to track how they were doing? I guess THAT didn't matter.
I had several students for the first time and after they had been at the center for 5-10 hours. Again, every hour had a different tutor. There seemed to be a big problem. SIX of them kept squinting when they read to me. I asked them if they were supposed to be wearing glasses. They all said YES, but they hated how they looked, so they never wore them.
SO, for at least for 1/3 rd to 1/5th of those NCLB hours, those kids couldn't see well enough to read. I don't know much about charter schools, but if they are as awful as my NCLB experience, then we are doing a big diservice to the kids, and the country.
As for on-line classes,I have taken some of those free-on line classes at Yale, and I really liked them. However, I don't think that those "squinting" students would be noticed by that on-line system either! Having a real life human does make a big difference in SEEING how a student learns ( or doesn't learn because they see!)
The sucking sound we hear comes from a trickle up stream of gas from the pump $$s, cuts in education and human services, outrageous costs of health care and health insurance and so on...
This is the biggest ripoff ever. It is stealing not just the money, but also the heart, soul and future of the country, the education of our youth. This is all based on ideology and the free money at hand without accountability. Public money being transferred into private unaccountable hands. General fund K-12 total income in the U.S. is over $600 billion about as much as DOD. How would you like a piece of that action.
The present Sec. of Ed., Arne Duncan, and Senator Dianne Feinstein, both wrote letters to the California legislature, in favor of mayoral control, stating that those who ran the Chicago Public Schools before Daley took over in 1995 had run the district into $1.8 billion in debt, even a hedge fund manager likes those numbers. I have these documents. I happen to also have the financial pages from the 1994 Chicago School budget and it was balanced. Feinsteins husband has a $1 billion bet on his private college, private colleges like his have not been fairing well in recent revelations.
Remember Rod Paige, under Bush 1, who said that he had reduced Houstons dropout rate to 0% and later it turned out to be 50%. He eventually lost his job. Shouldn't Duncan for also lying? If I have that information doesn't he? During that same time Obama was president of the Annenburg Foundation for Chicago Schools from 1995 until he ran for senator. What good did they do?
I was one of four speakers at the closed session at LAUSD concerning John Deasy for superintendent, backed by Duncan. All four speakers spoke for a national search. I also brought up the point of his illegitimate PHD in Louisville given by a person now in federal prison for 63 months for theft of $3.3 million from two schools. Not a reporter or board member knew of this until I told them. A board members chief of staff told me that they had heard it was a rumor. While on the phone they went online and saw the articles. I said "NOT A RUMOR ANYMORE". All you have to do is type in his name. They care so much they did not even do that, DUE DILLIGENCE?
I also brought up the point that is the current fad. We do not need high time experienced teachers to save money. Then, why do we need high time experienced administrators, let's save money there also. The administrators union did not like that position. I say "GOOD FOR ONE, GOOD FOR ALL".
Who controls the money and makes all the decisions, not the teachers, administrators do. What are Gates and Eli Broad (The Broadfather) doing. Well, placing their administrators in all those important administrative positions. Why not hold them accountable.
I can show with the districts own records and the Office of Public School Construction Jan. 2008 study on costs of school construction that they pay at least 2X the going rate for construction in L.A. County. $280/ft (county average) next to $700-1,100/ft (LAUSD). I could pay off more than 1/2 of the California debt with 1/2 of $27 billion.
Follow the money. Soon we will have up a website where you can see it all. Have a good day.
Bloomberg has a plan to create standardized tests made by his corporation. As a public official he will modify policy so that he can benefit from this. Chris Christie will divert public money to charter schools and private schools, earning himself money through his corporate ties. Meanwhile he is giving more tax breaks to those corporations.