There
it goes again; the Cartel of public school privatization advocates
has targeted Trenton, New Jersey for the appointment of another Broad
Superintendent Academy (BSA)-influenced candidate to head its
schools. Broad’s
objectives are to: demonize teachers and their unions; promote
virtual and bricks and mortar charter schools; run public schools
through a corporate business model; reduce the number of union jobs
in school districts; privatize school services; promote high stakes
testing; and push as much money into the private sector as possible.
Due to the Cartel’s
control over Gov. Chris Christie (via political contributions), it
descended on the State of New Jersey like a vulture, employing a
Broad graduate (Chris Cerf) to head the New Jersey Department of
Education (NJDOE) in 2011. Cerf, in turn, placed Broad
superintendents in Newark, Montclair, Bellville, Jersey City,
Highland Park, Trenton, and Camden, in serial order, in an
aggressive, well-funded effort to dismantle and privatize public
education in New Jersey.
When Dr. Francisco
Duran was appointed Trenton’s superintendent in 2013, he was
deft in hiding his Broad connection. He was mentored by the late Dr.
Arlene Ackerman, former Broad superintendent in Washington, D.C., San
Francisco, California, and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, who was
serving as scholar-in residence at the Broad Superintendents Academy
in Los Angeles, California prior to her death. Duran, who was a
Philadelphia area superintendent under Ackerman, slipped into Trenton
undercover and brought along his sidekick, Lucy Feria who was also
mentored by Ackerman. (She is currently serving as Trenton’s
interim superintendent and had also applied for the job.)
Duran and Feria
systematically implemented several of Broad’s principles:
spending, without measurable academic benefit, millions of dollars
with Broad-related technology companies; laying off hundreds of
teachers and school staff; launching a full-scale attack on
paraprofessionals by sending their jobs to a private contractor
recommended by then NJDOE commissioner of education, Chris Cerf; and
increasing the number of charter schools. These collective actions
created a huge budget deficit which they tried to solve on the backs
of public school employees.
Now the current Trenton
School Board (TSB) is poised to repeat the same mistake. Their
search efforts have yielded two deeply flawed candidates: Dr. Sergio
Paez, former superintendent of the Holyoke, Massachusetts School
District and Dr. Marguerite Vanden Wyngaard, former superintendent of
the Albany, New York Public Schools.
Dr. Paez was dismissed
from Holyoke in the summer of 2015 after a State-takeover of the
district for chronic underperformance and a budget deficit. On his
way out the door, he was facing a lawsuit over the school system’s
abuse of students with behavioral and emotional special needs and a
criminal investigation of the scandal.
The Minneapolis Public
Schools (MPS) made Dr. Paez their top choice to head MPS in December
of 2015 and brought him to town for final negotiations in early
January 2016. But by that time, news of his overall performance and
the special needs controversy had reached the MPS board members and
the broader Minneapolis community. After sending a team to Holyoke
to investigate the matters further, the district terminated contract
talks with Dr. Paez at a volatile January 12, 2016 Board meeting.
What is interesting
about Dr. Paez’s selection as a finalist is that the Trenton
School Board has recently accepted a recommendation from its
assistant superintendent for special education to eliminate 92
special education paraprofessional positions; several speech,
occupational, and physical therapists; and three child study teams.
This is occurring in a
district where 19 percent of students have special needs and where
these employees have been delivering effective services to date.
Such austerity actions will likely push the district out of
compliance with federal mandates. Was this the attraction to Paez
because he ran roughshod over special needs students?
Meanwhile, Dr. Vanden
Wyngaard, a Broad-trained superintendent, was under scrutiny for
awarding a contract to a firm with whom she had previously worked
that was a spin-off of the Michigan Leadership Academy where she
received her Broad superintendent’s certificate. This is an
ongoing pattern of Broad graduates who immediately establish
financial relationships with Broad-connected businesses after
becoming head of a school district. Dr. Vanden Wyngaard was forced
to resign or be fired by the Albany Public Schools after a teacher
raised the issue of her contracting process.
In New Jersey, Broad
superintendents in Newark, Montclair, Bellville, Jersey City,
Highland Park, Trenton, and Camden together have given more than $10
billion dollars to Broad-affiliated corporations and consultants from
2011 to the present. Dr. Vanden Wyngaard, who has never held a
senior school district post more than three years, has compiled a
mediocre administrative record at best. She was undistinguished
during her time as a deputy in the Paterson, New Jersey public
schools as was Dr. Paez in Holyoke.
So the essential
questions are: Did the Board make these final selections, or were
they submitted by a search firm? If the Board did employ a search
firm, was it in anyway linked to the Broad Superintendent’s
Academy or its allies (as was the search firm that gave Trenton Dr.
Duran)? How did these questionable candidates emerge as finalists
for the Trenton superintendent’s position? Who are the other
candidates in the pool of applicants? Had all of them been fired
from their previous positions, or were Paez and Vanden Wyngaard
the only two who were applying from home?
These
are troubling issues that should be carefully examined, and no offer
should be extended to either candidate. Given their woeful
inadequacies, the search should be extended or started over.
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