As noted in last week’s
column, I journeyed to Trenton to observe and participate in the
community’s hand-to-hand combat with the public education
privatization Cartel to prevent the appointment of a Broad
superintendent to head the Trenton Public Schools and to layoff
numerous paraprofessionals. After a citywide struggle, the teachers
and paraprofessional unions and rank-and-file citizens banded
together to force the mayor (who selects the school board) to cancel
the search and to temporarily halt the layoffs of more than 100
special education paraprofessionals and child study team members.
The two finalists for
the superintendent’s position were poised to aggressively
implement the Broad pro-business, anti-union, and anti-traditional
teacher agenda. Both Dr. Sergio Paez and Dr. Marguerite Vanden
Wyngaard had checkered administrative pasts as chief school officers
in Holyoke, Massachusetts and Albany, New York, respectively. In
addition, they had engaged in highly questionable administrative
behaviors that bordered on illegality. This information was ignored
by the search firm hired by the Trenton School Board and Mayor Eric
Jackson although it was readily available.
Mayor Jackson and
School Board President Jason Redd are quietly waiting for the furor
to die down and then to launch another assault on unions and public
school employees. Hopefully, it will not. Their Cartel backers
remain undaunted due to their stranglehold on these two individuals:
Redd is a Counsel in government affairs (not a partner) in Gibbons, a
premier New Jersey’s law firm, that represents numerous
corporate clients who have targeted public education as a profit
center. He also serves as a Cartel surrogate to push the Trenton
schools toward privatization.
A careful review of
Mayor Jackson’s campaign finance reports reveals that he
received sizeable contributions from Cartel allies during his primary
and run-off campaigns and afterwards. As a result, the Cartel and
its representatives have had a virtual glide path in recent years in
getting the school board to privatize school services, support the
creation of local corporate charter schools, and to lay off teaching
and paraprofessional personnel. Jackson had previously been careful
not to alienate educators as they were his base voters in his two
elections where he faced other cartel-backed candidates.
Now he has “come
out of the closet,” exposing his true attitude toward public
education--that it needs to be privatized and dismantled. Jackson
confidentially expressed his support for the two imperfect applicants
for superintendent even after the unions and community forced him to
cancel the search. What this shows is that money speaks loudly and
will attempt to crush any opposition. Given that Mayor Jackson and
Jason Redd have chosen to stand with the Cartel, it is imperative
that the Trenton community braces itself for the second round of
assault on public education.
First, the
community needs to keep the pressure on the Trenton School Board to
draw the Mayor out into the open. A rally has been planned for the
April 25th Board meeting, and hundreds of citizens need to
turn out to show the depth of their resistance. The unions have also
scheduled a May 15th gathering at the New Jersey
Statehouse to protest state budget cuts in the district. These shows
of condemnation will send a strong message to local and state elected
officials that people in Trenton want their schools to remain public.
Second, an
aggressive public case for the retention of the special education
staff slated for layoffs should also be put forward. Already, the
district’s outsourcing of special education services has
resulted in the following: a lowering of overall program quality;
privatized staff members that are poorly trained to deliver federal
and state-mandated services for students who are medically fragile,
placing greater stress on classroom teachers; an uptick in compliance
issues; and an increase in lawsuits by parents of special needs
children who are being under-served.
Furthermore, those
paraprofessionals, who reside in the Trenton community and who have
been personally invested in the care of the most vulnerable special
needs students via one-on-one services, have been replaced by
minimum-wage, non-resident at-will employees who only want a paycheck
and frequently do not show up for work, thus breaking the continuity
of student care which had been established for decades. The
private-sector companies, to which these services have been
subcontracted, have manipulated this situation to make maximum
profit.
Trenton is the final
district scheduled for complete dissolution by the Hope Act of
2011 (and expanded in 2014). Initiated by Gov. Christie and
passed by a Democratically-controlled legislature, it permits three
New Jersey school districts— Newark, Camden, and Trenton-- to
establish Renaissance charter schools which are provided construction
support by the state and are “… exempt from
public school facility regulations other than those pertaining to the
health and safety of the pupil." In other words,
Renaissance schools have a license to experiment with and abuse
children of color for profit. Several Trenton-area black and white
legislators voted for this bill.
Newark and Camden have
a near majority of its predominantly African American and Hispanic
student populations enrolled in corporate charter schools, and the
numbers are increasing rapidly on an annual basis. In both
districts, Broad superintendents were installed to deliver the death
blow to public education.
Only the heroic actions
of Trenton Education Association President, Naomi Johnson-Lafluer,
her grievance chair, Janice Williams, and Betty Glenn, head of the
Trenton Paraprofessionals Union, have prevented Trenton from becoming
enveloped in the “hangman’s noose” of the Hope
Act which was designed to decapitate three of the largest
majority-minority school districts in New Jersey. (Jersey City was
originally on the list, but it fought its way off.)
This is a critical time
for Trenton’s citizens; they must decide, in the words of the
poem, “If We Must Die,” by the famed African
American poet, Claude McKay, whether
“… (They will) meet the common foe;
Though far outnumbered, (and) show (themselves) brave,
And for their thousand blows deal one deathblow!
What though before (them) lies the open grave?
Like men (and women) we’ll face the murderous, cowardly pack (trying to
take over our schools), Pressed to the wall, dying, but fighting back!”
Peace!
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