May 15th is D-Day for
public education in Trenton, New Jersey. A rally of pro-public
education advocates will take place at the New Jersey state capitol
to take a stand against the pro-privatization initiatives of the
Trenton Public Schools by the corporate Cartel, Gov. Christie, the
Trenton School Board, Trenton Mayor Eric Jackson (who appoints the
Board), and the “money lady,” Jayne Howard, the business
administrator for the school district. There will be a “souls
to the rally” caravan shortly after the conclusion of Sunday
church services throughout the city.
What is at stake here
is the future of Trenton’s system of public education. There
is a mad rush by the Christie administration to privatize and
dismantle it before the end of his term in 2017 in payment for the
Cartel’s support (more than $50 million) of his three political
campaigns: two for governor and one for the 2016 Republican
presidential nomination. Gov. Christie has already turned Newark and
Camden into essentially corporate charter districts where corporate
charter schools have pushed public school budgets into significant
deficits.
Christie has also
placed Broad superintendents (who have led and/or are leading school
privatization efforts) in Jersey City, Newark (twice), Highland Park,
Bellville, Montclair, Trenton (twice), Camden, and most recently in
South Brunswick (Dr. Jerry Jellig not only slashed school services
but also acted inappropriately with the district’s female
employees and has been suspended until further notice.) These
superintendents are a multicultural group, including males and
females of Caucasian, African American, Asian, and Hispanic ancestry.
Together, they have presided over or are presiding over districts
with substantial majority-minority student populations, most of whom
qualify for free/reduced-price lunch and reside in disproportionately
dysfunctional social, economic, and family environments.
In Trenton, which
manifests these demographic realities to a major degree, it was
believed that it would be easy to take over the district because
educators and citizens would be so overwhelmed by these challenges.
Aided by a succession of state monitors from 2009 to the present—Mark
Cowell, Les Richens, Emily Capella, and Les Richens, again--these
individuals have worked to privatize school services. Collaborating
with the district business administrator, Jayne Howard, they
apparently manipulated school budgets by shifting money around budget
categories to show shortages that did not exist.
The Trenton NAACP
education committee chair has called for a forensic audit of the
district’s budget which would reveal these accounting tricks.
Howard, who has survived multiple superintendents, has maintained
cozy relationships with the state monitors sent in by the Christie
administration to upend the district. In a nifty “bait and
switch,” Howard would under-fund budget categories (e.g.,
custodial services, etc.) from previous year expenditure levels in
order to declare fiscal emergencies in the following year. Former
Washington, D.C. schools chancellor, Michelle Rhee, employed similar
tactics in 2009 and used the ploy to terminate more than 400 teachers
and paraprofessionals. She then hired 400 Teach for America teachers
when the money miraculously reappeared. Trenton is using a similar
strategy to get rid of more than 200 paraprofessionals, teachers,
secretaries, and others.
What is interesting
about this maneuver is that it will reallocate these budget cuts to
pay private companies for the same services and then increase their
compensation via bonuses and guaranteed payments. Thus, the
district, which alleges to be short of cash, will somehow find a way
to spend more money while claiming to have less! And the
paraprofessionals, teachers, and secretaries are bearing the brunt of
this financial scam. By continuing the community’s pressure on
Mayor Jackson and the school board, money will be found to restore
the positions recently eliminated by Howard by moving the money back
to where it belongs. (The forensic audit that has been called for
could expose unethical, and perhaps criminal, violations.)
Jackson now has to
think about his political future. Having served as a Cartel and
Christie surrogate since the start of his term in 2014, he
recognizes, as do Trenton’s citizens, that Christie leaves
office in 2017 one year before the mayoral election. With at least
five would be candidates circling Mayor Jackson like buzzards soaring
over road kill, he has placed himself between a rock and a hard
place. The community is becoming increasingly dissatisfied with
Jackson’s leadership as it is beginning to view him as a tool
of the corporate establishment and as Christie’s African
American puppet.
He cannot survive a
reelection bid if he continues on this privatization path. The
Trenton public has now determined that the school system is being
blown up with Jackson’s permission and assistance. Interviews
with numerous community leaders and rank-and-file citizens have
documented this observation. Moreover, several have reached out to
long-term and still popular former Mayor Doug Palmer for support in
saving the schools and district jobs. They remember the time when
the school board actually supported public education, when Palmer
appointed Board members who were reflective of the community’s
educational concerns, and when district jobs remained in the public
sector.
The May 15th rally at
the state capitol will make it abundantly clear that Trentonians, and
their allies from around the state, are opposed to all efforts to
dismantle and privatize public education. Mayor Jackson has done
everything in his power to block the rally to no avail. He will
stand in judgment by the community on Sunday and will be forced to
decide whether he will serve the Cartel and Gov. Christie or the
people who elected him to office.
The
political ball is in his court!
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