The primary stakeholders in
public education - teachers, unions, parents, and ordinary citizens -
are being systematically overwhelmed by the forces of privatization.
The Cartel of corporate education reformers, operating on multiple
fronts, has been consistently expanding its footprint in the nation’s
public schools. They are not only promoting school choice, charter
and voucher schools, but they are turning these initiatives into
business opportunities, a form of education entrepreneurship. In
addition, their marketing strategies are combined with their purchase
of Democratic and Republican legislators in local, state and federal
government. Often, unions and other public education backers are
unaware of related efforts that also undermine their sustainability.
First, the key elements of
school choice, voucher schools and education savings accounts, have
been aggressively promoted since the passage of the Wisconsin voucher
program in March 1990. In subsequent years, voucher programs were
established in Ohio and Florida and affirmed by the Supreme Court of
the United States (SCOTUS) in the Zelman
v. Simmons-Harris
case in 2002. Charter schools, which are technically public schools,
were first established in Minnesota in 1991 followed by California in
1992. They were originally championed by Albert Shanker, then
president of the American Federation of Teachers (AFT). By 1994,
Shanker was one of the first education union leaders to realize that
the Cartel’s mission was to turn charter schools into corporate
entities, and he withdrew his support for the effort. In a
conversation with the author at AFT headquarters in Washington, D.C.
in November 1994, Shanker correctly predicted the corporatization of
charter schools and that the Cartel would use them, along with
contracts for school services and products, to turn public education
into a corporate profit center.
Fast forward nearly a
quarter century, and we see that Shanker was prescient with his view.
Charter schools today are increasingly operating with the
independence of private, sectarian, and voucher schools while
receiving a larger financial allocation from the government than
their voucher counterparts. This is one of the reasons that Eli
Broad, who essentially serves as the Cartel’s minister of
education, wrote a letter to the U.S. Senate’s Health,
Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) Committee opposing the
confirmation of Education Secretary, Betsy DeVos, because of her
fervent support of school vouchers. Knowing that charters are much
more widespread and popular than vouchers, he saw this as an
opportunity to take a so-called principled stance for public
education and to bond with teacher unions who also opposed DeVos and
vouchers. Since her approval, Broad and the Cartel have healed the
breach with DeVos since she controls a massive federal increase in
funding for charter schools, and ultimately it is about the money.
Second, the marketing of
school choice to working-class and low-income parents by corporate
education reformers has been excellent. Spending tens of millions of
dollars in print, radio, and television ads, they have also showered
these groups with laptops, iPads, picnics, school supplies, etc. and
the claim that their children will be delivered to the education
promise land if they participate in school choice. The Cartel has
been assisted by school board members and state legislators who have
reduced funding to individual schools and school districts,
respectively, where the children of these parents are enrolled. These
elected officials have been heavily funded by the corporate sector,
often with 50 percent of their total campaign contributions coming
from corporate leaders. For example, two Cartel-backed candidates,
who upset incumbents, allowed Eli Broad and his cronies to take over
the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) Board in the May 2017
election. Broad had already announced that he will convert 50 percent
of LAUSD schools to charters by 2023, and now he will have the school
board and his own team marketing charters and school choice.
Third, the Cartel is funding
a bevy of cases across the country to destabilize unions and to
advance public school privatization. In 2016, the Friedrichs
v. California Teachers Association case,
which challenged union agency fees, was defeated in a four to four
SCOTUS decision, only because of Justice Antonin Scalia’s
untimely death. He would have voted to overturn the 1977 Abood
v. Detroit Board of Education
where SCOTUS upheld the maintaining of a union shop in a public
workplace. Undaunted, the corporate reformers refocused their
energies on the AFSCME
v. Janus
case which will accomplish the same objective and is scheduled to be
heard during SCOTUS’s fall term and will eliminate agency fees
with the vote of Scalia’s replacement, Justice Neil Gorsuch.
Thus the Cartel is surrounding public education stakeholders with a
curtain of privatization.
Fourth, Eli Broad has
distributed his Broad Superintendents Academy (BSA)-trained graduates
throughout the nation’s urban school districts. These
individuals, diverse in gender and race, have been taught to run
school districts like a business and to direct their districts’
service and product contracts to specific corporate vendors. During
the fifteen years of its existence, the BSA has placed more than 200
of its alumni as district and/or state superintendents of education.
But its greatest achievement has been to place successive
superintendents in large urban districts: Baltimore, Maryland;
Philadelphia and Chester, Pennsylvania; Washington, D.C.; Camden,
Trenton, and Newark New Jersey; Milwaukee, Wisconsin; and Memphis,
Tennessee, to name a few, moving growing percentages of these
districts’ finances into corporate hands. Thus, Broad is
maximizing his privatization plan for public education.
Public education
stakeholders must be more mindful of the Cartel’s multifaceted
assault on public schools that is intensifying daily. They need to be
sensitive to the fact that the attacks are becoming refined (e.g.,
Florida’s new law that mandates that school districts share
property taxes with charter schools and other creative privatization
approaches) and must be closely monitored. The establishment of a
collective war room made up of teachers, parents, grassroots
activists, rank-and-file citizens, and unions could prove beneficial.
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