Seth Sandronsky, a journalist in Sacramento, reports here on some extraordinary events in that city that should raise eyebrows. Maybe even some hackles.
Read Sandronsky to learn about State Senator Ron Calderon, his brother Thomas Calderon, Michelle Rhee’s StudentsFirst, Sacramento Mayor Kevin Johnson, ALEC, the Walton Family Foundation, Pearson, Connections Academy, the Sacramento Bee, and various other characters eager to reform our schools.
I would summarize, but this web is too tangled for me.
Since some readers had trouble opening the link, here is how the story begins:
Papering Over Public K-12 School Reform
By Seth Sandronsky
Private interests are busy paying for political favors from lawmakers at the state Capitol in California, writes Dan Morain, a columnist with The Sacramento Bee: http://www.sacbee.com/2013/11/13/5905448/dan-morain-the-investigation-into.html
According to him, what we know about Sen. Ron Calderon, a pro-business Democrat representing Montebello, and snared in an FBI sting operation recently, is just the tip of the dollars-and-politics iceberg.
The good senator has ample company, Morain continues. He mentions other actors and forces in the fetid pay-to-play of California state politics.
Yet his column omits the donor role of a leading public K-12 school reform group under the state Capitol dome. What is going on?
Al Jazeera America’s Oct. 31 unveiling of an FBI affidavit that alleges Sen. Calderon’s multiple alleged wrongdoings includes his brother Thomas Calderon’s meeting with star education reformer Michelle Rhee’s lobbyists. Her StudentsFirst group operates from a national headquarters in Sacramento.
The affidavit alleges that StudentsFirst lobbyists met with Sen. Calderon’s brother on Feb. 20. On Feb. 21, Sen. Calderon introduced a teacher-reform measure, Senate Bill 441 that Rhee’s group supports: http://www.leginfo.ca.gov/pub/13-14/bill/sen/sb_0401-0450/sb_441_cfa_20130423_084911_sen_comm.html
Sacramento Mayor Kevin Johnson, Rhee’s husband and never a classroom teacher, backed Sen. Calderon’s SB 441, which failed to pass out of committee. The mayor’s education non-profit, Stand Up for Great Schools, a 501(c)(3) non-profit that accepts hundreds of thousands of dollars from the Walton Family Foundation, the philanthropic arm of the big-box retailer, also supported SB 441, which teacher unions opposed.
As Trevor Aaronson of Al Jazeera America reports: “Ronald Calderon’s push for the education bill came after Rhee’s organization provided critical financial support to the political campaign of his nephew Ian Calderon. In May 2012, state records show, StudentsFirst funneled $378,196 through a political action committee to Ian Calderon’s successful campaign for the California Assembly”:
Rhee’s donation to Ian Calderon represents just over eight percent of StudentsFirst $4.6 million of donations to its 501(c)(4) nonprofit. That figure comes from its Form 990 filed with the Internal Revenue Service, for the tax year ending July 31, 2011.
Operating in 34 states now, the IRS allows 501(c)(4) groups to engage in political activity such as lobbying: “Seeking legislation germane to the organization’s programs (as) a permissible means of attaining social welfare purposes.” Oh, and the donor names to StudentsFirst’s 501(c)(4) are secret.
One of the states where StudentsFirst operates is Tennessee. There, Rhee’s ex-husband, Kevin Huffman, is a GOP governor’s appointed state head of public schools.
StudentsFirst’s political donations have swayed lawmakers to evaluate teachers based on their pupils’ standardized test scores: http://www.lexisnexis.com/hottopics/tncode/ This policy fits with American Legislative Exchange Council’s model legislation for education reform.
Back in the Golden State, SB 441 was a bid to amend the state Education Code. Accordingly, Sen. Calderon’s bill would have potentially changed the education of 6 million kids attending California’s public K-12 schools.
Comparing ALEC’s “Teacher Evaluations and Licensing Act,” part of its “Indiana Education Reform Package,” approved at the 2011 ALEC yearly meeting: http://www.alec.org/model-legislation/indiana-education-reform-package/ ( “chapter 3” of an omnibus bill) with Sen. Calderon’s SB 441, one sees similar phrases and words. As we know, ALEC is pushing forward across the U.S. with public K-12 school reform bills, using language that corporate lobbyists write and lawmakers vote on.
We turn to Connections Academy, a for-profit online learning enterprise that began in Houston, Texas. Once upon a time, this company co-led ALEC’s education task force.
Enter Pearson, Inc., a $7 billion publicly traded, global firm that profits shareholders through certifying teachers, grading standardized tests, publishing textbooks and providing digital curriculum on iPads. Pearson Connections in August 2011. Connections left ALEC soon after, said Brandon Pinette of Pearson in an email.
However, the state bills that Connections, the second largest online school company nationwide to K12 Inc., supported on ALEC’s education task force are still operative, said Rebekah Wilce, a researcher and reporter for the Wisconsin-based Center for Media and Democracy. K12 Inc., the biggest cyber school firm and formerly owned by Kaplan, Inc., the giant test preparation company, remains a member of the ALEC education task force, according to her.
Meanwhile, The Sacramento Bee financially backs Mayor Johnson’s nonprofit St. HOPE (Helping Others Pursue Excellence ) Development Company: http://www.sthope.org/fund-1.html. Johnson’s nonprofit, with help from the local school board and billionaire philanthropists such as Eli Broad, converted Sacramento High School to a nonunion charter school after pupils’ scores on high-stakes standardized tests fell in 2003.
Read the whole post, which is fascinating.
PS: Dan Morain, the columnist mentioned in first paragraph, was just named editorial page editor of the Sacramento Bee.
I’m getting garble for the link to Sandronsky’s piece
The link is broken. I saw this on Monday. Not a surprise since this pair has ‘issues’ with what is right and wrong. Especially Kevin “Sweet 16” Johnson.
Better link: http://www.counterpunch.org/2013/12/03/papering-over-public-k-12-school-reform/
Try this link: http://www.counterpunch.org/2013/12/03/papering-over-public-k-12-school-reform/
Sickening tale of quid pro quos, purchased political influence, and politicians selling out our children.
Kevin “Sweet 16” Johnson wants public money to pay for private education, and he wants public money to pay for a new basketball arena for the Kings. People on food stamps are getting a cut, something like $40/ month down from $60/month for food, meanwhile Sweet 16 Johnson wants millions of taxpayer dollars for his education organization and for the Kings.
There are lots of unionized state employees in Sac who understand politics. They can be persuaded to support students, teachers, and schools if they are given all the facts. They might even vote against the basketball arena if they are given the chance.
Thanks. That is the right link.
Public money for private education? Public money for a private basketball arena? Gee, where have I heard this story? Are you sure you’re not talking about Chicago?
I thought it was Atlanta?
(Except we are paying for a football stadium)
This movie must be playing in cities everywhere. Sorry, I give it two thumbs down.
Don’t forget the new hockey stadium in bankrupt Detroit. (From what I’ve read, the NHL is private, not public.)
A few questions:
As Dienne mentioned, in Chicago, TIF funds (which should have been going to support under-resourced public schools in blighted communities) are going to build a stadium for the Catholic DePaul University and one of the primary concerns that has been raised is that, because DePaul is a private non-profit, that stadium will be tax exempt.
Doesn’t the same issue apply to other non-profit organizations like the hockey stadium in Detroit for the private non-profit NHL?
What kind of return on investment (ROI) is there for cities when the government gives away public dollars, land and buildings to private organizations that are tax-exempt?
Is this another non-profit scam like we’re seeing with charter schools, such as with Juan Rangel and the UNO charter chain in Chicago?
And what is with the sports obsession –seemingly over all else? Someone behind this racket must be raking in big bucks.
Here’s a WebArchive link just in case …
http://web.archive.org/web/20131206152801/http://www.counterpunch.org/2013/12/03/papering-over-public-k-12-school-reform/
If the News/Information media really cared about the truth instead of promoting their cop orate bosses agenda, maybe this would get more attention.
tthis link doesn’t work.
Reblogged this on 21st Century Theater.
Our leaders are bought and paid for by the billionaires. Pure and simple. Right up to the top.
Here in NY, the Taylor Law prohibits public employees from striking. But it also mandates that management must bargain In good faith. This has not happened.
Hi everyone,
I’d like to share a talk I recently gave to the School Board of Palm Beach County, FL about the excessive testing going on in our public schools and who is profiting by it.