University of Washington scholars Wayne Au and Joseph J. Ferrare have written an excellent analysis of the big money that flooded the state of Washington to pass charter legislation in 2012. Although defeated three times before by voters, this time the proposal passed by a tiny margin. Its major funders were Bill Gates, who has no children in public school, and Walmart heiress Alice Walton,who lives in Arkansas. Substantial help was provided by other members of the Billionaire Boys Club and their claque (such as Stand for Children).
The more than $10 million they amassed was sufficient to buy what they wanted.
The moral of the story: a small number of very wealthy individuals and organizations bought a policy of their choosing. This subverts democracy. It subverts the principle of one man, one vote.
These are not reformers. They are plutocrats who use their vast wealth to buy what they want.
Here are a few choice quotes:
“Conclusions/Recommendations: This study concludes that, compared to the average voter in Washington, an elite group of wealthy individuals, either directly through individual donations or indirectly through their affiliated philanthropic organizations, wielded disproportionate influence over the outcome of the charter school initiative in the state, thereby raising serious concerns about the democratic underpinnings of an education policy that impacts all of the children in Washington State. This study also concludes that elite individuals make use of local nonprofit organizations as a mechanism to advance their education policy agenda by funding those nonprofits through the philanthropic organizations affiliated with those same wealthy elites. In light of these conclusions, the authors recommend that a mechanism for more democratic accountability be developed relative to education policy campaigns, initiatives, and legislation.
“INTRODUCTION
“To paraphrase F. Scott Fitzgerald, today’s plutocrats are not like you and I; nor do they resemble the politicians we elect. Even when they assume the authority to set public policies, they are, I fear, not sackable. (Bosworth, 2011, p. 386)
“With the backing of both major political parties, billionaire philanthropists, venture capitalists, business leaders, and a growing network of nonprofit organizations and research centers, charter school policy has evolved into a major component of the current education reform movement in the United States (Fabricant & Fine, 2012; Rawls, 2013). As of 2012, all but nine U.S. states allowed charter schools (National Alliance for Public Charter Schools, 2013), and in one of those nine, Washington State, charter school legislation was passed by popular vote in November 2012 (Reed, 2012)…..”
And more:
In this section we present the findings of our network analysis in two phases. First, through two tables, we present data on cash and in-kind contributions to the Yes On 1240 campaign and funding relationships between campaign donors, affiliated philanthropies, and organizational campaign supporters (Tables 1 and 2). Second, we visualize these relationships through a simple directed graph that traces the flows of sponsorship (material and symbolic) among policy actors (Figure 1).
YES ON 1240 CAMPAIGN CONTRIBUTIONS
Several important findings arise when we analyze the contributions to the Yes On 1240 campaign.
Table 1: Yes On I-1240 Campaign Cash and In-kind Contributions of $50k and More
Yes On 1240 Donor
Donation Amount
1.
Bill Gates Jr. – Microsoft cofounder and current chairman
$3,053,000.00
2.
Alice Walton – heiress; daughter of Walmart founder, Sam Walton
$1,700,000.00
3.
Vulcan Inc. – founded by Paul Allen, Microsoft cofounder
$1,600,000.00
4.
Nicolas Hanauer – venture capitalist
$1,000,000.00
5.
Mike Bezos – father of Amazon.com founder Jeff Bezos
$500,000.00
6.
Jackie Bezos – mother of Amazon.com founder Jeff Bezos
$500,000.00
7.
Connie Ballmer – wife of Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer
$500,000.00
8.
Anne Dinning – managing director D.E. Shaw Investments
$250,000.00
9.
Michael Wolf – Yahoo! Inc. board of directors
$250,000.00
10.
Katherine Binder – EMFCO Holdings chairwoman
$250,000.00
11.
Eli Broad – real estate mogul
$200,000.00
12.
Benjamin Slivka – formerly Microsoft; DreamBox Learning cofounder
$124,200.00
13.
Reed Hastings – Netflix cofounder and CEO
$100,000.00
14.
Microsoft Corporation
$100,000.00
15.
Gabe Newell – formerly Microsoft; Valve Corporation cofounder
$100,000.00
16.
Doris Fisher – Gap Inc. cofounder
$100,000.00
17.
Kemper Holdings LLC – local Puget Sound developer
$110,000.00
18.
CSG Channels
$60,000.00
19.
Education Reform Now
$50,000.00
20.
Bruce McCaw –McCaw Cellular founder
$50,000.00
21.
Jolene McCaw – spouse of Bruce McCaw
$50,000.00
Source: Washington State Public Disclosure Commission (2012a)
Table 1 highlights that $10.65 million in total, or almost 98% of the $10.9 million raised for the Yes On 1240 campaign, was funded by 21 individuals and organizations who each donated more than $50,000 to the campaign (Washington State Public Disclosure Commission, 2012a).
Notably, Bill Gates Jr. is the biggest contributor ($3M) to the campaign, nearly doubling the next biggest contributions coming from Walmart heiress Alice Walton ($1.7M) and Vulcan Inc. ($1.6M),2 Microsoft cofounder Paul Allen’s company. As a more general finding, these amounts indicate that a number of select wealthy individuals with no immediate connection to Washington State (e.g., Eli Broad and Alice Walton) demonstrated a vested interest in charter school policy in the state. Another finding that emerges from the data is that wealthy individuals who are connected to the technology sector also demonstrated a vested interest in promoting charter school policy in Washington State (12 of the top 21 contributors to Yes On 1240 are strongly connected to the technology sector). Additionally, as might be expected given the interconnectedness of any sector of industry, several of these individuals have historical and industry-related connections to Microsoft Inc. and Microsoft Inc. cofounder and chairman, Bill Gates Jr.
It is also of value to highlight the $50,000.00 donation to the Yes On 1240 campaign from Education Reform Now Advocacy Committee because it illustrates the tightly woven interconnectedness of organizations and funding structures associated with education policy reform advocacy. New York State tax records from 2006 explicitly indicate that Education Reform Now, Inc., Education Reform Now Advocacy Committee, and DFER all share officers, personnel, office space, and paymasters (Libby, 2012). Tax records from 2007 further indicate that Education Reform Now Inc. and Education Reform Now Advocacy Committee share these same resources (New York State Office of the Attorney General, 2013). Thus, it is difficult to determine where DFER, Education Reform Now Inc., and Education Reform Now Advocacy Committee begin and end individually because, in essence, they represent a financially intertwined cluster of three organizations that seem to operate as a single organization with overlapping staff and resources. Consequently, even though tax records do not allow us to fully understand the exact relationship, the $50,000.00 donation to the Yes On 1240 campaign from Education Reform Now Advocacy Committee is functionally also a donation from Education Reform Now Inc. and DFER.
YES ON 1240 CONNECTED ORGANIZATIONS
As discussed above, four organizations, LEV, DFER, Stand for Children, and Partnership for Learning, publicly claimed credit for leading and coordinating the Yes On 1240 WA Coalition for Public Charter Schools (Yes On 1240, 2012a). An analysis of the in-kind donations to the Yes On 1240 campaign (that is, donations of labor or other services that are given cash value and added to the campaign donation total) supports this claim: Those four organizations predominate the in-kind donations database and are the only organizations listing “staff time” as donated in kind to the campaign (Washington State Public Disclosure Commission, 2012c). Further, as a university-based research center, they cannot be listed as having provided in-kind donations (or any donations) directly to a political campaign in the state. Because of their active role in providing direct, nonmonetary support for the Yes On 1240 campaign vis-à-vis being highlighted prominently in a campaign video (Yes On 1240, 2012b) and authoring a research report explicitly in support of I-1240 (Lake et al., 2012), we have included the CRPE here as a “connected organization” for their symbolic contribution to the campaign through the lending of their expertise.
PHILANTHROPIC CONNECTIONS TO THE YES ON 1240 CAMPAIGN
Cross referencing information gathered from the Google search engine, philanthropy websites, and available tax records (Foundation Center, 2013) produced the following 11 foundations directly connected to major donors to the Yes On 1240 campaign (in alphabetical order): Apex Foundation (formerly the Bruce & Jolene McCaw Foundation), Bezos Family Foundation, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Corabelle Lumps Foundation (formerly the Anne Dinning and Michael Wolf Foundation), the Doris & Donald Fisher Fund, The Eli and Edythe Broad Foundation, the Goldman Sachs Philanthropy Fund (connected through the Connie and Steve Ballmer advised Biel Fund),3 Lochland Foundation (Katherine Binder, cofounder, officer, and contributor), The Walton Family Foundation, and Wissner-Slivka Foundation. Using foundation databases, foundation reports, available tax records, organizational websites, and institutional reports, we then looked for whether or not these foundations provided funding to the Yes On 1240 campaign-related organizations.
Table 2: Philanthropic Support for Yes On 1240 Connected Organizations
Organization
Amount
Foundation
Center on Reinventing Public Education
$8,578,000
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
$701,000
The Walton Family Foundation
$512,813
The Eli and Edythe Broad Foundation
Education Reform Now (Democrats for Education Reform)
$2,925,000
The Walton Family Foundation
$2,481,716
The Eli and Edythe Broad Foundation
$600,000
Doris & Donald Fisher Fund
$500,000
Corabelle Lumps Foundation
$15,000
Bezos Family Foundation
League of Education Voters
$4,790,000
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
$257,000
Lochland Foundation
$160,139
Bezos Family Foundation
$1,000
Apex Foundation
Partnership for Learning
$4,700,000
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
Stand for Children™
$9,000,000
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
$2,857,945
The Walton Family Foundation
$350,000
Goldman Sachs Philanthropy Fund
$120,304
Bezos Family Foundation
$55,000
Wissner-Slivka Foundation
$25,000
Lochland Foundation
$1,000
Apex Foundation
(Sources: Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, 2013; Foundation Center, 2013; Libby, 2012; New York State Office of the Attorney General, 2013; Stand for Children, 2013; University of Washington Bothell Office of Research, 2013; University of Washington Bothell Office of Sponsored Programs, 2013)
“As Table 2 indicates, the philanthropic foundations connected to major contributors to the Yes On 1240 campaign provided a range of support directly to three of the four campaign-coordinating organizations and the CRPE: the Apex Foundation’s $1,000.00 contributions to each LEV and Stand for Children were the smallest, and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation’s total contribution of $9,000,000.00 to Stand for Children was the largest. Further, while DFER received no direct philanthropic support, its sister organization Education Reform Now received ample support from campaign-connected philanthropies, and, as detailed above, the overlap of resources between the cluster of Education Reform Now Inc., Education Reform Now Advocacy, and DFER, is very fluid. The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation is the most prominent here, haven given over $27 million total to Yes On 1240 campaign-connected organizations across multiple years, grants, and contracts. The Walton Foundation is second-most prominent, having contributed $6.48 million to campaign-connected organizations, followed by the Broad Foundation at $2.99 million in support for campaign-connected organizations. There is a precipitous drop in total support after these three, potentially indicating smaller amounts of financial support originating from smaller foundations (e.g., Lochland Foundation or the Bezos Family Foundation). Regardless of the amount, foundation support of the organizations directly involved in the Yes On 1240 campaign is indicative of ideological alignment around specific education reforms (in this case, charter schools) between funders and grantees/contractors.”
If corporations are people then these people* aren’t people.
*the plutocrats.
See J. Prine for a deeper explanation:
THANK-YOU for sharing John Prine’s wisdom!
I headed one of the No on 1240 campaigns. It was a very hard battle against this kind of financial firepower. In addition, the Yes campaign sought to try to belittle member of the No campaign including me. I had several debates where the Yes supporter made light of my work as an education blogger.
Voters didn’t not hear this message enough about who was funding it, especially the out of state funding.
One other issue is that the Washington Education Association (the union) did not work nearly hard enough to defend this measure. That we lost by about 40,000 votes is a bitter pill considering how much money the Yes side had.
There is an on-going lawsuit and it is now in dispute whether charter schools meet our state’s constitutional definition of “common schools” and if they may receive state funding. It’s not over yet.
Here is another list of people Gates relies on to promote the agenda for GREATER business involvement in public schools. This list is from a just released tome on how business should “partner” with schools, based on a December 2013 conference convened at Harvard, an institution prepared, it seems, to do whatever Gates wants. The list of the “advisory board” for the report follows. The slick 32-page report features great stuff that is supposed to be happening in Memphis and in Cincinnati, my hometown, where the last CEO of a major non-profit “partner” was drained of much money when the economy tanked. Also featured in EdWeek as a case study of five decades in the retention of segregated schools, recently under the banner of public school “choice.” The 32-page report addressed to business leaders is at http://www.hbs.edu/competitiveness/pdf/lasting-impact.pdf
The advisors for this “report,” are listed here and grouped a bit to show roles.
Andres A. Alonso Professor of Practice Harvard Graduate School of Education
Monica C. Higgins Professor of Education Harvard Graduate School of Education
David A. Thomas Dean Georgetown University, McDonough School of Business
Tom A. Boasberg Superintendent Denver Public Schools
John E. Deasy Superintendent Los Angeles Unified School District
Mary Ellen Elia Superintendent Hillsborough County Public Schools
John C. White Superintendent Louisiana Department of Education
John B. King, Jr. Education Commissioner New York State
Sydney J. Morris Co-CEO Educators 4 Excellence
Elisa Villanueva Beard Co-CEO Teach for America
Paul T. Hill Founder Center on Reinventing Public Education Seattle
Robert E. Wise, Jr. President Alliance for Excellent Education and former governor of West Virginia (Launched CCSS)
Andrew J. Rotherham Co-Founder Bellwether Education Partners ( Spin doctors, push surveys)
Diane S. Tavenner CEO Summit Public Schools (Silicon Valley non-profit)
Robert L. Corcoran, Chairman GE Foundation
William D. Green Former CEO Accenture
Kevin R. Hall CEO Charter School Growth Fund
Joseph R. Hyde III Founder AutoZone
Deborah H. Quazzo Founder GSV Advisors Silicon Valley, investment bankers
Marvin N. Schoenhals CEO WSFS Financial Corporation
William H. Swanson CEO Raytheon Company
Andrew H. Tisch Office of the President, Loews Corporation
Jessie T. Woolley-Wilson CEO DreamBox Learning Online learning, Math
I assume that, like our LAUSD Superintendent John Deasy who makes so many bad decisions with iPad purchases and firing teachers who are kept indefinitely in teacher jail, these other Superintendents are all also Broad Academy graduates. They follow Eli Broad’s corporate business model to cut the budget by firing trained teachers, while overpaying/overspending taxpayer funds while buying free market goods.
Byrd-Bennet from Chicago also belongs on this list.
Ellen Lubic
“an education policy that impacts all of the children in Washington State. ”
That’s the key quote, and what I think we should focus on. These laws are sold as “about” charter schools, but that’s not true.
They impact every kid in every existing public school in the state. That’s what we’ve learned in Ohio after a decade of this privatization version of ed reform.
Parents of public school kids tune this out, because it’s “about” charters and our kids don’t attend charters. It’s not “about” charters, because charters don’t operate in isolation. When they come in, your public school will be affected. Inevitably and often negatively.
A recent New Yorker magazine profile said that Reed Hastings has moved with his wife and children to Italy, but he commutes back to the Netflix offices near San Jose for two weeks a month. Presumably his children attend school in Italy or have private tutors.
Meanwhile, Netflix is producing original children’s programs for the stated purpose of hooking children as lifelong Netflix viewers.
Also in the article, Hastings said that he has no hobbies and failed at his goal to become a renaissance man, and his only interest outside work is philanthropy aimed at charter schools and education reform.
Hastings certainly isn’t working to reform education for the sake of his own children. While the Hastings kids explore Italy, Reed Hastings is striving to get OTHER PEOPLE’S CHILDREN hooked on streaming tv shows and into privatized schools that use technology (sold by companies like Netflix) as a substitute for experienced teachers.
These titans of industry clearly see the privatization of education as a bonanza. They know investing in laws like the charter school legislation in Washington will pay huge dividends later.
What is recourse here… I mean the manipulation seems clear… How do we (even though I live in Oregon) combat this? Is this blog enough? Have we called Diane Warren, or the Washington equivalent…? What do we do? That kind of law manipulation has to be illegal somewhere? No?
James Clark,
Contact Senator Patty Murray, a high-ranking member of Senate committee, contact your senators and legislators, federal and state. We are many, they are few.
Will Do. Thanks!
Senator Murray, I read recently on Dianne Ravitch Blog that you your state has allowed corporate reformers to severely influence the democratic process regarding public schools. You are family to us here in Oregon, and in the same way that I would not want my Sister to take up with an abusive husband, I say to you that Gates and his compatriots are no good for education. Please do not allow them to subvert the democratic process. Get out of this relationship before it’s too late. See: https://dianeravitch.net/2014/02/07/researchers-reveal-funding-network-for-wash-charter-law/ for details
James Clark
Portland Oregon
Thanks Diane for this vital info.
I was interviewed by Lila Garrett of KPFK in Los Angeles yesterday and this is exactly what she asked about….how the Billionaires affect public education….as one area of their takeover of everything.
The program will first be aired on Monday, but it can be heard streaming at the KPFK website.
She too asked, as does James Clark, and the rest of us, what is the recourse to combat this wealth and power?
Ellen Lubic
What is needed to stop the billionaires’ covert takeover of public education is mass action, political action, demonstrations, parents and teachers and students together, fighting corporate takeovers of what belongs to the public.
well then….. I’m sorry, but I have to ask…. why DO you support Randi Weingarten when she WILL NOT fight the corporate takeover of public education…. at least not substantively….
I’m PR/marketing specialist – what she puts out in messaging, where and when she puts it out is completely designed to disappear into the ether without making much more of a ripple…
I dont see her doing ANYTHING effective to push back on ed reform, and it certainly doesnt help that she allows the union to take money from the billionaire plutocrats….
Seriously, Diane… with much love and respect… you know what is really going on – your languaging, which has changed over the last three years, shows you do… you now call it plainly for what it is…. and Randi DOES know…. why wont you call her on her BS?
We are not going to win this until we parents and teachers work together, and we cant do that with the unions still in bed with the ed deformers…
Wow, That REALLY deserves an answer. Diane must be temporarily offline…
Miz Ravitch, I’m with Sahila on this. Randi Weingarten is clearly aligned with the corporatist agenda based on her public statements. I understand that she is in a difficult position. perhaps she is compromising on some issues in order to champion others, about which we are unaware. Perhaps this is an issue that isn’t possible for you to discuss. I would understand and respect that. It would solve the mystery, and dispel doubt.
For example, I love the U.S. Air Force. I will be grateful to the USAF for the rest of my life, won’t ever criticize or discuss any actions associated with the USAF because my gratitude is boundless, and on an emotional level. Please, don’t be angered by my presumption? This comment is too long, but there are two sizable errors in that 1240 donor list.
Privatization is all about profit, not about improvement of education or about philanthropy.
http://billmoyers.com/2014/02/07/higher-profits-explain-why-there-are-more-people-of-color-in-private-prisons/
OMG! I have never thought of the privatization of schools as similar to the privatization of prisons. This quote really nailed it for me from that article:
“Chris Petrella’s study shows that they also pick and choose their prisoners in order to maximize their bottom lines.”
I think this is the end game for Charter school investors. Run a duel system where the cheapest kids to educate stay with them while the more expensive students to teach are dumped off into the public system. There is no intention of EVER fixing a broken Public School system. They need it to exist, otherwise they will be footing the bill. When the profit’s go down, the gravy train is over. This is the clearest path I see to a truly re-segregated public school system. But instead of segregation along lines of color, it will be along lines of cost. Charter will fight tooth and nail to have the smartest kids taught by the least experienced teachers.
You absolutely have got it now, Daniel. Not only do the private prisons need to keep their cells filled to maximize their profits, they incentivize the school to prison pipeline. Those students who for any reason, perhaps ADHD behavior and acting out in class, are suspended and are on the streets, are generally rapidly picked up by the police and end up in the juvenile justice system…and off they go to the private prison for shop lifting a package of gum.
The ‘of color’ issue is still prime since many of these students are inner city kids of color and Brown v. Bd. of Ed is being buried as the law of land in favor of the ‘for profit’ and some ‘not for profit’ charters being able to skim the easiest to teach, leaving behind ELL and Special Ed students.
It is a huge ripoff by Wall Street and ALEC and if we all do not fight back, as Diane suggests to us, we will lose free public education in America, but we the taxpayers will pay the freight to enrich the investors.
Ellen Lubic
Here in Ohio we have a “governor” who was part of the Lehman Brothers fiasco that preceded the 2008 fall of the economy. He is all for private prisons, highways, and schools. He makes promises he can’t keep. He tells people to “get on the bus” or he will run over them. He tells policemen they are idiots. He refuses to live in the governor’s mansion. He lives in his own home and sends his kids to private schools. The prisons are inadequate. Their privatization has changed their food system, their prison work to prepare for society and other things. The private charter schools are not adequately supervised and not held accountable.
And yet, he wants to run for President.
you need to take your revelation about the similarities between prison and school privatisation one step forward….
They’re saying that what they’re doing is to solve the problem of poverty….
That’s BS…. there never will be an end to poverty under capitalism…. capitalism is a pyramid in its structure, it NEEDS poverty to exist and it uses poverty three ways. First, because capitalism is by its very nature exploitative, it MANUFACTURES and MAINTAINS poverty by sucking profit up to the top of the pyramid….
Then it uses poverty both as a carrot and a stick to get people to comply with it’s demands that they participate in the system – dont participate and you are outside the system, will be left behind in bare survival mode, will be ‘other’…. if you do participate, it promises you the (illusionary) chance at making it to the rewards to be found at the top of the pyramid – or at least, a place higher up the ladder for your children than you yourself occupy.
And no, we plebs will never get a place at the top – imagine the capstone of an actual pyramid and think about how much room there is at the top. The plutocrats will never give up their places to share that finite space with the billions of us crawling over each other to move up/not lose our footing on our rung… It’s a bit like that question – how many angels can you fit on the head of a pin? How many ordinary people can you fit at the pinnacle of the pyramid-ponzi scheme that is capitalism? Certainly not 7 billion of us (and besides, Paul Krugman said it would take the resources of 4-5 earths to allow each of us on the planet to live as we do here in the west, which is one of several reasons why the plutocrats are forcing living standards in the west to drop to match 3rd world conditions, rather than vice versa)…
Capitalism is built on the premise of infinite growth. We’re going to have infinite growth in the number of private prison inmates, cos the plutocrats have promised their investors 90% occupancy… Where will they get those inmates from? By continuing to make new laws that are tougher on the smallest infringements, thus providing a steady stream of new fodder, especially from disadvantaged communities, which dont add to the bottom line in any othe way, are a drain on resources and which can be used as slave labour in prisons…
What’s happening in the privatisation of public ed is exactly the same as in the privatisation of prisons, with the added bonus that in doing what they’re doing to public ed, the plutocratsa are turning our kids into cash cows (see Boston Marketing Group Product Matrix for the reference) AND feeding the school-to-prison pipeline… and yes, it’s completely disgusting…
However, one cannot have infinite growth in a finite system (the earth), and very soon, the entire system will collapse under the damage we have done to the planet, other lifeforms and our fellow human beings…
and no, I’m not a fan of any other socio/political/economic system either… all the ‘isms” are the product of old, rich, white men, dont work and are downright dangerous to life….
read this piece about the hypocrisy of Bill Gates and the Gates Foundation – investing in all the things that undermine healthy, happy lives (including private prisons) on a healthy planet: http://www.motherjones.com/environment/2013/12/gates-foundations-24-most-egregious-investments – it really is all about the money….
Amy Goodman | Inside the Shocking “Kids for Cash” Juvenile Justice Scandal
Amy Goodman, Democracy Now!
Excerpt: “Today a special on ‘kids for cash,’ the shocking story of how thousands of children in Pennsylvania were jailed by two corrupt judges who received $2.6 million in kickbacks from the builders and owners of private prison facilities.”
READ MORE
Here is more of the private prison industry and incarcerating kids for cash.
Ellen
Doncha just love the free market?
It was unthinkable even 10 or 15 years ago to have to actually defend an institution of our democracy, public education.
This “reform” movement is all about pilfering ALL public institutions for private gain. This is nothing but parasitism.
The sad thing is that the students and staff members will lose by the creation of charters. Detroit has tons of charters and they are inferior to a real education. It makes me sick that all of these super, filthy, rich people are promoting this garbage that is ultimately inferior.
Yes on 1240 for Public Charter Schools may have won because like many country-wide propositions that win, the public is not fully informed on both sides of the issue to understand its effects on people or the economy. People sign petitions in front of the grocery store many times with only what the petitioner says in couple of sentences. We enjoy our freedom to vote in this country, however voters might be taking it for granted. I would question if the win here would have gone the other way if the same money was used but having more people informed about the effects of charter schools and how their tax dollars would be used in funding these schools. With Internet these days, one would think it would be possible to educate the public more so. We have how many educators in the country or in a state? I find it hard to believe that propositions negatively affecting public schools could win considering the number of educators in school districts, colleges, parents, and people related to them.
1240 was specific to WA…. as mentioned, voters had THREE times before rejected charter schools in this state…. THEN the ed reformers brought in their cash…. just as they have been doing in last two Seattle School District School Board elections…
the cash they brought in bought them saturation advertising…. cable, newspaper, mail box flyers, phone banking…. opponents didnt have the money to match
IF I remember correctly, the measure lost in the biggest urgan area – King County, but won in enough smaller areas to swing the result
“urban” even!
And here is the latest on our LAUSD problem with Billionaires Broad and Gates puppet, John Deasy. We can read it and weep, or read it and take to the streets.
From an email blast by Capitol & Main:
“As superintendent of the second largest school district in the country, LAUSD chief John Deasy’s job is to look out for L.A.’s public schools. So why is he actively helping to advance lawsuits filed against his own district?
As our new story by investigative reporter Bill Raden explains, education privatization forces in California have adopted a strategy of sidestepping the legislative process by going to the courts in an effort to force the state’s public school systems to adopt union-busting, market-based changes. In L.A., they’re finding help in influential places — including from the district superintendent himself.
As one good government expert puts it, Deasy’s efforts on behalf of education privatizers is like ‘calling in artillery on his own position.'”
http://capitalandmain.com/deasy-versus-deasy-the-two-faces-of-los-angeles-school-superintendent/
—
Read me at:
https://k12newsnetwork.com
From Cynthia Liu by way of me, Ellen Lubic
Reblogged this on Middletown Voice.
Looking at this list of contributors…
One cannot buy a place in heaven, but certainly one can buy a place in hell. In fact there is competition on.
There is an error. Number 9 on the list, Michael Wolf, is NOT, nor has ever been on the Yahoo! Inc. board of directors. Michael and Anne and Jeff Bezos all worked together at D.E. Shaw. Jeff married his secretary at D.E. Shaw. In addition, Anne, Jeff’s mother, Jeff’s father and yet another former D.E. Shaw managing director (he has his own hedge fund, 2 Sigmas or such) were appointed to the Board of Directors of the Robin Hood Foundation simultaneously, in March of 2013. They are 4 of the 8 board members. All describe themselves as “passionate about education”.
I’ve talked to Michael about his excellent public school education in San Francisco, at Lowell High School. We were engaged, so believe me, I had opportunity. I still talk to Michael on the phone. These people live in a rarified world unbelievably distant from mine, although they don’t even know it. Their children have dinners at the White House with former President Clinton. They do NOT attend the same cruddy charter schools as the plebeians!
I tried to contact Melissa from Seattle, and others, regarding 1240, but they ignored me.
Sahila and Woof seem to have a good understanding of how it works. And Deb, I recall her from past comments here. She is kind and wise.