Max Brantley, regular columnist for the Arkansas Times, tells the sorry tale of the likely Walton takeover of the Little Rock school district. Read here and here.
Six of Little Rock’s 48 public schools have low test scores. Instead of bringing help to those needy schools, Walton-funded lobbyists are promoting a state takeover of the entire district. That way, all the schools can be turned into charters with private managers. This eliminates the elected school board; reformers don’t like school boards. They like state control and mayoral control.
In the second link, Brantley writes:
“Following the money on the Walton-Hutchinson takeover of Little Rock schools
“It’s not yet clear when the final House Education Committee battle will be fought on HB 1733 to allow the state to privatize any or all of a public school district judged to be in academic distress.
“It’s monumental legislation that would make all school teachers and administrators fire-at-will employees without due process rights. It would destroy the last remaining teacher union contract in Arkansas. It allows for the permanent end of democratic control of a school district or those portions of it privatized. It would capture property tax millage voted by taxpayers for specific purposes, including buildings, and give them to private operators. It would allow seizure of buildings for private operators at no cost. CORRECTION: Fort Smith classroom teachers still negotiate with the Fort Smith School District. An anti-union organization they fund, the Arkansas State Teachers Association, has spent a great deal of money trying to solicit members in Fort Smith, a teacher there reports.
“This bill is the work of the Walton Family Foundation. People the Walton money supports — lobbyists Gary Newton of Arkansas Learns, Scott Smith of the Arkansas Public School Research Foundation, Kathy Smith of the Walton Family Foundation and Laurie Lee of Arkansas Parents for School Choice — are the leading lobbyists. Smith has been quoted by others as saying he’s the primary author (his organization gets $3 million a year from the Waltons), but it follows similar legislation introduced in other states, with poor to disastrous results (New Orleans).
(Concurrently and coincidentally, the Walton Foundation and Rockefeller Foundation are sponsoring a school study in Little Rock by the Boston Consulting Group, an outfit that has studied and recommended mass privatization in other cities.)
The goal is to make the Little Rock School District a laboratory for the pet education aims of the Waltons, who own the University of Arkansas, particularly the department ginning out propaganda in behalf of this bill. Gov. Asa Hutchinson is fully on board. He’s been resisting a solid plan to put competent people in charge in Little Rock and moving on fixing the six schools on which the entire district of 48 schools was placed in academic distress. His plan is to pass a law to overcome Johnny Key’s lack of a teacher certificate, master’s degree and 10 years education experience and become state Education Commissioner. Key would then find a Walton-favored outfit to run the six schools at issue and be poised to take over as many others as the Waltons deem necessary.
It’s been a long battle, but money does tend to win out.
UPDATE:….
Many tentacles. Lots of money….
If you think Johnny Key, who used Nick Wilson-style special language chicanery to increase the virtual charter school enrollment from 500 to 3,000 will stop at six Little Rock schools in the privatization scheme, I’ve got a Little Rock school to sell you for $1, subject to Walton approval.
The simmering pot full of Little Rock School District frogs (otherwise knowns as voters, taxpayers, parents, students and teachers) will soon be fully cooked, with no life left to jump out.
Good Morning–I’m a constant lurker, and though I find much of what you bring forward to be disheartening, I do thank you for all that you are doing to keep me and all of your readers informed about what is going on across the country.
Here are links to two posts that you might find of interest;
I am a teacher in the district, and we are planning a rally against HB1733 tomorrow at the Arkansas Capitol. It will start at 6pm. We’re trying to fight this, but Gary Newton (Walton lobbyist who started Quest Charter) took the Senate Education Committee out to a fancy-schmancy dinner last week, and apparently, champagne bottles were present… We’re more than devastated about our district being taken over, and we’re beside ourselves over 1733. Let’s hope the court system helps us out this week, as the LRSD School Board’s lawsuit will be heard in Judge Griffen’s court.
I’ve wondered after reading past items about Walton funding related to education: What if teachers and allies skipped shopping at WalMart for a week? To send a message that their efforts & dollars could be put to better use. Would it get their attention?
Say, the first week of June. No fair buying ahead. Call it Opt Out WalMart Week.
My needs, location don’t warrant buying from WalMart.
I am awaiting legislation that will change the name of this state from Arkansas to Waltonana.
There is a boycott going on right now, but I’m not sure how many people know about it. LRSD teachers are trying to get the message out to other districts about how HB 1733 will affect them, too, but it’s been difficult. We don’t have a huge platform in which to explain exactly what the bill entails, but we are getting other organizations involved. We’ve got to fight the charter takeover as hard as possible because the Waltons want the Little Rock School District in a bad way. It’s the largest, and the only district left with bargaining rights. Many of us are looking for other positions outside of the district, or we’re thinking of changing career paths all together. I did not get into education almost ten years ago to have a corporation dictate what I can and cannot teach.
Lunch is almost over, and I have to go do my job (which does not entail giving a test today, thankfully), but if you have questions about what we are doing in the district to combat the Walton takeover and HB1733, feel free to e-mail me at erica.ivy@icloud.com or elivy@ualr.edu.
Very frightening. Thank you for your work, Diane.
I don’t agree with referring to the Waltons as “elites”. They have accumulated wealth through retail, and in a state like Arkansas that has roots in plantation mentality, money really impresses. They come from a very narrow minded perspective, because their experience has been one of segregated world (2nd gen. are segregated by race and socioeconomic class), and they now seek (however mis-guided) to preserve it. Their idea is to Do Something Big, so they are throwing money at it. Unfortunately, Arkansans have packed our legislature with a bunch that will follow the money as long as they can get re-elected.
Walton is borrowing a page from Gates’ playbook. Now both billionaires openly declare their intention to experiment with public education and do an end run around those pesky school boards’ insistence on a petty little thing like democracy.
From a youtube video of Wolf Blitzer’s 2008 interview with Bill Gates:
“There’s a lot of issues about governance … They have to give us (the Gates Foundation) the opportunity for this experimentation – the unions, the voters (?!). The cities where our foundation has put the most money in is where there’s a single person responsible. In New York, Chicago and Washington, DC, the mayor has responsibility for the school system. So instead of having a committee of people, you have that one person.”
Now add Little Rock to their unilateral, undemocratic experiment.
http://publicschoolshakedown.org/funding-education-reform
cross posted
http://www.opednews.com/Quicklink/Walton-paid-lobbyist-intro-in-Best_Web_OpEds-Control_Legislation_Lobbyists-Lobbying-Influence_Schools-150321-547.html#comment537979