So, now the privatization begins: First, a swallow. Eventually, the crows, the buzzards, and the vultures. Watch for KIPP, Achievement First, Academica, Imagine, and the other corporate chains to get into line to open schools in P.R. As we now know, no experience is needed to open and run a school. Anyone can do it, and anyone can teach. New worlds to conquer.
Politico reports today:
AFTER COURT VICTORY, PUERTO RICO ANNOUNCES FIRST CHARTER SCHOOLS: Government officials in Puerto Rico announced Sunday the opening of the territory’s first charter school, just days after a victory in court that sanctioned Puerto Rico’s new school choice law.
— The Boys and Girls Club of Puerto Rico on Aug. 20 will open the Vimenti School — a K-5 school with 58 students. The school will be in the capital city of San Juan and is approved to enroll 190 students by its fifth year. The emphasis will be on social and emotional learning, and students will be educated in both Spanish and English.
— “There is much left to do to implement the plan for education reform, but this is an important step. Doing more of the same is not an option for this administration,” Gov. Ricardo Rosselló said during a press conference, joined by Keleher.
— Officials also announced that a second nonprofit, Caras de las Américas, was also approved to operate a charter school. The organization will have a year to plan for the new school, which is expected to enroll 315 students. Keleher said that other nonprofits and local government agencies are being vetted as potential charter school operators for the 2019-2020 school year. Among those are LEAP Social Enterprise, Techno Innovators and Centro para PR.
— The announcement comes days after the Tribunal Supremo of Puerto Rico, the territory’s highest court, overturned a July decision from a lower court that found privately run charter schools and private school vouchers unconstitutional and potentially harmful to Puerto Rico’s traditional public schools.
— In a victory for Rosselló and Keleher, the justices found that charter schools are constitutional because the state “exerts control and ample power over the implementation and administration of these schools, which are free, nonsectarian … and open to the community.” As for vouchers, they wrote that even when private schools stand to benefit from the funding, it is “not to a degree that would lead to the subsidizing of private education in violation of our constitution.” More on that from your host here.
— Meanwhile, traditional public schools on the island bring students back for the new school year today. Keleher, who has touted an overhaul of the traditional public education system there, is welcoming students after the closure of dozens of public schools. “Change is happening here,” she told POLITICO. “Change creates uncertainty and anxiety, but this is a system that has been stagnant for over a decade.”
— But the teachers union has said it anticipates mayhem. School closures, a new system for online student registrations and the shuffle of teachers from closed schools could result in overcrowded classrooms and schools short on the necessary staff, spokeswoman Grichelle Toledo told POLITICO. Toledo said the union has asked the territory’s commission for civil rights to serve as an observer over the process.
To read the links, open Politico link.

Sickening. Bet the thinking is: “The Puerto Ricans are JUST BROWN people so they deserve to have lousy schools, which makes profits off of them.” Abuse and USE!
Read: Melba Pattillo Beals.
https://www.publishersweekly.com/pw/by-topic/childrens/childrens-authors/article/75737-q-a-with-melba-pattillo-beals.html
https://www.npr.org/2018/01/15/577371750/they-didn-t-want-me-there-remembering-the-terror-of-school-integration
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Well another example of white do nothing people in charge making money off of minority children and public education. Once again Wall Street and do nothing white people who want to take advantage of children and ensure that they know nothing when they graduate. These are the same people who didn’t think there was anything wrong with not giving the people federal aid when they needed it . The president throwing towels at them like they were in the zoo.
no one has forgotten that.
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Hedge funds are skilled manipulators of financing followed by exploitation of the vulnerable.
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“Robbin The Hood”
Robbin the hood
Of public schools
Replacin’ with flood
Of charter tools
Over the hedge
With his Merry Men
Robbin The Hood
Has struck again
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The only thing needed to change up that stingingly arrogant image as an illustration for the hands-off invasions attached to disaster capitalism school takeover would be to have Trump now throw out a few MAGA backpacks.
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No plans for public schools, I guess.They’re a low priority, apparently.
The vast majority of families just went missing, never to be heard from again.
It happens every time ed reform captures lawmakers. Existing public schools drop to the bottom of the priority list. They should warn families with children in public schools- their schools have been assigned no value.
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On a not unrelated note, this just in:
Campbell Brown, hard at work putting her foot in her mouth (again)
Everything Brown touches turns brown (and stinky)
https://www.commondreams.org/news/2018/08/13/private-meeting-facebook-exec-warns-news-outlets-cooperate-or-end-dying-hospice
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PR’s economy has been in steep decline since 2006 – combo of US sunsetting various tax breaks, & surge in oil prices [their sole fuel for elec]. PR econ now in such terrible shape it’s hard to discuss the pro’s & con’s of privatized public services in any normal context. For a thumbnail:
Current PR per capita income is $24k, which is 50% lower than MS’s [lowest per capita income in states].
Current PR per capita debt is $17k, which is 50% higher than MA’s [highest per capita debt in states].
Unemployment was 12% a yr ago; down to 9% now (over twice the US ave). Job participation rate 40% (50% lower than US ave).
My husband is in intl elec power gen/ transm; I asked him about privatization of elec power in PR. He said their power sys was already on last legs before recent hurricanes due to low funds/ low maint/ no upgrades, & at this point has to be rebuilt from scratch. They will privatize because US won’t be underwriting that, they are desperate & will take the $ from wherever they can get it. The downside will be no govt revenue or control of prices, probable debt increase. Upside: the power sys gets rebuilt.
Public sch sys (as near as I can figure from articles on PR econ) forms a goodsize chunk of public debt & thus has already suffered many closures from pre-Irma/Maria austerity program. Closures continue (267 more, soon). A lot of that is consolidation reflecting yrs of losing 6%/yr enrollment to people moving stateside for job oppty (spiked after hurricanes tho some have returned). Pubschs/ teachers trying to hang onto the $589million hurricane relief targeted for public ed.
Frankly I don’t see a parallel to the elec power situation, am I wrong? Opening the public debt-kitty to charters/ vouchers will cause the usual decline in quality/ increase in cost, it’s a sign of nothing other than the typical vultures closing in when disaster strikes, looking to grub any available scraps. Keleher strikes me as a data-maven looking to get & apply max poss grants/ funds & set up a monitoring sys. She won’t turn down any source of corp investment. PR Govr per one article is looking to mimic US policies in every arena incl current DC charter/ voucher-friendly dept of ed so as to increase chances of PR statehood [devil take hindmost]].
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(I am an electrical engineer.) On a tropical island, with 300+ days a year of sunshine, and round-the-clock trade winds, it makes good sense to utilize solar/wind for power production. The island has been using expensive fuel oil for power production.
Sometimes, a natural disaster will work to benefit a territory. Getting rid of an obsolete and expensive power production system, and replacing it with a modern, lower-cost system will benefit the island.
In Enterprise, Alabama, there is a monument to the boll weevil. It is the only monument to a destructive pest insect in the world. The boll weevil wrecked the cotton industry, and the farmers turned to corn, soybeans, peanuts, etc. and the agriculture boomed, and more money was made than with cotton.
Hurricane Maria, might be the island’s boll weevil.
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Yes Charles that would be fabulous & a terrific long-term boost to the PR economy. Gifts of panels and batteries from Tesla and others are already helping a few remote clusters of homes and small businesses to function. But of course any larger-scale renewable system requires a govtl plan for rebuilding generation as well as distribution.
Sadly, the depleted economy – & lack of political will at PR end, & lack of $ support at our end – creates a vicious circle where low front-end cost dictates direction.
Would you believe they are not even taking the tiny step of switching to cylindrical utility poles to better withstand the next big hurricane? https://e360.yale.edu/features/after-the-storm-puerto-rico-misses-a-chance-to-rebuild-with-renewables-hurricane-maria
To figure in the effects of privatization, we can look to the Philippines. There is only one sour note in wiki article “Renewable Energy in the Philippines”: after a decade under a 2001 law to expand it primarily thro priv sector investment, many concluded monopolies were encouraged & price doubled. However, more refined combos of incentives have been legislated & perhaps reined that in. The overall picture is good, w/renewables now producing 25% of the nation’s power. However the big diff from PR is: Philippines has a longterm natl goal & plan & perseveres in implementation. PR is recovering from disaster willy-nilly & short-funded
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