Gay Adelmann, Parent Activist in Jefferson County and Leader of Save Our Schools Kentucky, writes about the hostile actions of the Kentucky Legislature:
Privatization or Potential Punishment: Are Louisville Teachers Being Forced To Choose The Lesser of Two Evils?
“The beatings will continue until morale improves,” seems to be the mantra of the Kentucky GOP when it comes to public education.
In the latest attack on its teachers, Kentucky’s new pro-charter education commissioner vowed to not punish teachers “as long as there are no more work stoppages.” It’s unclear whether the final day of Kentucky’s legislative session this Thursday will be met with another teacher-led “sick out.” It would be the 7th sickout in Jefferson County in a month. Kentucky Legislature has been on recess the last 14-days, resuming on March 28 for “sine die” and to pass any final legislation.
In addition to other terrible bills that pose a potential risk, nine resolutions stand ready to be passed by the Kentucky Senate, which would confirm the governor’s newest seven appointments to the Kentucky Board of education. The two additional resolutions appear to extend the length of current appointees’ service by swapping their seats (expiring in 2020) with two who would have been appointed to the new slots, possibly a maneuver to protect key players in the event Kentucky’s unpopular governor does mitt win reelection.
The entire 14-member board is now completely made up of privatization-friendly appointees from Kentucky’s charter-pushing, ALEC-backed governor, following an earlier round of appointments two years prior. Last year, the new board ousted the Commonwealth’s highly qualified commissioner, Stephen Pruitt, the day after they were appointed, and replaced him with an 5-year teacher and charter school ideologue who immediately called for a state takeover of the state’s largest district.
Serving nearly 100,000 students, and a $1.7 billion annual budget, Jefferson County Public Schools is by far the largest school district in the state of Kentucky, and the 30th largest in the nation.
Let’s ignore the fact that few, if any, of these board members have experience as educators or parents in the public school sector. In fact, several of the members have direct ties to charter schools and have been working behind the scenes to undermine public schools and/or position themselves to potentially profit from charters, scholarship tax credits and state takeovers of schools and districts.
KBE appointments subject to confirmation include Hal Heiner, Gary Houchens, and Ben Cundiff. Their names, along with that of their chosen commissioner, Wayne Lewis, can be found on formation documents and on boards of existing charter schools dating back to 2011, long before they worked their way into positions of conflict of interest or self-dealing.
Charters, vouchers, “scholarships” and myraid other hedge-fund darling investments have been the law of the land on 43 other states, so these well-funded privatizers know how to penetrate a market. And once they’re in, they can have their way with everything else they want. We know. We’ve heard this from allies in Indiana, Tennessee, Florida, Arizona, California, West Virginia, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Iowa, Washington State, the list goes on and on.
These folks keep telling us, “whatever you do, don’t let them in. It’s much harder to get them out once you have them.” JCPS teachers see it, and they have been literally keeping these most dangerous bills at bay this session and last. “To again fail to (approve charter funding) is pretty shocking and something we’ve never seen in any other state,” according to Todd Ziebarth, a national charter school advocate who helped craft the 2017 law.
But this fight is far from over. So what legislation is still in play that could happen on Thursday?
House Bill 358 would give public universities the option to exit the Kentucky Employees’ Retirement System (KERS). The bill passed the House where the Senate “took a problematic bill and transformed it into an outright dangerous one,” according to Louisville House Rep Lisa Willner. “The Senate version would still permit public universities to opt out of the public retirement system (KERS), and would all but require that “quasi-governmental” agencies – community mental health centers, domestic violence shelters, child advocacy organizations, rape crisis centers, and all 61 health departments statewide – exit the public retirement system altogether. The Senate version of HB 358 threatens the very existence of these lifeline organizations, and could effectively dismantle the statewide system of public protection and crisis support.” The number of Kentucky workers whose inviolable contracts would be broken would expand to nearly 9,000.
Although many legislators have assured us HB205 (Scholarship Tax Credits) and HB525 (Pension Trustee Appointments) are dead this session, it doesn’t mean they won’t continue to bring them back next year and the year after that until they pass, much like they did with charter school legislation, which finally passed in 2017. Our only saving grace has been the fact that there was so much pushback, the general assembly’s been unable to muster enough intestinal fortitude to fund them again this session. The trick is figuring out if we can really trust this latest promise, because those in the minority are usually the last to know what’s going on, and those in the supermajority have broken our trust before.
The same body that passed an unconstititional “sewer bill” on the last day of 2018 session is the same body that called a special session to try to pass it again constitutionally last winter. And now we’re simply supposed to trust them when they say these harmful education bills are dead?
But those bills aren’t the only threat in the near future. As I mentioned, charter school legislation passed in 2017, but has yet to be funded. A looming state takeover of JCPS could open the door to conversion charter schools, without waiting for any funding mechanism to pass.
Could the confirmation of the KBE appointments be checkmate for Jefferson County Public Schools? Or said another way, could a disruption in the confirmation of these appointments derail the privatizers’ agenda to implement charter schools in our most vulnerable communities? If for no other reason, concerned citizens of Jefferson County need to email, call and then head to Frankfort on Thursday to put pressure on the Kentucky Senate to not confirm Bevin’s appointments to the KBE.
Jefferson County teachers are fighting against a “solution” that has been not only proven not to work, but leads to school closures, district bankruptcies, displaced vulnerable students and increased taxes.
If I were a teacher, I would be outraged at Commissioner Lewis’ latest attempts to bully and intimidate teachers. I’d love to see teachers call his bluff and reveal their collective power over him..
But I’m not a teacher. I’m a parent, community organizer, concerned citizen and taxpayer (link:https://www.courier-journal.com/story/opinion/2019/03/26/jcps-parents-students-should-join-teacher-sickout-gay-adelmann/3269349002/) who recognized years ago that her son’s “failing” public school in a high-minority, high-poverty area of town was being groomed for a charter school takeover. And yet, here we are, six years and one helluva fight later, risking watching everything we’ve been warning folks about come to fruition.
The Friday following the last sickout, many parents also kept their children home to show solidarity with teachers who have been fighting for our students, and to exercise the only power they knew how. There is talk of another parent-led action during the week of abusive state testing. It’s time teachers and parents in these red states recognize the power they do hold, and to use it to stop the hostilities coming out of Frankfort.
Whether it’s parents or teachers doing the talking, it’s time to turn the conversation around and say to Lewis, the KBE and our state legislators, “There will be no more closures to our public schools, as soon as you stop the shady attempts to privatize them against the wishes of taxpayers and against the best interest of our most vulnerable students.”
Dear JCPS invites other concerned citizens to Frankfort on March 28 for a Rally in the Rotunda from 10 am – 12 pm. We will also have the table in the annex basement where concerned citizens like myself are happy to answer any other questions you may have about what’s really behind this movement and what are next steps.
Gay Adelmann is a parent of a recent JCPS graduate and co-founder of Dear JCPS and Save Our Schools Kentucky. She can be reached at moderator@dearjcps.com.
Gary Houchens, a professor at the public Western Kentucky University, identifies his employer with his name as a “policy scholar” at the Bluegrass Institute. The Bluegrass Institute site lacks scholarly objectivity. Why does WKU allow its name to be tarnished by association with a politically controversial organization? Why does an institution, created for the common good so that students had a quality alternative to legacy admission schools permit the appearance of its endorsement for undermining public education?
I attended Western Kentucky University. The university does not prohibit staff from working for other entities. And the fact that a WKU staffer works for an organization, does not necessarily imply any endorsement of that organization.
Organizations protect their reputations by instituting policies that discourage employees from identifying their employers when they engage in activities that are politically noxious, unsavory,…
Privatized education advocated by a person picking up a public paycheck while working in public education is at a minimum hypocritical?
A private organization would fire an employee who engaged in activities that threatened the survival of the firm. While, Charles, you have deficits in understanding and knowledge certainly, you are aware higher ed is the same target that K-12 is.
The incredible irony is that the Koch professors babble about liberty and freedom which is exactly what is taken away by the oligarchy.
@Linda: What “target” are you talking about? Families/students can get BEOGs and other federal money, like the GI Bill, and enroll at private universities and private vo-tech schools.
Post-secondary education at non-public outlets, has received public money, for many decades, with no adverse effects.
That horse already got out of the barn.
If anyone tried to stop BEOGs/GI Bill recipients from selecting the non-public college of their choice, they would be laughed out of town.
Until recently, most courts u derstood the difference between Postsecondary education for adultsand K-12 education, where religious schools proselytize. Whenever the issue of K-12 vouchers goes to voters, they are overwhelmingly opposed.
The public in Ariz voted down vouchers in 2018, voted them down in Florida in 2012, voted them down in Utah in 2007.
I trust voters, who can’t be bought, more than politicians, who change their views to satisfy their contributors.
I Believe in democracy, not plutocracy but obviously the politicians in Florida and Arizona don’t.
I was born in Louisville, and I am a graduate of Western Kentucky University. My college cannot stop a person from identifying the college as their employer. Just having a school employee participating in an organization, does not imply that the university endorses or approves of the organization. There is no “blacklist”.
Just so I understand your view as a college graduate from WKU, a university has no recourse if a teacher touts him/herself as a faculty expert from a university that he/she names in publications- no recourse if the publications assert themselves as, for example, the KKK, incels, polygamists, man-boy assignations, whatever…
Professionals usually respect their employers enough that they are sensitive to and protective of the organization’s reputation and they refrain from exposing the employer to public disdain for the choices they make as individuals.
@Linda: Are you supporting a blacklist? In the 1950s, if you were even suspected of being a communist, your career would be ruined.
Linda,
Charles is baiting you. One of his favorite games.
Lucky for you Charles, that citizens sacrificed so that you could have a cheaper, quality alternative to legacy admission colleges. And, you return the favor by advocating for school privatization- a taker like all Republicans.
@Linda: I do not consider myself “lucky”. I was born in Kentucky. My parents paid Kentucky taxes, that went to the public university (and other state functions). When I was ready for college, my parents could not afford to pay the tuition at the state university that they had been supporting for decades, with their taxes. And I was an 18 year old, with no money of my own.
NO citizen sacrificed to pay for my college education. They paid their taxes like everyone else.
I served in the Air Force, so that I could go to college on the GI Bill. I worked damn hard, and served in the military, to get my college education.
I strongly support school choices for parents. I support publicly-financed education. Just like a person can get GI Bill and/or BEOGs for higher education, I support lowering the grade level for families/students to choose their education. Why start at college and Vo-Tech schools for school choice. Extend it down to K-12!
What makes you think that I am a Republican? I voted for McGovern, and I have voted for Dem candidates all my life.
You sound like a Republican because you sound like DeVos, whose views you share.
Hmmm. Speculating about the thinking of the anti-tax Koch’s, relative to funding a G.I. bill. .. demographic groups who would benefit, and surmising the Koch’s views about them…
more musing… is there a Russian G.I. bill and, do the Russian oligarchs support it?
A historical quote confirmed by the number of dead Russian soldiers –
“Russian soldiers were used as cannon fodder.”
Chales-
McGovern would have fought Gates and the Koch’s with everything he had.
To refresh your memory about the man, “The Last Populist “,
9-9-2017 (The Nation)- McGovern saw the impact of the New Deal in the recovery of his neighbors, who had been devastated by economic calamity….
Totally SICK.
Diane, Obviously you didn’t know that even the Kentucky Education Association’s president has problems with Dear JCPS: https://www.wdrb.com/in-depth/kea-president-to-local-education-advocacy-group-stop-putting-fear/article_f92c3bb2-500b-11e9-aef1-e381b852d2a6.html?fbclid=IwAR25yCKslm48vUFRKvadw6l9izRa9ckVV8vitDQRDcGR–NFXEVC3fKS64U
BATS should certify as a union.
Fahrenheit 11/9 showed how W. Va. teachers had to fight their own unions for the solidarity and unity required to win in the legislature.
Ask the KEA president why an NEA executive is a member of the CAEP board that elected a Pahara Fellow as Chair. Pahara is funded by Gates. It was founded by the same person who founded New Schools Venture Fund, Bellwether and TFA.
Gates and his Microsoft co-founder spent $500,000 to defeat the reelection of judges who had rendered verdicts favorable to public schools.
Richard,
If you’re the same Innis who is at the Bluegrass Institute, it doesn’t look good for the KEA president to have you taking her side?
BTW- framing the situation as having just two viewpoints “greedy workers” vs. villainthropists is classic Koch PR.
We all understand. It’s tough to add a third player which would require vilifying Kentuckians who prefer democracy over oligarchy.
Linda,
I think you are confused.
I didn’t take KEA’s side, I just pointed out that the leading teachers’ union’s head in Kentucky has issues with Dear JCPS. Prof. Ravitch has a pretty solid history of supporting the unions, and I thought she would want to know that.
By the way, some of the reporters in Kentucky are starting to pick up on this disagreement between Dear JCPS and KEA. It’s interesting to watch.
Also, I didn’t frame anything as having just two viewpoints. You are trying to read into my comments far more than I say.
There’s info. at Sourcewatch about Bluegrass Institute.
Innis,
I think you’re confused. Diane has a strong record of compassion and supporting democracy.
Charles and David Koch have a strong anti-democracy, anti-union, social Darwinist record?
Libertarians believe freedom is the right to die like a feral dog in the streets, after having been kicked by the richest 0.1%.
How much out-of-state money is pouring into Kentucky to rob the citizens of their democracy?
Spare us the Stalin b.s. that all Koch minions trot out like regurgitated bile. You going to refute the history that reports Fred Koch was making money off of the vulnerable Russian people while Stalin was in power?
Labor hasn’t seen a wage increase in 40 years. Americans are the most incarcerated population in the world thanks to ALEC. The U.S. is the only developed nation in the world where families are bankrupted by health care costs. The median salary is under $60,000. The average family of four’s medical costs are $28,000. The U.S. infant mortality rate ranks near that of 3rd world nations. The suicide rate is increasing. The age people are dying has become younger. You own it.
Richard,
I see that you are the education policy analyst for the rightwing free-market DeVos-style Bluegrass Institute of Kentucky.
I appreciate your patronage of my blog.
I don’t appreciate your advocacy for charters and vouchers, which will defund the public schools that are attended by the overwhelming majority of children in your state.
Why do you hate public schools? Are you aware of the voucher research showing that children go backwards academically in voucher schools? Are you aware of the graft and corruption associated with charter schools?
I was in Louisville last fall speaking at a rally for public schools. It was co-sponsored by the union and DearJCPS.
I wish you had been there.
Diane,
If you go back to my first post, I just pointed out that Dear JCPS and the unions (yes, it is plural) recently (after your trip last fall) have had a falling out. I thought you would want to know that.
The next thing I know, I am getting personal attacks in your blog.
I guess that is a commentary on the US today. Respectful disagreement seems to have become a lost art. I have to wonder how much of that might be due to our education system.
By the way, pointing out problems in public schools does not indicate hate. It actually indicates I do pay attention and would like to see improvements. I submit that the real problem for public schools is too many people in this country don’t pay any attention to them.
The best way to improve public schools is to fund them, not create competition that will defund them even more.
As for your being attacked, it was not by me. You are responsible for what you write, as am I.
Innis,
The real problem is too many among the richest 0.1% avoid paying taxes by rigging the system.
It’s a travesty that Gates lives in the state with the most regressive tax system in the nation. The poor pay a rate up to 7 times that of the rich in the state of Washington.
Was Frederick Hess describing civility when he said the ed reformers wanted to “blow up the ed schools”? Was it civility when he and his article co-author, an employee of a Gates-funded organization, prescribed money as a preferred means for the billionaires to take over the schools?
I take it personally when the Koch’s bring their money from Kansas to defeat the zoo levy in a state capitol city, 4 states distant from them and bring their Kansas money to influence school board elections in places far removed from their wealthy enclaves, in locations where they pay nothing to support the community schools. The Koch’s political actions are uncivil.
BTW Diane, today, a Kentucky state legislator praised you in an e-mail, “Ravitch always brings important insights and perspective.”
Four out of the 5 professors who are “policy scholars” at Bluegrass got their degrees from universities that the citizens sacrificed to provide for them as an affordable alternative to legacy admission schools….
pulling up behind them the ladder that they climbed?
Houchens, Gohman, Garen and Schansberg
Dr. Pollio- Indiana U,
Hal Heiner- University of Louisville
Wayne Lewis- University of Kentucky
Worth a read-
6-13-2017, at AWrenchintheGears.com, “What the NEA probably wouldn’t want you to know about ‘personalized’ learning in Boone Co., Ky.”
On 9-19-2018, JCPS Supt. Pollio gave a presentation to the United Way and Urban League about his vision for 2020. The results of an internet search of Urban League Gates Foundation suggests Urban Leagues in various cities received funding. Diane Ravitch in a comment at a different post discussed the Gates funding of United Way and what the result has been in terms of the charity’s policy recommendations in education.
AWrenchintheGears addressed United Way in a Feb. 2019 investigative piece, “Boiling Frogs and Building Brands: P&G’s Partnership with Strive”.
The bait and switch of the corporate and Koch’s “liberty and freedom” – oligarchy.
Kentucky’s Department of Ed is well represented in the national SETDA organization (a listing at the site), so possibly they can identify the source of the State Educational Technology Directors Association’s original funding which is not identified at the site.
Evidently, SETDA self appointed “to take action in important issues facing public education.” They “foster public private partnerships to improve education”. One of their priority goals cited is digital learning. For their “partners (a choice among Gold, Platinum, Strategic and Event)”, an opportunity to “showcase innovative products” is afforded.
Betsy DeVos was a featured speaker for the organization in 2018.
How interesting that billionaire state rights advocates and billionaires nationalizing education policy direction promote similar agendas- privatization. it’s almost as if the U.S. is an oligarchy rather than a bastion of freedom and liberty.
Kentucky’s former Dept. of Ed. Associate Commissioner, Felicia Cumings Smith, now works for the Gates Foundation. Her bio is featured at the Gates-funded Pahara site.