Archives for category: Kentucky

THIS IS THE MOST IMPORTANT ARTICLE YOU WILL READ TODAY. SHARE IT WITH YOUR FRIENDS, YOUR SCHOOL BOARD, YOUR LOCAL MEDIA, YOUR ELECTEDS. TWEET IT. POST IT ON FACEBOOK.

In the states where teachers have engaged in walkouts and strikes, public education has been systematically starved of funding. Typically, corporate taxes have been cut so that funding for education has also been cut. The corporations benefit while the children and their teachers are put on a starvation diet.

Who are the corporations and individuals behind the efforts to shrink funding for public schools and promote privatization?

This article makes it clear.

It begins like this, then details a state-by-state list of corporations and billionaires backing the cycle of austerity and school privatization.

“The ongoing wave of teacher strikes across the US is changing the conversation about public education in this country. From West Virginia to Arizona, Kentucky to Oklahoma, Colorado to North Carolina, tens of thousands of teachers have taken to the streets and filled state capitals, garnering public support and racking up victories in some of the nation’s most hostile political terrain.

“Even though the teachers who have gone on strike are paid well below the national average, their demands have gone beyond better salary and benefits for themselves. They have also struck for their students’ needs – to improve classroom quality and to increase classroom resources. Teachers are calling for greater investment in children and the country’s public education system as a whole. They are also demanding that corporations, banks, and billionaires pay their fair share to invest in schools.

“The teachers’ strikes also represent a major pushback by public sector workers against the right-wing agenda of austerity and privatization. The austerity and privatization agenda for education goes something like this: impose big tax cuts for corporations and the .01% and then use declining tax revenue as a rationale to cut funding for state-funded services like public schools. Because they are underfunded, public schools cannot provide the quality education kids deserve. Then, the right wing criticizes public schools and teachers, saying there is a crisis in education. Finally, the right wing uses this as an opportunity to make changes to the education system that benefit them – including offering privatization as a solution that solves the crisis of underfunding.

“While this cycle has put students, parents, and teachers in crisis, many corporations, banks, and billionaires are driving and profiting from it. The key forces driving the austerity and privatization agenda are similar across all the states that have seen strikes:

“*Billionaire school privatizers. A small web of billionaires – dominated by the Koch brothers and their donor network, as well as the Waltons – have given millions to state politicians who will push their pro-austerity, pro-school privatization agenda. These billionaires lead a coordinated, nationwide movement to apply business principles to education, including: promoting CEO-like superintendents, who have business experience but little or no education experience; closing “failing” schools, just as companies close unprofitable stores or factories; aggressively cutting costs, such as by recruiting less experienced teachers; instituting a market-based system in which public schools compete with privately managed charter schools, religious schools, for-profit schools, and virtual schools; and making standardized test scores the ultimate measure of student success.”

Keep reading to learn about the interlocking web that includes the Koch brothers, the Mercers, the Waltons, the fossil fuel industry, their think tanks, and much more, all combined to shrink public schools and replace them with charters and vouchers.

By the way, rightwing billionaire Philip Anschutz of Colorado was the producer of the anti-teacher, anti-public education, pro-charter propaganda film “Waiting for Superman.”

 

Kentucky Governor Matt Bevin is moving fast to smash public schools. First, he ousted several members of the state board of education, which promptly ousted the state commissioner of education. The board hired Wayne Lewis, an outspoken charter school advocate as interim state commissioner. 

Lewis announced that he recommends a state takeover of the state’s largest school district, Jefferson County, which includes Louisville. Lewis is an education professor, with no prior experience as a superintendent.

Lots of blah-blah about achievement gaps and test scores but no evident plan to fix any of the problems he describes. And no reference to any successful state takeovers in any other state.

This may be Gov. Bevin’s payback for teacher walkouts.

Prediction: This will not end well.

 

 

 

The Network for Public Education is delighted to endorse Paula Setser-Kissik for the State Senate in Kentucky. 

We review the qualifications and policies of every candidate we endorse.

The only way to change state and federal policy is to elect well qualified people who understand the importance of good public schools for all.

NPE Action is proud to announce that it has endorsed Paula Setser-Kissik for the state senate of Kentucky. Paula is one of three pro-public education, female candidates in that state who we have endorsed.  Paula’s campaign message is as follows:

Kentucky must invest in public education and stabilize public employee pensions through comprehensive and fair tax reform and alternative sources of revenue, as well as elect pro-public education candidates who will protect public education and not be influenced by outside interests.

When we asked her what policy changes she would propose, this is what she said:

I would like to see policies that enforce funding for education and pensions, decrease testing and destructive school competition, and increased options for true public schools (not charters) to be more flexible and innovative to meet the needs of their districts. I’d also like to get rid of Kentucky’s charter law that is due to take effect later this year.

Paula’s viewpoints are well aligned with the positions supported by NPE Action. She is opposed to using test scores to evaluate teachers; she wants to reduce the role of testing in schools; she believes in smaller class sizes and she understands the importance of protecting the rights of teachers.

Paula told us, “Public education provided both sides of my family with a path out of poverty, and both of my parents are retired educators. I’m very passionate about the need for traditional public education in a democratic society.”

And so are we. We hope you support Paula Setser-Kissick when you cast your vote. If she is elected she will represent District 12 of the Kentucky State Senate. The primary election is being held on May 22, 2018. The general election will take place on November 6, 2018.

You can post this endorsement with this link

Thank you,

Carol Burris

Executive Director, NPE Action

Pol. adv. by the Network for Public Education Action

 

 

The spring of 2018 may well be remembered as the beginning of a mass movement by working people against the domination of corporations and the 1%.

The leadership in red states and the federal government have tilted the tax system to favor the very wealthy, while demanding sacrifices from the powerless majority.

The teachers in West Virginia were first to say “Enough!”

But they are far from last.

The ALEC-inspired Republican legislatures killed collective bargaining, and the Supreme Court in expected to hobble labor unions with the Janus decision.

But that’s not going to stop working people from organizing and demanding a fair share of the bounty that they produced.

For all of Facebook’s sins and transgressions, it has nonetheless created a way for voiceless people to organize and act. Teachers and others created collectives on Facebook and used them to mobilize for mass actions.

The teachers’ strikes were organized by grassroots efforts that began on Facebook. Powerless teachers discovered that by acting in concert, they became powerful. They have used their numbers to demand fair pay and benefits and have stood up courageously to legislatures known to be in the pockets of the oil and gas industries and other malefactors of vast wealth.

Piece by piece, day by day, as they lead us, we will recover our democracy. We will rebuild the institutions now under assault by Trumpism and its variants. The names of the leaders are not well-known. They won’t be on the covers of magazines or interviewed by late night TV hosts. They are ordinary citizens who have stepped forward to demand justice, equity, and fairness and to revive our democracy.

 

Kentucky education is in deep trouble due to the machinations and scheming of its newly elected Governor Matt Bevin. Bevin pushed through a charter bill but the Republican dominated legislature didn’t fund it. Then he engineered the ouster of the respected state superintendent Stephen Pruitt and installed a like-minded devotee of privatization.

Now, his goal is a state takeover of the state’s largest district, Jefferson County, which includes Louisville.  The school board is determined to resist the takeover, knowing that it is a cynical political ploy that will destroy local control and leads to damaging changes.

State takeovers historically have failed. The State Education Department is not stocked with experienced educators but with experienced clerks and administrators of government programs.

Parents, teachers, and local school boards have figured out that Governor Bevin means to do harm to the children and public schools of Kentucky.

Here’s wishing them success in repelling Bevin’s assault on Kentucky public schools.

 

Save Ky’s Education Commissioner

1. Send e-mails & make calls now!

2. Attend the meeting at 1:30pm Today

Today, at 1:30 PM, the Kentucky Board of Education will meet in both open and closed session, to install Governor Bevin’s School Choice appointees to the Kentucky School Board. During this meeting, they will go into closed Session to discuss personnel matters regarding Kentucky Commissioner of Education, Dr. Stephen Pruitt.

Save Our Schools Kentucky anticipates that in this closed session, they will remove Dr. Stephen Pruitt from his position and appoint Dr. Wayne Lewis, Chair of the Kentucky Charter Schools Advisory Council, as an Interim Leader until they find who they believe to be a suitable Education Commissioner to support their School Choice agenda, which Save Our Schools Kentucky believes to be destabilizing to public education in Kentucky.

The only way to stop this from happening is to contact the Kentucky Board of Education members and respectfully ask them to retain Commissioner Pruitt in his current position to provide stability to the Kentucky Department of Education and to continue his dedicated work for Kentucky’s Schools and school children, during a traumatizing fiscal and political climate.

Call and E-mails MUST BE SENT THIS MORNING!

Contact information is as follows (Note: contact information was not available for new appointee Laura Timberlake, as of the time of this post) :

Hal Heiner, former Bevin Education and Workforce Development Cabinet Secretary (Jefferson County)
Capstone Realty
12910 Shelbyville Road, Suite 200
Louisville, KY 40243
e-mail: Hal.Heiner@ky.gov
Bus: 502.254.5001
Amanda Stamper, former Bevin Administration Communications Director (Fayette County)
Anthem Blue Cross & Blue Shield
e-mail: amanda.esenbock-stamper@anthem.com
Bus: 859-321-7369
Ben Cundiff (Trigg County)
5601 Cerulean Road
Cadiz, KY 42211
Bus: (270) 350-0930
Email: cundifffarms1979@gmail.com

Tracey Cusick (Boone County)
743 Iron Liege Drive
Union, KY 41091
Email: cusick71@yahoo.com

Richard (Rich) Gimmel (Jefferson County)
1508 Sylvan Court
Louisville, KY 40205
Bus: (502) 584-7262
Email: RFGimmel@atlasmachine.com

Kathy Gornik (Fayette County)
4158 Georgetown Road
Lexington, KY 40511
Bus: (859) 492-8521
Home: (859) 233-0011
Email: kathygornik2@gmail.com

Gary Houchens (Warren County)
818 Wakefield Street
Bowling Green, KY 42103
Bus: (270) 745-4999
Email: gary.houchens@wku.edu

Alesa Johnson (Pulaski County)
410 Cave Springs Road
Somerset, KY 42503
Bus: (606) 451-6693
Email: alesag.johnson@gmail.com

Joseph Papalia (Jefferson County)
14604 Golden Leaf Place
Louisville, KY 40245
Bus: (812) 282-0488
Email: jpapalia@dtifilms.com

Milton Seymore (Jefferson County)
2906 Aspendale Court
Louisville, KY 40241
Bus: (502) 931-8525
Email: ceemore1@gmail.com
Go to Kentucky Board of Education Meeting at 1:15pm Today

Kentucky Department of Education Building, 300 Sower Boulevard, Frankfort, KY
Make sure to bring a photo ID and wear either Red for Ed or Black for Black Out!

 

 

The Network for Public Education Action Fund endorses Tina Bojanowski, who is running for the Kentucky House of Representatives, District 32.

Instead of complaining about the legislature, she is running for a seat.

She has no primary challenger, but needs your help in the general election in November.

The Network for Public Education Action has endorsed special education teacher Tina Bojanowski for the District 32 seat in Kentucky’s House of Representatives. Since 2010, Tina has been a special education teacher for Jefferson County Public Schools. She recently completed a Ph.D. in education and social change, and wants to use her knowledge and experience to ensure a high quality public education for all children.

Tina considered becoming a research professor, but realized that legislators seldomly read academic literature when making policy decisions. She decided to run for the legislature instead because having a voice on the floor and a vote will have more direct impact. She told NPE Action that her intention is to “bring the voice of a special education teacher to the floor of the state capitol to speak for public education.”

Tina’s positions on public education are in line with NPE Action. She is against high-stakes standardized testing as a way to evaluate teachers or measure student achievement. She supports sufficiently funding schools. She wants to ensure that education is a desirable profession both financially (living wages, pensions, and benefits) and professionally (treating educators as professionals).

She is strongly against the use of vouchers and tax credits to fund private or parochial schools with public funds. She also supports legislation that would repeal the 2017 charter school law passed in Kentucky. Until the law is repealed, Tina said she “would require charter schools (and the companies that manage the charter schools) to be completely transparent regarding the spending of public money.” She is also against virtual and/or online charter schools.

Tina understands that when privatization schemes like charter and vouchers divert funds away from public education, it is the most vulnerable students that are the most severely impacted.

Tina does not have a challenger in the primary election, but needs your support for the general election on November 6, 2018. Please do everything you can to help Tina bring her knowledge and experience to Frankfort to ensure a high quality public education for all children.

Mercedes Schneider reports good news: The Republican-controlled legislature in Kentucky overrode the Republican Governor’s veto of a bill to raise taxes to pay more for education.

There is a lesson to be learned in this vote: Republicans represent districts, especially rural districts, where the local public schools are the heart of the community. They don’t want to divert money to charter schools. They don’t want to lose their teachers. As we have seen in Texas, where rural Republicans have been the bulwark against vouchers, education is, can be a bipartisan issue. In almost every state, 90% of the children are in public schools, and parents love their local schools. When Republican legislators hear from their constituents, they usually respond. The Koch brothers and the DeVos family don’t own everyone.

She writes:

Public school teachers aren’t greedy people. We aren’t career ladder-climbers gauging “arrival” by our numerous vacation homes and yacht club memberships. But we would like salaries that do not necessitate side employment; safe, clean, and sufficiently-spacious facilities for ourselves and our students, and teaching materials of adequate number and appreciable quality.

In short, we want our state legislatures– red or not– to support us with suitable revenue dedicated to public education.

Attempting to deliver on that might even require Republican legislatures to override vetoes of Republican governors.

Well done, Kentucky!

 

The teacher walkouts continued and grow larger in Kentucky, where teachers are massing by the thousands in the State Capitol to protest changes to their pensions. The two largest districts in the state are closed.

“School districts across Kentucky will once again shut down as teachers plan to flood the state Capitol on Friday to rally for public-school funding and protest newly signed changes to public pension programs.

“As of Thursday afternoon, at least 36 districts had decided to close Friday, citing teachers calling in sick or the likelihood that they would. The closures include public schools in Louisville and Lexington ― the two largest school districts in the state….

“That frustration began to boil over last year when the Legislature, fully in Republican control for the first time in nearly a century, passed a bill to allow charter schools in the state.

“The issue was the potential “diversion of public money into charters,” said David Allen, a former president of the Kentucky Education Association…

“That laid the groundwork,” Allen said.

”Then, in January, Bevin proposed drastic cuts to schools and public education programs, even though funding was already tight. In inflation-adjusted terms, Kentucky’s K-12 budget was down 16 percent since 2008, according to the Kentucky Center for Economic Policy.

“Bevin’s proposal prompted dire warnings from school superintendents around the state, who said some cuts would push Kentucky’s poorest school districts to the brink of insolvency….

”Many Kentucky teachers, meanwhile, have come to believe that Bevin’s approach to education isn’t driven by the interests of taxpayers or its public schools. They see it as part of a broader movement, led by U.S. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, to further privatize education by deliberately undermining public schools.

“It’s a dismantling, step by step by step, of public education,” said Pam Dossett, a teacher in Hopkinsville. “So they can sit back and say, ‘Our public schools, they’re not working.’ And then they can replace them all with charter schools.”

 

Tomorrow and Saturday, the Kentucky General Assembly 2018 will end its 60 day budget session. Thousands of parents, teachers, students, staff, small business owners, taxpayers, constituents and voters from across Kentucky will be joining together to fight to not only save public education, but more importantly the democratic process in Frankfort.

There are a number of harmful bills still in play. Please help us #OccupyFrankfort and tell our ALEC funded legislators understand their tactics will not be tolerated! We will #HoldTheLine against the corruption, lack of transparency, swindling, privatizing and hijacking of our democracy.

The teachers have held the line. It’s time for the rest of us to jump in and carry the torch. We need to fill the rotunda and Capitol grounds. Save Our Schools KY Coalition is planning 2 full days of speakers, music, and advocacy opportunities. Please join us.

Here are the goals:

1. STOP BAD LEGISLATION – There is still some bad legislation that can get sneaked in at the last minute. HB169 would harm students, especially our gap students, because it will target poor youth in minority neighborhoods. There is also the proposed harmful “scholarship tax credit” legislation, and any other number of bills that may have made it out of committee that could be passed during the final two days.

2. PUT LEGISLATORS ON NOTICE – We want to let them know exactly what we think about their terrible legislation. There will be candidates speaking throughout the two days who want to do better for Kentucky. #WeWillRememberInNovember

3. GIVE COALITION GROUPS A CHANCE TO BE HEARD – From right to work, to charters, health service, to pensions, to higher ed cuts, many, many groups have been hurt by the past two years of legislation. We need to lift up each others’ voices and work together to move Kentucky forward.

Before You Head Out

Take the action below from Forward Kentucky.

1. Shoepolish Your Car Windows. Get some shoe polish or window markers to decorate your car windows (not the paint)! Be creative! Use the same messaging you would use on your posters. Be sure people understand this is more than just about pensions, jobs, benefits. It is about the hijacking of our democracy. The destruction and privatization of public schools is integral to their plans. And we must make sure people in our communities, as well as on the road to Frankfort, understand what’s at stake.

2. Pack your I.D., water, sunscreen, hats, snacks. If you bring extra cases of water and snacks, we can help distribute it to rally participants who get thirsty or hungry!

3. Get Tools! Check out Save Our Schools Kentucky’s activists tools for a stop charters stop sign you can make at home, and more!

4. Make a rally sign! 2’x3′ is the size limit & no big sticks are allowed inside.

5. Bring sleeping bags, tents, picnic lunches. Who knows? These last-gasp legislative sessions are full of shenanigans and tend to run late. We may be spending the night!

Once You Arrive

1. Check in at the check in table. We will be at the top of the steps of the Capitol building at 8 am! Look for us at the right hand side of the entrance. We will direct you to actions and areas where you can maximize your visit. Be aware that the capitol is limiting entry to 500 people at a time, but we will work hard to keep the crowds moving.

2. Find one of our “station leaders” in a red SOSKY tshirt! They will be holding SOSKY clipboards and can direct you where to go, as the situation will be changing minute by minute. We can help you track down your legislator, find where legislators are meeting, and other activities in the annex and capitol.

3. Drop off your extra waters and packaged snacks at the loading dock (rear of annex). A volunteer will point you in the right direction.

4. Get there early! For security reasons, the capitol will have limited entry to 500 folks at a time. Once the doors close at 4:00 pm, they will not let anyone else in for the day. However, we will still have volunteers inside keeping an eye on the actions of our legislators and reporting out to the crowd and those following on social media the goings-on. Also, there will be many co-sponsors there with tents and activities on the lawn, as well as bands and speakers on the capitol steps even after the doors are locked, so hang around and enjoy the continued festivities well into the evening hours.

5. Media, Co-sponsors, speakers, volunteers and VIPS: Media will have special passes for entry to the capitol. Cosponsors who want to host tents, tables, etc are also encouraged to bring literature and volunteers for both inside and outside. Everyone working the event, please check in at the table upon arrival.

6. Transportation: KEA has posted some shuttle information on the KEA Facebook page. As more school districts announce closures and any groups offering buses to Frankfort are announced, we will share that information on our Save Our Schools Facebook page. Also be sure to watch for livestreams and check us out on Twitter @sos_ky!

We need to make sure our legislators understand they work for us. They need to vote in the best interests of their constituents, not their big money, outside donors. And if they continue this attack on our democracy, we will

SHUT IT DOWN!
VOTE THEM OUT!

See you tomorrow morning!