fight

4 reasons educators must get in the game and fight ALEC

We mentioned some of the radical education policies ALEC was seeking to push in up coming legislative sessions, here are 4 reasons educators must get in the game and fight ALEC

  1. ALEC puts the profits of corporations before the welfare of students. Virtual schools and for-profit charters do NOT do all that a neighborhood school can do—so why does its Virtual Public Schools Act insist those corporate ventures should receive the same public funding?
  2. ALEC thinks its corporate members know better than your community how to run your schools. A common theme throughout ALEC education bills is to reduce local control of parents and democratically elected school boards.
  3. ALEC would have you giving more standardized tests. When they say they want to” apply marketplace standards” to education, they mean they want to increase the reliance on standardized testing to judge student and teacher performance.
  4. ALEC thinks corporations deserve “a voice and a vote” (their words) more than U.S. citizens do! Although it has disbanded its highly controversial Public Safety and Elections Task Force, the damage has been done: an estimated 5 million eligible voters will have a more difficult time exercising their right to vote in the 2012 election.

For more on how you can get invovled, you can go here.

Education News for 02-23-2012

Statewide Education News

  • Group offers bold plan for improving city schools (Vindicator)
  • Youngstown - A draft improvement plan for the city schools is a start, but representatives of a Cincinnati-based education-reform organization advocate an even bolder approach. KnowledgeWorks representatives met with Vindicator news and editorial staff Wednesday to talk about their recommendations. They’ll make a presentation at today’s city schools Academic Distress Commission meeting. Read More…

  • State bill to aid schools has detractors (Journal-News)
  • A proposed state bill that would allow school districts to explore new revenue streams by earning profits on facilities, services and merchandise does not sit well with some local officials. The bill — introduced Feb. 3 by state Rep. Mike Henne, R-Clayton — would amend current legislation and allow Montgomery County’s 16 school districts to pilot the new program, possibly as early as the 2013-14 school year. Henne said the bill could expand to other school districts outside of Montgomery County, other counties or the entire state. Read More…

  • Ohio schools join to fight AEP rate increase (WKYC 3 NBC)
  • COLUMBUS - Three of the largest Ohio school groups have joined together to fight a sudden jump in their bills from American Electric Power. The groups are asking state utility regulators to give special consideration to school districts at a time of budget cuts and the bad economy. The Ohio School Boards Association, the Ohio Association of School Business Officials and the Buckeye Association of School Administrators raised their concerns in a letter to the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio Tuesday. Read More…

Local Issues

  • Tough decisions ahead for Akron schools (Beacon Journal)
  • Akron superintendent David James made the case for passing a levy in November with his fourth annual “State of the Schools” address Wednesday. But he delivered no big announcements about the consequences of failing to pass a new tax. The district must eliminate a $22 million deficit before July 1, which could mean the layoff of up to 300 teachers if the cuts were made exclusively to labor costs. Read More…

  • Parents say switching schools could result in switching students to another district (Morning Journal)
  • LORAIN — With Lorain High School students being relocated for four years, starting next school year, to the old Southview High School while a new high school is built, many parents reacted to the news by stating they would seek to enroll their student at another district. However, open enrollment opportunities are few and far between. The Amherst school district is experiencing financial problems and probably won’t have that many openings for students outside the district’s borders. Read More…

  • Fight to save Libbey was good lesson for schools (Blade)
  • As dozens of schools fall in the final stages of Toledo Public Schools' massive building project, the district's remaining aged architecture soon could receive new distinctions and potential protections. Toledo Board of Education members and district officials researched and discussed in recent weeks the benefits and drawbacks of an effort to place older schools on the National Register of Historic Places. Read More…

Editorial

  • Shame Is Not the Solution (NY Times – Bill Gates)
  • Last week, the New York State Court of Appeals ruled that teachers’ individual performance assessments could be made public. I have no opinion on the ruling as a matter of law, but as a harbinger of education policy in the United States, it is a big mistake. I am a strong proponent of measuring teachers’ effectiveness, and my foundation works with many schools to help make sure that such evaluations improve the overall quality of teaching. Read More…

The real fight over SB5 is still ahead

Yesterday was the filing deadline for candidates wishing to run for the Ohio General Assembly. We had looked earlier at the impact of incumbents of the Ohio House of Representatives voting for SB5 would have on their reelection chances.

14 SB5 supporters could not survive a 5% swing from their margin of victory in 2010 (2 didn’t even reach the 50% threshold due to a third party taking significant support). With only a 10-seat margin to maintain control, it is quite possible that control of the Ohio House will swing away from the Republicans and back to the Democrats.

Such a swing, could put a halt to the Governors radical agenda and turn the remaining 2 years of his first term into a lame duck effort.

Now some of this calculation is complicated by the recent redistricting, but as Gongwer notes, the 2012 elections are shaping up to be a continuation of the fight over SB5

SB5 Redux?: In some ways, the contest for control of the House next session is shaping up as a proxy battle between the two sides in the fight over the collective bargaining law changes (SB 5) that voters rejected last month in a referendum vote.

House Democrats, for example, noted that a number of educators have filed to run and Speaker Batchelder said the GOP newcomers include an ample amount of businesspeople.
[...]
Rep. Debbie Phillips (D-Athens), the House Democratic Caucus Campaign co-chair, said 2002 Teacher of the Year Maureen Reedy, who is seeking the open 24th House District seat in Franklin County, is among at least 10 teachers running for the House as Democrats.

"State budget cuts and the unfair attacks in SB5 have put educators and our children's education directly in the crosshairs of the Republican's anti-middle class agenda and teachers are standing up, fighting back and getting involved," Rep. Phillips said in a release. "We are very excited to have so many great teachers running for office. They are trusted and well known in their communities, which are two key components of electoral success."

While some candidates might have a difficult task ahead of them due to the gerrymandering of districts, the overwhelming rejection of SB5 is likely to create some very sharp contrasts for voters to decide upon.

Top 3 Today

Your top 3 news stories for today

  1. Kasich Budget Could Destroy Over 51,000 Jobs
    Innovation Ohio conservatively estimates that in the absence of large local tax increases to offset the Administration’s proposed cuts to K-12 education, higher education, state personnel, and local governments, 51,052 direct jobs are likely to be lost.
  2. BUDGET BILL MIRRORS SB5 ATTACKS ON TEACHERS
    The fight opens up on multiple fronts.
  3. Will upset race in Wisconsin energize SB5 referendum race in Ohio?
    What do you think?

Join us at facebook.com/JointheFuture or leave a comment (click on the post title).

Teachers ready to fight Senate Bill 5

From the Morning Journal - Local teachers ready to fight Senate Bill 5

LORAIN — Local teachers concerned about the affects of Senate Bill 5 gathered yesterday in the auditorium of Lorain High School, 2600 Ashland Ave., to learn how they can fight the law that limits the collective bargaining rights of municipal and state workers.

William Leibensperger, Ohio Education Association vice-president, along with State Rep. Dan Ramos, D-Lorain, spoke during the Q & A session, which was held to better educate teachers on the law and rally them against it.

Fighting for the future, today

A guest post from Central OEA/NEA President Scott DiMauro

By now you have, no doubt, read about all the reasons why Senate Bill 5 is bad news for public employees. We educators, along with state and local firefighters, police officers, and other public servants, are under attack. We are being blamed for problems we didn’t create and targeted for “reforms” that will silence our voices in decision-making and weaken our professions.

As damaging as this bill is for us, it’s worse for our students. Taking away collective bargaining rights means taking away the ability to negotiate for needed classroom resources and professional support for teachers and other school employees. Weakening the union gives control of educational decisions to bureaucrats and politicians.

This will almost certainly lead to less pay, diminished healthcare benefits, greater pension costs, and weakened job security. Worse, we’re on the verge of losing a meaningful voice at the bargaining table, a voice over our working conditions and our students’ learning conditions. In short an erosion of our profession, a race to the bottom.

Like you, I didn’t go into education for the money, prestige or union support. I became a teacher because I wanted to make a meaningful difference in the lives of young people and help shape a brighter future for our country. I’m angered that we have become scapegoats for economic woes not of our own making. While we all know shared sacrifice will be needed to balance the state’s budget, I fear the extreme approach taken by Governor Kasich and many majority party legislators will diminish our ability to attract the best and brightest to the classroom in the future. Too many politicians and business leaders want to make it easier to move teachers through the “factory model” of education. How can that possibly be good for our students? How can our communities possibly be helped by this? What on earth does this do to create jobs?

Ultimately, attacks such as this one will undermine the very system of public education that has been the hallmark of America’s greatness, if we were to stand idly by.

As difficult as the fight over collective bargaining has been these past few weeks, it has also given me hope for our future. Never before in my 20 years of teaching have I seen so many friends and colleagues standing so strong. Your phone calls, emails, and letters may not have killed Senate Bill 5 yet, but the message is being sent loudly and strongly that we care too much about our students, profession and public education system to let our voices be silent. Standing with tens of thousands at the Statehouse and across our communities has made me exceedingly proud to be a member of this union and given me hope that our best days are still ahead of us.

It’s not yet clear where this fight will take us. Whether it’s to another showdown in the legislature, a referendum at the ballot box, or the streets of our communities, I’m confident that we’ll be in it together, and we will prevail. Our students’ futures and our profession are depending on it.