This is a very important article to read by Sue Ella
Deadwyler. This is another instance of the legislature making the voters think
they are voting for one thing that would be good for them, when in fact, it is
right the opposite and not good for the voters.
Please share this article with your friends and distribution lists, and
remember to vote
"NO" on ratifying this proposed GA constitutional
change.
*Shadow School Superintendent, Shadow School District*
by Sue Ella Deadwyler
In his state-of-the-state address in January, Governor Deal
announced that he would create an Education Reform Commission to implement his
“vision for k – 12 education … system driven by student need [to give] local
school and district leaders [real control and flexibility].” The 33 people he appointed to that commission
will report back to him.
There’s more to the Governor’s statement than meets the
eye. To legalize that particular “vision
for k – 12” the State Constitution must be amended. So, the Governor had his Senate floor leader
introduce S.R. 287 to add a new paragraph to the State Constitution, which
allows the
creation of a state-wide Opportunity School District. If voters ratify that change in the 2016
General Election, the Governor would appoint a “shadow” school superintendent
who could identify and take over, or close, or re-staff, or reconstitute, and
manage and control 20 “failing” public schools, annually (up to a total of
100).
That plan means the current constitutionally elected state
school superintendent will lose authority over schools the appointed shadow
superintendent selects and commandeers. Rather than giving “local school and
district leaders real control and flexibility,” the plan strips control from
the state-wide elected-by-voters school superintendent and locally elected
boards of education. Meaning, the Governor’s plan, drastically, weakens the
power of voters and over-rides local control over education.
S.B. 133 outlines the process for implementing a shadow
school district controlled by an appointed school superintendent in
Georgia. Without a doubt, voters will
ratify the constitutional change because the question for the 2016 General
Election Ballot is worded to elicit a YES vote.
It
asks: “Shall the Constitution of Georgia be amended to allow
the state to intervene in chronically failing public schools in order to
improve student performance?” Every
voter will vote YES, but, practically, NOBODY will know the ramifications of
its passage.
*In a nutshell:* A
/Governor-appointed/ school superintendent will select and assume control over,
re-staff, or reconstitute, or close 20 schools per year (up to 100); the school
superintendent elected by voters last November will supervise the left-over
schools; and voters lose what little control they have over the education of
their children. Will this top-down
take-over of schools mean Georgians can
expect their children to be taught to read?
Source: Georgia Insight /I’m Sue Ella Deadwyler, your
Capitol correspondent.
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