This may only be a partial list of reasons; please, add anything else in the comments. The deadline to file to run for the Board is May 19th. Entire Board Majority NOT vetting the Superintendent in any way, shape or form. Even the Seattle Times thought that was wrong. It was just absolute hubris and it was wrong. For the second time in just over a year , board members voted to negotiate a superintendent contract during a special meeting with no opportunity for public comment. This time, they showed an even deeper disregard for their responsibilities as public servants: Aborting a national search for a new superintendent and denying Interim Superintendent Brent Jones a chance to show students, parents and taxpayers that, indeed, he is the best person for the job. Government bodies can’t fast-forward through transparent processes just because they think they know the right answer. One other odd thing about the hiring of Brent Jones - most permanent SPS superintendent contracts ar
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They pretend to want to be "grown-up" and "analyze" politics 'n' stuff, but are really incapable of insightful writing unless it's all about themselves.
-pat
There are a variety of reasons that people are opposing the levy.
Some folks just don't want to put any more money into the dysfuctional system which is Seattle Public Schools.
Some folks are opposing the levy as a vote against Education Reform.
Some folks, and I am in this group, regard the levy as a referendum on the District's leadership and this is my opportunity to hold that leadership accountable for their mismanagement and failure to supervise.
I'm sure there are other reasons to oppose the levy as well as combinations of reasons.
Here's our website:
http://enforcetopdownreform.blogspot.
com/
The district has always used that levy to fill in basic operating costs unfunded by the state. We passed that levy back in February.
This is an addditional levy. The legislature gave districts expanded ability to collect money from levies back in the last legislative session.
So this is new moneys for the district. The district says it is to backfill cuts made by the state.
A lot of it is actually going to a new teacher evaluation system. A system that will be a new and ongoing funding drain that will have to be funded out of the budget going forward whether more monies can be raised in the future or not.
So some folks think the end result of this levy will be that more money will be drained out of classrooms to fund a performance management system with unproven utility.
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/editorials/2013164155_edit15levy.html
Shocking!
"VOTERS should reject Seattle Public Schools' $48 million levy. A message needs to be sent to the district, and this is the one unmistakable way to send it."
The Times sites the audit, calls it "pretty damning". They are clear that a no vote is NOT a vote against kids.
They were very careful not to hold the Superintendent accountable only those around her. No mention of the Board either. Puhleez both MGJ and the Board were as Melissa says "called out" in the audit. The buck stops with them.
I've actually thought we (being us concerned citizens) should encourage the Stranger to do a story on so-called ed reform in Seattle and how MGJ and company are attempting to do it. As far as I can tell, they're the only local news source who could do this.