Mayoral Takeover of Seattle Schools
Update: I checked with OSPI about one reader's claim that there was a grand plan from OSPI and the feds to take over the district.
From OSPI:
There are no laws that allow for OSPI to take over a district. We can, in some circumstances (see Question 5), withhold funds from districts. But we can’t simply take over the district’s day-to-day duties. That’s what local control is all about.
On whether OSPI would be part of any legislative action to take over the district:
State Superintendent Dorn would have his position to influence legislators to vote one way or another.
Has OSPI been supporting/advocating for this direction for SPS?
No one that I know of at OSPI is doing that kind of work. If someone is doing that work, it’s not been sanctioned by State Superintendent Dorn.
Would you know under what circumstances OSPI can withhold funds from a district?
Noncompliance of state law (RCWs) or agency regulations (WACs). Audit findings also can result in a district repaying money.
Generally speaking, OSPI prefers to be the benevolent older sibling in its relationships with districts: We prefer to assist and aid, rather than cajole or threaten.
I'm not even going to ask the Feds because the whole idea is ridiculous.
End of update.
Something in the water? The start of Fall? Who knows but there was Joel Connelly this morning in the PI with a column about Mayor Murray's budget:
Murray is creating a cabinet-level Department of Education and Early Learning to work with “our diverse communities” and Seattle Public Schools to “close our city’s opportunity gap.” It will have the ability to go around the not-very-functional Seattle School Board and widely disliked bureaucracy of the school district.Someone help me out - I think I missed the part that said if the Mayor's plan for the Department of Education and Early Learning (DEEL) gets created that it can "go around" the Board and the district.
(Update: I DID ask the Mayor's office and they said, "the Mayor characterized the new Department as one that will work with, not around, SPS." Thank you, Mr. Mayor.)
I'll ask the Mayor's office but no, I don't think that's true. What I DO think is true is that the powers that be have decided that now is the time and the memo went out. (Naturally, these people are a little smarter than that so it's more like smoke signals or the secret handshake.)
Here's what I wrote to the Board:
Now, to understand, this has to be done legislatively. I reached out to my reps but only heard back from one (I'll be following up with the other two). The one I heard back from was Senator Jamie Pedersen (who was Murray's replacement in the Senate). He says they have a close relationship but that he would not support this idea, mainly because while he might like/trust Mayor Murray, he might not feel that way about the next mayor. And he's right.
If the Mayor even tried to get the ability to appoint a majority of Board members, he would effectively have control of the district. Why? Because then "his" majority would pick the superintendent.
It might be worthwhile to make a statement that you ARE duly elected and will answer to voters. Otherwise, voters (and parents) might get one of two ideas.
One, that you don't mind being man-handled in the press.
Two, that you are toothless and won't stand up for yourself and the group you are part of.
I note that Director Martin-Morris mentioned the "irony" that the group he is vice-chair of (CUBE) will have a white paper on this topic of mayoral takeover. Well, I checked and there is a very good research paper from the Center for Public Education from June 2014 that was linked at CUBE.
You can read the whole thing (and I urge you to do so) but what is interesting is that there is good and bad to it and I note that groups that have reviewed it seem to take what THEY want from it.
Given the paper's title, "Toward collaboration, not a coup" What the research says about mayoral involvement in urban schools," that gives you a hint right there what the authors found.
Benefits:
- - Michael Usdan writes: “It is becoming increasingly apparent that public schools cannot unilaterally resolve the complex and interrelated issues confronting growing numbers of children and their families. Schools as institutions simply do not have the organization- al mandate, staff capacity, or financial resources to handle such a welter of problems”My take is that schools - in and by themselves - cannot solve all the ills of society that come to their door via students.
Student Achievement improvement?
According to the authors, the jury is still out on that one.
Moscovitch and her team found that student achievement, in general, had increased in districts under some form of mayoral control, but the study’s authors “were not able to establish conclusively that the change in governance had any causal relationship to improved performance, or that, using nationally-normed test data, [mayor-involved] cities had greater improvements than anywhere else.” Nonetheless, the fact that they found statistically significant achievement scores “at some levels and in some areas” argues, in their view, that “mayoral involvement, if not control” could be part of a district improvement strategy (Moscovitch, 2010).
Both mayors and elected urban school boards saw academic gains over the last decade; neither model outperformed the other .
Risks
From OSPI:
There are no laws that allow for OSPI to take over a district. We can, in some circumstances (see Question 5), withhold funds from districts. But we can’t simply take over the district’s day-to-day duties. That’s what local control is all about.
On whether OSPI would be part of any legislative action to take over the district:
State Superintendent Dorn would have his position to influence legislators to vote one way or another.
Has OSPI been supporting/advocating for this direction for SPS?
No one that I know of at OSPI is doing that kind of work. If someone is doing that work, it’s not been sanctioned by State Superintendent Dorn.
Would you know under what circumstances OSPI can withhold funds from a district?
Noncompliance of state law (RCWs) or agency regulations (WACs). Audit findings also can result in a district repaying money.
Generally speaking, OSPI prefers to be the benevolent older sibling in its relationships with districts: We prefer to assist and aid, rather than cajole or threaten.
I'm not even going to ask the Feds because the whole idea is ridiculous.
End of update.
Something in the water? The start of Fall? Who knows but there was Joel Connelly this morning in the PI with a column about Mayor Murray's budget:
Murray is creating a cabinet-level Department of Education and Early Learning to work with “our diverse communities” and Seattle Public Schools to “close our city’s opportunity gap.” It will have the ability to go around the not-very-functional Seattle School Board and widely disliked bureaucracy of the school district.Someone help me out - I think I missed the part that said if the Mayor's plan for the Department of Education and Early Learning (DEEL) gets created that it can "go around" the Board and the district.
(Update: I DID ask the Mayor's office and they said, "the Mayor characterized the new Department as one that will work with, not around, SPS." Thank you, Mr. Mayor.)
I'll ask the Mayor's office but no, I don't think that's true. What I DO think is true is that the powers that be have decided that now is the time and the memo went out. (Naturally, these people are a little smarter than that so it's more like smoke signals or the secret handshake.)
Here's what I wrote to the Board:
Now, to understand, this has to be done legislatively. I reached out to my reps but only heard back from one (I'll be following up with the other two). The one I heard back from was Senator Jamie Pedersen (who was Murray's replacement in the Senate). He says they have a close relationship but that he would not support this idea, mainly because while he might like/trust Mayor Murray, he might not feel that way about the next mayor. And he's right.
If the Mayor even tried to get the ability to appoint a majority of Board members, he would effectively have control of the district. Why? Because then "his" majority would pick the superintendent.
It might be worthwhile to make a statement that you ARE duly elected and will answer to voters. Otherwise, voters (and parents) might get one of two ideas.
One, that you don't mind being man-handled in the press.
Two, that you are toothless and won't stand up for yourself and the group you are part of.
I note that Director Martin-Morris mentioned the "irony" that the group he is vice-chair of (CUBE) will have a white paper on this topic of mayoral takeover. Well, I checked and there is a very good research paper from the Center for Public Education from June 2014 that was linked at CUBE.
You can read the whole thing (and I urge you to do so) but what is interesting is that there is good and bad to it and I note that groups that have reviewed it seem to take what THEY want from it.
Given the paper's title, "Toward collaboration, not a coup" What the research says about mayoral involvement in urban schools," that gives you a hint right there what the authors found.
Benefits:
- - Michael Usdan writes: “It is becoming increasingly apparent that public schools cannot unilaterally resolve the complex and interrelated issues confronting growing numbers of children and their families. Schools as institutions simply do not have the organization- al mandate, staff capacity, or financial resources to handle such a welter of problems”My take is that schools - in and by themselves - cannot solve all the ills of society that come to their door via students.
- Because of their central position, mayors are well situated to facilitate better coordination and integration of child and family services with school programs
(Usdan, 2006;
Kirst, 2006). The editors of the Harvard Educational Review commended
the mayors in Nashville, Tenn., and Long Beach and San Jose, Calif., for
“securing more funds for
their cities’ public schools, promoting innovative programs to
assist families and teachers, and using their high profiles to raise the
status of education as an issue of community concern”
- Wong and Shen’s analyses show that mayors have been able to
successfully manage school finances, and they credit mayors with steering more dollars
toward instruction while spending less on central offices
- Several researchers suggest that mayors’ bully pulpit can bring more visibility to educational issues and gain the “attention and commitment” of the public to its schools, which
often resulted in more public and private funds for education
Interestingly, these benefits were documented in cities with low mayoral involvement,
such as Long Beach and Nashville, as well as in high involvement cities like New York
and Chicago. According to the U.S. Conference of Mayors, mayors can have a meaningful impact on public schools in multiple ways, even when existing governance structures,
including school boards, remain in place. They wrote: “By using their authority over public safety, health and social service agencies, parks and recreation facilities, and a host of
other resources, mayors can make a direct impact on the lives of children—and improve
their educational outcomes—without becoming directly involved in the governance of
the school system” (U.S. Conference of Mayors, 2006).
Student Achievement improvement?
According to the authors, the jury is still out on that one.
Moscovitch and her team found that student achievement, in general, had increased in districts under some form of mayoral control, but the study’s authors “were not able to establish conclusively that the change in governance had any causal relationship to improved performance, or that, using nationally-normed test data, [mayor-involved] cities had greater improvements than anywhere else.” Nonetheless, the fact that they found statistically significant achievement scores “at some levels and in some areas” argues, in their view, that “mayoral involvement, if not control” could be part of a district improvement strategy (Moscovitch, 2010).
Both mayors and elected urban school boards saw academic gains over the last decade; neither model outperformed the other .
Risks
Nearly every study reviewed for this report recognized a risk associated with mayoral take-
overs: that is, they find that eliminating elected school boards can also disenfranchise
different groups and individuals from participating in decisions about their schools. Of these
groups, minority and low-income communities seem to be affected the most.
The very groups where you seek to close the achievement gap.
The very groups where you seek to close the achievement gap.
They also argue that because mayor-appointed boards
are not subject to election campaigns, they are less susceptible to the influence of special
interests, especially teachers’ unions. On the other hand, they find that mayoral-controlled
boards inhibit community engagement in public school issues, reduce transparency in the
decision making process, and marginalize minority voices (Hess & Meeks, 2013).
Yes, the people appointed by a Mayor ARE less susceptible to influence from special interests since they are not elected. But what about the Mayor? the City Council?
And that last sentence? Again, flies in the face of the Strategic Plan.
Yes, the people appointed by a Mayor ARE less susceptible to influence from special interests since they are not elected. But what about the Mayor? the City Council?
And that last sentence? Again, flies in the face of the Strategic Plan.
The
finding that mayoral control leaves parents and community groups out of
the decision making process is a recurring theme in the literature
(Taylor, 2001; Chambers, 2006;
Fruchter & McAlister, 2008; Moscovitch et al, 2010).
His analysis showed that business and state leaders were more likely to favor takeovers while the
local African American community was often “openly resistant.” He
wrote that “unions,
community-based organizations, and parent groups that had channels of
access to elected school boards are concerned that mayoral control
leaves them more marginalized”
(Henig, 2009). Similarly, an analysis of referendums in Cleveland and Boston found that
support for mayoral control overwhelmingly came from middle-class and wealthy voters, while the opposition of low-income and non-white voters was often hidden (Shen,
2011). Although the potential to silence voices is a problem in itself, other researchers
have further suggested that the lack of minority representation in school governance can
have a negative effect on the achievement of minority youth (Land, 2002; Taylor, 2001).
An Annenberg report recognized continuing improvement in math and reading test
scores in New York City after Mayor Bloomberg took charge. But the authors also asserted that the gains came at the expense of time spent in other subjects like social studies,
science and the arts; provided “too little consideration” in support for English language
learners and other special needs students; and undercut democratic engagement in school
governance. Ultimately, the authors concluded that “the Bloomberg-Klein regime’s
eclipse of student, parent and citizen participation has terminated any public role in what
is arguably the city’s most important public sector service” (Furchter & McAlister, 2008).
The entire study is worthy reading.
I will say to you again - if any one of you believes this is the right thing, then your duty is to speak out now. Have the courage of your convictions or, later on, it may look like you are currying favor with the powers that be if you come out for this idea at the last minute.
I am not for this. I will fight it. I think there is no real hunger for this (not in parents) in Seattle.
But you only hurt your elected institution when you allow staff to repeatedly push back, delay, obfuscate or otherwise hoodwink you (see that transfer of rental/lease dollars to the General Fund). Be the strong individuals that got elected in the first place.
Sincerely,
Melissa Westbrook
Seattle Schools Community Forum
The entire study is worthy reading.
I will say to you again - if any one of you believes this is the right thing, then your duty is to speak out now. Have the courage of your convictions or, later on, it may look like you are currying favor with the powers that be if you come out for this idea at the last minute.
I am not for this. I will fight it. I think there is no real hunger for this (not in parents) in Seattle.
But you only hurt your elected institution when you allow staff to repeatedly push back, delay, obfuscate or otherwise hoodwink you (see that transfer of rental/lease dollars to the General Fund). Be the strong individuals that got elected in the first place.
Sincerely,
Melissa Westbrook
Seattle Schools Community Forum
Comments
Thank you Mayor Murry and don't let the unions push you around, they had the chance to fix this mess and failed.
New Start
-Rare Commenter
Glad to know that you're pulling the strings on this puppet show, and that this is all part of your plan.
Notan apostle
Most the the directors are going to lose their jobs and the board will be turned into paid full time positions.
I'm not sure of the time line, but the panic has all ready started down at the district offices.
At least the Mayor and his staff will have skin in the game, where currently we have part time players who can't possibly fix everything when you have an administration acting with great impunity towards them.
New Start
HP
Right now, school boards in this state are publicly elected and have the statutory duty and authority to manage the school district. The mayor has no authority here. Only the legislature could intervene. Again, neither OSPI nor the USDE has any authority here.
--- swk
Notan apostle
OSPI can withhold state funding and the FEDs can withhold all federal funding. Why is it every time someone throws this blog a bone they get ridiculed?
I tell you this is a done deal! These where not low level personnel and officially they did not pass this information.
I will say it again , this is a done deal made two years ago.
New Start
--- swk
Notan apostle
How many more scandals can SPS produce? This plan was done on at the State level with a former state senator.
SPS has been embarrassing Seattle for many years and SPS was given one last chance to show they could start making changes for the better. SPS failed and I guess you could call this the nuclear option.
Believe it or not this is a done deal. Make your own calls and contacts, I'm not revealing my sources.
New Start
Nota napostle
Again, I can only say - you might like Murray but you might not like the person who comes after him.
And don't leave us hanging, New Start - who did you speak with at DOE and OSPI? Because I'm going to follow-up and it would be helpful to know who said that. I don't believe it either but sure, I'll follow-up.
Reading your comment, I smile bigger and bigger. The feds withhold ALL dollars? That's my tip-off that you truly don't know what you are talking about.
You have no sources and you are just blowing smoke.
Safco field , 99 tunnel, school district take over. IT"S A DONE DEAL and you will see vast improvements across the district compared to today.
I personally can't wait to see JSCFE turned into recycled concrete.
New Start
New Start- Just in case you hadn't noticed, Murray was the individual responsible for bringing us Bertha.
Thanks for sharing that disturbing pod cast!
"Some how you think you speak for all of us when you don't.."
I assume you are speaking to me. If you are, I'm not saying (nor have I ever) I speak for anyone. I'm saying you are wrong.
And I'm going to look back and say some anonymous person who has no courage of their convictions to sign their name predicted this?
I am not.
Notan apostle
It is also worth mentioning that Murray and Burgess are in bed with the Gates Foundation. A match made in heaven
You don't really understand how these things work do you. You will to a fault defend the teacher's unions when their members have contributed to the dysfunctional operational problems of SPS...I said contributed to, not responsible for! No?
I'm done talking about this except for, city takeover has lots of support or else it would not be happening.
So get your team together and try and stop it, I'll be watching.
New Start
The school board is too mushy, too inexperienced in real politics, or maybe realpolitik, in the sense of forcefully using it's powers, something Charlie frequently notes about the board.
XOXO
If you read the link to the study that I sent to the Board,JT, that's exactly what they say. More collaboration, less a coup.
XOXO, LOL. Thanks.
http://seattletimes.com/html/localnews/2024604656_citycompost1xml.html
The Seattle City Council passed a new ordinance Monday that could mean $1 fines for people who toss too many table scraps into the trash.
(more)
-districtWatcher
-- Ivan Weiss
--- swk
So while we need to discuss, and plot against, the possibility of this, we also should feel safe about dismissing this particular troll.
-- Ivan Weiss
Freudian slip?
Startyourown blog
Lurker
Also to note, Seattle passes its school levies and bonds.
Seattle even has a city levy for schools.
Seattle has a fairly sound economy stocked with smart people.
Great city, beautiful city.
Urban district but NOT Detroit, LA, Chicago, NYC.
Really, a smart superintendent would come in and figure it out. The PI and the Times and their BS notwithstanding.
Do the math
53,000 students and having muli-year gross mismanagement issues is just the reason change is coming.
Math done
Yes, SPS is seriously mismanaged and needs a major course correction. But mayoral control is not the answer. A strong Board backing a strong Supe is.
Lets recall all board members change the position to full time paid then open the election. Fire the super ,6 administrator and use the funds to cover the board.
--Good advice
Good advice, that's an interesting idea.
Seattle. Middle class interests do dominate the board's time it seems and the predominantly white schools off the past are even whiter today. The city as a whole pays the levies yet the district and the board don't seem accountable to the general public. I would support the mayor having some appointment power, maybe three additional members.
Do you really think the mayor and his peeps will advocate more for the poorer Seattleites? Who funded his campaign? I'm sure Tim Burgess and Reuven Carlyle are out having coffee with the common poor folks.
The only group city hall advocates religiously for is itself. Big monies come in second.
You know if you are going to trot poor people out to sell your crap, the least you can do is paying them the $15/hr now. Not make them wait 5 years.
night shift
Are there "medium size districts" out there using this model successfully?
They just had three schools in the SE shelter in place yesterday because a guy with a gun.
Reader 47, do you mean paid Boards?
Did you really think OSPI would tell you the plan. There are clues all around, but you can't read them.
Mayoral control is a done deal.
New Start
http://voices.washingtonpost.com/answer-sheet/education-secretary-duncan/ravitch-mayoral-control-means.html
PSP
Anyone who advocates Mayoral Control has not studied the impacts of Mayoral Control on public ed in the cities that have tried it. It's been a colossal failure in U.S. Cities, with rising test scores, if any, solely attributable to cheating scandals and/or teaching to the tests, neither if which is desirable or ethical.
It's a terrible idea, on the way out in many cities that have tried it. So, naturally, like Discovery Math, Seattle just has to try it too, I suppose. Can't we be like Chicago? Or Portland? Or New York? Identity Crisis, anyone?
Given the chance, the current School Board will demonstrate that big money cannot run schools as well as dedicated educators, good curricula and involved parents. But that is a declaration of war against profiteers and charlatans who want our tax dollars in their pockets. So, the undermining of the Board must continue, drip by drip, story by story, lest the Joel Connelly's and Joni Balter's be required to practice actual Journalism for a change and God forbid, be truthful and accurate.
Welcome to Disaster Capitalism and the Schock Doctrine: Hated under Bush; Embraced by Democrats under Obama. Meet the new boss, same as the old boss.
WSDWG
Just throw out the excuse "because it didn't work there" it can't work here? and it can't ever have anything to do with teachers because they are Teflon coated.
There is big disconnect between what the district apologist say and what students and parents are experiencing.
--Comeon man
is a district apologist.
Given the chance? Given the CHANCE..? Oh mighty jesus given the chance, sorry it's a bad MLK reference.
Seriously WISYWIG define chance or better yet chances. Is it just me or is it true that 9 times out of 10 when the "board" has a chance to do the right thing they don't!
--Comeon man
How would OSPI and the Feds be involved?
Not liking ed reform is not the same as being an apologist or wanting the status quo.
I want and believe we need change but I have different ideas than the moneyed ed reformers.
THIS Board, unlike previous boards, has a majority of members who did not take 6 figure contributions from Ed Reformers.
THIS Board is dealing with issues that have gone un-addressed for decades.
Which is why THIS Board is hated and labeled as "dysfunctional" by the Times and it's crony benefactors.
District apologist? Pull your head out. WSDWG