The Stranger's Endorsements for Seattle School Board

Activist SPS parent Albert J. Wong wrote this piece on his Medium page

The Stranger Should Cover SPS Consistently or Consider NOT Endorsing in Seattle School Board Races

Basically,

Until The Stranger demonstrates a deeper understanding of the school district and consistently tracks the impact of its endorsements there, you should recuse yourselves from endorsing school board candidates entirely.

I concur with what he says. I tried to reach out to The Stranger's editor in late summer to talk about Board endorsements. I never heard back (and I had something of an intro from someone connected to The Stranger). And the stats he gives about The Stranger and Board elections is stunning. 

(If you have not heard of Wong before, he is data wonk (akin to former director Eden Mack) and a good one.  He also has a website - SPS By the Numbers - with a lot of data on SPS. 

When I reached voting age, my older classmates told me to start every election with the “Election Control Board.” As a teenager fresh off an Orwell phase, I found that name darkly funny. But it’s a lot less funny when it starts looking like you’ve actually come to control elections.

That’s exactly what it looks like happened with The Stranger and the Seattle School Board. Since 2011, no candidate for school board has won without The Stranger’s endorsement. For fourteen years. No exceptions.

When I reached voting age, my older classmates told me to start every election with the “Election Control Board.” As a teenager fresh off an Orwell phase, I found that name darkly funny. But it’s a lot less funny when it starts looking like you’ve actually come to control elections.

That’s exactly what it looks like happened with The Stranger and the Seattle School Board. Since 2011, no candidate for school board has won without The Stranger’s endorsement. For fourteen years. No exceptions.

I will say that The Stranger is there to entertain, somewhat inform, and make money. That they have become the anti-Times media speaks to hard work on their part to build that base. That said....

Over 20 years your endorsements have placed 34 out of 36 school board directors. For better or worse, that means your endorsees have controlled the school board. If you covered the district regularly to inform your endorsements, or if the results were good, maybe that would be fine.

The results have not been good.

And he goes on to list all the issues with people who got elected to the Board.

His unhappiness seems to be jump-started over Sarah Clark losing her position on the Board.

Although Smith might prove to be a good school board director she is, by contrast, largely untested. Yet your endorsement of Smith was not grounded in her superior policy, knowledge, credentials, or experience but because, in your words, you “couldn’t get over [your] distrust” of Clark. The possibility that the influence of your endorsements might have tanked Clark’s campaign with such reasoning — despite her track record and campaign having garnered a lot more grassroots support — is frightening.

To put it bluntly: it’s possible a small group of mostly white editors put a highly qualified Black woman with a public record of pivotal contributions and achievement on equal footing with a white candidate with no such record, and the white candidate won because you didn’t trust the Black one.

He pulls no punches.

It’s true that your endorsement success rate may be just a correlation. It’s also true you’ve endorsed a fair share of good directors (e.g., Song, Mizrahi, and LaVallee in this election cycle). However, your endorsement process undeniably selected people who composed the board majority for nearly 20 years and as such, in aggregate, you are selecting people that have created the dysfunction we are living with.

Thoughts?  

Comments

Outsider said…
I recently saw a statistic that 15% of Seattle residents are under 18, which is the third lowest among US cities (minimum 100,000 population.) Most of the voters in school board elections do not have children in the schools and never will. Effectiveness in educating children does not drive their votes, and never will. Dysfunction in schools does not matter to them.

Most Seattle voters are driven by ideology. The Stranger's endorsements are driven by ideology. The Stranger is on the same wavelength as most voters. The Stranger will never "cover" the school district because neither they nor their readers have any interest in that.

Wong is correct about the negative influence of the Stranger on Seattle schools, as seen from the politically insignificant perspective of parents and students. But nothing will change. The only route to real change would be ending the public school monopoly and setting the people free.
Anonymous said…
Wong is spot on.

The Stranger was warned about Hampson and Rankin. They were warned that both of these two individuals wanted to close over 20 Option schools in the name of equity. The Stranger ignored respected community voices.

~ Wong for School Board

chunga said…
I largely agree with Albert's take given the Stranger's influence and how they've long been weak on education. IIRC, Melissa was consulted one year, which was an improvement, but it needs more than just one person which might not be worth it for them so probably better if they just dropped the SPS endorsements
Anonymous said…
Was Hampson on the board when they had the “well resourced schools” fiasco? I don’t think so. But the current 7 members were on the board and voted UNANIMOUSLY yes to “authorize the superintendent to explore the consolidation of schools”
Let’s be honest and don’t selectively forget the big details.
And to be fair, The Stranger was also warned about a certain candidate switch-a-roo (not a rumor, it’s documented) and they didn’t properly investigate the validity of that. The Stranger cannot be trusted.

Fed Up
Amanda said…
He is spot on. Note that the Stranger is one of the feeder partners for the Progressive Voter Guide. So their recommendations get amplified in a source people turn to. It's so unfortunate that school boards nationwide have gotten politicized. The Stranger I'm sure will not take his suggestions to get up to speed or stop sharing recommendations, so I think the other option is to educate Seattle voters and provide a trusted alternative. Like get Wong or Cruikshank to write up an official school board rec every election, and give it a catchy name, and explain to everyone why it's progressive but also grounded in reality.
Albert Wong said…
The vote is important but not sufficient as the whole SOFG stupidity was introduced and pushed by Hampson. One major pressure of that had been an off borg like peer pressure for the board to vote unanimously. It's why the SOFG aligned advocates got so mad on Clark breaking ranks in the OpEd. So yup. We all need more context. And yep. A lot of anecdotes plus a court case peg a lot of dysfunction to Hampson.

Cause the WRS vote was the end of exceptional increase in fiscal mismanagement start from I think around 2019? That's measured by when we unwittingly went from a yearly actuals surplus to deficit. And when the budget variance grew suddenly... Which might have been COVID related sure. But Hampson (and other folks) went after SOFG and PTA funding instead of the tens of millions of increased expenditures.

So I do pin this on her.
Anonymous said…
Hampson also made several public comments about HCC and Option School costs and the inequity of mixing students outside their neighborhood schools (which I never understood doubling down on neighborhood segregation). This laid the groundwork for killing HCC and the proposal to kill option schools that ultimately failed.

Rankins Tears
Anonymous said…
Good point , Amanda. To be clear FUSE is behind the Progressive Voters Guide. They are DIRTY!!! Their candidate write ups are biased, and the will stop at nothing to damage certain Union endorsed candidates. In short, don’t trust The Progressive Voters Guide!

-Dirt Bags!
Anonymous said…
It seems highly likely that Hampson’s and Rankin’s dream of closing all Option Schools in the name of equity won’t be realized.

It is also true that Hampson/Rankin’s SOFG abused the Consent Agenda. We’ve seen tens and tens of millions of dolls passed on the Cobsent Agenda. SOFG eliminated the Fobsnce and operational committees when the district faced years and years of $100M deficits.

- So disgusted
Outsider, you said this:
"Most Seattle voters are driven by ideology. The Stranger's endorsements are driven by ideology." I'm not sure I agree with the former but yes to the latter and that's really the issue.

Not sure what you mean by public school monopoly but it's a hard no for vouchers.

Albert, on the PTSA fundraising, I think, as usual, Hampson was all talk. Board members talk about this and yet they do nothing. I think that's because the district loves that PTAs are funding FTEs, year after year. If this district truly cared (including the Board), they could just say - as other regional districts do - no funding of any staff at any school by PTA. Hmmm.

So Disgusted, you are right on all counts. I just don't get trying to get rid of schools that work for equity. That's not how you solve the problem; that's how you cookie-cutter schools. Just as with HC, course correct, not get rid of it. The district has already tried to have HC in every school and it didn't work.
Albert Wong said…
Fair point on actual impact of PTA fund policy changes, but the thing that I am trying to highlight is that board oversight time as well as top-level staff attention is nearly a zero-sum game. So the fact that time was spent talking about the small points *is* the hard.

The measurement is opportunity cost.
Anonymous said…
Hey Albert, you are highlighting “exceptional increase in fiscal mismanagement start from I think around 2019?” and saying “the tens of millions of increased expenditures.”

That should be attributed to the senseless increase in compensation under Superintendent Juneau.

If Albert can point out the hundreds of millions of capital funds being quietly drained under “emergency” in the SOFG honor system under Superintendent Jones, whom Hampson installed, the next board could possibly thwart further heist.

Those dark days of financial mismanagement have changed Hersey’s life forever (and other accomplices of Hampson) to the school district’s detriment for sure.

Grave Consequences
Anonymous said…
Hey Albert!

Don’t forget about dollars getting shifted from capital to operating budget without a finance and operational committee!


-Thanks Albert!

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