Friday, May 22, 2009

Education Alliance, Pacific Research Institute, and CAPO



As you know, the Capo Unified School District (CUSD) has been seriously wacky for many years now, what with enemies lists, absurd construction projects, Brown Act violations, board member recalls, fired and indicted administrators, trustee "plumbers," etc.

CUSD's current “reform” board is dominated by a clueless bunch who owe there election victories to Education Alliance (EA), Tustin's right-wing education reform group, which has been a player in OC ed politics since the early 90s (they got their seed money from theocrat and pal-o'-Fuentes Howard Ahmanson, Jr.).

(The President of our (SOCCCD) board, Don Wagner, is, as you know, very conservative. He sits on EA's board.)

Now, CAPO has become the poster child for “broken” schools—or so says the pro-voucher Pacific Research Institute, a conservative think-tank located in San Francisco.

You remember them. One of their leading lights is Lance T. Izumi, a former Reagan Administration speech writer, and the Koret Senior Fellow and Senior Director of Education Studies at PRI.

You'll recall that, 16 months ago, Izumi was Chancellor Raghu Mathur’s special guest at the SOCCCD opening session (see our The Chancellor's Opening Session).

Well, the PRI is now promoting the documentary Not As Good As You Think (also the title of Izumi’s latest book), directed by Mr. Izumi (see trailer above):

Film: Capistrano district poster child for 'broken' school system: New documentary showcases the problems of one O.C. school district. (OC Reg, yesterday)
The Capistrano Unified School District is portrayed in a new, 49-minute documentary film as a case study in what is wrong with the American public school system and how politics, misplaced priorities and lack of oversight can derail what should otherwise be a successful institution.

"Not as Good as You Think: The Myth of the Middle Class School" prominently features a five-year effort by the CUSD Recall Committee parents group to bring reforms to a school district plagued by scandal, community unrest and allegations of corruption reaching into the highest levels of its administration.

The documentary, produced by the San Francisco think-tank Pacific Research Institute, made its Orange County debut Wednesday night for an audience of about 200 people at the St. Regis Hotel in Dana Point.

The [CUSD] "reform" movement has accepted at least $40,000 in political campaign contributions over the past few years from the Education Alliance, a Tustin-based political action committee that, among other things, strongly supports school choice and school vouchers.

According to the PRI website,
The mission of the Pacific Research Institute (PRI) is to champion freedom, opportunity, and personal responsibility for all individuals by advancing free-market policy solutions.


That is, when not promoting industry deregulation, they promote the voucher system for public education.

Read more about the Pacific Research Institute on Wikipedia.

Claremont Institute: "gosh, they all know each other!" (One of Fuentes' hangouts. Ed Meese, Howie Ahmanson, Tom Phillips, Pat Sajak, et al.)

Tom Fuentes "relationship map" on Muckety.

SEE ALSO:

Capistrano Unified Recall Leader Weighs In On Film, Is Mum About Excluded Journalist (OC Weekly, yesterday)

"Nine members of the Santiago Orange Growers Association womens baseball team, posing with their championship trophy at Irvine Regional Park … in 1931. The team members were employees of the SOGA, which was located at the corner of West Palm and North Cypress, Orange, California."

“Ella Buer and Minnie Hockemeyer at … Santiago Creek in Orange County Park, Orange, California, 1909. The youth groups of St. John's Lutheran Church in Orange, California, and Trinity Lutheran Church in Los Angeles, California were at the park for a picnic. In 1928 the park was renamed Irvine Regional Park.”

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

The plot thickens, the photos dazzle...

Anonymous said...

Why do these free marketers think of education as a business? If it were, we'd have classes like RG's recent text messaging styles, and advanced jaw slcking, etc.

Hattie said...

I love your blog! Those pix of old (white) California make me think about the tremendous changes since they were taken, the time when my mother was a girl in Santa Barbara.
And I appreciate all the info about the continuing struggles for public education in California, for as California goes, so goes the nation, and that is still true.

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...