Thursday, December 3, 2009

Trojan horses in public schools




TODAY, the Reg reported that
A libertarian think-tank that prominently features the Capistrano Unified School District in a documentary about how the U.S. public school system is broken will screen its 49-minute film this afternoon on Capitol Hill. [The documentary--see trailer above] recounts 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 2:30 p.m. screening will be hosted by two leading GOP lawmakers....

Co-hosting the screening will be the film's executive producer, Lance Izumi, and [the director]….
Lance Izumi? Does that name sound familiar? It should. Izumi was Chancellor Raghu P. Mathur’s super-special guest speaker at the Spring ’08 “Opening Session.” He was co-billed with Elvis. Remember?
The filmmakers highlight the much-criticized construction of Capistrano's sprawling district office building, the grand jury indictment of a former superintendent, and the unpopular decision to build a high school on a hilly site bordered by high-voltage transmission lines, landfills and a high-pressure gasoline pipeline.

The filmmakers also traveled to Nashville, Tenn., to profile a family's unhappiness with local public schools, to Sweden to examine that country's school voucher system, and to Oakland to chronicle the turnaround of an inner-city charter school.
...
Several Capistrano trustees who ran on the CUSD Recall Committee's "reform" platform attended the May premiere of the film, drawing ire from critics who questioned why public school officials were apparently supporting a film calling for sweeping reforms to public education, including school choice [i.e., programs allowing parents to spend government vouchers on private schools].
That is mighty strange, isn’t it? Public school officials in favor of the private school “voucher” concept? Gee willikers! It's almost perverse!

The Reg article notes that “Capistrano's ‘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….”

Education Alliance: that’s the right-wing organization that SOCCCD board president Don Wagner helps guide (he’s on their board). A couple of years ago, Wagner (and Mathur and Padberg) went to a big EA shindig, featuring ultra-pompous blow-hard Dennis Prager! They told everybody about it at a board meeting.

EA got its start, you know, with a big chunk of money provided by Tom Fuentes’ good pal Howard Ahmanson—you know, the guy who thinks that stoning gay people to death isn’t really such a bad idea.

They're a sweet bunch, really they are. And very pious. As you may have heard, they do a lot of prayin'.

Tonight’s musical selection is the late Gene Pitney’s 1961 recording of “Every Breath I Take.” It is perhaps the most delirious record ever made. Love it. Be sure to catch Gene's lurid sigh just before the instrumental break:



Bonus track: Mekons’ glorious I Love a Millionaire

The Reg: John Williams' reduced authority

Last night, we reported some impending decisions with regard to trustee John Williams’ role as OC Public Administrator/Public Guardian. This morning, the OC Reg’s “Watchdog” (Jennifer Muir) reports:

County CEO: Reduce authority of elected official
The county’s top executive wants to seize oversight of the public guardian’s office, essentially reducing the authority of the county’s elected Public Administrator John Williams.

The recommendation comes months after a grand jury issued two scathing reports about Williams and the public administrator/public guardian office. They accuse Williams of doubling his management budget, breaking personnel rules and squandering a trustee’s estate….

Williams has refuted the findings, saying the grand jury just didn’t understand some of the complicated information he handed over and that their reports contain factual errors.

The county concedes that Williams has corrected or explained many of the grand jury allegations, but still contends “there is more to be done,” according to a staff report from CEO Tom Mauk’s office.

Supervisors have historically appointed the elected Public Administrator to take on the additional role of Public Guardian. In 2007, they solidified that marriage, passing an ordinance that makes the elected Public Administrator the ex-officio Public Guardian.

That means Williams, like the county’s other elected officials, doesn’t report to a direct supervisor. The public is his boss.

Mauk wants supervisors to repeal that ordinance, returning the Public Guardian job to an appointed position– a position that reports to him.

Mauk is recommending that supervisors let Williams keep the public guardian job if they vote to split up the offices. But if supervisors decide to appoint someone else instead, it could mean Williams will get a pay cut. He currently earns $139,526 a year….
COMMENTS:

Anonymous said...
Everyone knows that John has been overworked and underpaid - I am sure he welcomes this change.
9:26 AM, December 03, 2009

Anonymous said...
I expect the district will send out another clarifying email announcement regarding this latest development.
9:46 AM

Anonymous said...
There you go again Roy - stirring the pot of controversy by reading newspaper and then posting the article so people can be informed! This has got to stop.
10:50 AM

Anonymous said...
Yeah, there you go stirring the pot, beating the Register to this story and getting everything exactly right! What an asshole!
11:11 AM

Anonymous said...
That's pretty good pay from the taxpayers. Maybe John is also in favor of public healthcare.
11:52 AM

Anonymous said...
Williams is finanlly getting what he deserves. Lets hope the BOS moves quickly to implement this then turn around and fire his worthless ass, then folled up again with the firing of the HR director and the Chief Deputy. I hope Williams is enjoying his last Christmas party with his staff (Claimjumpers).
12:58 PM

Anonymous said...
Claimjumper?
5:44 PM

Anonymous said...
Yes, Claim Jumper! He was even nice enough to donate a dvd player as a raffle item. $139K for showing up for work for a few hours a day and he donates a dvd player! He only said a few words too, which was really nice. We all know he doesn't care about anyone but himself anyway, so why waste the words.
10:37 PM

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...