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Unions provide platform for Democrats at Michigan rally vs.
school cuts
By Walter Gilberti and Lawrence Porter
24 June 2005
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A rally held Tuesday in Lansing, Michigan, to protest sweeping
cuts in public education epitomized the efforts of the teachers
unions to defuse mass opposition and channel it behind Governor
Jennifer Granholm and the Democratic Party.
As many as 13,000 Michigan teachers, support staff and parents
marched on the state capital, representing the largest mobilization
of its kind in Michigan in recent years. But the event was turned
into an official Democratic Party event, with the platform dominated
by Democratic politicians and Governor Granholm as the featured
speaker.

On this political basisdespite the anger of parents and
school workers against closures and cutbacksno effective
fight to defend public education can be waged.
Since she took office in 2003, Granholm has instituted an austerity
policy of cuts in public spending on the one hand, and further
tax windfalls for big business on the other. Per-student funding
has remained at $6,700, and there have been mid-year cuts averaging
$75 per student. Under her administration, $3.3 billion has been
cut from the state budget, affecting public schools, adult education,
institutions of higher learning, and other vital social programs.
She is presently negotiating another estimated $70 million in
cuts.
The rally was put together by the K-16 Coalition for Michigans
Future, an umbrella organization involving 23 education groups,
but dominated by the Michigan Education Association (MEA), and,
to a lesser degree, by the Detroit Federation of Teachers (DFT).
The Democratic Party is amply represented in this coalition, and
so complete is the degree of integration of the unions into its
political apparatus that it is hard to distinguish one from the
other.
Through the collaboration of the MEA, DFT and the Democratic
Party, the rally was turned into an appeal to Governor Granholm
and Democrats in the state legislature to pass Senate Bill 246
and House Bill 4582. These are stop-gap measures that would take
money from the general fund earmarked for other programs and divert
them to education. Even if the bills were to pass, they would
only result in an increase of $175 per student.
Nothing was said from the platform about reopening closed schoolsreversing
15 years of budget cuts and corporate windfallsor seriously
addressing the deteriorating state of public education throughout
the state, especially in working class cities such as Detroit,
Pontiac and Flint.
The organizers of Tuesdays rally were determined to control
the political direction of the event and contain the anger of
protesters. They issued a notice, published earlier in the Detroit
Free Press, seeking to prohibit large placards and banners
so they could supply the marchers with signs promoting the legislation
supported by the teachers unions and the governor.
The anti-democratic methods of the union bureaucracy and other
organizers of the event included an attempt to exclude supporters
of the Socialist Equality Party, who put forward an independent
strategy for teacherslinking the fight to defend public
education with opposition to the war in Iraq and growing social
inequality, and calling for a break with the Democratic Party
and the building of an independent political movement of the working
class.
In one instance, a Detroit teacher who was handing out the
leaflet issued by the SEP (See New
political strategy needed to defend public education, June
24, 2005) was told to leave the sidewalk in front of the Lansing
Center. When the supporter refused and informed the person that
this was a public sidewalk, several workers intervened in his
defense. This is a public sidewalk! What the hell
is going on here? one worker declared.
Later, two of the rallys organizers attempted to have
three SEP supporters taken away by the police. This attempt failed
as well, when police refused to have them removed.
Jennifer Granholm is a fervent supporter of the Iraq war and
a rising star in the Democratic Leadership Council, a group within
the Democratic Party that has been the main organizing center
for the rightward shift in the party since the late 1980s.
But despite her austerity record, Granholm attempted to don
a left face in the course of her remarks at the rally,
declaring, You have to ask them [Republicans in the state
legislature] to choose between investing in our kids and pouring
money into special tax giveaways to special interests.
She also made a demagogic reference to the oil and gas companies:
The owners of oil and natural gas wells take millions out
of our budget at the expense of education. I ask you, what is
more important, a special giveaway for oil and gas well owners
or education for our kids?... Close loopholes. Support public
education. Choose kids over corporations.
In fact, the biggest potential oil and gas giveaway
is the war in Iraq, which has already drained over $200 billion
that could be put towards funding social needs.
Not once in her speech did Granholm mention Bushs No
Child Left Behind actwhich links school funding to providing
access to military recruitersor the proliferation of charter
schools as well as faith-based and for-profit institutions in
Michigan, which has the highest number of these schools in the
country.
The WSWS interviewed some of the rallys participants,
who described the impact of the cuts in education on their schools.
Annie Carter, who has been a volunteer parent for 26 years, and
most recently worked in the attendance office at Detroits
Cody High School, voiced skepticism and displeasure at Granholms
speech:
When the school district froze $80,000 for the At
Risk program at Cody, people protested to CEO [Kenneth]
Burnley, but he said the cuts came from the governor. Weve
also lost money for special education. This year we have 16 retiring
teachers and 14 more slated for layoff. Where are we going to
get the support for the kids? These are certified teachers. Granholm
stepped up and did nothing.
Ms. Carter further explained that schools now have to compete
with each other for enrolment. If a school is under-enrolled,
it loses funds and teachers are laid off. We used to have
to do only one fourth Wednesday count [to finalize enrolment numbers],
at the end of September. Now the count is also done in February.
Rosalba LaRosa, a Spanish teacher in the Lincoln Park school
district, said, There have been lots of cuts in Lincoln
Park. We now have two remaining out of three teachers in the language
department. One person retired and was not replaced. The result
is all of us have to take on more kids. There are now 30 to 35
kids in a classroom.

Ms. LaRosa said that she is using textbooks that are eight
years old. We have been using the same set of workbooks
now for several years, and they are wearing out. Initially, we
had 35, now we have 10-15 and they are in pretty bad shape.
LaRosa has been teaching in Lincoln Park for 18 years. I
never imagined things would get like this when I started,
she said. What bothers me the most is the discrepancy in
funding between the districts. In Lincoln Park, the district receives
$6,700 per student. In Birmingham or Bloomfield Hills, it is $10,000
to $12,000 per student. This is not right.
In those districts, she continued, kids can
use computer for language classes. We dont have any of that.
I believe that all kids deserve the same.
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