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Bush administration uses Gulf Coast reconstruction to push
for dismantling of public education
By Andre Damon
21 January 2006
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Over the past four months, the Bush administration and sections
of both the Democratic and Republican parties have used the devastation
inflicted upon the Gulf Coast during last years hurricane
season as a justification to push through a broad range of right-wing
policies. Among these reactionary projects is the drive to undermine
the public education system through the promotion of charter schools
and voucher programs.
The public education system has been under steady attack in
recent years. The offensive kicked into high gear with consecutive
budget cuts and was compounded by the passage of President Bushs
No Child Left Behind initiative, which introduced competition
between schools via standardized testing. Schools which fell behind
on state tests were penalized with the loss of funds, oras
was the case of 102 New Orleans schools last yeartaken over
by state education boards. In many cases this was followed by
the introduction of for-profit management or individual charters.
Hurricane Katrina has given the Bush administration and its
congressional allies an opportunity to broaden this attack. This
current offensive takes place on two fronts: one national and
directthe passage of a reconstruction education voucher
program; the other regional and implicitthe fragmentation
of the New Orleans public education system into charter schools.
Charter Schools
The New Orleans parish public school system, barely solvent
to begin with, has been thoroughly devastated by Hurricanes Katrina
and Rita. After more than four months, only one third of the citys
population has returned. The dearth of tax revenues has compelled
the district to fire 6,939 out of 7,000 employees who had been
placed on disaster leave.
Out of the original 137 public schools in New Orleans, only
15 have opened thus far. The overwhelming majority of these schools13
out of the 15have been given individual charters. Only two
of the open schools continue to be operated under the direct control
of the district.
Charter schools are educational entities that are independent
from school boards and therefore also from much of the state and
federal legislation that regulates them. Instead of actively working
to revitalize the public school system with additional funding,
the Bush administration and its allies are seeking to fragment
the public education system by lopping off individual schools
from districts and converting them into autonomous charter schools.
To this end, the Bush administration has provided $20 million
in federal aid to Louisiana charter schools at the expense of
public school districts, while Democratic Governor Kathleen Blanco
has passed legislation that eliminates obstacles in the way of
chartering schools. Taken together with the New Orleans public
school districts financial crisis, these circumstances have
created a situation where charter schools are the best financial
alternative for those seeking to reestablish public education
in the city. The chartered schools are able to open because they
can harness state and federal funds, private contributions, and
volunteer labor not available to the cash-starved school boards.
While at first glance appearing somewhat innocuous, the propagation
of charter schools is a component part of the attack on the public
education system, corresponding with the drive for educational
vouchers and the corporate management of schools.
It must be noted that charter schools, like the standard schools
they displace, are not a homogenous lot. Different groups set
up charter schools for different reasons. Certain charter schools
are created to bail out districts in low-income areas and typically
accept any students seeking admissionthese have a strong
tendency to fold under financial and organizational pressure.
They are typically managed by inexperienced administration and
face overwhelming monetary burdens. These schools also tend to
be small and usually have a high employee turnover rate due to
low pay and poor conditions.
Much more destructive, however, are selective-admission charter
schools, which are not required to accept students with disabilities
and draw the highest-performing students from the surrounding
area, generally neglecting the more disadvantaged and poorer sections
of the population. These schools usually have no problems with
funds and are often subsidized by major corporations. They exploit
the legitimate concerns of parents worried about the collapse
of public schools, and the effect this has on the education of
their children, to further drain funds from the public school
system.
By polarizing the regional student body, selective-admission
charter schools keep their costs low while consistently scoring
higher on standardized tests. This produces a positive-feedback
effect: selective-admission charter schools will consistently
perform better than open-admission public schools, get more funds
due to incentive-based funding for their higher performance, and
continue to draw the lowest-maintenance, best performing students.
District-run Public schools, the educational foundation of the
United States, are set up to steadily decrease in performance
and therefore lose funds to the point of insolvency. The
end result is the formation of a permanent educational underclass,
a teacher from A. I. DuPont High School in Delaware told the World
Socialist Web Site.
Charter schools also posses a number of other tactical advantages
for those seeking to weaken the public school system. First, in
some states, including Louisiana, private companies are allowed
to operate publicly funded charter schools, meaning that chartering
public schools opens the way for for-profit enterprises. Equally
important is the fact that these schools are exempt from their
respective states collective bargaining agreements with
teachers unions, and are therefore free to pay wages that
are as low as the market will bear.
The impact of charter schools consequently ripples throughout
the educational system and out into the entire labor market..
With these circumstances in mind, its no surprise that Wall
Street and the Bush administration are rallying with full force
behind charter schools.
It is doubtless that most of the educators, parents and other
volunteers that worked to get New Orleans schools open had
only the best intentions in mind. However, they made the choice
to open charter schools based on the availability of funds allocated
in Washington and Baton Rouge. In a statement to the New York
Times, a spokeswoman for the Louisiana Department of Education
provided the rationale for using the charter model: Federal
money was available, and we were able to use it to get the schools
open.
The first US national voucher program
Last month, Congress passed a hurricane relief program granting
from $6,000 to $7,500 per student to any school that took in students
displaced by Hurricane Katrina. Previous versions of the bill
had included provisions that exclude schools that participate
in religious instruction, indoctrination, or worship
from receiving federal funds, but the finalized draft that passed
Congress on December 22 has no such restriction.
Educational voucher programs are government policies that hand
students a certain amount of moneya voucherwhich is
redeemable for tuition in public, private or parochial schools.
The net effect of these programs implementation is a further
polarization of students based on class lines. Students who can
pass private school entrance exams and pay the difference between
the cost of private school tuition and the vouchers valueagain,
generally those from higher socioeconomic backgroundsgravitate
towards private schools while the remainder of the student population
stays in underperforming public schools. Concurrently,
voucher programs run counter to the First Amendment by channeling
federal money directly to religious establishments.
In a duplicitous parliamentary maneuver, Decembers voucher
legislation was tacked onto an unrelated defense appropriations
bill that passed through Congress unanimously. The amendment to
the defense bill, labeled the Hurricane Education Recovery Act,
provides a total of $1.6 billion in federal compensation to schools
and is the first educational voucher program to transcend state
borders. This legislation arrives on the heels of a 2004 law that
initiated a $14 billion school voucher pilot program in Washington
DC.
In a reversal of his 2004 position, Democratic Senator Edward
Kennedy became one of the most pronounced congressional advocates
of the national voucher program. Ironically, the conditions under
which the two federal voucher programs passed through Congress
were remarkably similar. In reference to last years DC voucher
program, the senator bluntly stated: The administration
couldnt pass a voucher provision honestly, so theyve
attached it to an omnibus appropriations bill to avoid a vote
to eliminate it. Kennedys words might just as well
apply to the passage of the national voucher plan, which he supported.
In his attack on the DC voucher program, Kennedy hit upon something
very importantthe vast majority of the American population
is quite justifiably opposed to educational vouchers. In fact,
voucher programs have been voted down every time that have been
put on the ballot as independent propositions.
It is as a direct result of this strong popular opposition
that politicians have taken to sneaking education vouchers into
law by hiding them behind other programs. For instance, Floridas
voucher programsone of which was recently struck down as
being opposed to the states constitutionwere passed
in the guise of creating educational opportunities for poor and
special-education students. The DC voucher program was veiled
as a scholarship program for low-income students. And, of course,
the first national voucher program was passed off as hurricane
relief.
While the Hurricane Education Recovery Acts proponents
have taken pains to emphasize the fact that this law is only a
temporary relief measure, it is obvious that a federal program
of this magnitude opens the floodgates for further undermining
the public school system while simultaneously weakening the United
States secular legal educational foundation.
The resounding theme of recent attempts to drastically reorganize
public schools has been the cry that the free market
is the solution to problems that are in reality caused by underfunding.
The three alternate structures to the traditional district run-educational
structurecharter schools, for-profit schools and voucher
programsall hinge upon the idea that the forces of the market
and competition between schools will eliminate red tape and pressure
schools to improve their services. This conception is thoroughly
false.
The facilitation of public education is not generally a profitable
enterprise, though the liquidation of public schools often is.
This is why companies running for-profit schools tend to lose
money until their initial public offering (IPO), at which point
they invest their schools assets, sell their stock, and
make off with the loot.
The very market forces championed by the school-choice advocates
are organically opposed to public education. To compensate for
this tendency, the state must intervene. This is why one of the
first laws limiting the exploitation of labor by industrial capital,
the British Factory Act of 1833, was also one of the first laws
that required children to attend school daily.
Once one gets past the political doublespeak, competition
between schools boils down into an injection of the markets
contradictions into the educational system. In essence, this is
advocacy for the destruction of the entire public education system.
It is entirely in line with the general thrust of the policy of
the American ruling class over the past several decades: the elimination
or curtailment of all publicly funded social programs.
See Also:
New Orleans: school
staff face massive cuts in jobs, benefits
[19 October 2005]
New Orleans lays off
half its workforce
[6 October 2005]
Detroit school restructuring
plan attacks workers and students
[17 April 2001]
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