Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Face reality

LEARNS rhetoric ignores real issues

- Shelley Smith of Fox is a retired teacher. SHELLEY SMITH

Rhetoric versus reality. In the current political environmen­t that is heavy on massaging words and light on speaking plainly, it is hard to know which one we are hearing. Nowhere has this been more evident than in the realm of education.

I have often wondered how superinten­dents are adjusting to flying blindly into the unknown LEARNS landscape. A few weeks ago, I shared thoughts from a variety of stakeholde­rs. This a deeper dive into the views of school administra­tors.

I created a short survey which was sent to public school superinten­dents. These individual­s must walk a fine line between their employees, students, school boards, communitie­s, the public, the Department of Education, and the Legislatur­e.

It is a very sad reality that people remain silent because they fear repercussi­ons from state leaders. For this reason, there is no identifyin­g informatio­n attached to the results.

All regions of the state are represente­d, and 76.9 percent of the responses came from districts with enrollment­s of between 350 and 1,500. This is the group most at risk of financial distress or losing staff as a result of the new law. Approximat­ely 70 percent of all districts in the state also fall into the same range, according to Arkansas Department of Education data.

■ 69.3 percent have not yet made decisions about cutting positions, or have already laid off employees.

■ 55.1 percent will not receive adequate state funds to cover the required $50,000 salary for teachers.

■ 75.6 percent do not have adequate funds to increase the salary steps for veteran teachers and those with advanced degrees.

■ 55.1 percent are not confident that future funding from the state will be sufficient to maintain a competitiv­e salary schedule for licensed and classified staff; 41 percent are unsure.

■ 39.7 percent support the effort being made to put LEARNS on the 2024 ballot; 37.2 percent are unsure.

Their comments reveal much frustratio­n and ambivalenc­e.

“In a nutshell, I feel this is an elitist, wealth-oriented action designed ultimately to greatly reduce the number of public school districts in Arkansas.”

“The rhetoric used by those in [Little Rock] made no sense. Jacob Oliva was talking about how this legislatio­n was about saving public education, while the governor was talking about how this legislatio­n was to save parents, students, and others from public education.”

“Superinten­dents had almost no say at all in any of this legislatio­n.”

“And small rural districts are again having to fight for teachers when we can only pay at the most $55,000. There needs to be a statewide salary schedule and districts cannot deviate from it.”

“I’m a little in shock by how much we are short in funding to meet the required increases. Over $200,000 in salary costs that are unfunded, which is a ton for a small district such as ourselves.”

“I hate this new LEARNS Act and, as a superinten­dent, I’m scared for my school.”

“My biggest concern about the LEARNS Act is the unfunded mandates.”

“High-poverty districts like ours have low property values. We need a statewide millage rate to help even the playing field.”

“A focus of LEARNS is listed as early childhood education, yet the state and governor are not providing any additional funding for districts’ Pre-K teachers, staff or students.”

“I am afraid if the veto were to happen, it would be a bigger mess than what we are dealing with.”

“For No. 3 I answered ‘I don’t know’ because we haven’t seen the money yet. It’s all only preliminar­y.”

The superinten­dents who have made these statements are not radical leftists. They are committed school leaders who have undoubtedl­y lost a lot of sleep trying to figure out how they will keep their districts intact as they try to follow the new law … if it remains a law.

Hubris walks hand-in-hand with rhetoric. The problem with hubris is that people are so blinded by arrogance that they refuse see the downside of their bad decisions.

Bulldozing an omnibus bill through the Legislatur­e, social media-shaming those who speak against it, and ignoring all other ideas leads to a downward spiral of unintended consequenc­es. It probably never occurred to the sponsors that any part of it might be challenged in court. If one part is challenged, all of it goes to court. Oops.

It is extremely unwise to label concerned citizens as “adults with political motives.” When the education commission­er, in his official capacity, using an ADE social media account, accuses citizens of standing in the way of progress, we have reached a whole new circle of hell. If he had lived here long enough to actually know those people, he would understand how ridiculous a label that is. Opposition to the law comes from all parts of the ideologica­l spectrum.

Dante might point at the sign that says “Abandon all hope, you who enter here.” But we cannot abandon hope.

The rhetoric you hear is a lie. Nobody is fighting for the status quo, nor for failing schools. Students need someone to fight for their right to free and fair public education, not for the rights of a few to usurp public tax dollars to pay for their elitist private education.

A state as beautiful and diverse as Arkansas should not be subjected to the silly games of a small group of humans. The land and its people deserve respect. The consequenc­es of this lack of respect fall squarely on those shoveling rhetoric, not the ones fighting back. That is reality.

Regnat populus, y’all.

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