Chicago Sun-Times

Elected school board doesn’t address CPS’ real problem

- Email: markbrown@suntimes.com

THURSDAY’S VOTE IS DEFINITELY A SIGN OF THE MAYOR’S WEAKENED POLITICAL POSITION IN THE WAKE OF THE POLICE BRUTALITY FALLOUT.

With an election in less than two weeks, state government in a shambles and lawmakers looking for cover, this would not be a good time to accept anything coming out of Springfiel­d at face value.

Case in point: The Illinois House voted 110-4 on Thursday to allow Chicagoans to elect their own school board.

In one fell swoop, House members overwhelmi­ngly turned aside two decades of opposition by Chicago’s mayors to let the people control their schools, as Democrats and Republican­s joined together in blissful solidarity with the Chicago Teachers Union.

Or just as likely House Speaker Mike Madigan allowed everyone to fool themselves again with a preelectio­n maneuver, the purpose of which we meremortal­s may never know.

It became clear shortly after the House vote that Mayor Rahm Emanuel had not dropped his opposition to the elected school board proposal, which has been pushed by his nemeses at the CTU.

City Hall sources told the Chicago Sun-Times’ Fran Spielman that Emanuel has been assured Senate President John Cullerton won’t call the elected school board bill for a vote in his chamber. At least not right now.

All Cullerton’s spokesman would say is that the bill is “under review.”

I think thatmakes it safe to say the legislatio­n won’t be flying out of the Senate nextweek.

Just the same, I doubt Cullerton will be able to stand indefinite­ly in theway of a popular proposal that is backed enthusiast­ically by many of his members, no matter any assurances he has offered the mayor. After all, he’s no Madigan.

Then there’s the strange business of Gov. Bruce Rauner not discouragi­ng House Republican­s from voting for the bill.

Rauner had been an opponent of an elected school board until January, when he saw away to combine it with his CPS takeover strategy as a dig at Emanuel.

The governor then declared himself an elected school board supporter, with one major condition: that school board candidates be prohibited from taking campaign contributi­ons from the teachers union.

But there’s no such prohibitio­n in the legislatio­n thatwas shepherded through the House by Rep. Robert Martwick (D-Chicago), with an obvious assist from Madigan, who is currently engaged in a mutually beneficial lovefest with CTU for electoral purposes.

Thursday’s vote is actually pretty extra ordinary when I think back to how little political support the elected school board proposal had when progressiv­e leaders began using it as an organizing tool a few years ago.

It’s definitely a sign of the mayor’s weakened political position right nowin the wake of the police brutality fallout.

There’s a possibilit­y that Emanuel, seeing the handwritin­g on thewall, would relinquish the school board in the “grand bargain” with Rauner and the Legislatur­e that he believes is possible— after the primary.

But the mayor remained dug in Thursday, arguing to reporters that Chicago’s system of elected local school councils already gives the city “an elected school board for every school” which he described as “the largest democratic body in the country.”

He should have saved his breath. He lost that argument with the public long ago, about the time his appointed school board voted to close 50 public schools at his behest in 2013.

The mayor is right about one thing: The elected school board legislatio­n doesn’t address the real underlying problem, which is meeting the schools’ revenue needs.

“The solution does not match the problem,” Emanuel said.

I’m ready to try an elected school board inm uch the sameway I’m ready to try term limits.

I don’t really think it’s the answer, and I expect it will create some problems of its own, but it’s something the citizenry wants to see after 20 years of total mayoral control.

As if on cue, CPS announced late Thursday that all employees will be required to take three unpaid furlough days to enable the system to withstand its funding crisis.

CTU responded by threatenin­g — again— to go on strike.

When state lawmakers find a way to properly fund the schools, then they’ll be doing something real.

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 ??  ?? Mayor Rahm Emanuel
Mayor Rahm Emanuel

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