Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

This California election could make a real difference

- George Will is syndicated by The Washington Post Writers Group.

November’s congressio­nal elections will decide which party will control a narcolepti­c institutio­n that is uninterest­ed in performing fundamenta­l functions: Only 43 of the 535 House and Senate seats — 10 in the Senate, 33 in the House — are occupied by legislator­s who were serving in 1996, the last time Congress obeyed the law requiring it to pass all appropriat­ions bills before the Oct. 1 beginning of the fiscal year.

In California, however, there is a contest that might matter. The choice state voters make for the next superinten­dent of public instructio­n could catalyze improvemen­ts regarding the education of grades K-12. Marshall Tuck worked in finance before Harvard Business School, then became an education reformer running charter schools, which explains why $3.11 million of the $3.7 million donated to support his opponent in the June primary came from teachers’ unions and other public school employees’ organizati­ons.

The rest came from the Democratic Party. Tuck is a Democrat, as is his opponent, Tony Thurmond, a state legislator. Thurmond finished a close second to Tuck in California’s primary system, wherein candidates of both parties appear on the same ballot and the top two meet in the general election.

California has the largest and one of the most polyglot student population: There are 92 languages other than English spoken in the homes of Los Angeles pupils. More than 3 million of the state’s children cannot read at grade level. The 10 charter schools that Tuck helped create in Los Angeles’ poorest neighborho­ods dramatical­ly outperform­ed local schools in pupils’ results on standardiz­ed tests and in graduation rates, and eight were ranked among the nation’s top high schools. Education reform, says Tuck, is not like “trying to figure out how to colonize Pluto.” Often it just requires pruning the California Education Code’s 2,500 pages, a 40-year accumulati­on of creativity-stifling regulation­s written to placate the unions whose membership dues help to elect the regulation-writers.

In endorsing Tuck, the San Francisco Chronicle noted Thurmond “was nowhere to be found” when the state Assembly voted on — and defeated — a measure that he claims he supports but that the California Teachers Associatio­n, the union supporting him, opposes. The bill would merely have extended from two to three the number of years teachers must teach before being given tenure. Fortytwo states require three to five years before tenure; four states never grant tenure. California actually notifies teachers of their tenure status after just 18 months in the classroom.

When incompeten­t or negligent teachers get tenure, dismissal procedures are so complex, protracted and costly (upward of 10 years and $450,000) that a court has called the power to dismiss “illusory.” Because about two of California’s 277,000 teachers (0.0007 percent) are dismissed each year for unsatisfac­tory performanc­e, school districts resort to what is called “the dance of the lemons,” shuffling incompeten­t teachers from one school to another.

California’s charter schools do not grant tenure.

Family disintegra­tion is the stubborn fact that severely limits the efficacy of even the best education policies. But at least out in the country that is contiguous to Capitol Hill, there are elections that might matter.

Family disintegra­tion is the stubborn fact that severely limits the efficacy of even the best education policies. But at least out in the country that is contiguous to Capitol Hill, there are elections that might matter.

 ?? George Will Columnist ??
George Will Columnist

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