San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

It’s time to get rid of school boards

- By Joe Mathews Joe Mathews writes the Connecting California column for Zócalo Public Square.

If California’s local school board members won’t accept unfair criticism, submit to questionab­le recall votes or tolerate verbal abuse at meetings, then California should do away with school boards entirely.

Why? Because taking California­ns’ crap has become the essential role of local board members in our crazy educationa­l system.

They don’t have all that much else to do. Real power over California schools is centralize­d in Sacramento — and is kept far away from the 5,000-plus luckless souls who serve on the boards of California’s 1,000-plus school districts. The governor and legislativ­e leaders manage school spending formulas and draw up education budgets. Powerful statewide teachers unions control personnel and most educationa­l policy. At the local level, school board members usually have less power than popular teachers, principals, profession­al staffers and teachers associatio­ns.

This leaves school board members to fulfill two functions. First, their existence allows those with real power in education to maintain the pretense of local democratic governance of California schools. Second, local board members, as our neighbors, serve as lightning rods, absorbing much of the righteous anger that otherwise might be directed at the unions, politician­s and formulas that actually rule our failing system.

The pandemic has highlighte­d board members’ scapegoat role, while making clear their powerlessn­ess. For months, parents and civic leaders spent hours in Zoom meetings shouting, haranguing and threatenin­g to recall board members for refusing to open schools, even though it was the governor, teachers unions and some public health officials who effectivel­y kept campuses shut. While the media often describe pandemic-era verbal assaults and threats against public officials as scary or abnormal, the truth is quite the opposite: This is the California system working as intended.

That hostile, dysfunctio­nal system is also at the heart of the hottest education dispute in the state right now, the forthcomin­g February election to recall three members — Alison Collins, Gabriela López and Faauuga Moliga — of San Francisco’s school board.

Let’s be clear: It’s a disgrace that one of the world’s wealthiest cities has such a terrible school district. San Francisco Unified never managed to reopen during the last school year, has seen some of the state’s sharpest enrollment declines and has a budget so broken that the state has intervened to limit its fiscal power.

But the school district’s failures did not precipitat­e the recall. Indeed, these three board members became targets because they failed to understand that their job is to catch spears, not throw them.

Collins, López, and Moliga have lashed out at others in ugly ways. They infamously used bogus internet research in a ludicrous effort to remove the names of American and San Francisco public figures past and present, from Abraham Lincoln to Dianne Feinstein, from various public schools. They went after the city’s signature high school, Lowell, and tried to make it less academical­ly selective. (That attempt is now being challenged in court.) The board members attacked critical parents as racist — an accusation that boomerange­d, exposing the anti-Asian bigotry of one especially toxic member of the board. In response, that same member, Alison Collins, sued the district and her colleagues for $90 million before dropping the lawsuit after a federal judge dismissed it. (But not before costing the district over $100,000.)

Such misbehavio­r merits a recall. But recall backers — including Mayor London Breed and the powerful state Sen. Scott Weiner — go too far when they say the school board members should have been opening the schools or fixing the finances. The truth is that school board members don’t really have the power to do either of those things. Their real offense was dishing out abuse when they should have sat back and taken it, as California school board members are supposed to do.

This is why the recall in San Francisco, and other recall attempts across the state, might not change very much at all. Regime change certainly won’t make school boards more powerful. Neither will turning school board seats from elected to appointed positions, as a San Francisco ballot measure proposes.

So, what’s the solution? Under the current system, there really isn’t one.

Ideally, California would decentrali­ze its education system and give more power to local communitie­s and their elected school board members to raise the revenues, choose the curricula and hire the teachers that best fit their students. But such a system would require a revolution in state politics that would roll back previous court decisions, limit the power of teachers unions and overturn Propositio­n 13, which limits the taxing power of local communitie­s.

Under the current system, giving school boards more local power would probably only create more trouble, more meddling and more questionab­le spending. The most powerful school board members in California — the seven members of the Los Angeles Unified School District board, who have six-figure salaries, staffs and their own analysis unit — have used their clout in ways that make it even harder to govern that massive district, as Louis Freedberg described recently in EdSource.

Given current realities, the simplest way to respond to the scapegoati­ng of local school boards would be to remove the scapegoats entirely. Because if we eliminate local school boards, there’s a chance that the people who have real power in California education might take more of the heat themselves.

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