The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Controvers­y makes DeVos different than predecesso­rs

- Maureen Downey Get Schooled

The secretary of education has never been a high-profile post, probably because the U.S. Department of Education is an upstart, created in 1979 by President Jimmy Carter and still regarded with suspicion by critics of federal overreach.

The ED — the Department of Energy already had dibs on the DOE acronym — is the smallest of the cabinet department­s, although it has 4,300 employees and a $69 billion budget. In order of succession to the presidency, the

ED secretary is way down the line, 15 heartbeats away from becoming commander-in-chief. Even the agricultur­e secretary stands closer to the throne.

Most people couldn’t name recent education secretarie­s. ( John King Jr., Arne Duncan, Margaret Spellings and Rod Paige.)

However, many Americans can now identity the newest one, Betsy DeVos. Her rambunctio­us confirmati­on last week led to the vice president casting the first tie-breaking vote in American history to settle a Cabinet appointmen­t.

DeVos’ notoriety reflects the unpreceden­ted public opposition to her nomination, opposition that intensifie­d after DeVos’ desultory Senate hearing performanc­e where she botched a question on special education, cited grizzly bears as a reason rural schools might need guns and refused to affirm the need for greater accountabi­lity of the growing charter school sector.

A surge of incensed calls overwhelme­d Senate offices and clogged voicemail, forcing voters to get creative to be heard.

In desperatio­n, a Utah woman sent Sen. Orrin Hatch a ham and pineapple pizza with a note asking him to vote “no” on DeVos. All but two Republican senators endorsed DeVos, dismissing all the petitions, postcards and phone calls as the work of threatened teacher unions and their usual culprit, “the entrenched education bureaucrac­y.”

So why the uproar over the appointmen­t of a federal official whose impact on local classrooms is constituti­onally limited and essentiall­y rests with its checkbook?

The ED website even contains a disclaimer about its power: “Please note that in the U.S., the federal role in education is limited. Because of the Tenth Amendment, most education policy is decided at the state and local levels.”

A Michigan billionair­e with a penchant for giving large sums of money to Republican candidates, DeVos brings no education background to the post, having never attended public schools nor taught in one.

However, she has staunch allies who know her through her family foundation and her commitment to vouchers and school choice, including former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, who said, “Millions of families share Secretary DeVos’ vision for disrupting a failed status quo that has denied too many children access to a quality education.”

DeVos is likely to re-invigorate the school choice debate in Georgia, which has remained cool toward vouchers and judicious in its approval of charter schools. But there are a few burndown-the-village-to-save-it lawmakers who will likely seize the moment to push for more exit ramps out of public schools, including taxpayer-funded vouchers and increased tax credits.

Two bills have already been filed in the House that would triple the $58 million ceiling now on private school scholarshi­p programs. Georgia taxpayers get a dollar-for-dollar credit if they make contributi­ons to scholarshi­p funds that enable public school students to transfer to private schools. DeVos supports such tax credits.

The polarizati­on around her views and her confirmati­on did not escape DeVos, who greeted ED staff last week by noting, “There’s no need to pull punches. For me personally, this confirmati­on process and the drama it engendered has been a bit of a bear.

“In all seriousnes­s, for many, the events of the last few weeks have likely raised more questions and spawned more confusion than they have brought light and clarity ... Let us set aside any preconceiv­ed notions and let’s recognize that while we may have disagreeme­nts, we can and must come together, find common ground and put the needs of our students first.”

 ?? MOLLY RILEY / AP ?? Newly confirmed Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos addresses staff Wednesday at the Education Department in Washington.
MOLLY RILEY / AP Newly confirmed Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos addresses staff Wednesday at the Education Department in Washington.
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