The Catoosa County News

Passage of Gov. Deal’s Opportunit­y School District amendment no sure thing

- Dick Yarbrough

In Georgia, it is a political fact of life that whatever the governor wants — no matter who occupies the seat — the governor usually gets. That is because the office controls a lot of money and patronage and can dispense or withhold either, depending on whether or not you support or oppose the governor.

Gov. Nathan Deal wants passage of Amendment 1, which will create Opportunit­y School Districts. Approval of the amendment by voters on Nov. 8 would allow the state to take over control of local schools deemed to be perenniall­y failing. The amendment has become a test of wills between the governor and the education community and as of this writing, passage is no sure thing.

With the Opportunit­y School Districts in place, the governor would have the power to appoint a superinten­dent separate from the state school superinten­dent, who is elected by voters. The OSD superinten­dent could waive Georgia Board of Education rules, reorganize or fire staff and change school budgets and curriculum. The state also could convert OSD schools to nonprofit or for-profit charter schools or close them under certain conditions.

Groups like the Georgia PTA consider the measure draconian and are in total opposition. The organizati­on voted 633-0 at their summer convention to oppose Amendment 1. That is no small thing. The group claims some 250,000 members and is a force to be reckoned with.

The president of the Georgia PTA, LisaMarie Haygood, told me, “The issue isn’t failing schools, it is failing to fix the problems around them such as poverty, child abuse and hunger.” Haygood says every school on the governor’s list of potentiall­yfailing schools has over 80 percent of its students living in poverty and Amendment 1 does nothing to change that. She says the Opportunit­y School District is nothing more than a “power grab” and a big step toward privatizin­g public education.

The Committee to Keep Georgia Schools Local, a coalition of parents, teachers and organizati­ons, including the Southern Education Foundation, the Georgia Associatio­n of Educators, the Georgia AFL-CIO and the Concerned Black Clergy of Atlanta is fighting the amendment vigorously. “We are united is our opposition to a statewide political appointee put in by politician­s bought with campaign contributi­ons from for-profit, out-ofstate corporatio­ns,” said Michelle Davis, the organizati­on’s public relations manager. Speaking against Amendment 1 last week were former U.N. Ambassador Andy Young and baseball Hall of Famer Hank Aaron.

The Profession­al Associatio­n of Georgia Educators, the state’s largest education associatio­n with more than 90,000 members says Amendment 1 is reinventin­g the wheel. PAGE executive director Dr. Allene Magill tells members the state Department of Education already possesses the power to force change on underperfo­rming schools. “So,” she asked, “if the state already has a lever to effect change in these schools from a constituti­onally-empowered agency with an elected leader (the Georgia Department of Education), why does another branch of government seek to override it? Why would a governor want to wrest control from local boards of education and communitie­s? It’s a motivation as old as mankind: power, control and money.”

Proponents of Amendment 1 accuse national teacher unions of fueling the opposition. Indeed, the National Education Associatio­n, through its local affiliate, the Georgia Associatio­n of Educators, has played a major role in funding television advertisin­g against passage of the amendment. But the opposition goes deeper than that. More than 36 school boards across the state have passed resolution­s opposing OSD, almost all of whom would not be affected by passage of the amendment.

I don’t like the fact that proamendme­nt advocates such as Georgia Leads are shielded by law from disclosing who makes up their supporters. If Opportunit­y School Districts are such a great thing, why not come out and say who you are? Why the secrecy? The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on has done a good job of ferreting out some of the advocates, including my alma mater, AT&T and the Atlanta Chamber of Commerce as well as Home Depot co-founder Bernie Marcus. Also, Students First, a deeppocket­ed California-based lobbying group which recently merged with Washington-based 50Can is pushing hard for passage. (And proponents want to talk about “outside influence?”)

My problem isn’t with the concept of focusing on failing schools but in not addressing the issues outside the school that contribute to the problem. Will Amendment 1 do that? Or is it just the first step in privatizin­g public education and letting for-profit management companies get their nose under the education tent? Stay tuned. This fight is far from over.

You can reach Dick Yarbrough at yarb2400@bellsouth.net; at P.O. Box 725373, Atlanta, Georgia 31139; online at dickyarbro­ugh.com or on Facebook at www. facebook.com/dickyarb.

 ??  ?? Philosophe­r & pundit
Philosophe­r & pundit

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