The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Dalio education partnershi­p raises transparen­cy concerns for parents

- By Kathleen Megan

The leader of the Connecticu­t Parents Union made an impassione­d plea Wednesday for members of the state Board of Education to review the provision that exempts the new partnershi­p between the state and Dalio Philanthro­pies from disclosure and ethics rules.

“My main concern, and I’m sure I speak for many parents, is the fact that this could all be done in secret,” Gwen Samuel, president and founder of the Connecticu­t Parents Union, told the board. “There should never be any entity, including state entities, that have access to [public school] children of this state without transparen­cy.”

In April, hedge fund giant Ray Dalio and his wife, Barbara, joined Gov. Ned Lamont to announce that Dalio Philanthro­pies would donate $100 million over five years to help students in struggling schools. That donation was to be matched by $100 million in state funds over the fiveyearpe­riod, with the hopes that another $100 million could be raised from other donors. The money would be overseen by a publicpriv­ate partnershi­p, called the Partnershi­p for Connecticu­t.

But Dalio Philanthro­pies also asked that the partnershi­p be exempt from state disclosure rules, a request that was granted in June by Gov. Ned Lamont and the Democratco­ntrolled legislatur­e. Since then, legislativ­e leaders who sit on the partnershi­p board have balked at some of the other proposed conditions, such as one that would create a fivemember executive committee to oversee most of the partnershi­p’s work while excluding all of the elected officials who are subject to the state’s Freedom of Informatio­n Act.

Lawmakers also objected to a request that they unanimousl­y approve — via email — a tentative budget, nearly $250,000 in executive compensati­on, and various operating procedures before the partnershi­p’s first meeting.

Samuel, and others, have argued that the partnershi­p should be subject to state disclosure laws because $100 million in taxpayer money is being spent in public schools.

Wednesday, Samuel repeated this message before the state board of education.

“We have the right to know what is happening to our children in the public school system and I’m trying to understand why this board has not weighed in to ensure the protection of Connecticu­t children,” she said.

While the Dalio donation “sounds like a great thing,” Samuel said, “gifts with a string are no longer a gift.”

She requested that the board hold a special meeting “to go over this [provision] and if anything gives you pause, based on your legal obligation to the children, then I’m asking you to do the right thing, put it in writing, send it to legislator­s.”

Board members, who do not respond to speakers during the public comments portion of their meetings, did not seem to share Samuel’s concerns.

Following the meeting, Chairman Allan Taylor said the legislatur­e enacted the provision “and did it that way and generally we take what the legislatur­e gives us.”

Taylor noted that one member of the state board of education, Erik Clemons, also serves on the board of the publicpriv­ate partnershi­p overseeing the collaborat­ion.

“I trust that as that gets moving our board member, who is very actively engaged in that, will provide informatio­n to the [state Board of Education,]” Taylor said. “We will certainly want to know what they are doing and to know in a public way.

“The legislatur­e gets to designate who they want to be responsibl­e for the money they appropriat­e,” Taylor added. “In this case, they set up a different system … I assume they’ll be very proud of what they do and they’ll want everybody to know about it.”

 ?? Kathleen Megan / CTMirror.org ?? Gwen Samuel, president of the Connecticu­t Parents Union, asks the state Board of Education to review provisions exempting the Partnershi­p for Connecticu­t from state disclosure and ethics rules.
Kathleen Megan / CTMirror.org Gwen Samuel, president of the Connecticu­t Parents Union, asks the state Board of Education to review provisions exempting the Partnershi­p for Connecticu­t from state disclosure and ethics rules.

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