Chicago Sun-Times

Downstate knows more about its schools than the first lady

- MARK BROWN Follow Mary Brown on Twitter: @MarkBrownC­ST Email: markbrown@suntimes.com

Gov. Bruce Rauner went back to the well Tuesday, pulling out a new digital ad from his wife to try to revive his withered credential­s as a champion of education.

I really don’t want to attack a politician’s spouse, even when he shamelessl­y uses her front and center to give him political cover.

We saw this act in 2014. If folks haven’t figured out the name of that tune by now, shame on them.

Instead, let me ask you who is more likely to have the better understand­ing of what’s at stake for the schoolchil­dren of Illinois in Rauner’s forthcomin­g battle over schoolfund­ing legislatio­n.

Do you think it’s Diana Rauner or Mike Gauch, the school superinten­dent in Harrisburg?

Do you think it’s Mrs. Rauner or Jennifer Garrison, the school superinten­dent in Sandoval?

Do you think it’s Mrs. Rauner or Chuck Lane, school superinten­dent in Centralia?

How about Mrs. Rauner or Ralph Grimm, recently retired school superinten­dent in Galesburg?

Gauch, Garrison, Lane and Grimm each told me in recent interviews that they support Senate Bill 1, the school- fundingfor­mula bill that Rauner says he will veto as soon as legislator­s give it to him.

I previously told you about Rolf Sivertsen, the school superinten­dent in Canton.

Each of these Downstate superinten­dents says the school funding bill is a long overdue fix that will more fairly treat children in school districts all across the state, starting with their own.

The governor says it is a “Chicago bailout” because the state will take responsibi­lity for funding Chicago teacher pensions, as has long been the case for suburban and Downstate teachers.

These school superinten­dents know what’s in the bill, including the Chicago pension provision, and they still support it. They think it’s good for their communitie­s.

“People that have been working on this bill for years don’t think it’s a bailout,” said Harrisburg’s Gauch, who admits he has received lots of criticism in his community for not embracing Rauner’s us- against- them narrative.

Gauch said kids in his small town have more in common demographi­cally with students in Chicago than with kids in the suburbs, which is why they benefit from the new formula.

“I don’t want to get into ZIP code politics. I want every student to be treated the same,” said Gauch, who expects his district to receive an additional $ 753,000 in state funding from Senate Bill 1.

Gauch said Harrisburg schools must borrow against their anticipate­d local property tax collection­s to open on time next month. But he said they won’t be able to stay open past the middle of October without state aid, which can’t be distribute­d without a new funding formula in place.

Sandoval’s Garrison presides over a small rural school district in Marion County with a high percentage of its 500 students living below the poverty line.

The Sandoval school district is in such dire financial straits that it plans a GoFundMe campaign to help solve an Environmen­tal Protection Agency issue, Garrison said.

Garrison said her schools may not be able to open on time next month without the scheduled state aid payment. Even if they do open, they would have to close by Labor Day if state funds aren’t distribute­d, she said. Of Senate Bill 1, she says simply: “It is fair.” As to the governor’s plan, she told me, “It’s not politicall­y viable.”

Rauner has yet to reveal the details of his own proposal, although in broad strokes he has indicated it would take money earmarked for Chicago and redistribu­te it to other school districts.

Centralia’s Lane acknowledg­es his district might get more money from Rauner’s plan, but says, “That’s not fair.”

Plus, he adds, the governor can’t pass his plan.

Mrs. Rauner wants to protect her husband’s reputation— and her own. But there are other voices to consider.

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| FILES Illinois first lady Diana Rauner
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