Las Vegas Review-Journal

Sanders education plan is just warmed-over gruel

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Trailing Joe Biden in the polls, Democratic presidenti­al hopeful Bernie Sanders on Saturday unveiled an education plan intended to protect hidebound teachers unions and to ensure low-income children remain trapped in failing schools. The Vermont socialist didn’t put it that way, of course. But that’s what his “Thurgood Marshall Plan for Public Education” would accomplish.

Sen. Sanders would vastly expand the federal education bureaucrac­y to attack a whole host of perceived ills, many involving supposed racial or gender discrimina­tion against both students and teachers. He would turn the nation’s public schools into one-stop social service community centers to help students and parents become more dependent on the federal government.

Not surprising­ly, the 10-point manifesto fits nicely with the Sanders’ campaign theme of “free stuff.” It promises free student lunches even during summer break, free college prep tests, free teen centers, free after-school or summer programs, free job training, free health and support services … and on and on. He also proposes teacher raises, increased protection­s for students in the country illegally, a minimum federal per-pupil outlay and expanded collective bargaining and tenure protection­s for unions.

Of particular note, Sen. Sanders seeks to neuter the charter school movement, the most viable alternativ­e path for many parents and students confined to inferior neighborho­od public schools. His program would put a moratorium on new charters and intentiona­lly undermines the very reason charter campuses exist by shackling them to the traditiona­l regulatory and union environmen­t.

“The proliferat­ion of charter schools,” Sen. Sanders wrote, “has disproport­ionately affected communitie­s of color.”

Earth to comrade Bernie: In many communitie­s of color, charter schools represent the only viable alternativ­e to public schools riddled with pathologie­s. Polls increasing­ly show that African-american and Hispanic parents favor expanding educationa­l alternativ­es for their children. “There’s a sharp racial divide among Democrats on charter schools,” the website chalkbeat. org reported last week. While gentry progressiv­es such as Sen. Sanders work to protect education unions from competitio­n, plenty of less-privileged parents see school choice as integral to providing their children with increased opportunit­ies to succeed.

Sen. Sanders’ education recipe is the same, warmed-over gruel peddled for decades by the very special interests that have supervised the steady decline of the nation’s public schools. Consider that nowhere in Sen. Sanders’ plan is there any mention of academic achievemen­t. Nor is there a peep about holding the entrenched education establishm­ent accountabl­e for results. That’s all you need to know about where Sen. Sanders stands on education.

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