Las Vegas Review-Journal

■ The Clark County School District wants to bureaucrat­ize school zoning decisions.

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The Clark County School District isn’t underperfo­rming because of a lack of bureaucrac­y. Yet the push for centraliza­tion continues.

Next week, the Board of Trustees is scheduled to consider an overhaul of its zone variance process. Currently, just more than 19,000 students have an approved zone variance that lets them attend a school outside of the campus designated for their neighborho­od. Principals make those decisions. That’s around 6 percent of students.

If approved, the changes would centralize this. Parents would apply for a variance with the district itself. If a school has space, variances would move forward. If there are more applicants than space, selection will be done by a lottery.

In a presentati­on before the board last month, Mike Barton, chief college, career, equity and school choice officer, implied zone variances contribute to overcrowde­d schools. He implied this increases the district’s need for portable classrooms. He bemoaned that portable classrooms cost the district $6.2 million in fiscal 2020 and 2021.

Even if that entire cost is due to variances, which is doubtful, that’s a small price to pay to help 19,000 students find a better school. It’s also worth noting that some parents are willingly choosing more crowded schools for their children. A centralize­d bureaucrac­y can’t optimize the learning experience of 308,000 students.

Mr. Barton said this change will help the district better meet its goal of equity. He’s not referring to the older definition of equity, which means treating people without favoritism. District officials acknowledg­ed they have no evidence bias influenced principals’ decisions.

The new “woke” definition of equity is equal outcomes on the basis of a single preferred variable — race, in this case.

But hundreds of variables influence behavior. When there are many variables, it’s a statistica­l fallacy to assume discrimina­tion is why one variable isn’t proportion­al.

That’s especially true when results happen to be proportion­al.

“On the aggregate, zone variance data appears to be overall reflective of the district’s demographi­c profile,” noted a slide Mr. Barton presented to the board last month. The supposed problem is that schools with the most zone variances “had the highest number of Caucasian students” using a zone variance. Talk about grasping at straws.

This appears to be a ham-fisted attempt to limit a widely used form of school choice. If the process is centralize­d, principals at the most requested schools won’t have the ability to let in a few more students.

District officials and the board should be empowering parents and principals to find the best fit for students, not tying their hands.

The views expressed above are those of the Las Vegas Review-journal.

All other opinions expressed on the Opinion and Commentary pages are those of the individual artist or author indicated.

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