tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7893272060787897238.post1677681216304920044..comments2024-03-19T08:42:45.690-04:00Comments on The Delaware Libertarian: Smear tactics and school board campaigns: part 2 . . .Steven H. Newtonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09097470960863103473noreply@blogger.comBlogger8125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7893272060787897238.post-21571642283419884592012-04-29T00:33:53.622-04:002012-04-29T00:33:53.622-04:00It appears Ms. Saffer has publicly denounced the v...It appears Ms. Saffer has publicly denounced the votenoonvalharris site: <br /><br />http://www.shirleysaffer4christina.blogspot.com/2012/04/committed-to-honest-transparent.htmlEd Diagnosticianhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15327161701331135519noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7893272060787897238.post-73499201173095736922012-04-28T19:02:57.118-04:002012-04-28T19:02:57.118-04:00Eeeeek .... Voices 4 Education needs to be careful...Eeeeek .... Voices 4 Education needs to be careful - I find their efforts on the school board materials misguided at best. It's making me very uncomfortable.Coolspringernoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7893272060787897238.post-35258216061129704522012-04-26T09:59:55.962-04:002012-04-26T09:59:55.962-04:00My definition of shadowy is pretty basic: Voices 4...My definition of shadowy is pretty basic: Voices 4 Delaware, both the (c)3 and (c)4, are nameless and faceless.<br /><br />Just put all of your employees of import (directors, managers, etc on your internet masthead to let people decide to support or not support you on the merits of your positions. For me, having to connect the dots to prove it's Rodel, while easy, just allows the public discourse to take on the shaky/shadowy, why are you really doing this angle.....it actually hurts them IMO and as long as they stay in what I am calling the shadows, I will leverage fact alone that as a blogger in addition to their addiction to not using research to support their fallacious and private $$ motivated solutions to fixing public schools..Ed Diagnosticianhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15327161701331135519noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7893272060787897238.post-67319307064490468302012-04-26T09:26:53.795-04:002012-04-26T09:26:53.795-04:00John
I don't want the battle to continue; I w...John<br /><br />I don't want the battle to continue; I want the battle to end, not in some sort of pyrrhic victory by one "side" or the other, but with the de-politicization of public education in Delaware.<br /><br />Yeah, I know I'm an incurable optimist.<br /><br />Mike<br /><br />I know why RCEA got involved in Red Clay School Board elections, although I think the motivations were more complex than just financial concerns.<br /><br />But it's not RCEA but DSEA that is pouring hundreds of thousands of dollars into statewide elections. And while "the union is teachers," the DSEA Advocacy Fund and Working Families for Delaware (both of which list their mailing address as DSEA headquarters) are legally completely separate from DSEA.<br /><br />Once DSEA transfers hundreds of thousands of dollars of their members' dues to the PAC, their members lose ALL control of how that money is spent. And who is controlling it, and how much less faceless and accountable are they to the general public than the ed reformers?<br /><br />On tactics v motivations--that sounds very close to an "end justifies the means" argument, Mike, and fails to acknowledge that DSEA was engaging in these tactics for several years before the ed reformers responded.<br /><br />I intentionally did not mention Kenny by name in the article because I did not and am not making any allegations about his campaign. So far this season, with the exception of the push poll (which you seem to have affected quite handily), Voices has mailed out one flier for Joanne that is positive, and DSEA is going to mail out one flier for Kenny, which will also be positive.<br /><br />I suspect that part of the reason that we are seeing things unfold differently in Red Clay than CSD this year is that there has been a continual dialogue about what's kosher going on between the campaigns. That's apparently worked so far.<br /><br />Both John and Mike,<br /><br />In about two weeks I intend to do some of my own research on the "ed reformers"--ironically, I do disagree with you that they are a shadowy group. Just get the list of attendees from and meeting between DEDOE and USDOE in the past year and you'll have 90% of all the names involved.Steven H. Newtonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09097470960863103473noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7893272060787897238.post-57433765231018585312012-04-26T08:32:58.096-04:002012-04-26T08:32:58.096-04:00THe issue I have with the edreformers vs. the unio...THe issue I have with the edreformers vs. the unions is that the edreformers are still this nebulous beast. What do they want? Yes, on a macro level we know they want "better schools," but some of the individuals are so shadowy and there's such secrecy in their actions, it makes me wonder.<br /><br />As far as the teachers' union, yes, they entered the Board election fray because previous leadership in Red Clay was running the District into the ground financially. I don't need to name names. You know who I'm talking about. Rather than sit back and watch the District sink, the union had an a-ha! moment and said "Maybe we can affect some change here." And they did. The union is teachers. <br /><br />I agree with some of your comments above. DSEA has paid a minimal role in our campaign for Kenny Rivera. THey're sending one mailer to Red Clay members on Kenny's strengths. Everything else has been paid for by donations to Kenny's campaign. <br /><br />So, while some tactics may be the same, I see the motivations of the edreformers and unions to be so opposite. Actually, I still can't comprehend the motivations of some of the edreformers.downwithabsoluteshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06511870818710411155noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7893272060787897238.post-89371829144578240032012-04-26T08:01:15.469-04:002012-04-26T08:01:15.469-04:00Steve, good post.
Your point about how Joanne is...Steve, good post.<br /><br /><br />Your point about how Joanne is not endorsed by the Union yet the flyer was non confrontational and more professional illustrates the concern with the CSD flyer to me. The 501(c)4, Voiced 4 Delaware Education Action Fund funded both NON union endorsed candidates issues with these flyers yet one was much more pointed and confrontational. Is it a function of union support or as you say the legacy of some charged previous decisions by the BOE.<br /><br />The 501(c)3 veriosn of Voices 4 Delaware Education's lead registrant is on the Henrietta Johnson Medical Centers Board of Advisors. Our board voted unanimously to give Henrietta Johnson FREE access to space in our district offices for a low cost/free medical clinic.....and this is the thanks we get? A trumped up news release blasting our BOE?<br /><br />I call it super secret because I want the faces behind the 501 (c)3 and 501 (C) 4 to just come out to our board meeting and confront us to our faces.<br /><br />They wont.<br /><br />They're cowards.<br /><br />The money is absolutely on all sides. I support the sides that supports our educators. I own that view. I despise the side that, in my opinion, has no credibility in the arena of helping or fixing education yet continues to foist their ideology upon our public schools.<br /><br />Let the battle continue. Oh, and that post is likely to come back, I am doing additional research first.Ed Diagnosticianhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15327161701331135519noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7893272060787897238.post-40682304982224113202012-04-26T06:41:57.396-04:002012-04-26T06:41:57.396-04:00My best guess is this:
About five years ago, DSEA...My best guess is this:<br /><br />About five years ago, DSEA took a hard look at current educational trends in Delaware, didn't like the way things were going with choice/charter (all the things we have been discussing) and decided to mobilize.<br /><br />The first year they really got heavily involved in school board races, they won big, electing two candidates each in Red Clay, Christina, and Cape. A large part of the reason they won was shock value: nobody else had ever organized or poured money into these races. <br /><br />You can't even ever find campaign filings for most candidates prior to that, because very few ever exceeded the $2,000 threshold for filing.<br /><br />And DSEA has been remarkably successful: since 2007 all but one candidate in Red Clay that they have endorsed and supported financially has won election to the board.<br /><br />And I'm not saying they did anything wrong, but where they made a gigantic mistake was to start bragging, statewide, about their intent to control majorities on key school boards and to oppose a lot of different pieces of "reforms."<br /><br />There is both a lot of support for those reforms with people who don't talk much and there's a lot of money on the line--millions of dollars at a time when state budgets are declining.<br /><br />So there were (a) large interests out there with dollars to spend in the elections; and (b) candidates who did not like part or all of the DSEA approach. Naturally these two ended up together because there is no other source of funding in the State that can match the money DSEA throws into these campaigns.<br /><br />And it is HUGE money compared to the miniscule numbers of people who vote. Last year's Red Clay election was close to a record (might have been the record, I didn't go back to look it up), but the 2,500-odd people who voted represented less than 2% of the population eligible to vote. The losing candidate there would have steamrollered any other candidate in the state, because he got over 1,100 votes, and the highest vote total after that was in the 300-400 range.<br /><br />But thousands of dollars were spent in several districts over that election.<br /><br />Why the hoopla? Last year's well-publicized stand-off between DOE and Christina Board of Education would be a major example of why this garners so much attention: rightly or wrongly DOE and THE POWERS THAT BE saw the Christina Board as endangering tens of millions of dollars in Federal aid.<br /><br />That DOE was not necessarily using that aid wisely did not come into the picture.<br /><br />Add that to Citizens United, which gave the DE business community a venue to organize a PAC to counter DSEA, and you have today's situation.<br /><br />How do we get out of this box? I honestly don't know. I don't think moving the elections to November would do anything but make it worse; I tend to agree with kilroy that doing away with at-large voting would be a good thing if we have sub-district residency requirements for candidates. Why shouldn't a Red Clay board member from the city be voted on by people who live in Hockessin and vice versa?<br /><br />Here's a random thought: maybe school board elections and school referenda should be required to happen on the same day. Over 10,000 people voted in Red Clay's last referendum, and we'll be lucky to see 25% of that come out on May 8.Steven H. Newtonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09097470960863103473noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7893272060787897238.post-48393975864511464842012-04-26T06:11:16.866-04:002012-04-26T06:11:16.866-04:00I am trying to understand these school board elect...I am trying to understand these school board elections, but I'm not getting it. I keep feeling as if I'm missing something.<br /><br />Why all the sudden attention? School Board elections use to be sleepy little things, barely noticed. Very few people knew they were political. Hell, very few people knew about them, period.<br /><br />The way most board members campaigned and won was to build their support in certain areas and hope everyone outside their area forget to vote on election day - and that was a pretty effective strategy.<br /><br />So... why all the hoopla?<br /><br />BTW, that mailer is embarrassingly unprofessional.pandorahttp://delawareliberal.netnoreply@blogger.com