The Antidote

christie-antidoteGarden State Governor Chris Christie doesn’t mince words, and doesn’t suffer fools. His reaction to a compromised school choice bill, watered down to allow for swift passage in the legislature:

“If you gut the purpose of the program to begin with, what good is it?…

If you compromise yourself away to nothing, then I don’t know what you’ve won…

(Legislators) are irrelevant in this in comparison to the children in 200 plus failing schools in New Jersey who are being stripped of hope…

People wonder why there is violence in our cities. Violence is commited, in the main, at least in my experience, by people without hope.

They wonder why there is drug abuse in our cities. People who turn to drugs are generally people with out hope.

They wonder why families are disintegrating in our cities. Families disintegrate because of the poison of a lack of hope.

And the greatest antidote to a lack of hope is a world class education“.

(Watch his complete response.)

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Coming Attractions: The Lottery

What happens when you are assigned to a school that could easily lead your kids down a path of failure?

The tag line says it all:

Four families… and the chance of a lifetime.

The Lottery opens in Washington, DC this weekend. Find out where you can see it in your neck of the woods.

(Read our earlier review in Newswire…)

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The hits just keep on coming

dontchangeThe opening of Virginia’s latest charter school (one of only four operating around the state) has been nothing but a roller coaster ride, not to mention a textbook example of the more-often-than-not contentious relationship between school districts and their charter schools when districts hold all the cards under a weak charter law:

Since the start of their dance with Richmond Public Schools (RPS) in the spring of 2008:

- Patrick Henry was forced to go through the RPS approval vote process three times

- Patrick Henry was initially left out of this year’s RPS budget

- Patrick Henry is to be held to higher standards than other RPS schools, but will receive 21 percent less funding

- Patrick Henry was “generously” granted leased space from RPS at a cost of $1 per year - facilities which came with a crippling renovation price tag of close to $1 million

Enough already?

Apparently not. Yesterday, a school more than 2 years in the making, one that will offer families a longer school year and a curriculum focus not available in traditional Richmond schools, was faced with the possibility of being on the receiving end of one more hit - the potential refusal by RPS to hire their first principal just as the final preparations for their inaugural school year get under way.

More “The hits just keep on coming”

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A tale of two cities

two-citiesThe issue of school choice is one that Barack Obama just can’t seem to escape.

In his adopted hometown of Washington, DC, the President has given families and lawmakers the silent treatment on the future of the DC Opportunity Scholarship Program - a program that for years has allowed students to escape failing District schools and attend local private ones. Though families are over the moon with the options DCOSP has opened up to them and kids are doing better than ever in their new schools, Obama has quietly cut funding for the federally budgeted program with the stroke of a pen and denied new applicants the opportunity to enroll.

By contrast, in his true hometown of Chicago, 22,000 elementary school kids are on the verge of receiving the same hope and change now closed to DC families.

A bill that passed the Illinois Senate last month and catapulted out of the House Executive Committee (10 to 1) last week on a positive trajectory to a full vote would rescue students from the worst public schools in the Windy City through the offer of a voucher their parents could use to enroll them in the private school of their choice.

And the irony? The proposed Chicago voucher program has been championed by a former colleague of (and sometimes adviser to) the President: Democratic state Senator (Rev.) James Meeks.

Meeks joins a long line of school choice leaders who break the myth that it is a purely political issue:

“To me education is a moral issue, and we’re offering a humane answer from people of both parties and all colors who think it’s a moral tragedy to see three generations of Chicago children go without a real education.”

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Snowe-d under

plowIn an attempt to win back her crown as Miss Congeniality among anti-school-choice Democrats, Olympia Snowe (R-ME) strolled to the well of the Senate yesterday evening to stab her fellow Mainer, Sen. Susan Collins, in the back by voting against the DC Opportunity Scholarship Program. Ms. Collins is one of the program’s chief champions. Despite the courage demonstrated by Senators Dianne Feinstein, Bill Nelson, Mark Warner, and Joe Lieberman - who voted FOR the voucher program - Sen. Snowe’s status as the lone Republican vote against the program was anything but courageous. Whether she likes Sen. Collins or not - or whether she wants to curry favor with Democrats or not (she does), Sen. Snowe’s vote today left DC kids… snowed under.

(In another bit of Maine news, yesterday, the state legislature again denied families another form school choice when their Education Committee endorsed an “innovative schools” bill which had all references to charter school removed before moving on to the main body.)

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