Betsy DeVos called out on 60 Minutes for undermining public education in Michigan

Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos was just on Sixty Minutes, talking with Lesley Stahl about, among other things, the work she’s done in her home state of Michigan to undermine public education. In a better world, this interview alone would be enough not only to have DeVos immediately fired, but also initiate impeachment proceedings against the president who nominated her – a woman with absolutely no relevant credentials – to oversee the education of our next generation.

The entire interview was painful to to watch, but here’s one of the more cringeworthy exchanges.

For those of you who chose not to watch the above video, knowing that the sound of DeVos’s voice would trigger an attack of some sort, here’s what you missed… Stahl, noting the work that DeVos has done over the past several decades to increase the proliferation of unaccountable, for-profit charter schools across our state, asked, “Have the public schools in Michigan gotten better?,” to which DeVos replied, “I don’t know, overall, I can’t say overall that they have all gotten better.” Our least qualified Secretary of Education in American history then went on to say that she hasn’t visited the “really bad schools” in Michigan, or, for that matter, given much thought as to how to improve them. Stahl, hearing this, replied, “Maybe you should,” to which a clearly overwhelmed DeVos responded, “Maybe I should, yes.”

I was going to rant about DeVos, but then it occurred to me that I’ve said it all before. Here, with that in mind, are excerpts from two of my past posts about her.

WE SHOULD HAVE STOPPED BETSY DEVOS WHEN WE HAD THE CHANCE [November 27, 2016]:

On behalf of the people of Michigan, I apologize… Not only were we one of three states credited with making Donald Trump, the least qualified presidential candidate in American history, our President-elect, but, as it turns out, we might also be responsible for ending public education as we know it. You see, we, the people of Michigan, had a chance to stop Amway billionaire Betsy DeVos from dismantling our public schools, but we didn’t do it. And, now, unless something unexpected happens, it looks as though she’s going to be replicating the failed policies that she championed in Michigan across the entire nation as our next Secretary of Education.

While DeVos has absolutely no qualifications for the job, she does have money, and she’s proven again and again that she’ll use it to get what she wants. As she said in a 1997 op-ed for the Capitol Hill newspaper Roll Call, “My family is the biggest contributor of soft money to the Republican National Committee.” She then when on to add, “I have decided to stop taking offense at the suggestion that we are buying influence. Now I simply concede the point. They are right. We do expect something in return. We expect to foster a conservative governing philosophy consisting of limited government and respect for traditional American virtues. We expect a return on our investment.” And, with this as her objective, DeVos, with her $5.1 billion net worth behind her, has wreaked havoc in Michigan, funding successful legislative efforts to efforts to, among other things, “restore religious freedom” by keeping gay couples from adopting and stop Michigan cities from passing living wage ordinances. But her real passion is in the realm of education reform, where she’s worked tirelessly to ensure that Michigan is the most anti-public education state in the union, funding campaigns to remove all caps on charter schools, while, at the same time, guaranteeing virtually no oversight.

Lily Eskelsen García, president of the National Education Association, said of DeVos yesterday: “Her efforts over the years have done more to undermine public education than support students. She has lobbied for failed schemes, like vouchers – which take away funding and local control from our public schools – to fund private schools at taxpayers’ expense. These schemes do nothing to help our most vulnerable students while they ignore or exacerbate glaring opportunity gaps.

“She has consistently pushed a corporate agenda to privatize, de-professionalize and impose cookie-cutter solutions to public education,” Eskelsen García went on to say. “By nominating Betsy DeVos, the Trump administration has demonstrated just how out of touch it is with what works best for students, parents, educators and communities.”

And, for what it’s worth, Eskelsen García isn’t employing hyperbole here. Those of us who live in Michigan have seen it play out firsthand. We’ve seen the ubiquitous billboards for fly-by-night virtual charters offering to educate our kids over the internet. [They give kids laptops and access to an online platform, and just collect the money from the state that would have otherwise directed to a public school.] And we’ve seen our school districts closing once vital neighborhood schools right and left due to the unchecked proliferation of charter schools and a “schools of choice” system that pits neighboring districts against one another, fighting over those “good” students who don’t require things like special education, which can be costly.

They’ve been assuring us for the past 20 years that this unfettered competition will yield better opportunities for our students, but the results just don’t bear that out. [More on that in a minute.] I’d argue, however, that better schools were never the end goal. I think, from day one, the real objective has always been to kill the teachers unions, while, at the same time, funneling public money into the hands of private corporations, which, in turn, contribute to conservative causes and legislators. And, it’s working. While I don’t have current data, between 2012 and 2015, Michigan’s two teachers unions, the MEA and the AFT, lost almost 28,000 members. And, in large part that’s due to the overwhelming growth of the charter school industry, which, according to the Detroit Free Press, “Michigan taxpayers pour nearly $1 billion a year into.” [] More importantly, though, these programs pushed by DeVos and others, just aren’t working for kids.

A recent investigation by the Detroit Free Press, which looked at two decades of charter school records and data from across Michigan, found: “Wasteful spending and double-dipping. Board members, school founders and employees steering lucrative deals to themselves or insiders. Schools allowed to operate for years despite poor academic records. No state standards for who operates charter schools or how to oversee them. And a record number of charter schools run by for-profit companies that rake in taxpayer money and refuse to detail how they spend it, saying they’re private and not subject to disclosure laws. Michigan leads the nation in schools run by for-profits.” And much of the blame lies with DeVos, who not only led, but funded, the charge.

Here, from Chalkbeat, is a great example of DeVos in action: “When Michigan lawmakers this year were considering a measure that would have added oversight for charter schools in Detroit, members of the DeVos family poured $1.45 million into legislators’ campaign coffers — an average of $25,000 a day for seven weeks. Oversight was not included in the final legislation.”

And, that, my friends, is the kind of maneuvering on behalf of the for-profit charter industry that you can expect to see happening across the United States, assuming DeVos is confirmed as Trump’s Secretary of Education… I’m not sure what she paid for cabinet post, but you can be damn sure she’s going to see a return on that investment…

MICHIGAN, THE STATE WHERE BETSY DEVOS HAS FOUGHT THE PAST SEVERAL DECADES TO DEREGULATE THE CHARTER INDUSTRY AND WEAKEN PUBLIC EDUCATION, FINISHES DEAD LAST OF ALL 50 STATES WHEN IT COMES TO STUDENT PROFICIENCY IMPROVEMENT [February 20, 2017]:

Citing the good work she’d done in Michigan, the Detroit News endorsed Betsy DeVos for Secretary of Education this past January. The Amway heiress, they told us, based on what she’d accomplished here in Michigan, was a “sound choice” – someone who would “strive to improve education for all kids.” The “hysteria” over DeVos, they said, was “overblown.” The teachers unions, they told us, had been unfairly pushing a narrative that “overlooks the work DeVos has actually done.”

Well, let’s talk about what Betsy DeVos “has actually done.”

Here’s a headline from today’s Detroit News.

Yes, Michigan, the state where, for the last several decades, Betsy DeVos has worked tirelessly to move taxpayer money away from public schools and into the coffers of unaccountable charter school operators, is now the worst state in the nation when it come to the proficiency improvement of students since 2003.

I’d suggest that we all send this article to DeVos and ask her to explain how this came to pass in the state where she lobbied successfully to remove caps on for-profit charter schools, and fought tirelessly to keep our legislature from imposing any kind of oversight over the industry, but, as we learned during her nomination hearings, she doesn’t even understand how states measure achievement, so I don’t know what good it would do.

University of Michigan professor Brian A. Jacob, who conducted this new study of National Assessment of Education Progress (NAEP) data for the Brookings Institution, said the following when asked why, according to him, Michigan had ranked “dead last in terms of proficiency growth since 2003.”

“I believe that there are a number of factors responsible for Michigan’s weak performance,” Jacob said. “A lack of adequate state and local funding for schools, the highly decentralized nature of governance that makes it difficult for the state Department of Education to develop coordinated reforms, the lack of regulation and accountability in the charter sector, and the economic and political instability that have plagued Detroit and other urban areas in the state.”

I know it’s probably unfair to lay all this at the feet of DeVos, as our Republican legislature and others worked with her to make this happen, but, as others have noted, she really does deserve a great deal of the blame. Here, with more on what DeVos has done to Michigan, is a clip from Politico.

…Despite two decades of charter-school growth, the state’s overall academic progress has failed to keep pace with other states: Michigan ranks near the bottom for fourth- and eighth-grade math and fourth-grade reading on a nationally representative test, nicknamed the “Nation’s Report Card.” Notably, the state’s charter schools scored worse on that test than their traditional public-school counterparts, according to an analysis of federal data.

Critics say Michigan’s laissez-faire attitude about charter-school regulation has led to marginal and, in some cases, terrible schools in the state’s poorest communities as part of a system dominated by for-profit operators. Charter-school growth has also weakened the finances and enrollment of traditional public-school districts like Detroit’s, at a time when many communities are still recovering from the economic downturn that hit Michigan’s auto industry particularly hard.

The results in Michigan are so disappointing that even some supporters of school choice are critical of the state’s policies.

“The bottom line should be, ‘Are kids achieving better or worse because of this expansion of choice?’” said Michigan State Board of Education President John Austin, a DeVos critic who also describes himself as a strong charter-school supporter. “It’s destroying learning outcomes… and the DeVoses were a principal agent of that”…

As I’ve said several times in the past on this site, we should have stopped DeVos when we had a chance. And, now, because we didn’t, the whole country is likely to suffer the same fate. As our terrible Governor said a few weeks ago when he endorsed her for the job of Secretary of Education, she’s now going to “make a big difference in the lives of school children… across the nation.” And we’re to blame…

ONE LAST THING:

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WISD and YCS approach terms on the future of the Washtenaw International Middle Academy

Remember how, this past October, the Ypsilanti Board of Education voted to give control of the Washtenaw International Middle Academy (WIMA) over to a consortium managed by the Washtenaw Intermediate School District, and how Ypsilanti parents organized to block the deal from going through, concerned about what it might mean for both he local school district and Ypsi’s kids? Well, according to the following letter, which was sent out by Ypsilanti Community Schools this past Friday, it looks as though a deal has been struck between the various parties. [For those of you who are new to the issue, I’d encourage you to read my recent interview with WISD Superintendent Scott Menzel.] Here’s the letter.

…As an outcome of the current discussions between YCS and the Washtenaw Educational Options Consortium (WEOC), grades 6-8 of the IB MYP (WIMA) will continue to be populated, completely (100%), by YCS-enrolled students, either as residents or schools of choice students indefinitely. Consistent with the YCS board resolution passed on October 16, 2017, WEOC’s Joint Steering Committee is moving forward with plans to expand WEOC programming to unite WIMA and WIHI under a single governance structure, allowing WEOC to complete and maintain accreditation of a 6-10 IB MYP and an 11-12 Diploma Programme.

Because all pupils enrolled in grades 6-8 of the IB MYP will be YCS students, WEOC and YCS agree that the student achievement scores of WIMA students will be reported as YCS performance data. Likewise, we anticipate that all resources currently available to YCS students enrolled in WIMA will continue to be available. Transportation of YCS students by YCS will continue.

YCS will be responsible for developing and maintaining an enrollment plan for grades 6-8 of the IB MYP, subject to final approval by WEOC’s Joint Steering Committee, on which YCS’s Superintendent serves. For 2018-2019 and 2019-2020, YCS will continue to guarantee YIES student enrollment in WIMA. The YCS Board of Education will hear public comments and receive proposals on the enrollment plan for WIMA for 2020 and subsequent years on April 17, 2018, at a special workshop dedicated to this matter. The YCS Board of Education will vote on a final enrollment plan at a regularly scheduled board meeting occurring on a later date.

Through the spring, YCS will continue its negotiations with WEOC to finalize costs and lease terms for West Middle School. The final lease and Program Addendum to the WEOC Consortium will be made available for public review as the board considers their approval. These agreements will be approved at a regularly scheduled board meeting.

We deeply appreciate the hard work of all who contributed to the agreements that anchored this programming option in Ypsilanti, for our children, and the voices of our community who showed unfailing support for Ypsilanti Community Schools.

So, as I read this, going forward, both WIMA and the Washtenaw International High School (WIHI), the county’s Ypsi-based International Baccalaureate (IB) high school, will be operated by WISD’s Washtenaw Educational Options Consortium, which, based on what we’d been told, will make it easier for both schools to secure IB accreditation. Only, now, thanks to this compromise, WIMA will not open to students from the nine districts that comprise the WEOC consortium, as was originally planned, but remain open to just Ypsilanti students, and those from other districts who sign up to attend under “schools of choice”… While I still have a number of questions as to how this will impact Ypsilanti Community Schools, I think, at least on the face of it, this is an improvement over the plan as it was originally proposed.

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Russ Solomon, the visionary founder of Tower Records, has died

In honor of Russ Solomon, the visionary, iconic founder of Tower Records, who passed a few days ago at the age of 92, I wanted to share the following clip from an interview I did a few years back with Doug Biggert, the man responsible, among other things, for bringing zines to Tower.

I never had the occasion to meet Solomon, but, from what Biggert has told me, and what I’ve gleaned from having watched the Tower documentary, All Things Must Pass, he seems like a hell of a man, and a terrific boss – the kind of guy who hired creative people, put them in positions where they could be successful, and then actually allowed them to be themselves… There should be more like him.

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Mueller now knows that Erik Prince’s meeting in Seychelles was for the purposes of establishing a communications backchannel between Trump and Putin

OK, now that we’ve talked about how reprehensible of a human being Betsy DeVos is, let’s talk about her brother, Erik Prince, the man behind the extremely shady private military company Blackwater…

You remember Prince, right? He’s the enthusiastic, far-right Trump supporter who, not too long ago, told members of the House Intelligence Committee that a January 2017 meeting he’d taken in the Indian Ocean, off the coast of East Africa, on the remote Seychelles archipelago, with Putin’s friend, the Russian hedge fund manager Kirill Dmitriev, was just a kind of happy coincidence, a chance encounter. Well, as it turns out, that wasn’t really the case.

As many had suspected, the secret meeting was not only planned, but Prince was acting on Trump’s behalf when he met with Dmitriev. And the objective of the meeting, as Mueller can now apparently prove, was to establish a secret communications backchannel between members of the incoming Trump administration and the Kremlin. And, it would appear that we now know this because the man who both orchestrated and attended the meeting, a Lebanese American businessman by the name of George Nader, is, according to press reports, now cooperating with the Mueller investigation… Yesterday, news broke that Nader had flipped. And, today, the Washington Post is reporting that Mueller now knows that the objective of the meeting was to establish a line of communications undetectable by the American intelligence community.

Before we get into that, though, here’s an excerpt from Prince’s testimony, in which perjures himself, stating under penalty of prison, that his meeting with Dmitriev was nothing more than a chance encounter, lasted only a few minutes, and had absolutely nothing to do with Trump.

Now, compare that to the following excerpt from today’s Washington Post.

…Special counsel Robert S. Mueller III has gathered evidence that a secret meeting in Seychelles just before the inauguration of Donald Trump was an effort to establish a back channel between the incoming administration and the Kremlin — apparently contradicting statements made to lawmakers by one of its participants, according to people familiar with the matter.

In January 2017, Erik Prince, the founder of the private security company Blackwater, met with a Russian official close to Russian President Vladi­mir Putin and later described the meeting to congressional investigators as a chance encounter that was not a planned discussion of U.S.-Russia relations.

A witness cooperating with Mueller has told investigators the meeting was set up in advance so that a representative of the Trump transition could meet with an emissary from Moscow to discuss future relations between the countries, according to the people familiar with the matter, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive matters…

Nader began cooperating with Mueller after he arrived at Dulles International Airport in mid-January and was stopped, served with a subpoena and questioned by the FBI, these people said. He has met numerous times with investigators…

Investigators now suspect that the Seychelles meeting may have been one of the first efforts to establish such a line of communications between the two governments, these people said. Nader’s account is considered key evidence — but not the only evidence — about what transpired in Seychelles, according to people familiar with the matter…

Now you have to ask yourself, “Why would an incoming administration need to establish a private communications backchannel with a hostile foreign nation when they would have the ability, through the State Department, to establish secure communications with any foreign leader in the world?” It doesn’t make a lot of sense, does it? Unless, of course, they had something to discuss that they didn’t want for there to be a record of, like the existence of a quid pro quo, in which Russia, for instance, provided assistance during the election, in exchange for the rollback of sanctions, etc… And, while we’re at it, here’s another question. Why is Mueller team, which has been extremely disciplined this far, allowing this news to leak out now? Are they, perhaps, hoping to flip Prince as well as Nader? Or did they, for some reason, feel as though this news needed to be public in order to provide context for the next round of grand jury indictments?

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Betsy DeVos v. Dwayne Wade

Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, which shut down in the immediate aftermath of last month’s mass shooting that left 17 students and teachers dead, recently reopened. And, today, there was news that the students had received two distinguished guests, one of whom talked with them at length about their experiences, and the other, who, refusing to speak with then, just appeared to be there for the promise of positive press. One was Miami Heat guard Dwyane Wade. The other was Trump Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos. Can you guess which of the two refused to engage with the students? Here, from Twitter, are a number of not so subtle clues.

As for what motivated Wade to visit the school, one assumes it has to do with the Joaquin Oliver. Oliver, one of the Stoneman Douglas High School students who was murdered last month, was a fan of Wade’s. And, when Wade heard that Oliver had been buried in his Miami Heat jersey, he not only reached out to the family to offer his condolences, but he dedicated the rest of his season to Oliver, writing his name on his shoes, etc. “Life is bigger than basketball,” Wade said at the time, throwing his support behind the Stoneman Douglas High School students who, since the shooting, have been fighting tirelessly for gun reform. And, to his credit, Wade has stuck with it, even though there’s been blowback from the far right and conservative basketball fans. Saying, “This is definitely bigger than the game,” Wade promised that he would not “just shut up and dribble,” referencing a nasty, hateful comment that Laura Ingraham had directed at LeBron James a few days prior. And, today, in Parkland, Wade demonstrated that he really meant what he said, showing up for the students and encouraging them to keep going.

As for why DeVos went to the High School, she told members of the press that she wanted “to be there” for the students. In spite of this, however, it doesn’t sound as though she so much as spoke with a single student during her visit, although she did give the press that impression, saying that she had “toured the school with student journalists.” In fact, according to those student journalists, they were just allowed to follow the Secretary of Education at a distance, taking photos of her as she made her way through the school. Here, with more, is an excerpt from the New York Daily News.

…Members of the media received similar treatment from DeVos during a press conference later in the morning that lasted only 10 minutes or so. When pressed by reporters on the issue of arming school staff, with questions surrounding training standards and student opposition, DeVos suddenly walked away from her podium.

Taking only a handful of questions before she abruptly ended the brief press conference, DeVos did not discuss the specifics of her conversations with students nor the policies she believes need to be implemented to keep schools safe.

“I told the newspaper reporters that I would love to come back in an appropriate amount of time and just sit down and talk with them,” she said amid the brief presser, adding that she toured the school with student journalists.

But Carly Novell, an editor for the student newspaper, “The Eagle Eye,” said DeVos “refused to meet/speak with students”…

It’s also worth noting that, shortly after walking through the school, DeVos was defending the President’s ridiculous, dangerous and irresponsible plan to arm teachers rather than just outlaw assault weapons like every other developed nation in the world.

Speaking of the worst Secretary of Education our country has ever known, I’d encourage you to read the report just issued by Senator Elizabeth Warren and Congresswoman Katherine Clark about DeVos’s disastrous first year in office. The entire 17-page report, titled “DeVos Watch,” can be found online, but here’s a taste.

…This report summarizes Secretary DeVos’s major actions during her first year in charge of the U.S. Department of Education (“the Department”), concluding that she has failed as Education Secretary. It reveals that her tenure—marked by damaging conflicts of interest—has been a boon for for-profit colleges, student loan companies, and advocates of school privatization. And her actions have harmed public education and students of all ages. Detailed findings of this review include:
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Questionable Ethics and Conflicts of Interest. Secretary DeVos has taken actions that harm students and student loan borrowers while benefitting bad actors in the for-profit higher education and student loan sectors. These actions appear tainted by her own conflicts of interest (many of which likely remain undisclosed) and those of key personnel that she has hired–including her Senior Counselor and a former Special Assistant, who have personal ties to the main beneficiaries of her decisions.
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Favoring For-Profit Colleges over Students. During her nomination hearing, Secretary DeVos repeatedly emphasized the importance of “accountability.” Since her confirmation, however, she has taken numerous steps to limit, delay, and revoke regulations aimed at holding colleges accountable when they fail to keep their promises and protecting defrauded student loan borrowers. She has rolled back relief for students who were ripped off by shady for-profit colleges; she has exposed struggling loan borrowers to high collection fees; she has delayed rules ensuring that colleges that take federal student loan dollars are held accountable for student outcomes; and she has weakened oversight of predatory for-profit colleges while allowing bad actors to continue receiving federal student aid dollars.
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Weakening Public Education. The U.S. Secretary of Education should be a reliable champion of public schools. But fears of her lack of experience and disinterest in–or disdain for–public education have come to fruition. She has undermined key protections for public school students contained in the bipartisan Every Student Succeeds Act; she has proposed budgets that contain massive cuts for public education (and huge giveaways to private and religious schools); and she has spent her time in office meeting with school choice and privatization advocates, while largely ignoring the needs of public school students and teachers.
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Turning Back the Clock on Civil Rights Protections. A critical part of the Department’s mission is to provide equitable educational opportunities for all students. But Secretary DeVos has done the opposite. She has curtailed protections for victims of sexual harassment and sexual violence; eliminated protections for transgender students; weakened protections for students of color; and weakened enforcement of civil rights protections by the Department’s Office for Civil Rights…

This kind of behavior, of course, is rampant in the Trump cabinet. Housing and Urban Development Secretary Ben Carson, by way of example, it was reported today, is changing the mission statement of his agency so that promises of “inclusive” and “discrimination-free” communities is removed. With this said, though, I would still argue that no one is worse that Betsy DeVos, who fought for the job, and bribed her way into it, with one objective in mind… to destroy American publican education in order to advance god’s kingdom on earth. She is the worst of the lot… a self-professed “Christian” who is willing to look the other way as Trump fucks porn stars and makes fun of the disabled, convinced that the ends justify the means, and that he can give her what she wants. She, simply put, is a monster.

Oh, and she’s a horrible liar too… Just watch her tell the press that she talked with the students of Stoneman Douglas.

Posted in Civil Liberties, Education, Politics, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 9 Comments

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