“Ever since I’ve been in the Legislature we’ve been fighting
over public education—those who believe in it and those on the other side,”
said Bryan, a 29-year veteran legislator. “If you’ll look back over the years,
you’ll find a group of people pretty much consistently on this side of the
education issue and a group of people voting no on everything.
“Just look at the roll call. This is a roll call on
education. Look who’s voting which way. Overwhelmingly the people voting no on
every public school issue over the last eight years … if you compare the
charter school roll calls, the people voting yes on charter schools are
extraordinarily similar to the no votes from years past.”
Bryan and Mississippi First executive director Rachel Canter,
a charter school supporter, debated the issue recently at the University of
Mississippi’s Overby Center for Southern Journalism and Politics in Oxford. Mississippi
First is a non-profit organization active in public policy issues.
“Too many children in Mississippi go to underperforming
schools,” Canter said. “In many traditional schools we haven’t innovated in
years. Charter schools can design different things. … We support charter
schools and public schools.”
Bryan said charter schools will drain needed funds from
public education. “They’ll be taking tax money that I pay to the Amory public
schools … and that money will go to a charter school. That’s not good for public schools.”
Ironically, the legislators dumping new rules and
regulations on public schools are the same ones who want to exempt charter
schools from those rules and regulations, Bryan said.
Mississippi public education has had a tortured history. The
U.S. Supreme Court’s Brown vs. Board of Education ruling in 1954 caused such a
firestorm that it led to the creation of the (white) Citizens Councils
organization in Mississippi. The councils later spread throughout the South. The councils fought
racial integration tooth and nail, helping elect segregationist politicians,
harassing dissident, racially liberal journalists, and setting up private schools
for whites.
To avoid racial integration, white parents across the state
of Mississippi sent their children to private academies, leaving public schools
populated by mostly black students.
Charter schools come directly out of the playbook of the
American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) and the conservative billionaire
Koch brothers. The ultimate goal of that playbook is privatization, a shrinking
of government and the public role in practically every aspect of American
lives.
At the Overby Center debate, Canter said that teachers are what’s
“really key” to charter schools and the flexibility that is their major
attraction over public schools. Charter schools have much more flexibility in
“who they can hire, how much they can pay them, under what circumstances they
can terminate them.”
Ah, there’s the rub. Charter schools can show the door to teachers’
unions like the Mississippi Association of Educators and the Mississippi American
Federation of Teachers. That’s also straight out of the ALEC-Koch brothers
playbook. In fact, anti-unionism may be its founding principle.
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