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Andrew Gillum

florida democratic party
Charter SchoolsEducation PoliticsSchool ChoiceTax Credit Scholarships

Wishing that fellow progressives stop fighting education choice

David Hudson Tuthill December 21, 2018
David Hudson Tuthill
florida democratic party

Andrew Gillum lost the Florida gubernatorial election by roughly 32,000 votes. There are over 300,000 students on choice scholarships and in charter schools in Florida.

For my education wish this holiday season, I would like to participate in a storied tradition older than the Bolsheviks themselves – progressives going after their own.

I am on my hands and knees begging fellow self-styled progressives to stop denying educational autonomy to working class and minority families – quite literally the base of our movement.

The 2018 Florida gubernatorial election was a once-in-a-generation moment. Andrew Gillum emerged from the splintered Democratic primary without the backing of the leadership of teacher unions, the groups who routinely pump the false narrative into education discourse that (and I’m paraphrasing here, but only a little) “giving the poor freedom to choose the best educational environment for their children that the affluent will always have is bad and drains money from districts.”

Purveyors of that phony rhetoric backed their longtime ally Gwen Graham. Andrew Gillum owed those people nothing.

It was a moment for the Florida Democratic Party to finally have a mea culpa on an issue we are blatantly on the wrong side of. An opportunity to call for peace, to unify under a new definition of public education – a definition that places the real power in the hands of education’s most important stakeholders – teachers, parents, and students.

So what did the Gillum campaign do with that generational opportunity?

In September, Mayor Gillum stood before the media and called for bringing the Florida Tax Credit Scholarship – a program where two-thirds of the scholarship recipients are Black or Hispanic, where half of the students are in a single-parent household – “to a conclusion.”

He spent the rest of the campaign demonizing education choice, primarily charter schools.

When the Gillum campaign realized this position had the potential to hemorrhage base voters, what did it do to change course?

Nothing.

Its political brain trust falsely assumed its turnout models were correct, and it could ignore the hundreds of thousands of impoverished, working class, and minority voters who use the FTC scholarship, send their children to charter schools, or elect to make other education choices for their children that Florida makes available by settled law.

Internally, the Gillum campaign sent signals that its anti-choice rhetoric on the trail did not match any actual plans when they assumed office. But it refused to move off the wrong side of the issue publicly.

They paid a harsh price for that.

The campaign had no reason not to course correct. Did it think teacher union leadership was going to drop its endorsement of the first Black gubernatorial candidate of a major party in Florida history in the middle of a general election? Drop the most engaging and popular Democrat to come out of the state of Florida since Lawton Chiles?

It was an utter dereliction of political duty.

The results speak for themselves. In the biggest nationwide midterm election wave towards the Democratic Party since Watergate washed away the Nixon crime syndicate and its Congressional enablers, Florida Democrats lost the Governor’s mansion, both chambers of the Florida Legislature remain firmly in Republican control, and three new justices to the Florida Supreme Court will be appointed by Gov.-elect DeSantis, tilting the balance of the court towards revanchist conservatism for a generation, its echoes to reverberate through our way of life far longer.

According to a CNN exit poll, 18 percent of black women voted for DeSantis. We can twist in the wind all day about the reliability of exit polls, but here’s the bottom line – Mayor Gillum was on record telling single mothers, working class people, and the Black and Hispanic communities that, as governor, he would rip away choices those families had already decided their children needed. Period.

When the next Florida gubernatorial campaign rolls around in 2022, there will be untold thousands more students across the state utilizing different forms of choice and customization in their education. Their parents will be heavily invested in keeping those options available to their families, just as parents were this election cycle.

I don’t need to say again what the demographics and political affiliations of most of those families are going to look like.

My fellow progressives – you do not know what’s better for the children of families happily empowered and making education choices than those families do themselves.

And you never will.

This fight is over. The tipping point has passed. Progressives clinging to a 19th century factory-style model of educating every student the exact same way is not only failing children, it’s now failing our politics.

Think about everything else that is on the line. Please. I’m begging you.

Editor’s Note: This is the second in a series of posts where various members of the education choice world share an #edchoice wish. For yesterday’s post by national advocate Virginia Walden Ford, CLICK HERE. This column references the Florida Tax Credit Scholarship. The scholarship is administered by nonprofits like Step Up For Students, which hosts this blog.

COMING MONDAY: Director of Latino Outreach for the American Federation for Children Hergit “Coco” Llenas imagines an education world 30 years in the future, and hopes that we don’t have to wait that long. 

December 21, 2018 1 comment
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Florida Schools RoundupredefinED education roundup

Florida schools roundup: Transgender fight, new boards, rule changes and more

Compiled by redefinED staff November 21, 2018
Compiled by redefinED staff

Transgender fight: Dozens of Pasco County parents are calling on the school board to reverse its decision to allow students to use bathrooms and locker rooms that align with their gender identity choice. “Our gender is not assigned. We are created male and female. God is good,” resident Harry Chamness told the board. The fight has focused on Robert Oppedisano, a physical education teacher at Chasco Middle School who has refused to monitor the boys locker room because he’s uncomfortable watching over a student who was born a female but identifies as a male. He’s asked the Liberty Counsel to protect his rights and his job. Superintendent Kurt Browning says, contrary to Internet reports, Oppedisano has not been disciplined for his refusal. Tampa Bay Times.

Board members sworn in: New school board members are sworn in and new chairpersons selected at districts around the state. Miami-Dade. Duval. Broward. Brevard. Hernando. Pasco. Lee. Manatee. Sarasota. Alachua. Marion. Leon. Volusia. Monroe. Charlotte.

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November 21, 2018 0 comment
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Florida Schools RoundupredefinED education roundup

Florida schools roundup: Alternatives to college, governor’s race and more

Compiled by redefinED staff November 19, 2018
Compiled by redefinED staff

College alternatives: Increasingly, rural students in Florida are choosing to learn a trade instead of going to college. Among the reasons for their choices: Practicality, price and even politics. “It’s all about practicality,” says Wakulla County School District Superintendent Robert Pearce. “The mindset is: What makes the most sense?” Tampa Bay Times.

Governor’s race: Was race the primary reason Democrat Andrew Gillum lost the governor’s race to Republican Ron DeSantis? While many Democrats think so, others aren’t so sure. It wouldn’t explain why Gillum received only 86 percent of the black vote, well below even the 90 percent white Democratic U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson got. One possible reason for the low black total for Gillum may have been his call to end tax credit scholarships, which allow low-income, mostly minority students to attend private schools. Tampa Bay Times.

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November 19, 2018 0 comment
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Florida Schools Roundup

Florida schools roundup: DeSantis wins, tax hikes pass, board elections and more

Compiled by redefinED staff November 7, 2018
Compiled by redefinED staff

Statewide races: Republican Ron DeSantis, who strongly backs school choice, wants 80 percent of all education spending directed into the classroom and pledges to expand the state’s K-12 scholarship programs and career and technical education opportunities, narrowly wins the governor’s race over Democrat Andrew Gillum. In other statewide races, Gov. Rick Scott defeats incumbent Democratic Sen. Bill Nelson, Republicans win all three Cabinet seats, and 11 of the 12 constitutional amendments are approved with the required 60 percent majority. Associated Press. Politico Florida. Orlando Sentinel. The 74.

Tax initiatives: Voters approve all eight tax increases for education in the state. Sales tax hikes for construction and repairs of schools pass or are renewed in Alachua, Hillsborough, Lee, Martin and Polk counties. In Miami-Dade, Palm Beach and Charlotte counties, voters approve higher property taxes to pay for school safety and teacher salaries. Politico Florida.

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November 7, 2018 0 comment
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Florida Schools Roundup

Florida schools roundup: Tax votes, school schedule, AP courses and more

Compiled by redefinED staff November 5, 2018
Compiled by redefinED staff

Tax initiatives: About a third of Florida residents face increased taxes if voters in seven counties approve initiatives Tuesday to raise money for their school districts. Officials in those districts say the state put them in the position of asking for voter help by underfunding mandates for school security. “The legislative mandates were substantially unfunded,” says Alberto Carvalho, superintendent of the Miami-Dade County School District. “It has put significant fiscal pressure on the district.” Bloomberg. In Miami-Dade, a four-year property tax hike would generate an extra $232 million a year, and 88 percent of the money generated would go for teacher raises. In Palm Beach County, a four-year increase in property taxes would bring in about $150 million more a year, and the district has pledged 50 percent of it to improve teacher pay. Miami Herald. Palm Beach Post.

Post-hurricane schedule: The Bay County School District’s plan to make up the three-plus weeks of class time students lost to Hurricane Michael is approved by the Florida Department of Education. The district’s schools will be 10 to 14 minutes longer every day and schools will be in session on four days that had been set aside as holidays or teacher work days. Already scheduled time off over Thanksgiving, Christmas and spring break will not change. Half the district’s schools reopen today, and the district’s goal is to have the rest open by Nov. 13. Panama City News Herald. New bus stop schedules are issued for Bay County students, many of whom may be attending a different school starting today. The district is also handing out reflective items for students who will now be going home in the dark. WMBB. Panama City News Herald. School officials in Calhoun and Jackson counties had to get creative to reopen schools last week. WFSU. Eighty Florida students displaced by the hurricane are attending southeastern Alabama schools. Associated Press. Gov. Rick Scott is asking the Florida Department of Education to send additional funds to districts so schools damaged by the hurricane can be rebuilt to withstand storms. Gradebook.

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November 5, 2018 0 comment
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Florida Schools Roundup

Florida schools roundup: School choice, contract talks, software costs and more

Compiled by redefinED staff October 31, 2018
Compiled by redefinED staff

School choice survey: A recent survey concludes that the state’s K-12 tax credit scholarship program has greatly expanded educational opportunities for low-income families, and that those families are overwhelmingly satisfied with the program. More than 14,700 parents responded to the survey by the advocacy and research group EdChoice, with 92 percent reporting they are happy with the program and 89 percent saying they were satisfied with the private schools they chose for their children. The Florida Tax Credit Scholarship serves more than 100,000 students from families with an average income of $25,740 a year. Step Up For Students, which hosts this blog, helps administer the scholarship. Gradebook. redefinED.

Contract negotiations: The Volusia County School Districts and its teachers union reach agreement on a three-year contract that gives teachers a 3 percent raise this year and 7.5 percent over the contract in return for a 30-minute longer elementary school day. Daytona Beach News-Journal. St. Johns County School District bus drivers will receive a pay hike of 50 cents an hour, to $13.57 as a starting wage, under an agreement between the union and district. St. Augustine Record. The Brevard County School District has cut $9 million from next year’s budget. But school officials say nearly all of it is committed to mandatory spending on security and mental health services, charter school growth, money for the Florida Retirement System, costs to reopen South Lake Elementary School and resuming busing for choice schools, leaving little for teacher raises. The district has offered less than 2 percent, or about $575 a year for teachers rated highly effective. The union is demanding nearly six times that. Florida Today. The Pasco County School District is offering its teachers a 1.5 percent pay increase. The teachers want 3.75 percent, leaving the sides about $5 million apart. But both sides are optimistic that a deal can be reached soon. Negotiations resume in a week. Gradebook.

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October 31, 2018 0 comment
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Florida Schools Roundup

Florida schools roundup: Back to school returns, helping teachers and more

Compiled by redefinED staff October 29, 2018
Compiled by redefinED staff

Back to school: Several Bay County schools are now scheduled to reopen Nov. 5, according to district officials. All district schools have been closed since Hurricane Michael made landfall in the county Oct. 10. At least one will operate under a split schedule and two others will include students displaced from other schools. The rest of the schools are expected to open no later than the week of Nov. 12. Superintendent Bill Husfelt says district officials are working with the Florida Department of Education on an adjusted schedule for the rest of the school year that they hope to announce this week. WMBB. WJHG. Jackson County students return to school today. Tallahassee Democrat. Donations are pouring in for Bay County students. Panama City News Herald. Arnold High School will be used as a long-term shelter for displaced Bay County residents. Panama City News Herald. A private school in Bay County, Holy Nativity Episcopal School, resumes classes today. Panama City News Herald. Students from counties affected by the hurricane who started attending schools in nearby counties will have to return to their schools when they reopen unless they had a “complete family move.” WTXL. The Indian River County and Charlotte County school districts donate books and other school supplies to Panhandle schools affected by the hurricane. WPTV. Charlotte Sun.

Teachers trying to recover: Like students, teachers in the Florida Panhandle are struggling to regain a sense of normalcy after the devastation caused by Hurricane Michael. “I don’t have a home, so how can I be effective at my work when I can’t shower or cook food?” asks Denise Hinson, who teaches 7th-graders language arts at New Horizons Learning Center. “Maybe I will live at the school? I don’t have anything else to do.” Bay County School District spokeswoman Sharon Michalik says the district is meeting with community leaders to find housing options for teachers. “We have a delicate balance between the humanitarian needs and the need to open schools in order to show our community that normal will exist again,” she says. “We have teachers who have lost everything and they are camping out in their classrooms. We’ll have to find them somewhere else to live.” Associated Press.

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October 29, 2018 0 comment
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Florida Schools Roundup

Florida schools roundup: Recognition money, water tests, politics and more

Compiled by redefinED staff October 23, 2018
Compiled by redefinED staff

School recognition money: Hundreds of Florida schools will split more than $123 million in state recognition money for student performance based on school grades. Schools that receive or maintain an A grade from the state are eligible, as well as those that improve a letter grade. Schools receive an extra $100 per student, which they can use for bonuses, supplies or temporary workers. Traditionally, most of the money goes to employee bonuses. If school employees and advisory councils can’t agree on how to use the money by Feb. 1, the money is split among all the teachers at the school. Gradebook.

Testing for lead: Thirteen water sources at nine Polk County schools have higher levels of lead than the federal threshold for safe drinking water, according to school officials. Faucets and pipes with the contaminated water have been repaired, and will be retested before the schools are allowed to use them. Water in a dozen other schools tested under the EPA’s 15 parts per billion standard for safe water. The district began the voluntary testing after neighboring Hillsborough County found lead in the drinking waters at schools last summer. Lakeland Ledger.

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October 23, 2018 0 comment
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