Let's move school-board elections to November
Oklahoma should follow Indiana's lead.
Bill Evers, a researcher at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University, points out that Progressives have been able to transform our local school districts through such things as "nonpartisan elections, district boundaries that did not match other jurisdictions, [and] holding school elections at times other than that of the General Election."
So instead of electing school-board members who represent the views of Oklahoma's center-right majority [see nearby chart], we find ourselves with school-board members who represent the views of the education establishment whose voter-turnout apparatus put them into office. And this results in bad public policies. I'll cite five examples.
First, we see some surprising provisions in teacher contracts. Gov. Daniels points to provisions ranging "from things as trivial as what the humidity in the school shall be or what color the teachers' lounge shall be painted—I am not making this up—to more troublesome things like the principal can only hold staff meetings once a month or can only hold them on Mondays, to still more troublesome things like no teacher will be required to spend more than x hours with students [and] … no teacher can be observed in the classroom by the principal without a pre-conference and two days', three days', five days' notice."
These problems exist in Oklahoma too. In July 2011 the Education Action Group analyzed collective-bargaining agreements from six Oklahoma school districts and concluded that teacher-union contracts are "bleeding Oklahoma schools dry." Regrettably, I can't say I was surprised when scholars at AEI and The Heritage Foundation concluded last year that American public-school teacher salaries are $120 billion over market value.
Second, we're treated to the spectacle of school boards disobeying a state law they don't like (The Lindsey Nicole Henry Scholarship for Students with Disabilities Program Act). This was too much even for the liberal Tulsa World, which decried the "anarchy."
Third, we're treated to an even more disturbing spectacle: school boards using tax dollars to file a lawsuit against the parents of special-needs children.
Fourth, we have a school board teaming up with other tax consumers in a chamber of commerce to oppose reductions in Oklahoma's income tax rate.
Fifth, we have a school board passing a resolution declaring its opposition to scholarships for special-needs children.
These things happen because not enough voters are voting in school-board elections. It's time "to restore avenues for popular participation," Evers says.
It's time to move school-board elections to November.
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