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Jonetta Rose Barras: Politics and schools in D.C.

By: Jonetta Rose Barras
Examiner Columnist
October 19, 2009

D.C. Mayor Adrian Fenty, shown beside schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee, says education reform is at the top of his re-election platform. (Examiner file)

"Schools, school, schools," Mayor Adrian M. Fenty answered when asked for the top three issues of his re-election platform. His response came as he and D.C. Public Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee were being publicly excoriated for firing hundreds of employees.

"[People] are looking at what is happening and saying, 'If [the mayor and Rhee] are willing to take this type of criticism -- if they really want to put decisions affecting children ahead of decisions affecting adults -- this is a city that has its priorities straight,' " Fenty continued.

Some critics want the D.C. Council to rescind his authority over schools. Joslyn Williams, head of the Metropolitan Council of the AFL-CIO, asked Chairman Vincent C. Gray during a hearing Friday to impeach Fenty. (The council can reject a mayoral appointee, but it knows better than to try to remove Fenty from office.)

As I talked with Fenty over a California omelet and Chamomile tea, he dismissed reform opponents, treating them almost as collateral chatter: "Nothing is done without controversy. Regardless of whatever criticism may come, we are doing it for the right reasons."

The mayor's critics have painted a portrait of a municipality in trouble and in need of new leadership. But during a conversation about a variety of topics -- privatization, council relations and the 2010 mayoral race -- Fenty presented a picture of a city on the upswing.

"Here's how I frame where we are in 2009. We inherited a strong foundation. There were some high hanging fruit that, because of their nature, hadn't been addressed yet. [But] we are moving with more urgency and getting results," he said, citing the reduction in the backlog of child welfare cases, return of special education students to the city and the record number of once-homeless individuals now in housing.

"Schools is bigger than all of that," Fenty asserted.

He may be right. Education has been residents' top concern for years. They praised the council in 2007 when it turned control of the system over to Fenty.

Though some have decried his and Rhee's actions since then, a recent poll showed the chancellor's favorability rating was higher than those of the mayor and council chairman. Her durability has forced some legislators to perform a clumsy two-step, dancing with reform opponents without fully embracing their agenda.

As Fenty and I talked, I was reminded that politics is the art of packaging. The public is guided to a well-crafted scene created to capture their imagination, alter their perspective and garner their support.

A deft retail politician, Fenty has assembled an array of evocative vignettes ready for wrapping. If our conversation was any indication, he has written an interesting script, casting himself as a benevolent executive, struggling to further improve a once-stagnant bureaucracy and determined to bring quality public education to the District -- even if he gets bloodied in the process.

The months ahead will reveal whether voters will buy what Fenty has to sell.

Jonetta Rose Barras, host of WPFW's "D.C. Politics With Jonetta," can be reached at rosebook1@aol.com.



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Reader Comments

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*******

Oct 19, 2009

I don't care if the schools improve 150%. Fenty will never, ever, ever, ever, ever, ever, ever get a vote out of me!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

 

Oct 19, 2009

I say, amen to that.....

 

Ward 4 Voter

Oct 19, 2009

I second that comment with an amen. I will never cast a vote for King Adrian M. Fenty. Fenty has turned out to be a monster and dictator. His popularity in Ward 4 has dropped. People hate this guy!

 

MCDC

Oct 19, 2009

Fenty has done what so many others were scared to do, challenge the unions who suffocate the life out of the public schools. He knows the source of the problem. Kids are more important than unions, let him do his job.

 

Sick of the Foolishness

Oct 19, 2009

What Fenty has done is challenge unions and made the fatal mistake of saying that everyone in the unions is unfit for their jobs. You can see this very clearly across the city in his union busting attempts. What he is doing is acting as the same type of attorney he was -- crooked and dishonest. Just as he stole from senior citizens, he is stealing the life from DC everyday. Let's see what people say when this monstrous dictator bankrupts the city because of the lawsuits that will have to be paid, lawsuits that are the result of his inability to respect and follow the law. If the laws are so poor then perhaps he should make an honest and above board attempt at changing them rather than continuing to bring in a host of unqualified agency heads. I hope no one falls for his foolishness again because he is a megalomaniac of the highest proportions.

 

Oct 19, 2009

His vision gives him the right to break the laws. His cabinet members break the laws. He has waged a war on the entire government workforce. In my view his actions require more than a hunt for a new candidate. His actions should arm the citizenry to conduct a recall.
Recall, recall, recall, recall!

 

Oct 19, 2009

Right on with the recall!! Fenty has to go along with Rhee, Lanier and Nickels!!

 

eFavorite

Oct 19, 2009

Please provide a link to the "recent poll" that you cite. These days, when this information is publicly available and easily accessible, it's no fair making a broad statement without providing evidence.

Personally, I'm shocked that I'm hearing of this unnamed poll for the first time in this article. It's the type of thing that I'd expect to be publicised widely.

Thanks

 

dill

Oct 19, 2009

Doesn't matter who you put in charge of DC schools-- Poor people on average just don't produce-- Most poor people make horrible parents and their kids end up just as dysfunctional as themselves. The only system that has shown to work is the 'boarding school' model. However, with the kids being shipped off with someone else taking on the responsibility to raise them the poor people would probably just reproduce some more.

This is where we are at in America today. You have a chunk of the American population that want the public school system to raise their kid for them. There is no sense of personal responsibility. Teachers should just refuse to take jobs in these poor communities instead of continually getting blamed for not "fixing them"- it's an impossible task.

 

alexander22

Oct 19, 2009

Is there a way to fire the parents of low performing students? After all they are the ones that are supposed to instill morals and work ethic. I see some of these kids going into the school and I can't imagine what its like to be locked in classrooms with them all day. They are foul mouthed, have no respect for anyone including themselves, and seemed to want to destroy everything in sight. How do teachers do it?

 

Memories....

Oct 19, 2009

Duh ruh!!!! Didn't Tony Williams fire people near the holidays...and lo and behold he ended up becoming our Mayor. So, what's the big deal??? If you think the grievance level is at an all time high...then bring back those employees who were RIF'd there wouldn't be enough people in the world to hear all of those grievances. It used to be a time when a RIF employee would get a pity vote of consideration during an interview process...but unfortunately not these dismissed DCPS employees as the scarlet letter has been upon their foreheads and rightfully so... Again the last testimony of the 18-hour marathon solidified it for me...as grandma dynamite said "Woodson is run like a plantation and I don't want to call a spade a spade..." if that wasn't dialogue reminiscent from the Sanford and Son sitcom I don't know what is LMAO!!!!!

 

DC VOICE Ostrich

Oct 19, 2009

The DC Council made a decision in 2007 to put education control in the Mayor's hands. If the Department of Education's opinion on the matter is any indication, this will be the emphasized trend across the country in the near future. What the Council should do, is reestablish a Committee on Education, comprised of Councilmembers who actually want to serve such a committee. Friday's hearing probably had 7 of the 13 councilmembers present for witness questioning. The councilmembers who were there harped on lack of accountability, transparency, and public voice. Education is now 1 of 13 issues the Committee of the Whole manages. The District needs more opportunity for public involvement. If you want to "reform the reform", start with DC Council.

 

DC VOICE Ostrich

Oct 19, 2009

Instances like the ones abound with DCPS at present show the need for more direct oversight from the DC Council. The lack of a defined Committee on Education allows for less accountability and transparency. During the Council hearing on the 16th, maybe 7 different councilmembers of the 13 showed. The politicians say they are dedicated to the issue, but then are not available to hear the public opinion.

 

DCPS parent

Oct 19, 2009

I'm pro-reform and I was pro-Rhee the first year.

Now I'm fully in the Rhee needs to go camp.

It's convenient for Fenty to say that those who are against him are anti-child, but I have a news flash. I couldn't plunk my children down at Lafayette like he did. The chancellor's actions have made things worse at my child's school. 825 is still horribly broken, good teachers and administrators are treated horribly by Rhee and the culture of fear that she so seems to enjoy is simply not suitable for an elementary school.

The only way I would vote for Fenty again is if he got rid of Rhee and brought a real academic leader to DC.

 


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