BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
X-WR-CALNAME:www.indybay.org
PRODID:-//indybay/ical// v1.0//EN
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:Indybay-18797145
SEQUENCE:18932419
CREATED:20170308T035000Z
DESCRIPTION:3/17/17 Defend Public Education Now Meeting In Richmond\nFriday, March 17 
 Richmond Public Library, 4:30-6:30\n325 Civic Center Plaza, Richmond, CA 
 94804\nEmergency Meeting on Education. Come and learn about the attack on 
 public schools in WCCUSD. There are currently five charters schools 
 applying to start or expand in our district. They lack transparency and 
 accountability, they do not hire union labor to build or maintain their 
 schools. Some have questionable discipline policies. The teachers and staff 
 are not union either. Yet, they are using public money. Ultimately, they 
 will bankrupt the school district. Come find out why the NAACP and others 
 have spoken out against them, and learn how we can fight back! See you 
 there.\nFor more information\n(510) 
 506-4493\nDefendPublicEducationNow@gmail.com\nhttps://www.facebook.com/DefendPublicEducationNOW/\\n\n\n\nRichmond 
 UTR Members/ Parents & Community Protest Vulture Capitalist Caliber Charter 
 Boss Ron Beller\n"Doing Good" In 
 California?\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kk9n36VzQ14\nVulture 
 capitalist and privatization advocate Ron Beller who runs the Caliber chain 
 of charter schools in Vallejo and Richmond is trying to get a new school 
 location in Richmond on a hilltop for $60,000. Parents, United Teachers of 
 Richmond UTR  union members and public education advocates on May 10, 2016  
 spoke out and demanded answers from  Ron Beller, his operatives and the 
 West Contra  County School Board officials and lawyer who are pushing a 
 secret deal for the charter school in the community. Beller is planning to 
 get $20 million from the State of California through Proposition 39  to 
 build a school on the former Adams Middle School site which is on an 
 earthquake fault. Proposition 39 was not only supported by the California 
 Charter Association but the California Teachers Association CTA and 
 California Federation of Teachers CFT. Beller wants to bring 800 students 
 to the already crowded neighborhood with many other k-8 schools. \n\nThe 
 meeting was held at the Mira Vista school in Richmond which is one of the 
 schools that would be affected.  Vulture capitalist Ron Beller  was called 
 a "hit man" when he was hired by union busting anti-labor  NYC 
 Superintendent Joel Klein. " Reforms were needed, but went too far, 
 spearheaded initially by consultants from McKinsey and later by Ron Beller, 
 a former Goldman Sachs partner who was considered “their hit guy,” said 
 the former DOE cabinet member, who worked with Beller during the 
 reorganization. “There’s nothing like a trader at an investment bank 
 for the sharp, bright edge of the marketplace – a brutal clarity, applied 
 to the school system.” At the Richmond school meeting Beller  said he was 
 working for free and had no ulterior motives than the right of the children 
 to have "choice" like he had.  \n\nBeller and his wife Jennifer Moses have 
 contributed tens of thousands of dollars to the California Charter School 
 Association which has been pushing charters as well as fighting 
 unionization by charter school teachers.. Community speakers charged that 
 he had personally profited from speculating on housing mortgage loans while 
 he was with Goldman Sacks where he was  former chief of now-collapsed hedge 
 fund Peloton Partners. The  Beller run fund collapsed resulting in the loss 
 of some $17 billion to the investors  and investors sued for 
 compensation.\nHis early claim to fame was a secretary at Goldman Sacks who 
 stole millions of dollars that he and his wife did not know as missing. 
 "Not all Goldmanites avoid the headlines. An abiding tale of the boom years 
 is how three London executives, Jennifer Moses and her husband, Ron Beller, 
 and Scott Mead, had so much cash they did not notice when an assistant, 
 Joyti De-Laurey, stole more than £4m from their accounts." The collapse of 
 his fund Peloton happened on the last day of the quarter and it figures in 
 the book "House of Cards". In the case it also came out that Ron and 
 Jennifer had spent £500,000 on her  40th birthday weekend in Italy but 
 after 2001, the couple decided to put their energy into "doing good” 
 according to their friends.\nWhile at Goldman Sachs, Beller also  had a 
 reputation as a workplace bully. "Mr. Beller's intense demeanor sometimes 
 caused friction. He berated secretaries, and poor-performing traders kept 
 quiet in meetings to avoid being humiliated by him, according to people 
 familiar with the situation."\n\nRichmond community and labor member also 
 challenged him at the meeting for opposing unionization at charter school 
 and using non-union labor in the construction of the public funded 
 privately run charters. There are now 6 charter schools in line to get 
 constructed in Richmond while other poor public schools are being starved 
 of funds. Charter school supporter and non-union builders Steve and Susan 
 Chamberlin have given large donations to charter supporters on the West 
 Contra School Board who denied at the meeting that they received 
 contributions for Charter supporters.\nThey have also given $2.4 million to 
 the WCCSD for more TFA students to weaken the schools.\nWCCSF Trustee 
 Cuevas at the meeting vehemently denied taking any money from charter 
 supporters but was strongly challenged on this since she had taken money 
 from charter non-union builders Steve and Susan Chamberlin. These 
 developers build charter schools non-union and then lease them back to the 
 charters for profits.\n\nNow Beller and his wife Jennifer  are supporting 
 privatization schemes in education in the US and the UK and Caliber is one 
 of their hot ventures. Their work in helping to kick off the 2008 collapse 
 by the speculation on mortgage securities may now be repeated in the 
 speculation by charter operators in California and throughout the 
 country.\n\nFor additional 
 information:\nhttp://citylimits.org/2009/06/01/the-education-business-teachers-missing-at-the-top/\nhttp://www.forbes.com/2009/06/30/goldman-couple-london-markets-equities-streetwise.html\nhttp://www.cnbc.com/id/100569798\nhttp://www.caliberschools.org/who-we-are.html\nhttp://www.nysun.com/opinion/for-whom-beller-tolls/79427/\nhttp://www.law.harvard.edu/programs/corp_gov/MediaMentions/11-8-09_SundayTimes.pdf\nhttp://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/14/books/chapter-house-of-cards.html?pagewanted=all\nhttp://richmondconfidential.org/2014/10/30/pro-charter-school-pacs-flood-west-contra-costa-school-board-elections-with-spending/\nProduction 
 of Labor Video Project\nwww.laborvideo.org\n\nRichmond "philanthropists" 
 Chamberlins helping to destroy public education in West Contra Costa 
 County\nhttp://www.eastbaytimes.com/richmond/ci_27817167/richmond-philanthropists-helping-change-education-west-contra-costa\nRichmond 
 philanthropists helping change education in West Contra Costa County\nBy 
 Theresa Harrington tharrington@bayareanewsgroup.com\nPOSTED:   03/30/2015 
 06:11:40 PM PDT | UPDATED:   ABOUT A YEAR AGO\n\n1/13\n\n\nSteve and Susan 
 Chamberlin are photographed at Summit Charter School in El Cerrito, Calif., 
 on Friday, March 20, 2015, where they are restoring the former Chung Mei 
 Home for Boys historic building. The self-made millionaires, who met in 
 high school and have been married more than 40 years, are ...\n\nPhotos: 
 Chamberlins support West Contra Costa education \n‹›\nRELATED 
 STORIES\n	• Mar 31:\n	• Chamberlin Family Foundation contributions in 
 West Contra Costa County\nRICHMOND -- Steve and Susan Chamberlin built 
 their fortune as a developer and an architect, and now they are spending 
 tens of millions to improve education for kids who live within West Contra 
 Costa's low-performing school district -- in some of the poorest areas of 
 the county.\n\n"We began to read about K-12 education and to educate 
 ourselves," Susan Chamberlin, 72, said. "And as we did, we came to realize 
 the school district we lived in was not doing a very good job of educating 
 the kids who live here. I would say it's true in general and certainly true 
 with kids of color."\n\nThe Chamberlins, who met in a public high school in 
 Hawaii and have been married 48 years, started the Chamberlin Family 
 Foundation in 2006. They followed that with the not-for-profit Education 
 Matters last year.\n\n\nChristina Foust, left, examines an experiment with 
 students, from left, Isaac Prado, 12, Laura Sanders, 13, and Shaniece 
 Newman, 13, in Foust's seventh grade science class at Summit K2 charter 
 school in El Cerrito on March 23, 2015. (Kristopher Skinner/Bay Area News 
 Group)\nWhile many parents and educators appreciate the couple's commitment 
 of their vast wealth to the well-being of West County children, their 
 largesse has created a quandary for some in West County education circles. 
 And their fervent support for charter schools and political spending during 
 the November election drew criticism from some district trustees.\n\n"There 
 are some people who think we have an adversarial relationship with the 
 district," Susan Chamberlin said. "But, we're putting a lot of money into 
 programs in partnership with them. It's not just about charters. We're 
 trying to focus on improving academic quality." \n\nAdvertisement\n\nSince 
 its beginning, the Chamberlin Family Foundation has invested about $5 
 million in West Contra Costa public K-12 education, including school 
 district and community organizations that support students. It provides 
 small grants to teachers and has helped fund several large initiatives, 
 including one that provided books to all kindergarten classrooms in 
 Richmond and San Pablo. The foundation also brings Teach for America 
 educators to the district, and helps fund a leadership program that trains 
 district teachers to become principals.\n\nIn addition, the Chamberlins are 
 spending more than $35 million -- including land, design and construction 
 costs -- to purchase properties and build school campuses for high-quality 
 charters in El Cerrito and Richmond. They donate the properties to 
 Education Matters, which, the Chamberlins hope, demonstrates that they will 
 not reap any financial rewards from an influx of charters in the district. 
 \n\n"I think they've made some significant and innovative investments in 
 local education," said district resident Ben Steinberg. "They've made 
 investments in both traditional public schools and charter schools that 
 help provide access to good education for every child. I think that has 
 been a really important commitment that no one else in our community has 
 been able to match. I think we're very fortunate, and I hope they can find 
 ways to get our community to engage more deeply in public education." But 
 some district officials have expressed concerns that the spread of new 
 charter schools will further erode an already dwindling population in 
 traditional district schools along with the state money the district 
 receives to educate students. And the couple's recent foray into political 
 spending to sway the school board election has concerned others.\n\nThe 
 Chamberlins contributed heavily on behalf of successful candidates 
 Elizabeth Block and Val Cuevas in the November election, both directly and 
 through a political action committee sponsored by Education Matters. The 
 PAC spent more than $87,000 on behalf of Block and more than $59,000 on 
 behalf of Cuevas; the Chamberlins each contributed $2,500 directly to 
 Block's campaign, and Susan contributed $2,500 to the Cuevas campaign. The 
 PAC also spent more than $30,000 on campaign literature opposing incumbent 
 Trustee Madeline Kronenberg, who was re-elected, and more than $5,000 to 
 oppose unsuccessful candidate Peter Chau.\n\n\nConstruction of two new 
 schools is underway at a site across from Hilltop mall in Richmond on March 
 20, 2015. Steve and Susan Chamberlin, self-made millionaires who met in 
 high school and have been married more than 40 years, are committed to 
 spending their money to help the children who live in the low-performing 
 West Contra Costa school district. (Anda Chu/Bay Area News Group)\nDuring 
 the election, Chau complained about "millionaire spending" on the campaign 
 that he said he would not be able to match. \n\nCurrent board President 
 Todd Groves, who accepted a $500 election contribution from Steve 
 Chamberlin during his election campaign two years ago, said Thursday that 
 he shares the Chamberlins' passion for helping students succeed and 
 appreciates their commitment and contributions to district programs to 
 improve teaching and help children. But he said he was concerned about the 
 amount of money spent in the November board election -- including thousands 
 of dollars to oppose candidates, and he disagreed with their vision of 
 charters as a solution to district woes.\n\n"I don't share that certainty 
 that charters are going to promote a more efficient system as a whole," 
 Groves said. "It's complex. And it is possible to do damage. That's my 
 fear. The district system is not robust right now. It's surprisingly 
 fragile. I don't want to accelerate decline. We've got more charters than 
 anybody else in the county right now. I've studied this, and there's a lot 
 of peril in any direction you take." \n\nThe Chamberlins disagree, pointing 
 to charter schools such as Summit that match the demographics of the 
 district, yet are seeing more positive results. They also defend their 
 campaign contributions, saying they helped tip the scales away from 
 candidates supported by contractors and others who benefit from the 
 district's $1.6 billion bond construction program, which has diverted 
 attention away from academics. \n\nThe Chamberlins said long waiting lists 
 for local charters convinced them more are needed in West Contra Costa to 
 meet student and parent demand.\n\nThey purchased the historic Chung Mei 
 home for boys in El Cerrito on property that also houses modern buildings 
 leased by the Summit K2 Charter School. They recently completed renovations 
 on the historic building, which they hope to lease to Summit as needs grow. 
 \n\nThe Chamberlins are also in the process of constructing two new school 
 buildings on property near the Hilltop mall in Richmond specifically for 
 charters. One will be leased by the Aspire Charter School and open in the 
 fall; the other building is not yet leased, Steve Chamberlin said. 
 \n\n"What we came to realize was that if you had a facility, you could 
 attract the very best schools here," said Steve Chamberlin, 72. "You'd be 
 hard-pressed to find a better school operator in the state than Summit. 
 They were interested in being here, and we were interested in having a 
 great school."\n\nSusan Chamberlin mused that some West Contra Costa 
 residents may be tempted to pretend they live outside the district so their 
 children can attend better schools.\n\n"What if one day people would lie 
 about where they lived so they could get into a West County school?" she 
 said. "Why can't that be a goal? We can do it."\n\nTheresa Harrington 
 covers education. Contact her at 925-945-4764 or 
 tharrington@bayareanewsgroup.com. Follow her at 
 Twitter.com/tunedtotheresa.\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2017/03/07/18797145.php
SUMMARY:Defend Public Education Now meeting
LOCATION:Richmond Public Library\n325 Civic Center Plaza, Richmond, CA 94804
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2017/03/07/18797145.php
DTSTART:20170317T233000Z
DTEND:20170318T013000Z
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
