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DESCRIPTION:Forward Widely!   MOBILIZATION TO STOP THE CLOSURE OF THE "OAKLAND 5" 
 ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS!!   Wednesday, 4PM, California State Building   1515 
 Clay Street, Near the 12th Street BART   More Information or an E-mail Copy 
 of the Flyer: Contact Mike   Seigel 510.289.3318 michaeljwsiegel@aol.com   
 Also Contact: Tanya Russell, 638-7005   It is time to put the pressure on 
 Senator Perata and Assemblywoman Chan to   stop the closures of Oakland 
 Schools!   Enclosed:   1. Who is Randolph Ward, Research from the Equal 
 Opportunity Now Caucus   2. A Repulsive Letter from Senator Perata (Call 
 His Office at 510.286-1333   3. Letter from Pamela Drake   4. Oakland 
 Tribune Article   5. March 4 Call to Action for Books not Bombs     WHO IS 
 RANDOLPH WARD?   Randolph Ward is the unelected Trustee of the Oakland 
 schools. His record   of union-busting and imposing deep cuts during his 
 six years as Trustee in   Compton (1996-2002) won him the Oakland job at 
 well over $250,000 a year,   paid for by OUSD.   THE DAMAGE HE DID TO 
 COMPTON   Under the Compton takeover, over half of Compton’s teachers 
 left the   district. Ward’s austerity policy of imposing wage freezes 
 ensured that   Compton’s teachers remained the worst paid in the Los 
 Angeles Area. The   school bus drivers union in Compton was busted and 
 services contracted-out   (Data Center Report, Youth Strategy Project).   
 Ward left a legacy in Compton that will not be quickly repaired. Even   
 today, nearly half of all Compton teachers are employed on Emergency   
 Credentials. This compares to fewer than 4% of Oakland teachers with   
 Emergency Credentials (California Department of Education, Educational   
 Demographics, 02-03). In an August 21, 2001 interview with Scripps   Howard 
 News Service, Ward stated his preference for Emergency   Credentialed 
 teachers and exposed his anti-union, anti-education   sentiments saying 
 “When we get emergency credentialed people they come in   totally 
 open-minded. Too often when we have veteran teachers with   established 
 instructional strategies, they tend to be resistant to   change.”   In a 
 series of LA Times articles in 2000, four years after Ward became   Trustee 
 of the Compton schools, Compton high school students spoke-out   against 
 the conditions in their schools -- describing a protest in which   dozens 
 of students wore ribbons of different colors to protest different   issues 
 – green for lack of teachers, red for the absence of   extracurricular 
 activities, etc. Students stated “the school needs more   of 
 everything” (LA Times, 12/10/00).   In 2000, students at Centennial High 
 in Compton filed suit with the US   Department of Education because the 
 school’s failings constituted a   violation of their civil rights (LA 
 Times, 12/10/00). Just last month,   after three additional years under 
 Ward’s control, Centennial High, one of   three high schools in Compton, 
 lost its accreditation, meaning that   students may not receive credit for 
 classes they took in Compton when they   transfer to another District or 
 apply to college (Christian Science   Monitor, 1/13/04).   In Compton high 
 schools Ward approved new grading policies that tied   student grades to 
 racist standardized test scores (LA Times, 12/10/00).   While pushing 
 high-stakes testing, Ward failed to implement programs that   would help 
 Compton students get into college. In 2000, because of a lack   of school 
 counselors, Compton High School and Centennial High failed to   participate 
 in a new program that would have guaranteed the top 4% of   their graduates 
 a place at a UC campus (LA Times, 12/10/00).   Between 1996 and 1999, in a 
 District with about 800 graduates a year,   Compton sent only 26 students 
 to a UC school. Randolph Ward bears   responsibility for overseeing this 
 appalling record of impoverished and   substandard education.   In 1998, 
 while trustee of the predominately Latino Compton schools, Ward   
 implemented the anti-immigrant Unz Initiative (Prop. 227) in the harshest   
 manner possible, dictating that classrooms in Compton use “English 
 only”   90% to 98% of the time (LA Times,9/2/98). This was in stark 
 contrast to   virtually every other majority Latino district in California. 
 These were   the actions of a conscious conservative who chose to impose 
 the harshest   possible educational conditions on Compton's Latino 
 students. Ward also   left special education programs scandalously out of 
 compliance during his   administration.   In September, 2000 the Dallas 
 Morning News revealed that Ward was   registered for eight years with the 
 American Independent Party (AIP) – a   far-right wing libertarian party 
 which ran George Wallace and Pat Buchanan   for president, advocates 
 eliminating affirmative action and bilingual   programs, denying public 
 education to children of undocumented workers and   repealing the US Voting 
 Rights Act.   In 1997, over three years after the abolition of an elected 
 Compton   school board and the year after Ward became the appointed 
 administrator;   the school district was sued by the ACLU (Serna v. Eastin) 
 for providing   unequal education for black and Latino students.   
 *****************   HIS PLAN FOR THE OAKLAND SCHOOLS: UNION BUSTING, 
 CORPORATE DOWNSIZING, AND   PRIVATIZATION     Ward was recommended for the 
 Oakland Trusteeship by Oakland Mayor Jerry   Brown and Superintendent of 
 Public Instruction Jack O’Connell in   consultation with billionaire 
 businessman Eli Broad (Alameda Times-Star,   8/11/03). Ward and his Chief 
 of Staff “Woody” Carter are both affiliated   with the Broad 
 Foundation, a training program for school superintendents   and trustees 
 that includes voucher supporter and Bush-appointed Secretary   of Education 
 Ron Paige as a member of its staff. Eli Broad, who funds the   foundation, 
 is an advocate of right-wing “reforms.” Broad supports   charter 
 schools and merit pay while maintaining that teacher transfer and   
 seniority rights should be eliminated and locally elected school boards   
 abolished.     Since arriving in Oakland in June 2003, Ward has acted as an 
 unelected,   unaccountable overseer attempting to strip down, degrade, and 
 privatize   education in Oakland. Ward implemented a 4% wage cut on Oakland 
 teachers   in August, before they even returned to school, imposing an 
 illegal   contract despite his knowledge that it was illegally ratified 
 with a   mail-in ballot which clearly violated the OEA Bylaws. Another of 
 Ward’s   first actions was to layoff more than 60 school custodians. 
 After Ward   attended a closed-door summit of California superintendents in 
 November,   2003 with new California Secretary of Education Riordan (R), he 
 and other   Superintendents stated they had discussed “contracting-out” 
 unionized   school services in order to save money. (LA Weekly, November 
 21, 2003).     Ward also made cuts at the expense of quality education 
 programs. In   announcing his plans to make cuts in services to students in 
 the special   education program, Ward states “I don’t think we need 
 five-star programs   for everybody.” (Montclarion, 6/27/03).     Ward is 
 proposing a corporate-style “results-based budgeting” plan that   would 
 increase the inequality between Oakland schools, by throwing each   school 
 into competition with all others for scarce resources. Each   school’s 
 funding would be based on student attendance instead of   enrollment, and 
 the site administration would have only this limited   budget – minus 
 deductions for downtown administration as well as special   education and 
 other programs – to pay for all school expenses, including   teachers’ 
 salaries. Staffing decisions would be made for economic   expediency rather 
 than educational quality. For example, school   administrators might decide 
 that veteran teachers are too expensive and   try to staff the school with 
 newer teachers. Staffing levels would no   longer be guaranteed based on 
 the number of students enrolled at the   school, and could also decrease as 
 a result. Ward has already announced he   plans to close five elementary 
 schools by next August.     Oakland has a long and proud history of 
 struggle. We must end the   disenfranchisement of the Oakland community, 
 return to a locally elected   and accountable school board, and build the 
 movement for equal quality   education. We must act now to show that 
 Oakland will not allow Randolph   Ward to attack Oakland’s schools, 
 students, teachers, and communities.   Randolph Ward must go!     Equal 
 Opportunity Now Caucus   For more information call 510-978-0846 or contact 
 EON at:   equaloppnow@aol.com 1/28/04   
 *****************************************   A Repulsive Letter from Senator 
 Perata (Call His Office at 510.286-1333   Text of January 29th Letter 
 Regarding Closure of 5 Schools   Dear Dr. Ward:   I urge you in the 
 strongest manner possible to delay your decision to   close the five 
 schools until after the voters decide the March 2 parcel   tax. Give them 
 the opportunity to reinvest in the local public schools, as   they have so 
 often and generously in the past.   Perhaps the closure of schools is 
 inevitable. I know other districts are   making similar cuts. But waiting 
 until March at least gives you the   maximum range of possibilities with 
 which to make this decision.   Closing schools will create a hardship on 
 families and young students,   many of whom are already among the most 
 educationally disadvantaged. In   days when we should all work to convince 
 local taxpayers to help our   bankrupt district to avoid or defer these 
 radical changes, the controversy   (however limited it may be) over closing 
 schools is divisive and   self-defeating. Change is often more obvious to 
 those charged with making   it than it is to those most affected. 
 Neighborhood schools are among the   most cherished benefits of a public 
 school system.   I know better than most the tough decisions you face. I 
 appreciate the   enormity of your job. But I know too that how Oakland 
 voters decide the   parcel tax and statewide voters decide the deficit bond 
 will have dramatic   consequences on your fiscal and administrative 
 decisions. Please, take a   few months until we know more precisely what we 
 do and don't have to work   with - locally and in Sacramento.   Thank you 
 for your consideration in this difficult issue.   Don Perata   
 *********************************       Pamela Drake"    To: 
 teachnobombs-announcements@lists.riseup.net   Subject: Last night I 
 attended the Oakland School Board Meeting   Date: Fri, 30 Jan 2004 13:09:24 
 -0800     HTML Attachment [ Scan and Download | Scan and Save to my Yahoo!  
  Briefcase ]   >From Wednesday, January 28th   Last night I attended the 
 Oakland School Board Meeting (or whatever we're   calling it these days). I 
 was met again with a large show of police force   and no little amount of 
 intimidation. School security and police officers   straddled the steps. It 
 was not apparent that you were able to enter at   all. I went around them 
 successfully and found at least a half dozen OPD   officers immediately 
 inside filling up the hallway.   I asked the officer in charge why such a 
 large force was needed. He said   he probably needed more and had I seen 
 what had happened at the last   meeting. I said I had and there had been no 
 incident. He told me that   they were required to enforce the fire safety 
 laws (or something to that   effect). I asked him why folks were not 
 allowed to stand in the halls as   they always had in the past when the 
 room filled up. He felt that there   were already too many people in the 
 halls. At the time, most of people in   the halls were TV reporters and 
 cameramen. He commented that if there   were an emergency, a gurney would 
 not be able to get through. So I’m   guessing that next the press may be 
 excluded for causing a hazard.   I made my way to the meeting hall. There 
 was an officer blocking the door.   He said that the room was not yet open. 
 Dan Siegel was coming down the   stairs from the Closed Session. He asked 
 Ward if the meeting room could be   opened to the public now. But when I 
 tried to enter, I was asked who I   was. He then told me that I had to have 
 a ticket. I was unable to locate   the ticket “vendor”. A teacher from 
 Burbank School came up to me and got   me to the lady giving out the 
 tickets. She asked me if I were a Burbank   teacher or parent and the 
 teacher said that I was; so using subterfuge I   was able to get into an 
 OUSD “public” meeting.   Once in the meeting there were numerous police 
 and security personnel (as   there were also in the entire hallway. I asked 
 one guard if her were on   overtime and he said yes). The speakers from 
 Burbank were asked to line up   at the mike to speak. About 30 folks lined 
 up and spoke very emotionally,   many of them children.   As I got up to 
 leave I observed an audience member (whom I know somewhat),   almost get 
 into an altercation with an officer apparently over handing out   flyers. 
 Another officer calmed the first one. I saw that more security was   coming 
 in. I also saw an officer from the hallway ask if more citizens   could 
 come in. He said no. I watched as numerous people left, but it was   still 
 no. I could see the OPD and school security forming a barrier at the   top 
 of the stairs. Citizens were being ushered out the side entrance and   not 
 allowed back into the hallway. I watched a mother plead with the group   of 
 officers to let her take her daughter to the bathroom. They escorted   her 
 out. I shifted myself to the door and quickly left as an officer   
 attempted to grab me before I could get through.   I was told that the room 
 would be “cleared” before the next school could   come in to plead 
 their case. I will be submitting a complaint to the   ethics commission on 
 this violation of the Brown Act. If you know of any   other witnesses who 
 wish to complain, please notify me. I am outraged and   believe that if we 
 do not stop this thwarting of public participation, the   flaunting of laws 
 and intimidation will continue to grow. In my opniion,   it has already 
 reached an unacceptalbe level.   Pamela Drake   
 *****************************     Oakland Tribune     Last-ditch try to 
 save 5 schools   State administrator hears concerns, though he said he's 
 already made up   his mind on closures   By Alex Katz   STAFF WRITER     
 Thursday, January 29, 2004 - OAKLAND -- Parents, students and teachers   
 made a last-ditch effort to save their schools Wednesday, when a few   
 hundred people testified at a hearing on the impending closures of five   
 city campuses.   It was the second hearing this month on State 
 Administrator Randolph   Ward's plan to close and consolidate five 
 elementary schools with   declining enrollment.   Ward said his decision to 
 close five schools -- Burbank, Foster,   Longfellow, Swett and Toler 
 Heights -- at the end of the academic year   was already made. But Ward 
 said he wanted to hear more public comments   on the matter and make the 
 decision official in an open meeting.   He was expected to finalize the 
 closures at the end of the hearing,   which was scheduled until 10 p.m. 
 Wednesday.   Fifth-grader Rogelio Gonzalez broke down after talking about 
 the   closures to a television reporter on the sidewalk outside the 
 hearing.   Gonzalez said he came to Burbank Elementary two years ago not 
 knowing   any English. He's now fluent.   "I learned everything there," he 
 said. "They've got good leaders. They   help you to be successful in life." 
   Ward says the district shouldn't be paying for principals, cafeterias,   
 janitors, clerks and utilities bills at schools with only a few hundred   
 students and falling enrollment.   By consolidating schools, the district 
 can spend less on administering   campuses and more on classrooms and 
 students, Ward says.   That argument has not won much support among 
 parents. They say it's   more   important to have small schools -- 
 declining enrollment or not -- in   their neighborhoods.   Ward was 
 appointed to run the Oakland schools during the state takeover   of the 
 near-bankrupt district eight months ago.   Closing schools "won't be more 
 efficient, because you'll have a higher   absentee rate," said Longfellow 
 Elementary teacher Linda Williams, who   also attended Longfellow as a 
 student. "If I have to send Sally 14   blocks to go to school, and it's 
 raining, I'm not sending Sally to   school."   Speaking in Spanish, parent 
 Cecilia Chavarria said Burbank is "a school   that's 100 percent good for 
 us."   Chavarria said a number of parents at Burbank don't have cars to 
 drive   to the next-closest school, which is probably Burckhalter 
 Elementary.   "Some parents don't know how to drive, and some have no means 
 of   transportation," she said. "So how are they going to get to other   
 schools?"   Lack of adequate transportation has been one of the biggest 
 objections   to Ward's plan. Young children can't walk up to a mile away to 
 get to   school, parents and teachers say.   Ward maintains that parents in 
 affected neighborhoods will be able to   reach other campuses without much 
 trouble. The distance to other   schools   was one of the criteria Ward 
 used to decide on closures.   All schools on the list are using less than 
 70 percent of their   classroom space, according to district data. Ward 
 also chose schools   with less than 300 students and declining enrollment.  
  Henry Hitz, head of the community group Oakland Parents Together,   called 
   for parents to keep children out of school if Ward doesn't change his   
 mind. A large-scale school boycott would cost the district a huge   amount  
  of money, and would put financial pressure on Ward, he explained.   Other 
 parents said Wednesday's hearing was far from a last effort.   "We're 
 really just pulling all our parents together," said Rev. Jeffrey   Parker, 
 a Burbank parent. "We're not done. We're going to fight this   until the 
 end."     http://www.may8.org  \n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2004/02/03/30043.php
SUMMARY:MOBILIZATION TO STOP THE CLOSURE OF THE "OAKLAND 5" ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS!!
LOCATION:California State Building   1515 Clay Street, Near the 12th Street BART 
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2004/02/03/30043.php
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