A referendum named R-55 in Washington State would have permitted
the implementation of the charter school bill in Washington State
that was passed earlier this year. Despite passing the legislation
with bi-partisan support and drawing a diverse and extensive
coalition of supporters across the state, the referendum failed by
17 points. The unions who placed this referendum on the ballot have
declared victory. As expected, union leaders have sung a familiar
refrain, which they've used every time initiatives concerning
education reform have failed:
"The voters have rejected [choice/charter schools] 21 times. The
people have spoken. They would rather support their public schools
then abandon them."
The reality is that the voters have not really rejected choice or
charter schools. Polls continue to show a majority support, year
after year, nationally and across many states, for educational
opportunities that allow children to have more than one option for
their education, which are publicly supported and accountable.
In fact, in Washington State, the voters also rejected a tax
increase that would have directly subsidized schools. If voters
there were confident their schools were doing great, they would have
happily voted for the spending referendum.
But the failure of the charter question in Washington State
raises several important issues, not least of which is: Where do we
go from here?
First, we must ensure that that the reform opponents who embrace
the status quo cannot continue to abuse the democratic process.
Unfortunately, we can't keep them from swooping in to other
communities with paid signature gatherers and hijacking the
legislative process. But we can ensure that the public and lawmakers
see through their rhetoric, and understand the true motives behind
their campaigns.
But most importantly, we must learn from our mistakes in
Washington State, invigorate our efforts to educate the public and
add fuel to our legislative outreach across the country. There are
actions that can and must be taken to ensure that substantive
education reform continues to gain momentum across the country.
-
We must elect progressive legislators who are willing to
take a stand for educational options for all kids. And ensure
that we continually hold these lawmakers to task.
-
We must continue to shed light on the reality of the
problems plaguing our public schools - and not just during the
months and weeks before Election Day.
-
We must organize our constituency and continually bring new
allies to the battle for educational options. As a movement for
better schools, we must commit to nothing less than going
door-to-door until all Americans embrace freedom for parents and
high standards for each and every school. That means we can't
lean on flashy television ads that can't possibly do the job on
such highly charged, emotional issues.
-
We must continually call for further research to quantify
the success of solutions such as charter schools. And this
research must be more than a snapshot of student achievement; it
must closely examine individual student progress from year to
year.
-
Finally, we must continually work to better understand what
it takes to unite the passion of the people!
We owe it to the kids (who were the true losers in the battle for
better schools in Washington State), and we owe it to the millions
of kids nationwide who do not have access to the educational
opportunities they deserve.