Huck/Konopacki Labor Cartoons |
In reality,
though, Parent Revolution is a front group for private charter school operators
and their wealthy allies in the Education Reform movement who support weakening
and ultimately abolishing the teachers’ unions, tenure and seniority;
increasing testing, online learning and the deskilling of the teaching
profession; lowering overall costs to increase charter school profits and lower
state spending on education.
Parent
Revolution’s executive director, Ben Austin, is a millionaire former state
school board member and Los Angeles Deputy Member (under Mayor Riordin), who
earns over $200,000 per year from the organization. He also earned over $94,000
in 2008 as a consultant for the private charter school organization, Green Dot,
according to Schools Matter. It should come as no surprise that
Parent Revolution, which advocates for the conversion of traditional public
schools into charter schools by way of California’s Parent Trigger law, was
created by Green Dot’s founder, Steve Barr, quite likely in hopes of winning
some of the contracts to run the soon to be converted schools.
A recent
investigation by Frying Pan News has found that the Walton Family Foundation
has pumped $6.3 million into Parent Revolution since 2009. (An interactive
infographic from Frying Pan News can be seen here). The Gates Foundation has donated
$1.6 million, and a host of other wealthy donors (including Eli Broad) have
also kicked in more than $1 million each. In total, 18 different foundations
have provided the organization with over $14.8 million since 2009. The Emerson
Collective Education Fund (started by the widow of former Apple CEO Steve Jobs)
has also donated $1.2 million.
Not long
after California’s Parent Trigger law was approved in 2010, similar legislation
started to pop up across the country, thanks to model legislation created by ALEC (the American Legislative Exchange
Commission) and the ultra-conservative Heartland Institute, in Chicago. The
movement for Parent Trigger laws received additional support from the Hollywood
propaganda flick, Won’t Back Down,
which was produced and funded by Walden Media, which is owned by reactionary billionaire
Philip Anschutz, a longtime supporter of free market education reform.
Parent
Revolution’s succeeded in converting Desert Trails Elementary school in San
Bernardino County, but not without controversy (the conversion was originally
rejected by the school board because of irregularities in the petition process, as well
as doctored signatures). However, even many of the parents who voted for the
conversion ultimately felt duped. According to Alternet, Desert Trails parent Lori Yuan said Parent
Revolution organizers tricked parents into thinking they were merely trying to
improve conditions at the school, rather than turning it over to a private
charter operator: “Our community was misled. . . Parents didn’t know they were
signing for a charter takeover.”
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