Showing posts with label Superintendent Mike Miles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Superintendent Mike Miles. Show all posts

Sunday, March 9, 2014

"3 sources say home rule was pitched with Dallas mayor running schools" - Matthew Haag - Dallas Morning News

This following information is a reprint of the full article written by Dallas Morning News staff writer Matthew Haag. The article was published on Saturday, March 8, 2014.

The article shows the real agenda of the backers of Support Our Public Schools, Mayor Mike Rawlings and Trustee Mike Morath.


The agenda is to get voters to give up their right to elect school Trustees in order to create a system giving Mayor Mike Rawlings the right to appoint and control all Dallas ISD school Trustees. 

This will be trading democratic election of school Trustees for undemocratic appointment by a Mayor. 

Just say, "No."

Click Here to see the original article.
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3 sources say home rule was pitched with Dallas mayor running schools

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Nathan Hunsinger/Staff Photographer
Volunteer Jim Olson gets Lorena Villanueva to sign a petition seeking home-rule of the Dallas Independent School District at Robert E. Lee Elementary School in Dallas.
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Mayor Mike Rawlings and Dallas ISD trustee Mike Morath have denied they’re seeking any specific results in supporting an effort to overhaul the school system.
Yet three people who have been briefed on the initiative said they were told the goals include establishing a different system of governing the district, perhaps under the mayor’s oversight.
Rawlings said in a written statement Friday that he has decided that “proposing a specific change in governance was not the right way to go.”
“I spoke with several leaders about this issue before I endorsed Support Our Public Schools, and a lot of potential changes to the charter were discussed,” he said.
If approved by voters after a successful petition drive, Dallas ISD would move to a home-rule charter that would possibly change how it is governed and operates.
A state law grants home-rule districts more freedom to make decisions, such as modifying the state-mandated curriculum, ignoring teacher labor laws and increasing local control of the district.
The initiative became public a week ago. But in the preceding months, Morath and Rawlings worked privately to build political support for it.
The three people, who agreed to speak to The Dallas Morning News on the condition of anonymity, said that in recent conversations, Morath and Rawlings mentioned replacing the district’s publicly elected board with appointed members.
“It is orchestrated. I hate to see stuff that’s not grass roots being portrayed as it is,” said a former city official whom the mayor recruited unsuccessfully to endorse the effort. “They should be straightforward that they are coming after the trustees.”
The five board members of Support Our Public Schools haven’t publicly criticized the district’s trustees or suggested they be replaced. Those members have instead talked about other possibilities with home rule.
But the former city official said the mayor’s spokesman, Sam Merten, called several weeks ago and spoke bluntly about the effort.
He said that the mayor would run DISD or oversee it. You wouldn’t have trustees. If you did, they wouldn’t be making decisions,” the former official said.
Merten said Friday that he doesn’t recall telling anyone that the mayor would oversee DISD and has only mentioned it as a possibility.
In an interview Friday, Morath said he has “nothing to do with Support Our Public Schools.” But he also called DISD’s board “broken” and said all options for change should be considered.
“We have a system of governance that doesn’t focus its energy or attention or goals on improving outcomes for kids,” he said. “When was the last time the board talked about the achievement gap?”
Meeting with the News editorial board Thursday, an impassioned Rawlings spoke about his dissatisfaction with voter apathy in DISD board elections and the community’s complacency with student achievement.
“An average of a thousand votes per board of trustee? No wonder we are this bad,” the mayor said. “This is a disaster, and for us to sit around and try to argue kind of politics about this is naive and is not going to change things.”
The school charter has never been used in Texas. But if 5 percent of DISD’s registered voters sign a Support Our Public Schools petition, the school board would be required to name 15 people to a commission to write the district’s charter.
The charter then would need approval of local voters and the state education commissioner. The group declined Friday to say how many of the required 24,459 signatures it had collected.
Because district trustees would appoint the commissioners, the process suggests that outside forces couldn’t control the outcome. However, according to the former city official, Merten said the group’s backers had recruited people to be on the commission and believed a majority of DISD trustees would vote them in.
“He said he would propose a slate of people for the charter that they knew would put in place the charter they would want. They would have enough votes on the DISD board to get that passed,” the person said. “You’d have the folks in place already who are committed no matter the public outpouring or opposition.”
Merten denied telling anyone that and said there is not a list of suggested commissioners. “That’s completely inaccurate. There has not been one conversation about who would serve on this potential commission,” he said.
While Rawlings has no current oversight of Dallas ISD, he has long been interested in the district. When he ran for mayor, he made education a top priority. And his biography on the city’s website says he has taken a “hands-on approach” to the schools. Rawlings also suggested Miles’ name to the school board’s superintendent search firm.
A former DISD board member said Rawlings told him that if just two Miles’ supporters left, the majority could swing against the superintendent.
“The mayor pushed back on me and said, ‘What if [trustee] Dan Micciche or [board president] Eric Cowan leaves and suddenly we lose this momentum?’” the former DISD board member said. “That is a valid concern.”
A current city official who spoke to Morath said he mentioned mayoral control of DISD along with a hybrid system of five elected trustees and four appointed. He said Morath wants a system that would grade trustees and allow for their removal, but the trustee didn’t provide specifics.
Support Our Public Schools’ financial supporters include John Arnold, a Hillcrest High School graduate and billionaire Houston philanthropist. Allyn Media, a Dallas public relations firm that assisted Rawlings’ mayoral campaign, is directing Support Our Public Schools’ communication plan.
The former city official said the mayor wanted to recruit 10 influential people who would make the case to the news media and public.
Follow Matthew Haag on Twitter at @matthewhaag.

Friday, March 7, 2014

Save our schools from a mean-spirited corporate reform model and Mayor Mike Rawlings hostile takeover

“Find out just what a people will submit to, and you have found the exact amount of injustice and wrong which will be imposed on them; and these will continue until they are resisted with either words or blows, or with both.” Frederick Douglass
Mayor Mike Rawlings blamed the economic problems of the city on Dallas ISD at a press conference yesterday.

This was selling fear to the citizens of Dallas - fear mongering.

This is all about politics, power and money - not education.
With Mayor Mike Rawlings' constant unethical meddling into Dallas ISD affairs and Superintendent Mike Miles doing more harm than good, the result is a Dallas ISD teaching staff that appears to be more broken in spirit than I have seen in the 8 years I have served as a Trustee.
Authoritarians always want all power. 

They never want to share it. 

If they cannot get their way democratically, they change the rules and the game or take power by force.

Physician, first do no harm.

They laughed in city hall Wednesday. 

A city councilman asked Todd Williams of Committ what he thought of Dallas ISD governance. He refused to answer the question. They laughed. I guess it was funny. It felt belittling. 

Todd Williams (Mayor Rawlings' education advisor) did support the current SOPS (Support Our Public Schools) deceptive takeover petition that gives unlimited power to an unelected Charter Commission. 

The right of citizens and taxpayers to vote for school Trustees will likely be removed. That is the purpose - to get rid of those pesky voters.

Will Dallas ISD be turned into one big charter district like Louisiana state politicians imposed on the poor and powerless after the ethnic cleansing of New Orleans following the hurricane Katrina disaster?

See Rawlings, Support Our Public Schools unveil home-rule goals for Dallas ISD

This is turning into the ethnic cleansing of New Orleans-Naomi Klein

New Orleans is the example Mayor Rawlings used yesterday as the desirable model.

We might now be in for one of the most divisive times in Dallas ISD history if this group succeeds with the next ruthless takeover by those who will take away your right to vote and call it 'a civil rights issue.'

Civil rights should be protected - not taken away. 

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From "Save Our Schools" 
"Over the last 30 years, succeeding administrations have employed conservative solutions to social problems, significantly reducing federal programs to provide equal opportunities for the poor and minorities. Federal officials have redefined and curtailed assistance to combat hunger, insufficient income, poor housing, unemployment, and poor health care, leaving teachers as the only public workers charged with the responsibility to help Americans (regardless of their backgrounds) prepare themselves morally and mentally to compete in the world."  Save Our Schools - The Case For Public Education.
"Remember public schools were once expected to fashion a common national culture and prepare young people to be reflective and critical citizens in our Republic. The result of NCLB is that education will become a private matter in which individuals choose their futures, rather than a public responsibility of all citizens to each citizen. Save Our Schools -The Case For Public Education .
 "Advocates of NCLB will shout that because each individual is afforded this private educational choice, all American children enjoy equal opportunity to pursue the American Dream. Yet, as the hoax of the "Texas Miracle" clearly demonstrated, NCLB sacrifices our dreams to achieve lower taxes, political advantage, and business profits. Unless significant changes are made in the tenets and system of NCLB, the next decade will be a sad end to the most ambitious American experiment - universal free public education." Save Our Schools - The Case For Public Education.

Thursday, September 19, 2013

Waiting for a Superintendent - no excuses reformers always excuse themselves

"... lack of accountability has corroded public respect"

There is a full court press now on to prevent the Dallas ISD Board of Trustees from holding Superintendent Mike Miles accountable for the damage he has done to Dallas ISD and himself - self-inflicted damage.

No excuses reformers are often ready to excuse themselves. The rules don't apply to them. Wrongdoing is merely swept under the rug and covered up.

Some Trustees are being pushed to ignore their governance responsibility to hold the Superintendent accountable for the numerous serious issues raised in recent internal and external investigations.  

Yet, no other Dallas ISD employee would be allowed to obstruct or interfere with an ongoing internal investigation of their conduct or contact important witnesses and remain a staff member.

No other employee would be allowed to publicly damage the Superintendent of Schools or Board of Trustees by plotting and carrying out 'a plan' to disparage the Board - "to assist Smelker with the drafting of a resignation letter that was negative toward the Board in order to generate positive publicity for the Superintendent Miles and negative publicity for the Board."  - using district resources and the help of other district employees. (footnote 31 - page 46)

No other employee would be allowed to refuse to be interviewed or cooperate with an internal investigation when that employee is the subject of the internal investigation.

No other employee who is the subject of an internal investigation would be allowed to read everyone else's notarized statements.

No other employee who is the subject of an internal investigation would be allowed to take over all evidence and have internal legal staff copy and review it all for the purpose of discovering if there is anything that will stick.

No other employee would be allowed to set their own terms and escape serious consequences for 'troubling' violations of district standards of conduct.

No other employee would be allowed by Superintendent Mike Miles to simply pass on through and reset their own button.

In fact ...
  • no excuse would be accepted. 
  • no pass would be given.
  • no button would be reset. 
  • no second chance would be considered without serious consequences.
But then most employees don't have ... 
  • political connections.
  • an overreaching Mayor unethically meddling in the affairs of an Independent School District and trying to interfere with the authority of an elected school board. (There is no Mayor in the Texas Education Code - only Trustees.)
  • plutocrats and wealthy sponsors and patrons protecting them.
  • newspaper editorial writers making excuses and blaming others.
Former U.S. Attorney Paul Coggins stated:
"This outside investigation would never have taken place if Superintendent Miles had followed the advice given him by at least three District officials to allow the underlying OPR (Office of Professional Responsibility) investigation to go forward."
In other words, it was not necessary for Trustees to spend up to $100,000.00 on an external investigation. Superintendent Mike Miles simply needed to "follow the advice given him by at least three District officials."  

The suspended OPR Final Report also mentioned problems with staff attorneys carrying out the orders of Superintendent Mike Miles:
Don Smith-OPR Director-page 36 - "I also requested that the direct intimation of Dallas ISD General Counsel's Office and attorneys be excluded from any action in the personal investigation of the Superintendent, as this legal service is a benefit not available to other employees in the District regardless of position or title during an OPR investigation.I stated that this is a misuse of District resources and a means of intimidation to OPR employees doing their job."
Attorney Paul Coggins also stated:
"... for a target of an investigation to suspend the investigation raises troubling issues, and any damages to Superintendent Miles' standing with the Board, the District or the community at large were self-inflicted." (p.5) (Also "... troubling documents" that had a "troubling appearance" ... p. 26)
footnote 16 - page 28 - "(Justin) Coppedge provided a statement to OPR that, on June 14, Superintendent Miles explained his decision to pull the RFP from the agenda stating "there is a political nature to the district that has to be considered and there is nothing wrong with approving vendors who have influence in the community ... According to Board policy, political influence is not one of the factors that can be considered in awarding a contract (CH (LEGAL) ... (Rebecca) Rodriguez had a similar recollection, but Superintendent Miles denied making this statement."
Superintendent Mike Miles owns total responsibility for the "troubling issues" raised by his inexcusable refusal to take very good legal and professional advice to simply follow established internal investigation procedures.

Instead, Superintendent Mike Miles followed his path of fear and intimidation, and demanded that staff follow his orders to interfere with an ongoing internal investigation.

No one made Superintendent Mike Miles reject very good advice. 

There is no shared responsibility for his own flawed conduct. 

He alone is responsible.

The Coggins external investigation found that there is "good cause" for dismissal of Superintendent Mike Miles.

The clear duty of  elected Trustees is to protect Dallas ISD from further harm and damage "for the good of the district."
17 We watched and watched, wore our eyes out looking for help. And nothing. We mounted our lookouts and looked for the help that never showed up.

Would Mike Miles tolerate a subordinate who conspired to undermine him? - 9-10-13

Friday, September 6, 2013

Dallas ISD Final Investigation Report - OPR Case No.11335 - Rebecca Rodriguez - Superintendent Mike Miles

The citizens of Dallas pay the bills at Dallas ISD. Taxpayers and stakeholders have a right to know.

The Texas Public Information Act clearly states that a completed report or investigation prepared for a public institution is public information and is not excepted from required disclosure.

Texas Government Code - Chapter 552. Public Information
"Sec. 552.001. Policy; Construction.
"(a) ... The people, in delegating authority, do not give their public servants the right to decide what is good for the people to know and what is not good for them to know. The people insist on remaining informed so that they may retain control over the instruments they have created. The provisions of this chapter shall be liberally construed to implement this policy.
"Sec. 552.022. CATEGORIES OF PUBLIC INFORMATION; EXAMPLES
"(a) without limiting the amount or kind of information that is public information under this chapter, the following information is public information and not excepted from required disclosure unless made confidential under this chapter or other law:
(1) a completed report, audit, evaluation, or investigation made of, for, or by a governmental body, except as provided by Section 552.108 (Exception: Certain Law Enforcement, Corrections, and Prosecutorial Information)"
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