FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
MARCH 4, 2010
CONTACT: TED O’MEARA
207.699.4401
ted@cutler2010.com
INDEPENDENT CANDIDATE FOR GOVERNOR ELIOT CUTLER URGES DEFEAT OF SO-CALLED “INNOVATIVE” SCHOOLS BILL
PORTLAND, Maine – Independent candidate Eliot Cutler has sent a letter to the chairs of the Legislature’s Education and Cultural Affairs Committee urging them to defeat LD 1810, An Act To Promote the Establishment of Innovative Schools. The legislation is scheduled for a public hearing today.
“LD 1801 does absolutely nothing to promote innovation and autonomy in education,” Cutler said in his letter to Sen. Justin Alfond (D-Cumberland) and Rep. Patricia Sutherland, (D- Chapman). “In fact, this bill would promote the creation of schools that, while labeled “innovative,” in fact would be strapped in the same political and bureaucratic straightjacket that today stifles our existing public schools. Maine children, parents and taxpayers deserve much better than this.”
Cutler, who has made education reform a major focus of his campaign, said the legislation was introduced in an effort to increase Maine’s chances of receiving funds under President Obama’s Race to the Top education initiative. Race to the Top awards points for “innovative autonomous public schools,” but schools created under LD 1801 would be neither, he said.
“Slapping the ‘innovative’ label on LD 1801 is nothing more than window dressing,” Cutler said in his letter, in which he cited several areas where the legislation doesn’t measure up to Race to the Top standards:
- LD 1801 schools would be required to meet virtually all existing statutory and regulatory requirements, ensuring that they will be bound up in the same red tape that too often diverts a school’s energy and resources away from educational excellence. It also means these schools won’t be able to reduce costs, one of the hallmark accomplishments of charter schools nationwide.
- LD 1801 adopts the national teachers’ union policy on charter schools – which means that these schools will be subject to the same labor relations statutes and collective bargaining requirements as traditional schools.
- LD 1801 would permit only local school boards to authorize these schools, denying parents the innovative and autonomous charter school options presented in most states by other sponsors, such as the State Board of Education, colleges and universities and local non-profit organizations.
- LD 1801 schools could experiment with unconventional staffing and scheduling – but only so long as they don’t interfere with existing state laws. Schools would not be allowed to develop alternative compensation arrangements, such as basing teacher compensation on growth in student performance.
Cutler has called for a “No Excuses” policy of education reform that will put kids first, ensure that all Maine children receive a quality education, and champion innovation.
“The bill before your committee won’t do any of those things,” Cutler wrote the chairs. “It doesn’t respond to the Race to the Top challenge, doesn’t make possible innovative and autonomous schools and doesn’t promote reform. Sadly, LD 1801 simply proffers more of the same for Maine students and their parents . . . and for the state’s economic future.”
In closing, Cutler said that if the committee is unwilling to kill the legislation, at the very least it should change the title so that the Legislature doesn’t make empty promises to Maine citizens and our children.
