Stack Seeks Elected School Board

Filed under: Government,Subject Categories |

Philadelphia’s five-decade-long practice of appointing people to oversee the city’s school system has failed, said State Sen. Mike Stack (D-Northeast). “It is time for Philadelphians to decide how city schools operate,” he insisted.

He said SB 913 would return a locally elected School Board to Philadelphia.

“Each reiteration of the Board of Education was supposed to increase accountability, transparency, and improve fiscal oversight. Instead, we have had year after year of dysfunction, fiscal crises, and schools that fail our students,” he told the Philadelphia City Council Committee on Education.

Stack said the School Reform Commission, which is made up of three people appointed by the Governor and two by the Mayor, needs drastic reform itself.

“The SRC fails the accountability and transparency test because it is not elected by the taxpayers. Therefore, it is not accountable to parents, students, and certainly not the taxpayers. It is only accountable to the Governor or Mayor who appoints them,” Stack said.

Stack said the evidence for filling the City’s school system with publicly elected directors – the district’s failure in 2011-2012 to reach target graduation rates and overall academic performance to its crippling deficit – is overwhelming.

Stack said his legislative proposal, SB 913, would replace the School Reform Commission with an elected school board.

“The School Board would be unpaid, nonpartisan, and locally elected from 9 districts throughout the city,” Stack explained. “Every 10 years, the districts would change based on the census. Members of the School Board would serve four-year terms.”

Stack said he believes replacing the SRC with a publicly elected School Board would get people to the table in the Philadelphia School District who truly care about public education.

If adopted, the Senator said Philly’s Mayor and City Council would still play a significant role.

“The Mayor will appoint the School District Superintendent,” Stack said. “The Mayor would also be able to fire the Superintendent at any time and for any reason that does not violate state law.”

Additionally, Stack said SB 913 would the elected School Board would be allowed to pass a resolution of no confidence on the Superintendent. The Mayor, however, would decide if that resolution would be fulfilled.

Taxing authority and the ability to incur debt would continue as powers of City Council and the Mayor only, under the legislative proposal. However, the School Board would be required to write an annual budget plus a five-year spending plan.

And the board would have the authority to approve labor, service and other contracts.

“I think we need to have faith in the voters, parents, students, and teachers to make the right choices on how to govern the School District,” Stack said. “I think we need a change, and I think SB 913 is the vehicle to get us where we need to go.”

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One Response to Stack Seeks Elected School Board

  1. Please check out the Marketplace of Ideas website: http://www.electedschoolboardforphilly.com.

    You can sign the petition, take our poll, and really educate yourself on the issue.

    Penda
    June 13, 2013 at 12:43 pm

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