The official view of those
satisfied with the current state of elementary and secondary education in
Louisiana is that “the best term limit is the ballot box” because term limits “mandate removal
of qualified members.” So what? It is the height of conceit and arrogance for
any politician to consider oneself so talented as to be indispensible to the
body politic, and a sign of intellectual laziness if not of a slavish
willingness to surrender self-governance to think as such of any. It is folly
to think that in any school board district in the state there is not at least
one person who would be as good as, or better than, an incumbent in each.
But, as explained
ably elsewhere, likely an enormous proportion of those capable unelected does
not run or cannot run competitively because entrenched incumbency brings advantages
particularly in contesting low-level offices over a governmental unit that
typically has the largest budget, often by far, than any other local government.
Worse, this disproportionately aids the stinkers sitting in those seats in
retention, most particularly those tied in with special interests who like
things as they are and who have disproportionate electoral and policy clout in
a situation where policy benefits get concentrated in the hands of a few (politicians,
administrators, employees, unions, ideological fellow-travelers) while their costs
are dispersed among the many (the taxpaying public).
And it’s hard to conclude that
there aren’t a number of stinkers out there given the sad but slowly improving
shape of Louisiana education. Just as a thought experiment, consider the significant
improvement of Orleans Parish schools since most of them were swept by the
hurricane disasters of 2005 into the Recovery School District and as a
requirement of that be made into charter schools. In effect, only the best
schools were left under the Orleans Parish School Board and the remainder, as
far as their governance was concerned, in effect found the OPSB members
term-limited out and replaced with new individuals for each school.
No doubt that the greater policy
implementation latitude afforded by charter status skillfully used by their employees
has played a significant role in many schools’ relatively rapid increase in
quality, not so much due the decisions made as policy by the schools’ boards.
Yet these also doubtlessly played a role, and, in the most macro sense possible,
is there any question that, had the prior leadership not faced this alternative
form of term limitation, given its track record never would have approved of
the charter concept in the first place perhaps for any school? The real-life
history of Orleans schooling over the past half-dozen years provides more than
enough face validity to the idea that capping service time on a school board greatly
facilitates the injection of new ideas and energy that brings success.
1 comment:
Listening to Jeff Sadow explain democracy and self-governance is like listening to Leander Perez talk about civil rights. To be clear, stupid conservatives like Jeff have no qualms about suppressing the votes of blacks, minorities, or any traditional left-leaning constituency. Here's how democracy works when you're a disgraceful conservative who will justify any anti-democracy action in the name of freedom:
http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2012/10/say-hello-to-the-ohio-official-who-might-pick-the-next-president/264201/
http://www.thenation.com/blog/170261/recent-history-gop-voter-suppression-florida
Jeff: if you had any self respect, you'd be ashamed of your own party, and your disgraceful attempts to justify anything it does.
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