One of the red herring arguments used by opponents to recent education reform
efforts in Louisiana has been the process has lacked openness and transparency.
Perhaps this has proven a popular line of attack out for its familiarity, because
some of these opponents themselves come up far short in this category.
A group leading the charge has been the Coalition for
Progress in Louisiana, which now holds itself out as “Louisiana Progress.”
The affiliate of the far-left Center
for American Progress is according to its website and IRS letter of determination
for 501(c)(3) charitable nonprofit status domiciled in Baton Rouge with former
Shreveport state Rep. Melissa Flournoy as its executive director. Within the
past year she has had several opinion pieces that ran in the Shreveport Times about education and
other issues, and recently the organization with The Times sponsored
a forum on coming challenges in education, and also the same with a couple
of other Gannett publications.
Also being involved in other political outreach efforts, one would
think this costs some money. The group appears to be able to attract some
donors: the web site for Razoo,
a foundation to channel money to groups, in the middle of July gave a total of
108 donors and three separate “fundraisers” that indirectly had money donated to
it. The Form
990 that some nonprofit groups are required annually to submit to the Internal
Revenue Service from Razoo showed in 2011 it shunted $6,453 to the
organization.