16.2.26

Remove useless requirement to empower families

With a needless requirement teed up for removal, parents in Louisiana will gain greater say in the future of their children’s school that particularly will assist some in Monroe.

HB 83 by Republican state Rep. Mike Echols would excise from statute a stricture mandating double majorities for parents and school staff to request that a school serving their attendance zone be converted into a Type 2 charter school. That designation means administration would occur by a charter association aligned with the Board of Elementary and Secondary Education, rather than with the local school district or a Type 3 school, which requires approval by the local school board or, failing that, BESE, then approved by the double majority if the local authority wants that (by administrative code), which the bill effectively also would remove. (A Type 4 conversion, or a local board running a school under a charter with BESE, also has this requirement.)

A double majority is where not only a majority of those voting must approve of something but also a majority of the relevant electorate must vote in the election. These are not uncommon in countries around the world but almost always apply to large jurisdictions and questions, such as amending constitutions or having citizens pass a law. The concept sporadically exists in America, dealing only with forced annexations into different governments.

15.2.26

GOP BESE candidates need to explain positions

Voters in Louisiana’s boot are going to suffer off-year overload with not only hotly-contested U.S. Senate and Fifth Congressional District races but also a slew of state-level elections that may prove as vigorously contested.

 Elections for the Public Service Commission and Supreme Court will end up putting a Republican in office, but will test voters on their abilities to distinguish among candidates more aligned with consistent conservatism and others less so. By contrast, the special election for the Board of Elementary and Secondary Education features a lineup blasting from the past without obvious and clearcut differences.

After a number of years out of the political limelight, when past member Republican Paul Hollis received confirmation as GOP Pres. Donald Trump’s director of the U.S. Mint, Republican Anh “Joseph” Cao was appointed by GOP Gov. Jeff Landry late last year to hold the seat on an interim basis. He signed up to finish the last couple of years of Hollis’ term.