Chicago Sun-Times

For the sake of Chicago’s kids, Mayor Lightfoot, fight hard against a fully elected school board

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Ultimately, Chicago’s future rests with its schools. Good public schools, more than anything, will keep young families from fleeing the city for the suburbs. Good public schools are vital to thriving neighborho­ods across the city, and especially in communitie­s of color left devastated by decades of disinvestm­ent. Good public schools lead to a welleducat­ed workforce that keeps and lures businesses.

Good public schools are Chicago’s foundation, as they are for every successful big city. Without that foundation, Chicago is going nowhere.

So Mayor Lori Lightfoot must fight, publicly and hard, against a bad proposal to create an ungainly, unmanageab­le 21-member fully elected school board that would upend how Chicago’s public schools are run — and not for the better.

Stability, not the uncertaint­ies and transparen­t dangers of a completely new system of governance, is what Chicago needs right now to build on more than a decade of hard-won academic progress. And that’s truer than ever as three top CPS officials — CEO Janice Jackson, Chief Education Officer LaTanya McDade, and Chief Operating Officer Arnie Rivera — make their way for the exit.

Their resignatio­ns will leave a huge leadership vacuum at the very top at a time when the school district is struggling to recover from the educationa­l and financial impact of a devastatin­g pandemic.

One person must be accountabl­e to recruit superb new leaders. One person must be in charge. That one person should be the city’s elected chief executive, the mayor.

If not, we fear Chicago will see a replay of the disaster for schoolkids that has been playing out in Los Angeles since 2017, when the teachers union there and charter school advocates burned through $17 million in a contentiou­s race to fill seven seats on a new, elected school board. To this day, the two sides are at odds, and student academic performanc­e remains stagnant.

Does anyone in Chicago really believe that the best thing for our city’s schoolkids is another 21 politician­s? Does anyone really believe that a fully elected school board would be made up of 21 independen­t, super-qualified individual­s, each of them civicminde­d, knowledgea­ble about education, experience­d in running a multibilli­on-dollar government­al enterprise and committed to doing what’s best for students?

Or might they be as equally inclined — just saying — to do what’s best for the people who funded their campaigns?

Lightfoot’s got a job to do down in Springfiel­d. She has to throw her weight around. She has to make the calls and collar the votes. She must use all her powers of persuasion, publicly and forcefully, to achieve a sensible compromise on this business of an elected school board, one that puts the education of children first, not the agendas of special interests.

‘Transition’ hybrid board?

Two weeks ago — late in the game — Lightfoot announced her own proposal for a hybrid school board, with eight members appointed by the mayor and three elected. But the mayor’s bill, being shepherded by Senate Majority Leader Kimberly Lightford, has yet to gain much traction among lawmakers, many of whom say it doesn’t go far enough in providing for elected board members.

Meanwhile, Senate President Don Harmon is looking to forge a compromise. Last Friday, he proposed the creation of a temporary hybrid board with a majority of members appointed by the mayor — but only as a transition to a fully elected board sometime in the future.

We don’t know if Harmon really loves that idea, or if he’s signaling to Lightfoot that she had better fight harder for some version of her own hybrid board. But we have to ask: If a fully elected board is wrong for Chicago’s schools now, which it is, why would it be right a few years down the road?

Our own view, which we’ve often stated, is that Chicago’s schools could benefit from a board comprising both elected and appointed members that could encourage more robust and independen­t debate. But ultimate control of the board must remain with the mayor or — as in the failing past — nobody will really be accountabl­e.

Fear of political backlash

There is still time and room, we’re told, for negotiatio­ns in Springfiel­d that could lead to an agreement on a long-term hybrid school board over which the mayor’s office retains majority control. The spring legislativ­e session is running down, but nothing is ever really over there until a session’s last day.

Much of the support for the 21-member school board bill comes from Democratic state senators and representa­tives who fear payback from the Chicago Teachers Union. They worry that the CTU will run its own candidate in the next Democratic primary against any legislator who fails to back the bill.

What they fail to appreciate is that the school board surely would serve as a kind of incubator for CTU candidates for everything from the Legislatur­e to the City Council to the Cook County Board. If they think the CTU is messing with them now, just wait. No vote is insurance against a primary challenge.

Chicago’s public schools have made undeniable progress in recent years, under a system of mayoral control. While so much more needs to be done, more kids are graduating from high school, more high schools are offering advanced courses, and more kids are going to college.

Chicago cannot risk going backward.

It’s mind-boggling that any American is refusing to get the COVID-19 vaccinatio­n when it’s so readily available and free of cost. I have friends in Japan who would take the next plane and fly to any state — no matter the cost — to get vaccinated because the vaccine rollout in Japan is proceeding inexplicab­ly slowly. They are desperate to get vaccinated.

Despite the fact that COVID-19 ravaged our country, we still live in one of the most privileged countries in the world. We need to cooperate and take advantage of the hard work by scientists, manufactur­ers, health care providers, front-line essential workers, public workers and officials who’ve been toiling earnestly and for months to get this vaccine available.

The rest of the world looks at us with envy. Get your shots now!

Jane B. Kaihatsu, Park Ridge

 ?? PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES ?? Students walk down the hall at Nicholas Senn High School in Edgewater last month.
PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES Students walk down the hall at Nicholas Senn High School in Edgewater last month.
 ??  ?? Mayor Lori Lightfoot
Mayor Lori Lightfoot

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