Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

First US secretary of education dies at 90

- By Laurence Arnold Bloomberg News

WASHINGTON— Shirley Hufstedler, who served as the first U.S. secretary of education following the creation of the department by President Jimmy Carter, has died. Shewas 90.

She died Wednesday in California, according to Radley Moss, director of communicat­ions at San Francisco-Morrison & Foerster LLP. Hufstedler was senior of counsel at the lawfirm’s Los Angeles office. No cause was given.

Carter’s loss to Ronald Reagan in the1980 presidenti­al election limited Hufstedler’s tenure at the Department of Education to 14 months. In that time, she oversaw the developmen­t of the 17,000-employee agency, which combined more than 150 programs that had been under five other department­s.

It opened for business on May4,1980. Threedays later, at a White House ceremony, Hufstedler said the department’s role would be as “a helping, supportive friend of education, as a simplifier and streamline­r of regulation­s and paperwork, and not as the holder of an unlimited federal purse and not as a power beyond the reach of local decisions.”

She called on the president’s daughter, Amy, then 12, to unveil the department’s flag, which depicts an acorn — “the seed of knowledge and the never-ending renewal of life and learning,” Hufstedler said — beneath an oak tree.

Almost from day one, the department was targeted by critics as an example of money-wasting federal overreach. In fiscal 2016 it had a budget of about $68 billion. Abolishing the department was a plank in the Republican Party presidenti­al platform from 1980 to 2000. Mitt Romney, the 2012 Republican presidenti­al nominee, said hewould shrink or consolidat­e it with another agency.

In his annotated “White House Diary” published in 2010, Carter said establishi­ng an independen­t education department “had been a goal of mine since I served as chairman of our county’s board of education in the 1950s.”

Education “was overshadow­ed by health and welfare” when it was overseen by what today is the Department of Health and Human Services, Carter wrote. “My hope and expectatio­n were that the new department would devote almost all its resources to making an effective contributi­on to education and supplement­ing the primary role of state and local government­s.”

Throughout Carter’s presidency, Hufstedler was mentioned as a possible nominee should a seat open on the Supreme Court, which at that time had never had a female justice. Carter didn’t have a chance to fill a seat, and in 1981, Reagan made Sandra Day O’Connor the first woman on the highest U.S. court.

In a 2005 interview with CNN’s “Larry King Live,” Carter said Hufstedler “probably” would have been his first choice.

Shirley Ann Mount was born Aug. 24,1925, in Denver, the second oftwo children of Earl Mount, a building contractor, and Eva Mount, a schoolteac­her. She and her brother, Kenneth, grew up where their father’s jobs took them, which by high school was Albuquerqu­e, New Mexico. She received a bachelor of business administra­tion degree from the University of New Mexico in 1945 and a law degree from Stanford University in1949.

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