A major focal point of the election was the debate over the schools and state-appointed Superintendent Cami Anderson’s controversial "One Newark" school reorganization plan — which calls for the relocation and consolidation of one-quarter of the city’s schools and turning over some neighborhood schools to charter operators.Some similarities to the Wash DC mashing of Fenty/Rhee but that story did not turn out all that well. Oh, stop being such a cynic, Norm, my alter voice is saying to me.
Jeffries, 39, a law professor, former assistant attorney general and school board member who helped found a charter school, had been backed by charter school interests, along with the Essex County Democratic machine."When everybody didnât believe, you believed. Today is the day we say goodbye to the bosses."Baraka, the principal of Central High School and a sharp critic of Anderson’s plan, was supported by the teachers’ unions.
Ok, I'm cheering. Like I did for de Blasio. Come talk to me in a few months. But what fun to see what happens with Cami Anderslime.
Read it all:
http://www.nj.com/essex/index.
Let's celebrate tonight and go back to reality tomorrow!
ReplyDeleteA Newark Teacher