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Connecting The Dots, Charters, Corruption, Gulen & Privatization: Whistleblower Carroll

by Labor Video Project
Kathleen Carroll, an attorney and fired whistleblower at the California Commission For Teacher Credentialing was interviewed about the growing systemic corruption of private charters and other commercial interests who want to make public education a profit center for their businesses. She also discusses the Turkish Gulen controlled Magnolia school connection which has schools in California and is the largest chain of charter schools in the United States.
Finally she exposes the failure of California politicians such as Attorney General Kamala Harris to prosecute this systemic nepotism, financial conflicts of interest and criminal violations of the law by lobbyists and government officials who are voting on public funds going to companies that they have financial interests in.

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Connecting The Dots, Charters, Corruption, Gulen & Privatization: Whistleblower Kathleen Carroll
" A corrupt and internconnected web"
Lawyer and fired whistleblower Kathleen Carroll from the California Commission on Teacher
Credentialing CTC connects the dots about the systemic corruption
within the California education system including the Turkish Cult Iman Gulen run Magnolia
public schools in California.
She exposes the blatant conflict of interests and violations of
criminal law by board of education members, and other government
officials appointed and elected. She also calls for prosecution of
these officials and for legislation that would outlaw the use of
public funding for charter schools.
She also discusses the financial conflicts of Sacramento mayor
Kevin Johnson and his wife Michelle Rhee who has received
hundreds of millions of dollars from the Gates Foundation and
other privatizers and is organizing to place political operatives
on school boards and place superintendents and principles
into the schools who will close public schools and open up
charters run by their financial partners.
She also discusses the role of Governor Jerry Brown who
appoints the board of the Commission on Teacher Credentialing
and is personally involved in setting up private military
charters in Oakland, California.
The interview took place on May 12, 2012 in San Francisco
For further videos go to:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rVzWzHOshgc
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S_eu5u70tTE
http://youtu.be/xFlOt-r5z90
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a2-dZ_b8K8o
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wFJBof1tEfs&feature=
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7sk1SxgY9NE&feature=
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pqFDNQrgMXU&feature=
http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-18560_162-57433131/u.s-charter-schools-tied-to-powerful-turkish-imam/?tag=currentVideoInfo;videoMetaInfo
Production of Labor Video Project http://www.laborvideo.org
§Gulen Turkish School
by Labor Video Project
turkey_gulen_school.jpg
With backing from the CIA, the US government has allowed a Turkish Islamic Imam Gulen to build up the largest chain of charter schools in the United States that receive public money. These schools are growing while public schools are being shut down.
pearson.jpg
Pearson is one of the largest suppliers of books and tests in the United States and is being investigated by the New York Attorney General for payoffs to school officials to get contracts for their products. In California there is also a growing web of officials who may also have received payoffs to get contracts for their products. California Attorney General Kamala Harris refuses to investigate these criminal connections and maybe be getting political contributions from these privatizers or have connections with these foundations.
§Kamala Harris and Diane Feinstein
by Labor Video Project
harris__kamal___feinstein.jpg
Kamala Harris who refuses to investigate corruption about the education privatizers is close friends of California Democratic Senator Feinstein whose husband Dick Blum who is on the Regents also has investments in the University of Phoenix which is engaged in a diploma mill operation and is getting hundreds of millions of dollars from the US government. Feinstein and her husband are personally profiting from the destruction of public education in California and California Attorney General Kamala Harris is refusing to investigate and prosecute their conflicts of interests.
§Michelle Rhee and President Obama
by Labor Video Project
rhee__michelle__obama.png
Sacramento Mayor Kevin Johnson's wife Michelle Rhee is supported by the Gates and Broad Foundation in pushing privatization in the schools. She also has backing from President Obama and Education Secretary Arnie Duncan who is pushing No Child Left Behind and Race To The Top which requires privatization of education throughout the country.
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Lawsuit by pro-privatization "Students Matters" group takes aim at California's legal protections for teachers-
Funded By Billionaire Union Buster Eli Broad
Lawsuit takes aim at California's legal protections for teachers
latimes.com/news/local/la-me-0516-lausd-teachers-20120516,0,6292585.story

latimes.com

Lawsuit takes aim at California's legal protections for teachers

A Bay Area nonprofit targets teacher tenure rules, seniority protections and the dismissal process. Foes say it wants to weaken public sector unions.

By Howard Blume, Los Angeles Times

May 16, 2012

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A Bay Area nonprofit backed partly by groups known for battling teachers unions has filed a lawsuit seeking to overturn five California laws that, they say, make it too difficult to dismiss ineffective teachers.

The suit, filed on behalf of eight students, takes aim at California laws that govern teacher tenure rules, seniority protections and the teacher dismissal process.

"A handful of outdated laws passed by the California Legislature are preventing school administrators from maintaining or improving the quality of our public educational system," according to the lawsuit, which was filed Monday in Los Angeles County Superior Court and announced Tuesday.

The group behind the legal action is the newly formed Students Matter. The founder is Silicon Valley entrepreneur David F. Welch and the group's funders include the foundation of L.A. philanthropist Eli Broad.

The suit contends that teachers can earn tenure protections too quickly — in two years — well before their fitness for long-term employment can be determined. The suit also seeks to invalidate the practice of first laying off less experienced teachers during a budget crisis, rather than keeping the best teachers. And it takes aim at a dismissal process that, it alleges, is too costly, too lengthy and typically results in ineffective teachers holding on to jobs.

The move to address teacher quality has become a national issue from the Obama administration on down. In California, officials supported by powerful teachers unions have been reluctant or opposed to changing teacher job protections. Advocates, instead, are turning to the courts.

Such efforts are misguided at best, especially at a time when sweeping budget cuts have decimated schools, said Joshua Pechthalt, president of the California Federation of Teachers.

"We should be fighting like crazy to make sure schools are not laying off any teachers, except those who shouldn't be in front of a classroom," he said. And, he said, those teachers can be dealt with under current laws if school systems have sufficient resources and use them properly.

This latest legal effort is the most sweeping of several underway — all of which affect the Los Angeles Unified School District. The first, Reed vs. L.A. Unified, resulted in a settlement that allows the nation's second-largest district to bypass some campuses when layoffs are necessary. The teachers union has appealed.

A coalition of allied groups called Monday for the teachers union to drop its appeal. Their event was held across from Liechty Middle School, a campus exempted from layoffs under the settlement.

Another ongoing case alleges that L.A. Unified is not following state laws that mandate regular teacher evaluations and that they need to include evidence of student achievement.

The defendants in the latest litigation include state elected officials, L.A. Unified and a San Jose school district.

L.A. schools Supt. John Deasy commended the intent of the advocates for trying to force needed changes. The lawsuit "is aggressively going after long-term issues which have thwarted the rights of students to a high-quality education," Deasy said.

The L.A. school board has supported speeding up teacher dismissals. Deasy also wants to extend the time needed to earn tenure. The lawsuit does not propose specific solutions to the laws it deems objectionable.

Within L.A. Unified, Deasy has moved ahead with developing and testing a new evaluation system that incorporates student test scores. He said such a system would provide a clear view of which teachers are effective — whether the purpose is to decide whom to lay off or whom to help.

The teachers union has challenged Deasy's decision to impose the new system before a state labor board.

The advisory committee of Students Matter includes Students First, a group headed by former District of Columbia schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee; Democrats for Education Reform, whose California branch is led by former state Sen. Gloria Romero; and Parent Revolution, which organizes parents to compel dramatic changes at local schools through so-called parent-trigger laws. All of these have faced off against teacher unions in the past.

The legal team includes Theodore B. Olson, a U.S. solicitor general in the George W. Bush administration, and Theodore J. Boutrous Jr., a partner at Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher. Both represented activists who successfully overturned California's ban on gay marriage.

L.A. school board member Steve Zimmer said he detected an underlying anti-union agenda.

"What matters to the folks who fund this is not students, it's eliminating public sector unions," he said.

howard.blume [at] latimes.com

Los Angeles Times staff writer Stephen Ceasar contributed to this report.
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