Anonymous wrote:I was just reading her position pPer on education today and was alarmed at her commitment to finding more private funding for DCPS and school reform. Private funding usually comes with strings attached and in the education arena those finders and strings make this voter very wary. I'm leaning toward Catania. Thoughts?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ladies and gentlemen.........introducing your new mayor.......Muriel Bowser!!!!!!!!
Even Mr. Steele is running her ads, at least on the version of this page I am seeing. So at least he is making some money out of this debacle.![]()
Jeff doesn't get to choose who the advertisers are. The space on the page is rented out to Google, and Google analyzes the content of the page to match it with advertisers who are looking for certain audiences. Something about this discussion makes us attractive to Muriel Bowser.
Anonymous wrote:Ladies and gentlemen.........introducing your new mayor.......Muriel Bowser!!!!!!!!
Even Mr. Steele is running her ads, at least on the version of this page I am seeing. So at least he is making some money out of this debacle.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Ladies and gentlemen.........introducing your new mayor.......Muriel Bowser!!!!!!!!
Even Mr. Steele is running her ads, at least on the version of this page I am seeing. So at least he is making some money out of this debacle.![]()
Anonymous wrote:There are no viable mayoral candidates in this race who will resist the increasing privatization of our schools. DC is a petri dish for siphoning public education money into private hands -- it's (and NOLA) are the experimental sites for a national scale-up on the privatization of our public education system.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was just reading her position pPer on education today and was alarmed at her commitment to finding more private funding for DCPS and school reform. Private funding usually comes with strings attached and in the education arena those finders and strings make this voter very wary. I'm leaning toward Catania. Thoughts?
Private funding also comes with the murky shadows of private insider dealing. Look how the insular Ellington board paid the former Principal a compensation package 3 times the market rate, citing private funding sources. Of course, at the same time they were citing a shortage of funds as they were laying off full time faculty! There is too much potential for non-transparency, conflicts of interest and shadow governance where public schools become dependent in substantial part on private fundraising.
Anonymous wrote:I was just reading her position pPer on education today and was alarmed at her commitment to finding more private funding for DCPS and school reform. Private funding usually comes with strings attached and in the education arena those finders and strings make this voter very wary. I'm leaning toward Catania. Thoughts?