"Hundreds of parent-led local school councils would be stripped of the critical power to pick principals under a bill introduced this week by the Rev. James Meeks, head of the Senate Education Committee.
Plus, up to 42,000 students at 65 of the city's lowest-scoring public schools would be entitled to tuition vouchers to attend private or parochial schools under an amendment Meeks said he is planning to another bill."
"I think they are radical changes,'' the Chicago Democrat said Wednesday of the two bills now in Senate committees. "Isn't that what the president ran on -- change? America has voted for change.''
Some school activists were stunned by Meeks' proposal to convert elected local school councils into advisory bodies. No longer would LSCs select and fire principals and approve school budgets, as required under the 1988 Chicago School Reform Law.
"Why would he want to get rid of the last segment of democracy that exists in our schools, where people who are most directly affected can have a voice in how their schools are run?'' asked Jitu Brown of the Kenwood Oakland Community Organization.
Meeks -- pastor of Chicago megachurch Salem Baptist -- said Chicago Schools CEO Ron Huberman and his predecessor, now U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan, have told him that "principals are the most important people'' in a school while complaining that "we don't pick the principals.'' The bill would "eliminate that excuse,'' Meeks said.
Plus, up to 42,000 students at 65 of the city's lowest-scoring public schools would be entitled to tuition vouchers to attend private or parochial schools under an amendment Meeks said he is planning to another bill."
"I think they are radical changes,'' the Chicago Democrat said Wednesday of the two bills now in Senate committees. "Isn't that what the president ran on -- change? America has voted for change.''
Some school activists were stunned by Meeks' proposal to convert elected local school councils into advisory bodies. No longer would LSCs select and fire principals and approve school budgets, as required under the 1988 Chicago School Reform Law.
"Why would he want to get rid of the last segment of democracy that exists in our schools, where people who are most directly affected can have a voice in how their schools are run?'' asked Jitu Brown of the Kenwood Oakland Community Organization.
Meeks -- pastor of Chicago megachurch Salem Baptist -- said Chicago Schools CEO Ron Huberman and his predecessor, now U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan, have told him that "principals are the most important people'' in a school while complaining that "we don't pick the principals.'' The bill would "eliminate that excuse,'' Meeks said.