Latest News and Comment from Education

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

D.C. Schools Insider - Bill Turque chronicles Chancellor Michelle Rhee's effort to transform District public schools.

D.C. Schools Insider - Bill Turque chronicles Chancellor Michelle Rhee's effort to transform District public schools.

No politics in Rhee complaint, Brannum says


If there's something Chancellor Michelle A. Rhee has said or done over the last three years that Robert Vinson Brannum actually likes, he's kept it pretty much to himself. Count him among the hardest of the hard-core anti-Rheeites.
"Chancellor Rhee seems to take personal joy in being hostile, rude, petulant, and disrespectful," Brannum blogged in 2009 after one of her marathon appearances before the D.C. Council, where he is a fixture on the witness list.
Then there's this from last January: "Regardless as to how hard Chancellor Rhee seeks to reinvent herself, she will never measure up to the competence, intellect or professionalism of [Rhee's predecessor] Dr. [Clifford] Janey as a solid educator. Chancellor Rhee cannot remake her image or shed new skin and be viewed other than as a failed classroom teacher. There is a difference between being a fearless administrator and a reckless tyrant. There is a difference in respecting alternate views and rejecting to hear them."
Brannum, a Ward 5 activist and one-time school board candidate, is also supporting D.C. Council Chairman Vincent C. Gray in his attempt to unseat Rhee's boss, Mayor Adrian M. Fenty. But he insists that election-year politics have absolutely, positively nothing to do with his decision to pursue an ethics complaint with the Office of Campaign Finance (OCF) against Rhee for her dealings with the private foundations that are funding a portion of the new teachers contract.
"Individuals are free to say what they wish," Brannum said Monday, but he pointed to OCF's decision to investigate Rhee's solicitation of $64.5 million from a group of four private foundations to support the new teachers contract. OCF director Cecily E. Collier-Montgomery said in a June 4 letter that there is "reasonable cause to believe that a violation