This article originally appeared in the LA Times on April 15, 1999
© 1999 Los Angeles Times
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EDITORIAL
New Era at School Board
MAYOR RICHARD RIORDAN has a right to celebrate. So do the voters
and civic activists who demanded and got change on the Los Angeles School
Board, seeing outright victories for Riordan-backed candidates Caprice
Young and Mike Lansing with incumbent David Tokofsky headed for an
apparent narrow win. There will be a runoff between incumbent Barbara
Boudreaux, who also should be swept out, and Genethia Hayes, the fourth
challenger backed by Riordan. The results reflect an amazingly successful
uprising against two incumbents who were tied to poor test scores, poor
management and poor excuses.
Riordan took on the school board even though he technically has no
authority over the public schools. He backed a slate of reform
candidates, raised $2 million and, along with the business-led Committee
on Effective School Governance, forced a vigorous debate throughout the
vast district. The mayor, and those who supported his campaign to revamp
a dysfunctional school board, deserve appreciation.
In the runoff, Hayes is by far the better choice for District 1, which
covers South and Central Los Angeles. A civil rights leader, former
teacher and coalition builder, Hayes has a record of getting things done,
unlike Boudreaux, who has delivered little during two terms on the board.
During the campaign, Boudreaux resorted to divisive, racially tinged
rhetoric, excoriating Hayes for accepting support from Riordan instead of
concentrating on urgent educational issues. Hayes cannot let up now.
Beating Boudreaux, a necessity for a board majority that can accomplish
school reform, will require a substantial and sustained effort leading up
to the June 8 runoff election.
Before Tuesday, incumbents on the seven-member board routinely faced
minor opposition and prevailed for years regardless of the kind of job
they did. The voters who bothered to go to the polls on Tuesday signaled
a new era.
As the new board takes charge, reading instruction must take priority
in a district where only one of three children reads at grade level in
English by the end of third grade. The new board members must, as
promised, work together collegially and govern in a disciplined fashion.
They also must support Supt. Ruben Zacarias and his instructional
priorities and hold greedy labor demands at bay. That goal will require
Tokofsky, a former teacher, to mature in his second term on the board and
put improving student achievement ahead of teachers union wish lists.
The new board members will be sworn in July 1. But they should attend
school board meetings now, as well as visit schools and look to Tokofsky
for his fund of knowledge. They will need to take office well-informed
and ready to do battle with anyone who tries to prolong the sorry status
quo.
The victories of Caprice Young, David Tokofsky and Mike Lansing are
cause for optimism. If these three can gain the help of Genethia Hayes,
they can make a difference for the public schools, and for Los Angeles'
children.
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