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"He never should have been hired."
--Crisis Team co-leader Ronnie Herndon
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EDUCATION
So long, Ben?
Portland's
schools chief has alienated key groups of education boosters.
by
NIGEL JAQUISS
njaquiss@wweek.com
Last Friday morning, Ben Canada emerged from what might have been
a routine meeting with Jefferson High School students. But waiting
for the Portland Public Schools superintendent were camera crews
from five local television stations and reporters from four radio
stations. Normally, Canada's visit to a school--even one in turmoil
as Jefferson is--would hardly warrant such coverage. But the maxim
in broadcast media is "if it bleeds, it leads," and clearly, Ben
Canada's blood is in the water.
It could happen
by the end of the week. It may not be until the end of the year,
but it's increasingly clear that barring a miracle, Canada is gone.
In his two and
a half years at the helm of Portland's public schools, the superintendent
has won praise for mending relationships with legislators and business
leaders. But he has also built a record of disastrous personnel
choices and repeated communications failures. By now, it's no secret
that Canada has lost the trust of the Portland Association of Teachers.
"I think he has outlived his value to the Portland Public Schools,"
says union president Richard Garrett. "He's burned too many bridges,
and I think they are impossible to repair."
As serious as
the union's discontent may be, it's not what's fueling the drive
to dump Canada. Rather, the push stems from the superintendent's
remarkable ability to alienate disparate constituencies more influential
than the union and, ultimately, more important to the district's
future than Canada himself.
Since its founding
in 1996, there has been no bigger local booster of K-12 education
than the Portland Public Schools Foundation, which brings together
corporate chiefs, top educators and community leaders. The foundation
has helped raise $150 million in public funds and generated another
$10 million in private grants. Without its support, the $80 million
local option voters approved last May would probably have failed.
On Jan. 14,
foundation management and board members met with school board members
Marc Abrams, Debbie Menashe and Sue Hagmeier. "They were expressing
concern about the rate of change in the district," Abrams says.
Based on conversations
with foundation sources, Abrams' interpretation of the message the
foundation's representatives delivered seems diplomatic, to say
the least.
"My perception
is that a number of folks in the foundation, including its leadership,
don't support Canada," says Tony Hopson, CEO of Self Enhancement
Inc., the only member of the foundation board willing to speak on
the record about its relationship with the district.
Perhaps the
most telling evidence of the foundation's frustration is the news
that its director, Cynthia Guyer, has requested a leave of absence.
Guyer declined
to comment for this article but colleagues say that she has grown
impatient with what she perceives as the district's resistance to
change and specifically Canada's lack of leadership.
If Guyer were
to depart, it would be a blow to the district's image and jeopardize
key funding sources. "She's done an excellent job," says former
Secretary of State Phil Keisling, a foundation board member. "She's
taken the foundation from zero to being a very prominent player
in town and nationally."
Coming on the
heels of Canada's blow-up at the teachers' union (see "The Wrath
of Ben," WW, Nov. 1, 2000) and the unscheduled departures
of principals at Whitaker Middle School and Jefferson High, the
timing of Guyer's request couldn't look worse for Canada. Her organization
is in the midst of pursuing a $10 million Carnegie Foundation grant
and is angling for a larger sum--up to $40 million--from the Gates
Foundation.
Part of what
rankles foundation types and others is the perceived failure of
the Strategic Plan. The plan, funded by a $300,000 grant from the
foundation, brought 700 community members into a yearlong effort
at rethinking schools. But while participants hoped the plan would
provide a road map for change, the missteps that have marked its
implementation have left many dismayed.
"The strategic
plan was my last hope," says Marianne Fitzgerald, a Lincoln High
parent who, as one of the "Three Moms," led the fight for more school
funding in the second half of the '90s. But echoing other members
of the core planning team, she says Canada seems oblivious to the
district's lack of progress. "I saw Ben the other day," Fitzgerald
says, "and he said, 'It [the Strategic Plan]'s really taking root,'
and I thought, 'Where have you been?'"
If people like
Guyer and Fitzgerald represent the organized face of school support,
then Dwayne Schultz is the ideal volunteer: a business leader willing
to dive into the district's operations.
In the past
three years, Schultz has served on the district's Blue-Ribbon Finance
Committee, the Bond Oversight Committee, led its Facilities Utilization
Task Force and helped shape a massive 1998 audit by the accounting
firm KPMG.
Perhaps no private
citizen understands the schools' inner workings better than the
former Hewlett Packard and Apple Computer executive. But after hundreds
of hours of volunteering, Schultz is pessimistic. "The community
has really lost faith in the district," he says.
Schultz offers
three specific criticisms:
First, although
he wasn't involved in the Strategic Plan, he calls the result a
fiasco. "It has the right kinds of words and language," he says,
"but there are countless examples of the plan being violated." Schultz
notes, for instance, that Canada's replacement of Lincoln's principal--without
the community involvement the Strategic Plan emphasizes--came just
two weeks after the superintendent presented the plan to the school
board.
Second, Schultz
says, he has grown frustrated with the district's inability to make
obvious cost cuts. For example, the 1998 KPMG audit recommended
that the schools sell some unused buildings. Since then, two more
committees--including one he led--have come to the same conclusion.
And still, there's been little action. "Here we are 24 months later
and the latest findings make more or less the same points," he says.
Schultz places
the blame on the school board as well as Canada and the people he's
hand-picked to run the district. He argues that Canada has both
increased the centralization of district functions and hired or
promoted people who are ineffective. As examples of centralization,
he cites the growth of the number of directors of student achievement
(principals' bosses) from five to 10.
As for effectiveness,
Merced Flores, Canada's first chief of staff, has already been sent
packing; Deputy Superintendent Susan Dyer, his top lieutenant, has
endured heavy criticism, and Linda Harris, an assistant superintendent,
is largely invisible (see "Head of the Class," Sept. 8, 1999).
"At this point,"
Shultz says, "the performance of everybody on Ben Canada's staff
is unacceptable."
Although the
alienation of the Portland Public Schools Foundation and volunteers
such as Schultz is costly, the attacks of a third group may ultimately
provide the starkest example of Canada's failure to connect with
key constituencies, giving the school board the political cover
to push him out the door.
In June 1999,
longtime school activists from Portland's minority community formed
the Crisis Team. Since then, their criticism of Canada's efforts
has escalated from polite press conferences to hostile demonstrations.
Their opposition
is damaging for a couple of reasons:
First, Canada
insists he agrees with them that closing the achievement gap between
poor, minority students and middle-class whites must be the district's
highest priority. Yet, despite that common goal, Crisis Team representatives
say they have completely lost faith in the superintendent.
The second reason
that the Crisis Team's criticism cuts so deeply involves race. The
sight of African-American activists attacking an African-American
superintendent raises some awkward issues in a city as white as
Portland.
Some, including
an African-American principal interviewed by WW, say the
black community has placed excessive demands on Canada because of
his skin color.
Others, however,
say Canada's race protects him. "There may be some white guilt surrounding
the achievement gap," says Hopson, a co-leader of the Crisis Team.
"It's possible for that same guilt to carry over to the superintendent
and his lead staff, who are also people of color."
Aside from the
union, the Crisis Team members are the only school activists willing
to say publicly what many others say privately about Canada. "He
never should have been hired," Crisis Team co-leader Ronnie Herndon
told WW last week. "He has never reformed a school system
or made a significant difference in the performance of low income
kids."
Canada acknowledges
he's under pressure but insists it's too soon to judge his performance
on the Strategic Plan. "If we don't produce based on the plan, they
won't have to ask me to leave," he told WW.
But "they"--the
school board--have privately demanded that he reorganize his staff
and are meeting nearly continuously with each other and community
leaders to see whether his job can be salvaged. Another house cleaning
may buy Canada some time. But even if he jettisons Dyer, he may
have passed the tipping point.
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