NEWARK IS READY& CAPABLE TO CHOOSE OUR OWN SUPERINTENDENT!
For over 20 years the people of Newark have been under the hands of the State of NJ and our public schools have not prospered! We have dealt with appointees like Cami Anderson brought us “solutions” like One Newark, causing absolute chaos with in our community! It has been an attack on our community neighborhood schools month after month year after year. Now we have Governor Christie running for a presidential seat and he is holding over our head issues like Common Core and restoring Local Control over our heads. Issues that we,as Newarkers , have been fighting for years!
It’s
very easy to say what Newarks need or want when you don’t live in our great
city. To suit from afar and project what is best for our children and families!
To write blogs and use our families and city as a petri dish of hot topics to
speak upon. We look at other towns and see the freedom they have to follow the
democratic process that all Americans should have. Yet, the “ poor and disenfranchised
“ people of Newark are treated disrespectful by our local, state and federal
government.
Instead
of given the right and freedom to follow the democratic process of having our
Board, with whom we elected to make decisions and let the people choose our
replacement for Cami Anderson as Newark Public School Superintendent, we are
told “ Ya want Local Control restored, Newark you must deal with another appointed
Superintendent Christopher Cerf!” Is that really the local control we have been
fighting for all these years? Hell no! It is yet again having the state tell us
that we the people of Newark are unable to follow the democratic process that
the rest of the state has the freedom to follow. In turn it ultimately is
saying to parents, who pay taxes and vote, “YOU DO NOT KNOW WHATS BEST FOR YOUR
FAMILY AND YOUR CHILDREN!”
What the hell
are we teaching our children? That it is OK to just roll over and allow our democratic
rights to be stripped and taken away from us? That is insane!
Mark
Beidon , President of State of NJ Board of Education stated “ the people of
Newark having local control over their school district is a good thing!” So, Mr
Beidon and Governor Christie why in the world would you rip our democratic
rights from us and appoint Cerf to our school district without Newarkers having
a say! He is unqualified for the job!
-
He trained and appointed Cami Chaos as an appointee to dismantle
the Newark Public School System implementing the One Newark Program.
-
Her has his hands all in corporate schemes to expand the charter movement
with companies he has great involvement in. Making his abilities to serve the Public
School in our community families a huge conflict of interest.
-
He sat on the Board of Charter Schools Alliance and just recently
stepped down after being exposed by the public.
WE DO NOT NEED THE CORPORATE SCHEMES OF CERF TO COME IN AND “FINISH
OFF” THE DISMANTLING OF OUR PUBLIC
SCHOOL SYSTEM TO ALLOW THE CHARTER MOVEMENT TO ENGULF OUR COMMUNITY! LET
NEWARKERS SAY WHAT IS BEST FOR NEWARKERS! NOT CORPORATE AND POLITICAL BULLIES!
WE DON’T NEED COMMITTEES TO TELL US WHAT’S BEST AND WE DON’T NEED APPOINTEES TO
TELL US WHAT IS BEST!
An open letter to President Beidon was sent to him to tell
him to not vote for Cerf to be appointed as Superintendent of Newark Public
Schools. Here is the open letter. PLEASE SHARE AND PASS IT ON! WE MUST FIGHT
FOR OUR DEMOCRATIC RIGHTS! BOY I NEVER IN MY LIFE THOUGHT I WOULD BE FIGHTING
FOR RIGHTS THAT I THOUGHT AS AMERICANS WE HAD THE RIGHT TO POSSES!
OPEN LETTER T O PRESIDENT BEIDON OF STATE BOE:
Newark
Residents Should Select Their Next Superintendent
We
believe that the people of Newark should be able to democratically govern their
public schools.
Fortunately, Mark Biedron,
President of NJ’s State Board of Education, seems
to agree. Mr. Biedron recently told the Star Ledger
that “the people of Newark having local control over the school
district…is a good thing.”
On
Wednesday, Mr. Biedron will have anOPPORTUNITYto act
on this belief when the State Board votes on whether Chris
Cerf should become Newark’s next Superintendent.
If
the State Board approves Mr. Cerf, it will beCONTINUINGa
20 year history of disenfranchisement for Newark’s nearly 300,000
residents, who have had no say in this decision.
If the
Board rejects Mr. Cerf and instead approves a candidate selected by
Newark’s popularly-elected Board ofEDUCATION, it
will be putting Mr. Biedron’s admirable philosophy into practice.
There
is plenty of precedent for allowing Newark to select its
own superintendent.
Newark,
Jersey City, and Paterson are all state–controlled school districts.
Yet Jersey City’s popularly–elected Board of Education selected its
Superintendent, Marcia Lyles. Paterson’s Superintendent, Dr. Donnie
Evans, was selected by
a committee that included members of Paterson’s
popularly-elected Board of Education, along with other community
leaders. In contrast, Newark’s popularly-elected
Board of Education has had no voice in selecting Mr. Cerf,
who was nominated for thisPOSITION by
Governor Christie.
Approving
Mr. Cerf is also difficult to justify because Mr. Cerf
lacks the qualifications necessary to run New Jersey’s
largest school district. Unlike Jersey City’s and Paterson’s
leaders, Mr. Cerf has no prior experience as
a superintendent.
Nor is
there a record of success in related public-educationPOSITIONS on
which to base Mr. Cerf’s nomination. In fact, Mr.
Cerf’s tenure as New Jersey’s Commissioner of Education was marked
by numerous poor decisions regarding Newark, including:
- Appointing andCONTINUING to
support Newark’s prior Superintendent, Cami Anderson, whose
policies and behaviors generated broad-based rejection
and rebellion from Newark residents;
- Improperly giving in to
a demand from Ms. Anderson “to allow her to retain full
control over 28 low-performing schools,” which resulted in New
Jersey failing to
comply with federal requirements; and
- Forcibly
maintaining State control of Newark’s schools by
dramatically lowering the
district’s scores on the State’s monitoring
system (QSAC) from the scores that Mr. Cerf had given the
district less than a year earlier.
The
people of Newark deserve the right to select their next Superintendent.
They also deserve an experienced public education leader with a
proven record of success. Mr. Cerf’s candidacy fails on
all these counts.
We
encourage Mr. Biedron and the other State Board of
Education members to vote no on Mr. Cerf’s nomination and to
allow Newark’s popularly-elected Board of Education to nominate the district’s
next Superintendent.
Newark’s
residents have been deprived of their right to democratically control their
public schools for 20 years. It is long past time to correct this
wrong!
Rosie
Grant, Piscataway, NJ
Parent and nonprofit leader
Parent and nonprofit leader
Michelle
Fine, Montclair, NJ
Parent and professor
Parent and professor
Judy DeHaven,
Red Bank, NJ
Parent and writer
Parent and writer
Valerie
Trujillo, Jersey City, NJ
Parent and public education advocate
Parent and public education advocate
Jacklyn
Brown, Manalapan, NJ
Parent and educator
Parent and educator
Julia
Sass Rubin, Princeton, NJ
Parent and professor
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Linda
Reid, Paterson, NJ
Parent and nonprofit leader
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Melissa
Katz, South Brunswick, NJ
Future educator
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Bobbie Theivakumaran,
Metuchen, NJ
Parent nd investment banker
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Lisa
Winter, Basking Ridge, NJ
Parent, technology manager and former Board of Education member
Parent, technology manager and former Board of Education member
Marcella Simadiris,
Montclair, NJ
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Michelle
McFadden-DiNicola, Highland Park, NJ
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Bill
Michaelson, Lawrence Township, NJ
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Marie
Hughes Corfield, Flemington, NJ
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McClellan, Cherry Hill, NJ
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Blaine, Montclair, NJ
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Spring Lake, NJ
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Maria Brown, Pitman, NJ
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Julie Borst,
Allendale, NJ
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Howell, NJ
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Darcie Cimarusti,
Highland Park, NJ
ParenT and Board of Education member
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Amnet Ramos,
North Plainfield, NJ
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Montclair, NJ
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Ani
McHugh, Delran, NJ
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Jill
DeMaio, Monroe, NJ
Parent
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Tamar Wyschogrod,
Morristown, NJ
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Lauren
Freedman, Maplewood, NJ
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Lisa
Rodgers, South Brunswick, NJ
Parent and business owner
Parent and business owner
Laurie Orosz,
Montclair, NJ
Parent and public education advocate
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Michael
Kaminski, Mount Laurel, NJ
Parent and educator
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Ronen
Kauffman, Union City, NJ
Parent and educator
Parent and educator
Frankie Adao,
Newark, NJ
Parent and social media specialist
Parent and social media specialist
Kathleen
Nolan, Princeton, NJ
Parent, researcher and lecturer
Parent, researcher and lecturer
Sue
Altman, Camden, NJ
Educator
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Jennifer
Cohan, Princeton, NJ
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Parent and publicist
Daniel
Anderson, Bloomfield, NJ
Parent and Board of Education member
Parent and Board of Education member
Debbie
Baer, Robbinsville, NJ
Parent and educator
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Dan Masi,
Roxbury Township, NJ
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Parent and engineer
Susan Schutt,
Ridgewood, NJ
Assistant principal and public education advocate
Assistant principal and public education advocate
Karin Szotak,
Madison NJ
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Parent and business owner
Tiombe Gibson,
Deptford, NJ
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Lisa
Marcus Levine, Princeton, NJ
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Parent and architect
Kristen Carr Jandoli,
Haddon, NJ
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Parent and public education advocate
Jean Schutt McTavish,
Ridgewood, NJ
Parent and high school principal
Parent and high school principal
Virginia Manzari,
West Windsor, NJ.
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Stephanie LeGrand,
Haddonfield, NJ
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Parent and public education advocate
Melanie
McDermott, Highland Park, NJ
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Parent and sustainability researcher
Nora
Hyland, Asbury Park, NJ
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Beth
O’Donnell-Fischer, Verona, NJ
Parent
Parent
Susie Welkovits,
Highland Park, NJ
Parent and Borough Council President
Parent and Borough Council President
Gregory
M. Stankiewicz, Princeton, NJ
Parent and nonprofit leader
Parent and nonprofit leader
Margot Embree Fisher,
Teaneck, NJ
Parent and former Board ofEDUCATION member
Parent and former Board ofEDUCATION member
Laura Begg, Bernards Township,
NJ
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Parent and public education advocate
Gary
C. Frazier, Camden, NJ
Parent and community activist
Parent and community activist
Debbie
Reyes, Florence Township, NJ
Parent
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Christine McGoey,
Montclair, NJ
Parent
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Regan Kaiden,
Collingswood, NJ
Parent andEDUCATOR
Parent andEDUCATOR
Moneke Singleton-Ragsdale,
Camden, NJ
Parent and administrator
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Liz
Mulholland, Westfield, NJ
Parent and former educator
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Toby
Sanders, Trenton, NJ
Parent, pastor and educator
Parent, pastor and educator
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