"ANYTHING"
The Oakland Tribune informs us that
the Oakland School For The Arts (which it helpfully identifies as "Mayor Jerry
Brown's performing arts charter school," so we'll remember to whom it belongs)
is planning on moving out of its present location at the Alice Arts Center and into
tents and portables on the parking lots surrounding the Fox Oakland, sometime thereafter
to move into the Fox building itself. The proposal is for OSA to pay the city (meaning
us) a thousand dollars a month in rent, which is a good deal for them if they can
get it, since Oakland brings in considerably more a month for parking revenue for
that space. Oakland's civic leaders, we learn, are willing to make the sacrifice.
"Anything we can do to provide additional educational opportunities in Oakland
we have to do," the Tribune quotes Oakland City Council President Ignacio
De La Fuente. It's a good sound byte for a man who would be Oakland's mayor, if we'd
let him, and Don Perata don't run. But as in all such cases, context-and a little
history lesson-is all important.
In passing the law that authorized charter schools, the California Legislature wrote
that "it is the intent of the Legislature, in enacting this part, to provide
opportunities for teachers, parents, pupils, and community members to establish and
maintain schools that operate independently from the existing school district structure,
as a method to accomplish [among other things] vigorous competition within the public
school system to stimulate continual improvements in all public schools."
It's doubtful that anybody really took that "vigorous competition" thing
seriously for most charter schools, because a local church or community group going
head to head with the public school behemoth would be something like a pickup basketball
team joining the NBA. But then again, nobody envisioned that a city mayor would take
up the task.
Elected to run our city, Jerry Brown decided that he'd rather organize schools, instead.
One of them was the nonprofit corporation Oakland School For The Arts, of which he
serves as board chairperson. That there was already an existing magnet arts school
program at Skyline High School that could have used the mayor's attention and help
seemed to have been somewhere outside Mr. Brown's line of sight. In any event, OSA
was approved by the Oakland School Board as an authorized charter school-with a one-year
delay, however, because school board members were concerned that the school's finances
were on shaky grounds. And, in fact, the OSA has only been able to survive because
of creative city financing made possible by Mayor Brown's political clout.
First the mayor discovered-Columbus-like-that there was a nice, city-owned building
(the Alice Arts Center) with a theater and rehearsal space where the arts school
could be housed, with only the little messy detail that some natives-in the form
of a long-running and highly successful community dance program with nationally known
resident companies and packed classes-were already in occupation. OSA took up residence
in unused side office and basement space, using a million dollars or so in city money
for renovation (if I'm vague on the figures, it's because there's no actual line
item in the city budget for "Subsidies Of The Oakland School For The Arts").
Thereafter, OSA benefited from city staffing, care and attention in a way available
to no other Oakland-based charter school (with the exception of that other mayor-initiated
charter, the military institute out on the old U.S. Army base). Some competition.
What seemed inevitable was that the politically connected Arts School would eventually
muscle the dance classes and the resident dance companies out of the Alice. And,
in fact, at one point Mayor Brown so declared that to be an accomplished fact, meeting
with the community dance folk and upstairs residents and telling them that the school
was staying, and they would have to go (the dilapidated and long-unoccupied Fox Oakland,
he suggested, would be a nice new home for the dancers and renters). The Alice-folk-who-was-already-there
thought otherwise, organized and brought their case to the City Council, which showed
some spine against the mayor and agreed that an existing community arts and recreation
program benefiting thousands of Oakland citizens was a bit more important than a
mayor-sponsored school housing less than 200 students, many (if not most of them)
from outside of Oakland. Then came the Saturday Night Massacre (or whatever day it
happened on) when the mayor fired City Manager Robert Bobb who, unlike the mayor,
actually knew how things in a city get done. With Bobb gone, stiff opposition from
the Alice dance folk, and the council against him, Mr. Brown really had no choice.
And so it was the arts school that had to make the move to the Fox.
But not without more and considerable subsidy from the City of Oakland. The potential
loss of revenue from the parking lots is only the beginning. Brown is now proposing—through
developer Phil Tagami—a full renovation of the Fox Theater, at the cost of millions
in Oakland tax dollars, and all for the benefit of his little arts school. "This
is my legacy," Mayor Brown told the Tribune last year. But if it's his legacy,
how come it's us who's got to pay for it?
Now, back to where we got into this. "Anything we can do to provide additional
educational opportunities in Oakland we have to do," says Council President
De La Fuente, in agreeing to continued public subsidy of the arts school. If this
is so, one wonders where my friend Mr. De La Fuente—and the rest of the City Council—stood
a year ago when the Oakland Unified School District was being seized, en toto,
by the state. Coulda used some help back then, guys.