School choice parents to rally at Florida Capitol

About 1,000 people are expected for the rally in Tally.
About 1,000 people are expected for the rally in Tally.

“Where are the parents who support school choice?”

“Where are the parents who support parental empowerment?”

“Where are the parents whose children benefit from education reform?”

These are typical questions from traditional parenting groups, groups that sometimes say they represent Florida parents in all educational matters. They have to ask the whereabouts of moms and dads of more than 1.5 million schoolchildren of choice, because such parents don’t tend to be in their membership files.

To the extent these choice parents are low-income and single moms who choose options such as the tax credit scholarship, they do indeed tend to be less visible in the political sphere.

Get ready, because that’s changing.

Early Wednesday morning, families from all over Florida, from Miami’s inner city neighborhoods to rural Pasco County, will board buses with their children and teachers and travel five to 10 hours to get to Tallahassee for School Choice Day. Organizers expect more than a thousand participants to gather and show lawmakers, traditional parenting groups, and everyone else the real face of parental school choice.

They won’t look like right-wing corporations. There’s a good bet they will be racially and economically diverse. In other words, they will probably look like you and me.

The rally is being coordinated by Florida Alliance for Choices in Education (FACE) and the Florida Chapter of the National Coalition for Public School Options. Participants will be on hand to represent charter schools, virtual programs, magnet schools, McKay Scholarships, the Tax Credit Scholarship Program, career academies, and home-schools.

“If you care about black children, you have no choice but to participate,” says T. Willard Fair, the President and CEO of the Urban League of Greater Miami.

He’ll be there.

“It’s important that we come together to celebrate all of the school choice options currently offered in Florida,” said Wendy Howard, a parent activist and director of FACE,  “and to thank our school choice champions for expanding options with fair access and equitable funding.”

She’ll be there, too.

Proponents will gather at the Leon County Civic Center for advocacy training sessions while their children make signs and write letters to legislators. At noon, everyone will wave those signs and march to the Capitol, ending the rally with speeches and celebrations in Waller Park.

Later in the afternoon, rally goers will visit with legislators and speak about their own experiences with education in Florida. They will also show support for laws making their way through the legislature this session. Laws like The Parent Empowerment Act, which will make it illegal for children to be stuck in an ineffective teacher’s classroom two years in a row. The law also allows parents to get together and turn around failing schools.

This crowd intends to send a message to lawmakers and the media that school choice is a vital right and here to stay.

Get ready. These are the parents who are underrepresented in traditional parenting groups. where they are often discounted or ignored. These are the parents those groups are always asking about.

I’ll be there working with FACE to coordinate things, and I urge you to come meet them. They’re on their way. They will no longer be ignored, and they’re ready to speak for themselves.

So listen up.


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BY Catherine Durkin Robinson

Catherine Durkin Robinson is a former teacher and columnist for the Tampa Tribune and Creative Loafing. A Democratic activist for 30 years, she got her start in the education choice movement as a grassroots leader in Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Missouri and Maine working with StudentsFirst. She has been organizing scholarship parents since 2013.

6 Comments

Why are you USING children to promote your privatization cause? That is just disgusting.

I do not have any polite way of saying what a sad joke this is. Who is paying for the buses? Who has written the comments for those who will speak? The taxpayers in Florida are waking up.

btw – Why are these kids out of school? Is it a Charter School Holiday?

Donna Mace

Will these students have an opportunity to learn about the legislative process? Or are they simply being exploited to show the “diversity” of the students that attend charter schools?

And why do their parents feel that they are being “discounted or ignored” in traditional parenting groups? All the public schools my children have attended have both a PTA and a SAC that are always encouraging ALL parents to be a part of (and often having to beg parents to participate). I find it hard to believe that any parent that wanted to be actively involved would ever be turned away, “discounted or ignored”.

My children will be in their classrooms tomorrow, sitting beside children of “low-income and single moms” who have chosen traditional public schools for their child’s education. They, nor do I, feel that it would be appropriate to remove our children from classes to lobby for corporations that wish to profit off of Florida’s children with the passage of the parent trigger. These corporations are already paying for lobbyists, such as Jim Horne, to do that job. The job of our children is to be children, learning and playing with their “racially and economically diverse classmates”.

The traditional public school is the still the SCHOOL CHOICE for most Florida parents. We expect our legislators to realize that and show support with their words AND actions during this legislative session. That did NOT happen today in Tallahassee. I wonder how the group of parents that will be in Tallahassee tomorrow will be received? Perhaps with more “respect” since they will simply be saying what our legislators want to hear?

Donna Mace

Here is a link to an article about proposed charter school bills in North Carolina.I think may of the ” low-income and single moms” would be shocked to find out how much money can be skimmed off of charter schools to pay rental and management fees. A quote in this article mentions $3 million. I have read articles about Florida charter schools that mention similar amounts. Is the parent trigger really about the “children”?

https://dianeravitch.net/2013/04/02/how-alec-is-changing-the-face-of-charters/

Rosemarie Jensen

Wait, so what code gives them an excused absence for this I wonder? And they are pulling them out of school the week before FCAT to be used as a prop and photo op? How about we bring the 1.8 million children who choose to attend public schools next week right in the middle of FCAT? What a terrific message for kids…you too can miss school if you fit our political agenda.

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