Gidwitz will set off the Right wing

From the Sun-Times Letters to the Editor February 26, 2002

BODY:
Talk about the gang that couldn’t shoot straight! After firing dedicated, knowledgeable state Education Supt. Max McGee, state board Chairman Ronald Gidwitz and his accomplices on the State Board of Education hired a Gidwitz family friend and accountant, Ernie Wish, to be state superintendent.

Wish, who by most accounts (no pun intended) was a fine numbers cruncher and managing partner of a prestigious accounting firm, was hailed as the proximate savior of the state’s educational system, even though he had no real knowledge of educational policy issues or the needs of the schoolchildren of Illinois. What he did have was a connection to Gidwitz and the recently arrested president of the clout-heavy Near North Insurance Brokerage, Michael Segal. Wish’s connection with Near North, which continued after his appointment as superintendent, was a result of “miscommunication,” according to Gidwitz, and ultimately led to Wish’s dismissal [news story, Feb. 13]. This is not to suggest guilt by association on anyone’s part, but to quote Sir Walter Scott, “Oh, what a tangled web we weave, when first we practice to deceive.”

So now that one crony of Gidwitz had to be removed as state superintendent, he has been replaced not by the chief education officer of the state board, Christopher Koch, but by Respicio Vazquez, general counsel to the state board and a former Gidwitz crony from his days as chairman of the board of City Colleges of Chicago.

Again, by most accounts, Vazquez is a fine fellow, but clearly the message being received here is that cronyism has supplanted professional education considerations in the selection process of the state superintendent of education. One can only wonder what this chairman and his board have in mind regarding the selection of the next state superintendent. To say the least, their recent track record has been abominable.

To provide the children of Illinois with the educational leadership they deserve, we must remove this state board chairman and his allies on the board. If the current governor doesn’t have the guts to do it, then perhaps the next one will. Once this is accomplished, we should move to a new process for selecting state board members and their chairperson. Their appointments should not be based on the level of their campaign contributions or other political considerations, but on their accomplishments in leadership, management or education.

The progressive state of Washington has a system for electing state board members regionally. These individuals are elected by the votes of local Board of Education members who have a direct link to their educational communities.

Although this system may also have some weaknesses, it would be far superior to the current politically influenced selection process, which has yielded a state board that is an embarrassment to the educational community in Illinois. Serving on the state board should be a reward for outstanding service to children–not for large campaign contributions.

Dr. Harry P. Rossi,

superintendent of schools,

Northbrook/Glenview

Vallas on Gidwitz

I don’t know enough of Gidwitz’s history, but here is the first bit I have on him. Trib on January 27, 2000

Vallas called state officials “Keystone Kops” who were caught in “a comedy of errors” in the way they administered the new ISAT.

“The problem is that the state is running this (test) from a distance,” Vallas said during a morning appearance on WBEZ-FM. “They are just making arbitrary policy. First of all they get a superintendent (McGee) from the suburbs who had 3,000 kids in his district, and now of course he is in charge of overseeing all the schools in the state of Illinois.

“They appoint as the board president, Ron Gidwitz, who was an absolute failure in City Colleges–ran City Colleges into the ground. So of course he basically gets promoted to the state job. But that’s what happens when you’re worth a fortune.

“So we have basically . . . (people) setting state policy who basically are either not serious about it or being amateurish about it or maybe they have other motivations. But the bottom line is they are mismanaging the policy,” Vallas said.

I’ll be looking into this, but obviously I have a lot of respect for Vallas’ opinions.

News Tips accepted

Just to make sure you all know, feel free to send me news tips. Sometimes I’ve heard of it, but even if so, it never hurts to duplicate. Generally you want to tell me if it is confidential or if you don’t want your name used. Usually I don’t use names, but I could. Some folks I regularly correspond with I know for sure, but it never hurts to reiterate the point.

The Fax on Potential Replacements

Rich Miller’s Capitol Fax has some scuttlebutt on

The name most mentioned yesterday as a possible Ryan replacement was Ron Gidwitz, a wealthy businessman and education reform crusader. Gidwitz has a lot of friends in the party, but he is not loved by Mayor Daley and the teachers’ unions, which he battled at the City Colleges of Chicago. Another name that popped up out of the blue is Jayne Thompson, the wife of the former governor, although nobody really knows if she’d even accept such an offer. Of course, there are also the other usual suspects, Jim Edgar, Jim Thompson (both of whom reportedly don’t want it), Judy Baar Topinka (doesn’t want it), Steve Rauschenberger (wants it, but lost the primary), Jim Oberweis (anti-illegal immigrant weirdness in the primary rules him out), etc.

While Dems first choice is for Ryan to stay in the race, Oberweis is a close second. He won’t even challenge Obama and frankly, those commercials were the funniest damn thing on TV. Flashback to Polis’ take on the helicopter commercials.

The Most Important Story in Chicago This Week

Is the Segal trial. Or should I say conviction and sentencing.

Is Kass perverted? No. A bit strange, yes.

My fantasies involve Segal sitting fully clothed–in an orange prison jumpsuit before a federal grand jury–spilling his guts about Chicago politicians and the Chicago way.

But the best news is that Segal got the book thrown at him:

Segal, found guilty of racketeering, faces 20 years in prison for dipping into protected insurance trust fund accounts to finance a fancy lifestyle of steaks, hookers, gourmet treats for his dog and other pleasures.

A jury on Tuesday had him forfeit $30 million of his own cash and recommended he also forfeit 60 percent of his company’s assets. He’ll probably lose his Highland Park mansion, surrounded by a sumptuous 17-acre yard. Segal pays a measly $689 a year in property taxes for those 17 prime North Shore acres.

Why is that good? Now the US Attorney has leverage over him and that is key to getting him to open up about his ties to various politicians around town. I haven’t touched much on it to date, but this story should be interesting to watch over the next 6 months and really far more important than Jack! and Jeri.

Does it go all the way up? Probably not, the Daley’s have a knack for not being directly involved, but turning a blind eye to corruption below them. It’ll be embarrassing, but ultimately the Mayor for Life is the Mayor for Life. He may threaten to take his pants down though.