Saturday, November 15, 2008

Voter turnout in SF

Here's another slice of the election results: the turnout by district. On election night the turnout seemed unexpectedly low. But that was a deception. Look at the overall turnout. Look at the absentee and vote-by-mail numbers. Now that's more in line with expectations.
DistrictRegisteredBallots CastTurnout (%)Election Day ReportingVote by Mail / Absentee Reporting
Uprmkt/Eurka189521597284.2883657607
N Bernal Hts8709733484.2141223212
Noe Valley165821382583.3774796346
N Embrcdro6567543482.7528732561
Seclf/Prehts8481701082.6635383472
Mar/Pac Hts393203227082.071763714633
W Twin Pks333252732982.011315214177
Diamd Hts7175587881.9228423036
Inner Sunset9711793581.7146653270
Potrero Hill11101905681.5850554001
S Bernal Hts9420756980.3542223347
Richmond354592822479.61550412720
Haight Ash144051139779.1267684629
Lrl Hts/Anza9837777078.9944033367
Wst Addition309282430078.571373810562
Chinatown184891422776.9573776850
Mission311822387376.56143969477
Sunset409073051174.591543115080
Excelsior258251902373.6692099814
Portola8341607472.8228753199
Ingleside11646844972.5539914458
Lake Merced9275672572.5138492876
Soma189321347571.1866426833
Cvc Ctr/Dwtn272821865568.38100918564
Bayvw/Htrspt176921174766.462135534
Visita Vly8108529765.3326492648
Total47765136935977.33197086172273

I sorted the table in order of turnout, and the order is pretty familiar. The districts that ususally turn out in bigger numbers still came on strong. Even if the relative turnout ranking didn't shift that much in this election, the turnout top to bottom was truly impressive. Lets hope this carries over into future elections.

But how did this impressive turnout translate into BOE voting? I'll have to do some digging to see if there was more or less BOE votes cast relative to the overall turnout compared to other yers. But here's a quick factoid to chew on: For every ballot cast, there were 2.37 BOE votes marked. That strikes me as a decent participation rate. Probably better than in years past.

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Friday, November 14, 2008

Endless BOE voting

Update: final update? This is pretty close to the final vote tally, and it sure looks like the results are no longer in doubt. No one has change rank in the past few days of counting, and it does not look like any changes are at all likely. Congratulations to Yee, Fewer, Wynns, and Norton!

OK, so this post is the last post about the BOE vote count. Sort of. The vote count will be updated, probably a few more times. But I won't add new posts, I'll just update this one.

Over the weekend a lot more votes were counted. And the ranks changed again, with Jill Wynns continuing to move up. She is now in 3rd place with Rachel Norton in 4th.
CandidateNov 14Nov 9Nov 7Nov 5Nov 4
Norman Yee1401351261591039409359286646
Sandra Lee Fewer111152100430832447493669682
Jill Wynns7505267111546124886544699
Rachel Norton7427267108554664951345484

Barbara ''Bobbi'' Lopez6940263246536884945347101
Jaynry Mak6868161019493834426640341
James M. Calloway5378948411405383710534543
Emily M. Murase5050845185368333282730130
Kimberly Wicoff4880844678377083438332575
Marigrace Cohen3775934056280432521923178
H. Brown2737224853211431944818250
Omar Khalif2334621100178191639415525
Alexander Lee2237020128168691544614450
Glenn Davis1780816197139721292912252
Kelly Wallace145671325911399105979997

Notice that aside from the rise of Wynns and the decline of Lopez, the only other candidates to move up or down in the standings (so far) has been Emily M. Murase who passed Kimberly Wicoff to reach 8th place.

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Friday, November 07, 2008

BOE Vote as of November 7th

Today's voting update finds Jill Wynns overtaking Bobbi Lopez in 4th place. This continues the trend observed in yesterday's update. The vote counts are obviously in flux, so the standings could definitely change again. But as of today, Jill has the 4th and final spot on the board.
Norman Yee103,94016.57%
Sandra Lee Fewer83,24413.27%20,696
Rachel Norton55,4668.84%27,778
Jill Wynns54,6128.71%854

Barbara ''Bobbi'' Lopez53,6888.56%924
Jaynry Mak49,3837.87%4,305
James M. Calloway40,5386.46%8,845
Kimberly Wicoff37,7086.01%2,830
Emily M. Murase36,8335.87%875
Marigrace Cohen28,0434.47%8,790
H. Brown21,1433.37%6,900
Omar Khalif17,8192.84%3,324
Alexander Lee16,8692.69%950
Glenn Davis13,9722.23%2,897
Kelly Wallace11,3991.82%2,573
Write-In2,4820.40%8,917
627,139
Sure you can get these numbers from the Boad of Elections site. But you get to compare different vote tallies here and see the trends. More to come.

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Updated BOE Vote

The vote tally continues to change daily, with Rachel Norton inching ahead of Bobbi Lopez and Jill Wynns narrowing the gap. Looks like it will stay unsettled for a while longer. The SF Deparment of Elections stuggling to count votes? Seems like we've heard this before. A pair of recent articles on the unfinished count here and here.

Meanwhile, the latest results are found here, but we focus on the BOE and give you the results in order:
Norman Yee93,59216.50%
Sandra Lee Fewer74,93613.21%18,656
Rachel Norton49,5138.73%25,423
Barbara ''Bobbi'' Lopez49,4538.72%60

Jill Wynns48,8658.61%588
Jaynry Mak44,2667.80%4,599
James M. Calloway37,1056.54%7,161
Kimberly Wicoff34,3836.06%2,722
Emily M. Murase32,8275.79%1,556
Marigrace Cohen25,2194.45%7,608
H. Brown19,4483.43%5,771
Omar Khalif16,3942.89%3,054
Alexander Lee15,4462.72%948
Glenn Davis12,9292.28%2,517
Kelly Wallace10,5971.87%2,332
564,973

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Wednesday, November 05, 2008

2008 Votes

With %100 of precints reporting, here are the almost-final election resultsa:

Board of Education
Norman Yee8664616.44%
Sandra Lee Fewer6968213.22%
Barbara ''Bobbi'' Lopez471018.94%
Rachel Norton454848.63%
Jill Wynns446998.48%
Jaynry Mak403417.65%
Kimberly Wicoff325756.18%
Emily M. Murase301305.72%
Marigrace Cohen231784.40%
James M. Calloway345436.55%
H. Brown182503.46%
Omar Khalif155252.95%
Alexander Lee144502.74%
Glenn Davis122522.32%
Kelly Wallace99971.90%
Jill Wynns falls short by 785 votes.

Proposition V
Shall it be City policy to encourage the School Board to reverse its decision to terminate JROTC and to continue to offer JROTC in San Francisco public high schools?
Yes107,84653.20 %
No94,88246.80 %


Community College Board

Milton Marks9128520.65%
Natalie Berg6872115.54%
Chris Jackson5703112.90%
Steve Ngo5143111.63%
Mary T. Hernandez5115311.57%
Bruce Wolfe4457510.08%
Rodel Rodis348017.87%
Roberto Figueroa252555.71%
Carl Koehler159253.60%


The results from the Board of Supervisor races involving Eric Mar (D1) and Mark Sanchez (D9) are preliminary and only reflect voter's first choice votes. These results could change considerably as the ranked choice forumla is applied. But it certainly looks good for Eric and like a long shot for Mark:

D1 first choice votes:
Eric Mar771642.41%
Sue Lee598232.88%
Alicia Wang255114.02%
Brian J. Larkin6593.62%
Nicholas C. Belloni3471.91%
Jason Jungreis3411.87%
Fidel Chrys Gakuba2261.24%
George Flamik2101.15%
Sherman R. D''Silva1600.88%
D9 first choice votes:
David Campos606535.52%
Mark Sanchez503629.49%
Eric Quezada363121.26%
Eva Royale10376.07%
Tom Valtin5353.13%
Eric Storey4942.89%
Vern Mathews2791.63%

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Friday, October 31, 2008

Prop V Poll

Introducing SfSchool's first experiment with polling! Fingers crossed...

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Friday, October 17, 2008

Jill Wynns on SFUSD student assignment

Jill Wynns, incumbent Board of Ed candidate for re-election, has called for overhauling the student assignment process and making it more family-friendly. A chart in today's Chronicle about the candidates' positions on specific issues didn't make that clear. Here's Jill's position, from her campaign website:

Student assignment process
  • The process for assigning students to schools is not working; parents don't understand the system and it has not resulted in more racially diverse schools.
  • We need a new system which is simpler and more transparent for parents, and which does not leave some students without a school assignment until August or beyond.
  • The Educational Placement Center (EPC) must strive to complete student assignments more quickly; the time between placement rounds should be shortened.
  • The discussion about "neighborhood" schools and school choice has raged for years in San Francisco with no possible resolution that will please all sides; we need to start a new conversation.
  • Community commitment to diversity and de-segregation must not be allowed to be pitted against the best interests of children and families.
  • Rather than focusing on the old rigid assignment areas, we should be looking at giving weight to proximity, allowing those who live closest to schools to have priority, while still preserving choice for those coming from farther away.
  • The EPC must improve its customer service, responding to parent questions more promptly and ensuring that all of the information it gives out is accurate and consistent.
  • SFUSD should be working towards ensuring that comprehensive childcare on a sliding scale is available at every school.
Too many families feel that the current lottery system doesn't give them enough of a chance for a school which feels right for their child and their family. The student assignment process of spring 2008 was riddled with both human and computer errors, further eroding parent confidence in the assignment system. Some parents who followed all of the conventional wisdom about visiting many schools, seeking out less popular programs, and applying to a broad range of schools, still ended up getting none of their choices. The process must improve before the next round of student assignments in spring 2009, to rebuild the community's confidence in our schools.

Ironically, more students than ever applied for Kindergarten in spring 2008, reversing a trend of falling enrollment. Some schools which had struggled with low enrollment for years were overwhelmed with requests. A static assignment system which is not nimble enough to adjust for these kinds of changes does not serve our parents or our schools.

"Just make all the schools great schools" is often touted as the solution, but schools are only as strong as their leaders. Hiring qualified teachers for every school, recruiting and training the best Principals, and providing extra resources for schools serving low income students help level the playing field, but nothing is more appealing to parents touring schools than seeing an active parent body engaged in working for the benefit of their school and its students. We must make every effort to ensure that every school has something to entice parents in the door, whether it is a special program like language immersion or Montessori, or extended childcare, or additional arts and enrichment, or partnerships with local museums and cultural institutions. Different models for language immersion should be added to existing models to expand the availability of these popular programs to the large number of English-only applicants.

No family should feel that they must move out of San Francisco in order to be assured of a good public education for heir children. Strengthening public schools in San Francisco is a key requirement to the future of our community.

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Wednesday, October 15, 2008

A personal note: My SF school board picks

A note about the San Francisco Board of Education election From Caroline Grannan, 13-year SFUSD parent, volunteer and advocate

Friends, neighbors and associates often ask my opinions at election time about San Francisco school board candidates, knowing that I’m very involved in school district issues. So I’m sharing my views on this year’s candidates, for those who are interested. I don’t expect even my dearest friends to agree with my every opinion, but I hope this is helpful, whether or not you have children in our school district. Please feel free to forward it to anyone you like, and to ask me questions.

For those who don’t know me that well, my children are in 9th and 12th grades at San Francisco School of the Arts (SOTA, a public high school), and have attended SFUSD schools since kindergarten – Lakeshore Elementary and Aptos Middle School.

Four of the seven Board of Education seats are open. Here are my recommendations:

JILL WYNNS
I’m giving most of my space to Jill because I think it’s so important that she be re-elected. Jill is a four-term veteran of the Board of Ed (BOE). I’ve known her personally since 2000 after watching her on the board for three years before that. I have many good things to say about her (honest, smart, principled, courageous, committed, no-nonsense – you get the idea). But the thing about Jill that most impacts you, me, our children, our schools and everyone in our community is this: She is the only current board member and the only candidate who truly understands school financing and the district budget.

School financing is so incredibly complex — the phrase “don’t try this at home!” comes to mind — that it takes years to begin to understand. And school budgets are ripe for mismanagement, as many California districts have found. During the period that the Oakland, West Contra Costa (in Richmond) and Emeryville school districts (among others) have imploded financially and been taken over by the state, SFUSD has stayed afloat even in dire budgeting times – and Jill gets a lot of the credit for that. She has made it her calling to learn everything she can about this byzantine, incredibly important (and yet mind-numbing!) area. When I first met Jill, I asked if she had a professional background in finance, since I was impressed by her obvious expertise. Actually, her background is as a professional theatrical costumer (she’s also the only BOE member who has been a working artist) — she simply found school financing a critical area to learn.

The state is apparently on the verge of revisiting, once again, how to fund education. It is absolutely imperative that we have school board members who understand how school financing works so we know what to advocate for — and how — with our state representatives.

Back in the 1990s, SFUSD had a cowboy superintendent, Waldemar “Bill” Rojas – Jill established her reputation standing up to his reckless and dubious schemes, under heavy fire from Rojas and his loyalists. Rojas’ top lieutenant in SFUSD was a finance guy named Bill Coleman. The two of them left SFUSD together for top jobs with the Dallas school district. Eventually Rojas left the superintendent biz after his house of cards collapsed, and Coleman took a job with the Detroit school district. Recently Coleman was found guilty in Detroit of fraud and corruption, and I believe he’s in jail. The current top finance guy in SFUSD is Myong Leigh, a capable and honest professional who is widely admired and respected by City government and private industry, and is heavily recruited by the private sector. There’s no guarantee that Myong will stay here forever or that his replacement will have his integrity and competence.

The Bill Coleman story demonstrates why we need people on the BOE who have more than just the credential that they are a parent, or work with community-based organizations, or are “a nice person.” We need people who understand what staff is talking about when the topic is school financing and the budget. We need people who have been through the sometimes acrimonious process of union negotiations. We need people who know what they are doing and can provide the expertise while newer board members are still learning the ropes.

The three current BOE members not up for reelection this year were elected less than two years ago. At least two more newbies are guaranteed this year. That will mean at least five board members with no more than two years’ board experience. No matter how the election goes, there will be plenty of “fresh blood” and “new voices” on the BOE. We need Jill’s experience and her understanding of the financial matters more than we need a sixth inexperienced newcomer.

A personal issue to me and to fellow parents at SOTA and Lowell is that Jill supports both schools and their specialized selective admissions processes, which some current board members and a faction of our community have called for eliminating.

As a volunteer for Jill’s campaign, I wrote the homepage copy for her website, and I meant what I wrote. I’m reproducing it here: “In 16 years on the San Francisco Board of Education, Jill has earned a reputation for independence, integrity, thorough understanding of complex issues, and relentlessness in asking tough questions. She is an expert in the complex areas of school budgeting and finance and has done extensive research and observation on best practices in education nationwide. In San Francisco, Jill has played key roles in developing and passing five school bonds, a facilities parcel tax, a unique local school sales tax, the groundbreaking city funding commitment for schools and preschools, and a parcel tax to support teachers and other school employees. Jill has served on the board during a time when the school district has been hailed for rooting out corruption and incompetence, and student achievement has steadily risen. She understands that there is far more work to be done, and has the knowhow and commitment to continue overcoming those challenges.”

By the way, Jill was an SFUSD parent for 22 years and has lived in Bernal Heights for 36 years. Her husband is a union ironworker, and Jill is currently employed as a professional fundraiser for the Jewish National Fund.

To learn more about Jill and her campaign, please visit: http://www.jillwynns.com/issues.html

RACHEL NORTON
Rachel is an SFUSD parent and volunteer with a particular knowledge of and involvement in special-education issues. She’s savvy, thoughtful, capable and committed. (My colleagues in what's left of the news business will be interested to know that Rachel is a former New York Times reporter.) Please visit her website at: http://rachelnorton.com/

EMILY MURASE
Emily is an SFUSD parent with an impressive background in community service and two children in elementary school. Please visit her website at: http://www.emilymurase.com/

MARIGRACE COHEN
Marigrace Cohen is a longtime SFUSD employee; her 44-year career includes experience as a teacher, administrator, and central office supervisor. Please visit her website at: http://www.mcohenforbdofed.com/index.html

A note to some contacts: Those of you who know both me and my friend/fellow parent volunteer activist Dana Woldow are aware that we’ve worked together on many school and district issues. We don’t agree on every candidate every year — although we have both campaigned for Jill in two previous elections — but this year it happens that we do, and collaborated on parts of this letter, so that explains the similarities.

Again, please feel free to ask me if you have any questions about my views. Thanks for taking the time to make thoughtful choices in this election!

— All the best — Caroline

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Wednesday, October 08, 2008

Updates on the BOE campaign

I posted a string of tidbits and observations about the school board campaign on examiner.com.

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Wednesday, September 24, 2008

BOE Candidates Forum

There will be a BOE candidates forum held at ThereLincoln HS tomorrow, (Sept. 25) at the Lincoln HS (24th Ave./Quintara from 6:30 - 8:30 PM.

There is another forum scheduld for October 7th at Everett Middle School, in case this notice arrives too late.

If you hear about any other BOE candidate forums, let us know in a comment.

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Monday, September 22, 2008

Sr. Dad interviews the BOE field

Local school podcaster Senior Dad has been conducting a series of podcast interviews with the BOE candidates. You can get more information on his site, or you can download the audio files directly from these links:
  1. Harold Brown (declined)
  2. James Calloway JamesC.zip
  3. Marigrace Cohen MarigraceC.zip
  4. Glenn Davis (withdrawn)
  5. Sandra Fewer SandraF.zip
  6. Omar Khalif OmarK.zip
  7. Alexander Young Lee (in France, unknown return)
  8. Barbara "Bobbi" Lopez BarbaraL.zip
  9. Jaynry Mak JaynryM.zip
  10. Emily Murase EmilyM.zip
  11. Rachel Norton RachelN.zip
  12. Kelly Wallace (withdrawn)
  13. Kimberly Wicoff (could not schedule)
  14. Jill Wynns JillW.zip
  15. Norman Yee NormanY.zip
Update: Jill Wynns interview has been posted, the interview cycle is complete

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Education budget heralds hard times ahead

The still unsigned state budget appears to be a disaster for school districts around the state. Not only will districts get less than they were expecting this year, but they will face uncertainty and revenue shortfalls as far as the eye can see. The difficult and painful school budgeting process we saw all around the state this year figures to be much worse next year.

The 2008 BOE candidates should be pressed for details on how they plan to address this disaster.

Education leaders blast proposed state budget plan - San Jose Mercury News:
Education leaders this week echoed each other in criticizing the plan, saying it doesn't do enough to help local school districts pay for the rising costs of just about everything. State Superintendent of Instruction Jack O'Connell called the plan a 'gimmick,' while California Teachers Association President David Sanchez and California PTA President Pam Brady each urged Schwarzenegger to use his veto power to leverage a more education-friendly budget.

'The proposed budget includes a reduction of the cost-of-living adjustment that will further tighten the vise on local school budgets as districts across the state face increased costs for supplies, food, transportation and employee health care costs,' O'Connell said in a statement. 'These reductions are a disservice to California's 6 million school children and the thousands of educators across the state.'
Wasn't the whole point of the Republican coup against Davis supposed to be about solving the structural deficits in the state budget? Have they done anything constructive on that front at all? Seems to me they have used their minority perch in the legislature to obstruct any and all possible solutions while Schwarzenegger twiddles his thumbs and tries to stay above the messy fray. Truly gutless and disgusting.

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Sunday, September 21, 2008

School boards and gut-wrenching choices

At a candidates’ forum a couple of weeks ago, a candidate for San Francisco school board declared that board members need to be able to make the tough decisions.

There’s nothing unusual about that remark, and it doesn't routinely pique much interest. But I can imagine a current board member's inward reaction: “Dude, you have no idea….”

Think about it. An effective school board member needs the grit for some gut-wrenching decisions, most of which are guaranteed to make a lot of people really, really angry. Some decisions hurt people. This is no job for someone who wants to be universally liked and wants to please everyone. And a conscientious school board member can't base a decision on which choice gets you yelled at the least, either.

I thought about some of the tough decisions I’ve seen over the years. Here are just a few random examples:
Balancing the budget and thus avoiding bankruptcy and receivership for the district (as has happened to a number of nearby districts)vs:
  • meaningful raises for teachers (and sometimes any raises for teachers)
  • avoiding closing child development centers
  • a seventh period for all the middle schools
and many, many other essentials and/or popular programs
Raises for hardworking cafeteria workersvs.higher-quality food for the children
Closing a school when enrollment dropsvs.avoiding outrage, anguish and disrupted lives by avoiding closing schools, even though it costs the district extra money to run unneeded schools
When a school must be closed, choosing a low-performing, underenrolled school to close vs.trying to spread the pain by not closing schools only in low-income neighborhoods — and thus closing a high-performing, popular school instead. (In general, low-performing and underenrolled schools are mostly clustered in low-income neighborhoods.)
Directing extra resources to schools that serve many low-income, disadvantaged, high-need studentsvs.appeasing middle-class parents who complain that their kids are being “punished for success” when they get fewer resources.
Eliminating the JROTC program based on principle (or ideology, depending on how you want to make this sound)vs.Accommodating the students, parents and school communities who are calling for keeping JROTC.
Costing the district $1 million by cutting JROTC immediately, as a matter of principle/ideologyvs.compromising your principles/ideology to let the JROTC program run till the end of the school year so that $1 million is not wasted. (See this Chronicle story for explanation)
Supporting job security for teachersvs.allowing problem teachers to stay in classrooms
Accommodating families who live near popular schools by supporting neighborhood school assignmentvs.accommodating those who call for districtwide choice
Adequate funding for special educationvs.more for the general fund
Spending millions on buses for kids in low-income neighborhoods so they have access to schools districtwidevs.saving those millions by eliminating the busing even though that means school options for families in low-income neighborhoods will be limited to nearby schools, which are likely to be more troubled
Providing arts and other enrichments to all students in all schoolsvs.redirecting the resources into remedial reading and math for low-achieving students in underperforming schools.
This list could go on and on and on. It makes you wonder how anyone remains on the school board without making a lot of enemies (or rather makes you realize why people who are on the school board do make a lot of enemies).

I hope the candidates have thought this through and know what they’re in for.

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Monday, September 15, 2008

Chron weighs in on truancy

San Francisco team needed to fight truancy:
More power to both of them [Harris, Newsom] - the more officials who take on this issue, the better. We'd like to nominate the school board trustees next - Harris said SFUSD Superintendent Carlos Garcia has been a wonderful partner - but where are they? Could they spare a moment from fighting JROTC to take on a battle worth winning?
Has the BOE taken any votes on anything related to truancy prevention?

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Sunday, September 14, 2008

The hot school board issue: Is Jill Wynns a bitch?

At a recent school board candidates' forum, candidate Sandra Fewer declared that Board of Education members need to be unafraid to make the tough decisions. (More on her later.)

Meanwhile, Jill Wynns — a veteran incumbent and friend whom I'm supporting in her bid for re-election — is being accused in some circles of not being "nice" enough. In my opinion, this charge is irrelevant and unfair.

Going back to Fewer's comment: You can't have it both ways. Putting a top priority on being nice conflicts directly with being willing to make the tough decisions.

In Jill's four board terms, she has consistently shown her willingness and ability to spot the tough decisions that need to be made (often while others look the other way) — and to make them.

Here's what the San Francisco Bay Guardian (despite the fact that it's far more politically aligned with Wynns' critics) said about her in 2004: "Wynns has spent years as the board skeptic, asking the uncomfortable questions that needed asking and identifying legal and financial realities." The Chronicle called her "tough-minded" in 2002 and "a peppery and outspoken maverick" in 2004. In all those cases — which were election endorsements — the description was intended as praise. Being "nice" somehow didn't make it onto the list of desirable qualifications for the office.

That said, is Jill a bitch? If she were, she'd be in good company. I am a fervent Obama supporter, but I also admire Hillary Clinton and savored Tina Fey's Saturday Night Live commentary: "...people say that Hillary is a bitch. Let me say something about that: Yeah, she is. So am I ... You know what, bitches get stuff done." And those of us old enough to remember the 1984 presidential election recall Barbara Bush's salvo that Geraldine Ferraro, the first-ever female VP candidate from a major political party, was something that "rhymes with rich."

But actually, the dictionary definition of "bitch" is "a malicious, spiteful, or overbearing woman." Even Jill's worst enemies have not accused her of being malicious or spiteful. Overbearing? Not an epithet ever used to denigrate a man. Perhaps she is. Jill is also blunt and honest; I've often said she's not someone to whom you want to address the question: "Do I look fat in this dress?" She asks tough questions, makes tough decisions, sorts through difficult priorities, and doesn't cower or wimp out. Gosh, what a surprise that that sometimes offends people.

For the record, in her personal life (which she keeps well out of the limelight), Jill has many loyal, affectionate, longtime friends, and always seems to be taking in one or another stray young person or lost soul to live with her family.

Meanwhile, there's the knitting issue, which is resurfacing in the public discussion. A few years ago, the school board was dealing with the painful necessity of closing schools, with enrollment in the district dropping. (For the record, the criteria for choosing those schools included low and consistently dropping achievement and low and consistently dropping enrollment.) Jill, an expert knitter, often knits at school board meetings, and came under fire (including in the Bay Guardian) for knitting during the public comment period when irate and anguished parents were speaking against school closures.

Somehow those critics fail to mention the fact that during public comment other board members routinely open their mail, text-message and use their laptops (we unwashed masses in the audience can't tell whether they're taking notes, e-mailing or playing "World of Warcraft"). BOE member Mark Sanchez once audibly muttered "bullshit ... bullshit ..." repeatedly while I was making my two-minute public comment.

Jill, meanwhile, says she knits to keep her stress level and blood pressure down while being yelled at by the public. She recalls during that particular issue that one enraged speaker at the microphone suddenly reached into her purse, and Jill had to make a split-second decision whether to dive under the desk. She chose not to, and luckily the woman turned out to be reaching for a pencil. And by the way, school board members are essentially volunteers — they receive a token $500/month stipend — to fear being shot at in the line of duty.

Jill's fellow yarn addicts will attest that to skilled knitters, not only is it just what the doctor ordered to reduce stress and blood pressure, it also improves their ability to listen closely — which is not the case with opening mail, texting or playing "World of Warcraft."

Now back to Sandra Fewer and tough decisions. A year and a half ago there was an effort by some city supervisors to essentially withhold $2.5 million that the city had committed to our schoolchildren (this was in Prop. H funds, using the dodge of counting "pre-existing in-kind services" as part of the money). Mark Sanchez proposed supporting that scheme, reportedly in the interest of working cooperatively with the city. Fewer, as a member of the Prop. H Committee, spoke in favor of Sanchez' move to support withholding that $2.5 million from our schools and our kids, claiming that what resolving the issue quickly was more important than getting those resources for our schools. (A description of their views is at the end of this March 2007 account on Greatschools.net.) Parents and school communities — more concerned with the welfare of our kids than with being nice — put up a hard fight against the giveaway and won that battle.

I'm not sure if Fewer considers that position making a tough decision or not. Tough decisions also need to be wise ones — based on sound judgment — that are in the best interests of our schools and our children.

And those tough decisions in the best interests of our schools and our children have been Jill Wynns' top priority during her 16 years on the school board. That's why I'm supporting her re-election.

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Tuesday, September 09, 2008

More BOE endorsements

BOE Endorsement round-up

Here are more BOE and College Board endorsements from a variety of sources:

San Francisco for Democracy PAC

S. F. Board of Education

Endorsed Candidate
Questionnaire
Video
Sandra Fewer
Bobbi Lopez
Rachel Norton
Norman Yee

S. F. City College Board

Endorsed Candidate
Questionnaire
Video
Chris Jackson
Milton Marks
none
Bruce Wolfe

Raoul Wallenberg Jewish Democratic Club
Board of Education Jill Wynns, Rachel Norton
Community College Board Natalie Berg, Chris Jackson, Milton Marks,III

Milk Club PAC recommendations
School Board:
Sandra Fewer
Bobbi Lopez

SF Green Party
School Board: Barbara Lopez and Sandra Lee Fewer

College Board: Bruce Wolfe, Milton Marks, and Chris Jackson

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Alice B. Toklas BOE endorsements

The latest BOE endorsements come from the Alice B. Toklas LGBT Democratic Club:
San Francisco Unified School Board
  • Sandra Fewer
  • Rachel Norton
  • Kimbery Wicoff
  • Norman Yee
Community College Board of Trustees
  • Natalie Berg
  • Milton Marks
  • Steve Ngo

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Thursday, August 28, 2008

SF DCCC Endorses Norton, Yee, Mak, and Fewer

BeyondChron is reporting the SF DCCC BOE Endorsements::
the San Francisco DCCC voted to endorse Rachel Norton, Norman Yee, Jaynry Mak and Sandra Lee Fewer in the Board of Education race. With Eric Mar and Mark Sanchez running for Supervisor in Districts 1 and 9, respectively, only incumbents Jill Wynns and Norman Yee are running for re-election – with four seats at stake.

Norton led the vote getters with 24, receiving support from both the progressive and moderate members of the committee. Norman Yee was the only incumbent endorsed receiving 23 votes. Mak and Fewer both finished with 18 votes receiving most of their support from progressive members.

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Friday, August 22, 2008

Colemand Action Fund BOE endorsements

Another prominent set of BOE endorsements comes from Colemen Action Fund. I've known of the endorsements for some time, but I've been waiting for an official annoucement from them to no avail. Thankfully the Fog City Journal comes through with this report:
In the race for school board where 4 seats are up for election, CAF endorsed Sandra Lee Fewer, Rachel Norton, incumbent Norman Yee, and Dr. James Calloway.

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Teachers' union BOE endorsements

The BOE endorsement season is upon us. First up, the UESF endorsements.

UESF Endorses Fewer, Norton, Mak, and Yee for School Board

On Wednesday night, the UESF Executive Board officially endorsed four candidates for School Board - Sandra Fewer, Rachel Norton, Janry Mak, and Norman Yee. The vote at the Executive Board followed the recommendations from the UESF/COPE meeting on Monday, August 18th. At that meeting School Board candidates were given a chance to speak, and answer questions from UESF members.

These four candidates represent the best of the crowded field for School Board. Their commitment to supporting students and educators in the classroom earned them our endorsement. Together they encompass a broad segment of San Francisco, each bringing a set of skills and expertise that will serve the school district and not a clique or faction.

Sandra Fewer brings experience as the Director of Parent Organizing for Coleman Advocates for Children & Youth, an influential community organization that focuses on public education, as well as years of service as a site PTA officer.

Rachel Norton is a well-respected parent-advocate, who has worked diligently for improved Special Education services in the district. She was an active worker on Proposition A, supporting UESF.

Janry Mak, with her experience as an aide in the offices of Tom Lantos and Fiona Ma, has successfully demonstrated her ability to work with a broad-range of community groups. Her interest in improving the schools for her 2 1/2 year old is a driving force in her candidacy.

In his tenure on the School Board Norman Yee has worked to bring consensus to the board, successfully transitioning the district to a new superintendent, and working to pass Proposition A. He also brings many years of experience in early childhood development.

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Thursday, August 14, 2008

2008 BOE Candidates Published

Filing deadlines have come and gone, and now the SF Elections Deparment has
published the list of candidates. So who's running for BOE?
  • Harold Brown
  • James Calloway
  • Marigrace Cohen
  • Glenn Davis withdrew
  • Sandra Fewer
  • Omar Khalif
  • Alexander Young Lee
  • Barbara "Bobbi" Lopez
  • Jaynry Mak
  • Emily Murase
  • Rachel Norton
  • Kelly Wallace
  • Kimberly Wicoff
  • Jill Wynns
  • Norman Yee
Obviously, we will be hearing a lot more about this election and these candidates in the days ahead.

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