Rae Belisle leaving EdVoice

By John Fensterwald - Educated Guess

Rae Belisle,  a savvy advocate for change as well as an influential Sacramento insider with the governor’s ear, has resigned as president and CEO of EdVoice, and her bid for a full term on the State Board of Education is in trouble. Her departure from both EdVoice and the board would leave low-income and minority children with one less  strong voice.

Belisle submitted her resignation for health reasons to the non-profit EdVoice board in January, though she  had not made that public until now. Her last day at work is March 1.

Belisle has been taking medication for breast cancer, which is in remission.  She says she stopped the medicine for two months while helping with the state’s Race to the Top application. When she resumed taking it, the side effects were worse.

Her term on the State Board of Education expires March 11. Senate President Pro Tem Darrell Steinberg canceled a scheduled hearing Wednesday before the Senate Rules Committee amid rumors that Belisle would resign, or the governor would withdraw her nomination. She said Sunday that neither case was true and that she would meet Tuesday with Schwarzenegger’s advisers. Another board member for the past year who also was to have a hearing Wednesday, Jorge Lopez, executive director of Oakland Charter Academy, resigned last week.

Belisle, 54, has been at EdVoice, a non-profit that works to eliminate education inequality,  for two years. A year ago, Gov. Schwarzenegger appointed her to the state board to finish the term of the late philanthropist and charter school financier  Don Fisher.  In those rolls and her capacity, before that, as chair of the Charter School Advisory Commission,  she became identified with controversial school reforms of the past several years: an open enrollment law allowing interdistrict transfers for students in low-performing schools; statewide charter approvals for high-performing charter organizations, and  a policy, now challenged in court, of requiring Algebra I for nearly all eighth graders.

That – and her defense of Proposition 227, requiring instruction of English only, as counsel to the state board – have made her many adversaries. The California School Boards Assn. (see opposition letter), the Association of California School Administrators, bilingual organizations and the California Federation of Teachers, all oppose her nomination. However, the California Teachers Assn., the largest teachers union, has not taken a position, and she has the support of a number of groups representing minority students. CSU Chancellor Charles Reed also endorsed her for her work promoting the Early Assessment Program for prospective CSU students.

Belisle said  that Steinberg would not give his support for her nomination, although a spokeswoman for Steinberg declined to comment. State board candidates need a two-thirds majority of the Senate for confirmation – a difficult threshold, especially when you’re as outspoken and forceful as she is.

Belisle said her future plans were uncertain, although she said she would continue as a policy advocate and an informal adviser to EdVoice.

5 Comments

  1. We are losing one of the greats in education. Steinberg should be voted out of office as soon as possible for his political stunt. Playing games with California’s children should not be tolerated.

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  2. The real sin for which Mrs. Belisle is punished is her unique effectiveness. Effectiveness in advocating for the disadvantaged so they can escape failing schools; effectiveness in giving immigrant and non-immigrant Latinos the gift of English, rather than have them stuck in mindless bilingual classes from Kindergarten until they graduate; effectiveness in promoting essential standards so that disadvantaged kids will not graduate with a meaningless diploma that will lead them nowhere.

    Now Steinberg prefers to kill the best thing that happened to HIS OWN constituents, rather than to stand up to racial politicos that prefer their voters never to learn English, and to teacher unions that instinctively hate anything that smacks of accountability or of giving options to the public. For shame.

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  3. I am sorry to read of Ms. Belisle’s health issues. I am not sorry to read she is leaving the CA SBE.

    Having attended thae last half-dozen SBE meetings I was always amazed at the superficial knowledge of education she exhibited.

    More telling was her ideological lack of flexiblity that led to two lawsuits. I recall the meeting the SBE was considering Ed Code waivers. She asked how the SBE had voted before, and was informed that waivers were granted based on case by case need. At this point she said (and this is pretty close to a quote): “I believe the SBE should be consistent, even if it’s consistently wrong.” When the attendees laughed she obviously had no idea why.

    Ed Voice will always be able to find another corporate shill or educational no-nothing to be its CEO.

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  4. Oh come on – she is a menace. Her actions are those of person who distains poor and minority kids, rather than caring for them as she claims at every turn. This is only one of the many terrible appointments made by this governor and for once the Senate (and Steinberg) are bucking up.

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