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Federal Court in Ciavarella “Kids For Cash” Case Issues Groundbreaking Ruling: State Court Judge’s Acts Not Immune from Conspiracy and RICO

Ciavarella

January 13, 2014 – A Federal District Court Judge in Pennsylvania ruled last Friday that “Kids for Cash” Pennsylvania State Juvenile Court Judge Mark Ciavarella’s actions in causing juveniles to be sentenced under a “zero tolerance” policy to further a civil conspiracy are not protected by judicial immunity.  United States District Judge A. Richard Caputo on Thursday issued a decision in favor of plaintiffs in that case, holding that Judge Mark Ciavarella’s acts in participating in a conspiracy to deprive children of a right to a fair trial in order to send the children to juvenile detention facilities which Ciavarella helped develop are not “judicial acts” entitled to judicial immunity.

What It Means for Parents and Children

“This decision will profoundly impact parents’ ability to pursue Family Court judges for civil rights violations based on judicial conduct occurring outside of the courtroom, which causes injury inside the courtroom.” says Colbern Stuart, President of California Coalition for Families and Children.  ”Every parent should take a close look at the judge, psychologist, and attorneys in their cases to see if they were involved in any out-of-court activity such as court policy-making committees, legal or judicial professional organizations, “CLE” for judges or attorneys, “think tanks” and “technical assistance” organizations that influence judicial behavior and the administration of justice.  Those activities are now clearly suspect if they result in constitutional injury.”  Says Stuart.  ”Illegal policies or guidance, and unethical conduct and business dealings that lead to a decision inside of court that deprives a litigant or their family of civil rights can be the basis for civil liability that is not immunized by the in-court act.”   “If a parent or child has been deprived of civil rights or otherwise damaged by such policies or illegal dealings, they may have recourse against the Family Court judge, psychologist, or attorney acting illegally outside of court.”  Says Stuart.

California Coalition’s DDICE RICO Lawsuit


California Coalition has sued San Diego Family Court judges for conspiring  with attorneys, psychologists, and the county bar association to deprive families of civil rights.  ”This is exactly the type of conduct we’ve found in San Diego.  Judges and private professionals self-dealing for private advantage, making policy to stoke that advantage, then working the policy in court to fuel their private fire with parents’ and children’s college funds.  It’s now clear those judges may be liable despite the fact that part of the transaction occurred in court.  Parents in every state should closely re-examine their cases to see if similar facts exist in their case.”

From Judge Caputo’s January 9, 2014 Memorandum in the Ciavarella case:


   Ciavarella is not entitled to judicial immunity for his role in closing the River Street facility. That is, appearing on television urging a shutdown of a county-run detention facility and facilitating hiring decisions for a private detention facility are not functions “normally performed by a judge.” Wallace, 2009 WL 4051974, at *7 (quoting Stump v. Sparkman, 435 U.S. 349, 362, 98 S. Ct. 1099, 55 L. Ed. 2d 331 (1978)). During Ciavarella’s criminal trial, he acknowledged that he was not performing any official duties when he took part in the television interview. (Plfs.’ SMF, ¶ 74.) Moreover, aiding PACC in staffing its facility with employees of the River Street facility also falls outside the traditional role of a judge. Cf. Forrester v. White, 484 U.S. 219, 229, 108 S. Ct. 538, 98 L. Ed. 2d 555 (1988) (“personnel decisions made by judges[ ] are often crucial to the efficient operation of public institutions (some of which are at least as important as the courts), yet no one suggests that they give rise to absolute immunity from liability in damages under § 1983.”).

b. Zero Tolerance Policy
Second, Plaintiffs argue that the enactment of a zero tolerance policy was not a judicial act. While Ciavarella served as judge of the juvenile court, he enacted an administrative policy that dictated instances in which probation officers had to file charges against and detain juveniles in Luzerne County. (Plfs.’ SMF, ¶¶ 79-82.) Ciavarella expanded his zero tolerance policy in February 2003, the same month PACC opened, to require that children on probation be violated and detained for any violation of their probation, including zero tolerance for drug and alcohol violations, not attending school, not attending appointments, or violating curfew. (Id. at ¶ 80.) Under this policy which was distributed to all juvenile probation officers on February 20, 2003, (id. at ¶ 82), Ciavarella eliminated juvenile probation officers’ discretion to informally adjust juveniles’ charges. (Id. at ¶ 79.)
Ciavarella’s enactment and expansion of a zero tolerance policy dictating how probation officers were to handle violations of probation and other charging decisions fall outside the scope of judicial action. “Administrative decisions, even though they may be essential to the very functioning of the courts, have not similarly been regarded as judicial acts.” Forrester, 484 U.S. at 228, 108 S. Ct. 538. Under Pennsylvania law, probation officers have the authority to informally adjust allegations before a delinquency petition is filed. See 42 Pa. Cons. Stat. Ann. § 6323; Pa. R. Juv. Ct. P. 312 (“At any time prior to the filing of a petition, the juvenile probation officer may informally adjust the allegation(s) if it appears: (1) an adjudication would not be in the best interest of the public and the juvenile; (2) the juvenile and the juvenile’s guardian consent to informal adjustment with knowledge that consent is not obligatory; and (3) the admitted facts bring the case within the jurisdiction of the court.”).  Moreover, “coercing probation officers to change their recommendations is outside the role of a judicial officer. Probation officers are to advise the court, not the other way round, on sentencing matters.” Wallace, 2009 WL 4051974, at *8. In adopting the zero tolerance policy, Ciavarella was acting in an administrative capacity, and acts such as that which involve “supervising court employees and overseeing the efficient operation of a court- may have been quite important in providing the necessary conditions of a sound adjudicative system. The decision[ ] at issue, however, [was] not [itself] judicial or adjudicative.” Forrester, 484 U.S. at 229, 108 S. Ct. 538. Because Ciavarella’s enactment and expansion of the zero tolerance policy were non-judicial acts, judicial immunity does not shield this conduct. 

c. Additional Out-of-Court Actions
Finally, Ciavarella is not sheltered from liability for his out-of-court conduct that was not judicial in nature. Ciavarella initiated the plan by approaching Conahan and suggesting that they bring together a team that had the financial ability to construct a new detention facility. (Plfs.’ SMF, ¶¶ 23-26.) Ciavarella also connected Powell and Mericle. (Id. at ¶ 26.)  Ciavarella’s failure to disclose the payments he received from Mericle and Vision Holdings also furthered the conspiracy. Specifically, Ciavarella took steps to conceal the more than $2,700,000 he and Conahan received from Mericle and Powell starting in 2003. (Id. at ¶ 66.)  Indeed, Ciavarella sought to conceal the payments because knew that it would not look good that he was receiving payments from Powell while sending juveniles to his detention facility. (Id. at ¶ 67.) In that regard, Ciavarella instructed Mericle where to send the second and third payments. (Id. at ¶ 58.) This out-of-court conduct was not judicial in nature, and, as such, is not protected by judicial immunity.

4. Causation
Lastly, Plaintiffs must establish that Ciavarella “caused the complained of injury.” Elmore, 399 F.3d at 281. I previously indicated that the “setting in motion” theory of causation would be applied to individual Defendants in this case. See Wallace, 2012 WL 2590150, at *11. This standard provides:
“”A person ‘subjects’ another to the deprivation of a constitutional right, within the meaning of § 1983, if [that person] does an affirmative act, participates in another’s affirmative acts, or omits to perform an act which [that person] is legally required to do that causes the deprivation of which complaint is made. Indeed, the requisite causal connection can be established not only by some kind of direct personal participation in the deprivation, but also by setting in motion a series of acts by others which the actor knows or reasonably should know would cause others to inflict the constitutional injury.”"
The undisputed facts establish that Ciavarella caused the violation of Plaintiffs’ right to an impartial tribunal through the receipt and concealment, by himself and Conahan, of payments from and through other Defendants. In particular, Ciavarella knew he had a duty to disclose information relevant to his ability to engage in impartial decision-making, that he violated that duty, and that he never informed any juveniles that he was receiving payments from PACC, WPACC, or Powell. (Plfs.’ SMF, ¶¶ 69-70.) The undisputed facts conclusively establish that Ciavarella knew that, as a result of his conduct, Plaintiffs would be deprived of their right to appear before an impartial tribunal.
Ciavarella’s role in closing the River Street facility set the conspiracy in motion.
Significantly, knowing that he stood to profit from the completion of the PACC facility, Ciavarella took steps to close the old facility and ensure that it would not re-open, resulting in PACC being the only detention facility in Luzerne County where a child could be detained. (Id. at ¶¶ 38-42, 73-77.) Yet, despite his financial stake in closing the River Street facility, he never disclosed this interest. (Id. at ¶¶ 44, 69-72.) Thus, the undisputed material facts establish that Ciavarella knew, or he should have known, that his role in the closure of the River Street facility and his concealment of his interest in its closure (and the resulting opening of the PACC facility while he served as judge of the juvenile court) would deprive Plaintiffs of an impartial tribunal.
The zero tolerance policy adopted by Ciavarella also furthered the conspiracy and caused the deprivation of Plaintiffs’ right to an impartial tribunal. In 2003 when Ciavarella knew he had a financial interest in PACC, he expanded the zero tolerance policy, which increased the number of juveniles that would appear before him and be detained. As a result of the expansion of this policy, more juveniles appeared before him and were subject to adjudication by a biased tribunal. And, as detailed above, Ciavarella’s out-of-court conduct which set the conspiracy in motion, and which concealed the existence and the nature of the conspiracy, as well as the corresponding payments, all furthered the goals of the conspiracy. As the undisputed facts establish that Ciavarella knew or should have known that, as a result of his out-of-court conduct, Plaintiffs would not appear before an impartial tribunal when they were in his courtroom, the causation element of Plaintiffs’ § 1983 impartial tribunal claims against Ciavarella is satisfied.
Therefore, for Ciavarella’s conduct which is not protected by judicial immunity, i.e., his non-judicial acts, Ciavarella is liable to Plaintiffs on their § 1983 impartial tribunal claims. In particular, Ciavarella’s non-judicial acts detailed above set in motion and/or caused the deprivation of Plaintiffs’ right to an impartial tribunal as he initiated the scheme to construct a new detention facility, he assisted in closing the River Street facility, and he expanded a policy which increased the number of juveniles that appeared before him. And, these acts were all taken without Ciavarella ever disclosing, and, in fact, while he took affirmative steps to conceal his financial interest in the success of PACC and WPACC. Accordingly, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, Ciavarella subjected Plaintiffs to a deprivation of their constitutional right to an impartial tribunal. For the conduct which Ciavarella is not shielded by judicial immunity, he is liable to Plaintiffs on their § 1983 impartial tribunal claims.

Family Court Implications


Judge Caputo’s decision is a significant development for parents and children victims of Family Court.  First, it clarifies the existing law that out-of-court actions by a judge are not protected by judicial immunity.  This was pre-existing law, but in some cases has been challenged by those asserting immunity, especially where an in-court act is involved in the chain of causation or pieces of the conspiracy leading to injury. Parents should examine closely their family court judges out-of-court activities such as bar association meetings, business dealings, political activity, and other behavior not conducted inside the courtroom, but which may impact judicial behavior nonetheless.

Administrative and Policy-Making Decisions Not Immune


Second, the decision clarifies that administrative “supervisory” and “policy-making” acts by a judge, even those deemed essential to operation of the court, are administrative, and not judicial, and therefore not entitled to absolute judicial immunity.  Administrative actions include oversight of other justice system officials such as court administrative staff or law enforcement, and may include direct “supervisory” oversight such as instructing law enforcement or staff, or from policy-making roles such as setting rules for how staff or employees treat litigants.  In the Ciavarella case, this included direct oversight of juvenile system probation officers and detention facility personnel, and setting a “zero tolerance” policy for law enforcement apprehending juvenile offenders assuring that more offenders would end up in court.
In the family court context, judicial officers have many such roles, including overseeing law enforcement for illegal “pro-arrest” or “zero tolerance removal” policies in domestic violence cases, equal protection violations against domestic couples, families, or a gender, guiding attorneys and custody evaluators in how to manage litigants, and guidance over the “forensic psychologists”, supervisors, and other court-related personnel who, though “essential” to the business of the court, are not judicial officers.  Because these functions are administrative, the judge’s role in them is not protected by judicial immunity.  Social workers, too, will not be shielded from such liability.
Parents should be suspicious of any statement by an attorney, supervisor, social worker, child services worker, court staff, law-enforcement, or other government official claiming to act under a “policy,” judicial instruction, or “that’s how we do things in Family Court.”  Such “policies”, if not consistent with valid law, may be illegal, and may give rise to a judicial or other government official’s liability.  Judicial officers (or any other government official’s) role in enacting such “policies” are not protected by judicial immunity.

Judges Liable for In-Court Injury


Perhaps most earth-shaking, the Pennsylvania District Court explicitly found Judge Ciavarella liable for acts outside his courtroom which “set in motion” acts inside his courtroom which caused deprivation of civil rights.  Some have argued that acts by a judge outside the courtroom are protected by immunity when the “direct act” causing the constitutional injury occurs inside the courtroom—such as a judge’s depriving juveniles of a fair trial.
“This decision establishes that reasoning is wrong.”  Says Stuart.  ”Judge Caputo held that a judge performing a non-judicial act outside the courtroom which “sets in motion” a judicial act causing injury inside the courtroom is not protected simply because the second act occurred inside the courtroom.”   California families in Family Court often face similar scenarios, though they or their attorneys may not be aware of it.  Family Court judges, like judge Ciavarella, regularly establish policies and practices outside of courtrooms which cause injury inside the courtroom.  This ruling makes clear that the judge may still be liable for those “outside the courtroom” illegal acts “setting in motion” judicial acts inside the courtroom.  The Pennsylvania court relied on a recent case from the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals which has jurisdiction over California State Court judicial officers, making the case directly relevant to California state court judges.
A judge engaging in “out-of-court” activities that would impact his impartiality, breach duties of disclosure and create conflicts of interest may be subject to liability if those acts lead to injury inside the courtroom.  Policies relating to use of unqualified, biased, or unethical custody evaluators, guardians, or other experts fall into this category.  Even activity which would otherwise be legal—such as business dealings, professional activities with attorneys, activities on rule or lawmaking bodies, or other indirectly related legal, professional, or business activity—may be problematic in the context of a judge’s duties under the judicial code of ethics, fiduciary duties, oaths of office, or constitutional restrictions on judicial behavior.  If such activity leads to in-court injury, the judge may face liability even though the litigant’s harm was inflicted in court.
“This is huge.” says Stuart.  ”Judges previously thought themselves insulated from all liability so long as the injury occurred inside the courtroom. That’s no longer a safe bet.”
California Coalition’s DDICE RICO lawsuit engages several family court judges on precisely these theories.  “The case is a vindication of what we’ve been telling parents, judges, and family law attorneys all along—illegal acts are illegal no matter where they occur or who performs them.  Judge Caputo’s decision makes it clear that such acts are not shielded by immunity just because they cause injury inside a courtroom.  A judge, social worker, psychologist, attorney—all may be held liable civilly as well as criminally for their illegal acts outside of court leading to injury anywhere” says Stuart.
California Coalition filed its First Amended Complaint on similar theories on January 9, 2014.  A Case Management Conference is scheduled for February 26, 2014 in United States District Court for the Southern District of California.
Complete Story, including analysis of Judge Caputo’s January 9, 2014 Memorandum, at WeightierMatter.com.
Re-blogged/Comments from Croixsdadsblog.wordpress.com. 

Povestea înrobirii tale (RO) | The Story of Your Enslavement





Putem fi ţinuţi captivi doar în cuştile pe care nu vedem. O scurtă istorie a înrobirii umane - până la şi inclusiv dumneavoastră. De la Freedomain Radio, cea mai mare şi răspândită conversaţie filozofică din lume. (www.freedomainradio.com)

Sursa: http://www.fdrurl.com/slavestory
Subtitrare: lukasig.com

This is the story of your enslavement; how it came to be, and you can finally be free.


Like all animals, human beings want to dominate and exploit the resources around them.


At first, we mostly hunted and fished and ate off the land - but then 
something magical and terrible happened to our minds.


We became, alone among the animals, afraid of death, and of future loss.


And this was the start of a great tragedy, and an even greater possibility...


You see, when we became afraid of death, of injury, and imprisonment, 
we became controllable -- 
and so valuable -- in a way that no other resource could ever be.


The greatest resource for any human being to control is not natural resources, 
or tools, or animals or land -- but other human beings.


You can frighten an animal, because animals are afraid of pain in the moment, but you 
cannot frighten an animal with a loss of liberty, or with torture or imprisonment in the future, 
because animals have very little sense of tomorrow.


You cannot threaten a cow with torture, or a sheep with death. 
You cannot swing a sword at a tree and scream at it to produce more fruit, 
or hold a burning torch to a field and demand more wheat.


You cannot get more eggs by threatening a hen - but you can get a man 
to give you his eggs by threatening him.


Human farming has been the most profitable -- and destructive -- 
occupation throughout history, and it is now reaching its destructive climax.


Human society cannot be rationally understood until it is seen for what it is: 
a series of farms where human farmers own human livestock. 


Some people get confused because governments 
provide healthcare and water and education and roads, 
and thus imagine that there is some benevolence at work.


Nothing could be further from reality.


Farmers provide healthcare and irrigation and training to their livestock.


Some people get confused because we are allowed certain liberties, and thus imagine 
that our government protects our freedoms.


But farmers plant their crops a certain distance apart to increase their yields -- and will allow 
certain animals larger stalls or fields if it means they will produce more meat and milk.


In your country, your tax farm, your farmer grants you certain freedoms not because he cares 
about your liberties, but because he wants to increase his profits.


Are you beginning to see the nature of the cage you were born into?


There have been four major phases of human farming.


The first phase, in ancient Egypt, was direct and brutal human compulsion. 
Human bodies were controlled, but the creative productivity of the human mind 
remained outside the reach of the whip and the brand and the shackles. 
Slaves remained woefully under-productive and required enormous resources 
to control.


The second phase was the Roman model, wherein slaves were granted 
some capacity for freedom, ingenuity and creativity, which raised their productivity. 
This increased the wealth of Rome, and thus 
the tax income of the Roman government - and with this additional wealth, 
Rome became an empire, 
destroying the economic freedoms that fed its power, and collapsed.


I'm sure that this does not seem entirely unfamiliar.


After the collapse of Rome, the feudal model introduced the concept of livestock 
ownership and taxation. Instead of being directly owned, peasants farmed land 
that they could retain 
as long as they paid off the local warlords. This model broke down due to the 
continual subdivision of productive land, and was destroyed during the 
Enclosure movement, when land was consolidated, and 
hundreds of thousands of peasants were kicked off their ancestral lands, 
because new farming techniques made 
larger farms more productive with fewer people.


The increased productivity of the late Middle Ages created the excess food required 
for the expansion of towns and cities, which in turn gave rise 
to the modern Democratic model of human ownership.


As displaced peasants flooded into the cities, a huge stock of cheap human capital 
became available to the rising industrialists - and the ruling class of human farmers 
quickly realized that they could make more money by letting their livestock 
choose their own occupations.


Under the Democratic model, direct slave ownership has been replaced 
by the Mafia model.  The Mafia rarely owns businesses directly, but rather sends 
thugs around once a month to steal from the business "owners."


You are now allowed to choose your own occupation, which raises your productivity - 
and thus the taxes you can pay to your masters.


Your few freedoms are preserved because they are profitable to your owners.


The great challenge of the Democratic model is that increases in wealth and freedom 
threaten the farmers.  The ruling classes initially profit from a relatively free market 
in capital and labor, but as their livestock become more used to their freedoms and 
growing wealth, they begin to question why they need rulers at all.


Ah well. Nobody ever said that human farming was easy.


Keeping the tax livestock securely in the compounds of the ruling classes 
is a three phase process.


The first is to indoctrinate the young through government "education." 
As the wealth of democratic countries grew, government schools were universally 
inflicted in order to control the thoughts and souls of the livestock.


The second is to turn citizens against each other through 
the creation of dependent livestock.


It is very difficult to rule human beings directly through force -- 
and where it can be achieved, it remains cripplingly under-productive, 
as can be seen in North Korea.  Humans do not breed well 
or produce efficiently in direct captivity. 


If human beings believe that they are free, then they will produce much more 
for their farmers. The best way to maintain this illusion of freedom is to put some 
of the livestock on the payroll of the farmer. Those cows that become dependent 
on the existing hierarchy will then attack any other cows who point out the violence, 
hypocrisy and immorality of human ownership.


Freedom is slavery, and slavery is freedom.


If you can get the cows to attack each other whenever anybody brings up the reality 
of their situation, then you don't have to spend nearly as much controlling them directly.


Those cows who become dependent upon the stolen largess of the farmer 
will violently oppose any questioning of the virtue of human ownership -- and the 
intellectual and artistic classes, always and forever dependent 
upon the farmers -- will say, to anyone who demands freedom from ownership: 
"You will harm your fellow cows."


The livestock are kept enclosed by shifting the moral responsibility 
for the destructiveness of a violent system to those who demand real freedom.


The third phase is to invent continual external threats, so that the frightened 
livestock cling to the "protection" of the farmers.


This system of human farming is now nearing its end.


The terrible tragedy of the modern American system has occurred 
not in spite of, but because of past economic freedoms.


The massive increases in American wealth throughout the 19th century 
resulted from economic freedom -- and it was this very increase in wealth 
that fed the size and power of the state.


Whenever the livestock become exponentially more productive, you get 
a corresponding increase in the number of farmers and their dependents.


The growth of the state is always proportional to the preceding 
economic freedoms.


Economic freedoms create wealth, and the wealth attracts more thieves 
and political parasites, whose greed then destroys the economic freedoms.


In other words, freedom metastasizes the cancer of the state.


The government that starts off the smallest will always end up the largest.


This is why there can be no viable and sustainable alternative 
to a truly free and peaceful society.



A society without political rulers, without human ownership, 
without the violence of taxation and statism...



To be truly free is both very easy, and very hard.


We avoid the horror of our enslavement because it is painful to see it directly.



We dance around the violence of our dying system 
because we fear the attacks of our fellow livestock.


But we can only be kept in the cages we refuse to see.


Wake up...



To see the farm is to leave it.

Mellow gets 16 months - opinion piece by Nobody

Mellow gets 16 months
Nobody (Guru)2012-12-02 14:03:06


RE: Mellow gets 16 months
Booger Brown wrote: "In case you didn't notice by the 200 letters and the big shots who still think Mellow was a "great guy who brought a lot of money to the area..."

In my opinion, those 200 letters by 200 people represent 200 people who placed gain over morals- the end apparently justifes the means. That, in itself, is a sad

comment on the moral standards set by those who are in a position to do more.

As I often do, I quote the letter of George Baer, representing the coal barrons in the Anthracite strike of 1902- The letter captures the fiber of the people

who have a hold on this area and it goes a long way to explain why they believe they must rule. I firmly believe People like Mellow believe their right to their

positions come directly from their God and anything they do is in his name- and therefor above mere mortal laws.

"The rights and interests of the laboring man will be protected and cared for -- not by the labor agitators, but by the Christian men of property to whom God has given control of the property rights of the country, and upon the successful management of which so much depends."

Somewhere within this twisted morality is the fact that "the rights and interests of the laboring man" are not "protected and cared for"- but rather abrogated in favor
of the rights and interests of those "Christian men of property."

Let me add one thought that is a slap in the face to every taxpayer- Mellow did not bring one cent to the area that was not taxpayer dollars. Politics is done by

trading support of another's project for support of yours. In other words, the project that uses resourses most appropriately may not be funded but a project that

has no value can be fully funded, because of a handshake. That is the morality that we celebrate by naming bridges and buildings after these weasels.

I am frustrated when a public official is credited for "saving" businesses, "creating" jobs or "solving problems" with tax money. It's our money, not his. Except for the
money he gained from renting himself space from the building he owned. That's all his now.
________________
"When they came for me, there was no one left to speak out." -Pastor Martin Niemöller http://nobodyscorner.blogspot.com

by:  Nobody@ http://ScrantonPoliticalTimes.com

For the entire file of letters in PDF form, one may download by clicking here. (long link @ https://dl.dropbox.com/u/73419741/Mellow_1212.pdf )  Size: 8.62 MB

SCRANTON'S BRAIN DRAIN

POVERTY CRISIS CONTRIBUTORS
"IT'S AS IF HIGH ACHIEVEMENT CONCEPT IS WHITE NOISE." 

Disgruntled Teacher (Veteran Member)2012-11-03 02:01:16

"All politics is local."
Tip O'Neill, Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives
1977 - 1987

Local politics is killing us in Scranton - not national politics.  Everything negative that we've become over the past twenty years, including unemployed, can be attributed directly to short sighted, and inept political leadership.    This failure of local political leadership is most evident on the Scranton School Board.    The SSD's short comings and failures have been highly publicized over the years.    The end result is:  the SSD has become a low-achieving public school district.   This condition is unacceptable because the only natural resource we have left around here that can be developed is our people.  And yet, according to the recently published Brookings Institute report, we don't have many highly educated people living here at all.   That's the case because there are no jobs in Scranton that require any special technical skills or a college degree.   We invest nearly 120 million dollars annually in our public school system...  for what?

To put it in perspective; there has been over 1000 dropouts from the Scranton School District since the new high school was built.  On the other hand, and I think it not unreasonable to assume - that there has been an equal number of students who finished at the top of their class in the district over that same time period.  But once this second group acquired marketable skills or a degree - they left the area (brain drain).    The dropouts stay.   What else are the skill-less to do?   Some will compete for scarce low paying service industry jobs.  Many more will rely on social services and government assistance for their day-to-day existence.  Additionally these unskilled SSD dropouts that stay are procreating.   And now, it's their children who are entering the public school system today.  The failure of the SSD is becoming generational.   The public school system was developed to be combat poverty, not contribute to it.  The SSD is fast becoming a major contributor to Scranton's poverty crisis.
 The district has high achievers..  the problem is, the SSD just doesn't produce enough of them to attract  any real industry to our region.. see Brookings Report.

Sondra Meyers, a senior fellow for International, Civic and Cultural Projects at the U of S was an OP-ED guest columnist in the TT (Scranton Times-Tribune) this summer and she discussed the tiny island nation of Taiwan in her article.   She reported that the country - lacking large deposits of natural resources; invests a substantial amount of its budget on education.   Not surprisingly, Taiwan is near the top of the list in student achievement world-wide, and Taiwan is not far behind number one in high achievement, Finland.  Both country's have strong economies in part because they cultivate their richest resource - their people.  They're smart about education in those countries too.  They're innovative.  They quickly disregard what doesn't work, and improve on the things that do.  You will never witness anything like that happening in the SSD.  Never..  ever...

The biggest failure of the SSD political leadership is that they've never pursued a high achievement agenda.  They never even mention the words.   It's as if the high achievement concept is white noise.   The political leadership can't wrap its head around it.   For example:  The SSD never applied for the federal government Race To The Top high achievement initiative grant money worth millions of dollars.   They did not apply for the grant contest in part, because, it would require setting a high achievement agenda.  The political leadership on the school board dosen't believe high achievement is possible citing the high student poverty level as the reason.   At that narrow minded dismissal of the problem the conversation ends.

Further evidence of their failure is the pending privatization of an alternative school being planned for the large "at risk" student population the SSD has.  The district has failed these kids, and is now set to farm out to a private, for-profit entity, the job these politicians could not do.  That says a lot about what we are as a city.  We really don't give a rat's ass about education.  Therefore, why the hell would industry leaders ever consider locating to Scranton?  They won't..  Would you?   The achievement level of the local school district is one of the first things they look at.   That has got to be a hard sell for Austin Burke.

That reminds me of the president's visit to Scranton High School last spring.   You know he checked on the SSD's achievement numbers before he arrived to possibly give the political leadership an Attaboy! if the numbers looked good.    I wonder how the conversation went between the U.S. President and the school board president.   "Nice building you have here, Bob."  

There has been an abundance of data available over the past decade foreshadowing what was to come.  If interpreted and used correctly; it could have helped develop long term high achievement education policies.  But for that to have happened in Scranton, it would have required the political leadership to connect the dots.   Unfortunately for us, all of our dot connectors moved to where the skilled jobs are.   The end result being that broad-minded, forward thinking political leadership is in very short supply in this city.

The high unemployment has been with us since 2008, and it is here to stay.  The employment outlook will never improve unless the Scranton School District becomes the number one high achieving public school system in Northeast PA. 

There is great opportunity in Scranton politics for a young person with a good head on their shoulders looking to make a name for them-self.  The challenge here is to turn the Scranton School District into a high-achieving public school system.    That type of political leadership can vault a career-minded politician right out of this local political cesspool, right onto the state or national stage.

It's amusing to watch all the local political hacks attempt to advance their political careers beyond the valley, only to fail miserable.  They fail because they can't connect the dots.  They fail to think the unemployment problem through.   They can all tell you the area needs family sustaining jobs.   But they don't see that the only local taxing body of the three in Scranton, that has any real control over its outcomes is the public school system.     A high achieving public school system is our only real shot at improving our local economy.  And it has to be the Scranton School District.

 As Scranton goes, so goes the valley.

Sorry about the length of this post folks.
DT


MaMa Bear (Guru)2012-11-03 05:27:13

Educated children might start asking questions... The smart ones have to move.


Disgruntled Teacher (Veteran Member)2012-11-03 07:46:00

The U.S. Secretary of Education said we need to educate our way to a better economy.   The Race to the Top grant program was designed to stimulate innovation on the local level to improve our schools.   Great public schools are the core of a sustainable and strong local economy.   It's time to try the education approach to combat high unemployment and poverty.  If they fix the failing Scranton Public School System, all the other socioeconomic problems will start to improve dramatically.  The education approach will work far more effectively.  Twenty years of failed recovery plans says a lot about the what doesn't work.   But.. The definition of insanity is...   The phrase holds true for the way the SSD is managed as well.