Gerald Bracey's Last Column: The Skeleton in Arne Duncan's Closet

by: Paul Rosenberg

Sun Dec 13, 2009 at 14:00


During the years (2001 - 2008) that Arne Duncan was CEO of Chicago's public schools, he implemented programs that resulted in the firing of hundreds of veteran teachers and the privatization of more than 70 public schools, mostly through controversial charter school programs. Duncan's years saw the most massive privatization of public school assets in the 175-year history of public education in Chicago. One of the smaller examples of that, was Duncan's decision to out source the work of trained physical education and health education teachers to the "Save-A-Life Foundation." Subsequent investigations showed that Save-A-Life was fraudulent, but Duncan made no effort, following the revelations regarding the foundation, to retrieve the public money he had authorized be paid to Save-A-Life. Substance photo by George N. Schmidt.Jerry Bracey--America's lead progressive expert/voice on education--had just finished this column when he died on Oct. 20. (Open Left memorial diary here.) He had planned to release it at his Huffington Post blog on Halloween. Hence the rattling skeletons theme. It has published previously by Susan Ohanian and Substance News, and is republished here with permission.
Halloween season is an appropriate time to talk about rattling skeletons in the closet. US Secretary of Education Arne Duncan appears to have a noisy one dating from his years running the Chicago Public Schools.

Her name is Carol J. Spizzirri.

A little background. Spizzirri is a convicted shoplifter. According to a sworn affidavit by her ex-husband, a court ordered psychological evaluation diagnosed her as a paranoid schizophrenic and pathological liar. Spizzirri claimed to be a registered nurse and a renal specialist. Her alma mater, now defunct, denied giving her an RN and reportedly she has never been a registered nurse in either Wisconsin or Illinois, as she had claimed. One of her daughters filed a protective order against her because of alleged abuse.

This same daughter died in a car crash in 1992 after which Spizzirri started the nonprofit Save-a-Life Foundation (SALF) whose charter was to teach first aid skills like CPR and the Heimlich maneuver to school children using EMTs and firemen as in-class trainers. According to Spizzirri, her daughter was the victim of a hit-and-run driver and bled to death because the ambulance took a half hour to reach the scene and no one at the scene knew how to stanch the flow of blood. Spizzirri claimed her mother's grief motivated her to start the foundation which attracted political and financial support, including about $9 million in IL state and federal dollars. Famed doctors Peter Safar (who developed CPR) and Henry J. Heimlich (known for the maneuver) served on SALF's medical advisory board.

But official records indicate that the daughter's alcohol level was twice the legal limit, that she flipped the car, and died a half hour after reaching a hospital. Confronted with these facts by Chicago TV investigative reporter Chuck Goudie in 2006, Spizzirri terminated the interview and stomped off the set. Over the next year, Goudie did another three reports raising more questions about SALF.

Those stories appear to have been the first time a Chicago reporter did any fact checking about the foundation. For instance, in an uncritical 2002 Sun-Times article, Spizzirri claimed that her foundation trained 400,000 Illinois school children in 2001 alone. Do the math. In a 180-day school year, that's 2,222 children per day.

Paul Rosenberg :: Gerald Bracey's Last Column: The Skeleton in Arne Duncan's Closet


Save-A-Life Foundation's Carol Spizziri (center) poses with Chicago Schools Chief Executive Officer Arne Duncan (right) and Ronald McDonald (left) in a photograph used by the Save-A-Life Foundation for publicity. Duncan, as a cartoon character, also appeared in a Save-A-Life promotional before the foundation was exposed as a fraud. After the expose on Spizziri and Save-A-Life, Duncan took no action to retrieve Chicago public education funds that he had authorized to the foundation, and CPS records show no activity by Duncan to investigate how CPS spent tens of thousands of dollars on the Save-A-Life programs.
During his years as CPS big dog, Arne Duncan was apparently close to Spizzirri. He was a featured speaker at a 2003 SALF conference and a 2006 press statement has him receiving a SALF "Sponsorship Award" from Spizzirri, his second such prize. Duncan is quoted saying, "Carol is one of my heroes. I really appreciate the partnership." Duncan even appeared as an animated pitchman on SALF's website, cheerily hyping kids on the program: "Hi, friend, I'm Arne Duncan ... Ask your school teacher today if the 'SALF-Town' heroes can visit you!"

Before she huffed out of the interview with Chuck Goudie, Spizzirri said SALF trained 67,000 Chicago Public School (CPS) children in first aid the year before and that the training was free to the children. In fact, records show that CPS paid the foundation a considerable amount.

After Goudie's reports, Spizzirri filed a defamation suit against three people who criticized SALF (including Dr. Heimlich's son), claiming the criticisms cost it 11 contracts, including CPS. But the lawsuit resulted in only more scrutiny. For example, in response to a subpoena from the defendants' lawyer for all their SALF records, CPS produced a grand total of 19 invoices from 2000-2007 totaling $12,855.

Three more invoices from 2004/2005 -- which CPS failed to provide to the defendants' attorney -- have since turned up via a public records request. The first 19 invoices produced by the subpoena appear to have gone through regular CPS payroll. But the three later invoices, totaling $49,000, were processed and signed off by CEO Arne Duncan's office. One includes this handwritten notation: "per AD per Ann Whalen 9-14-05." Whalen was Duncan's personal assistant. She now works for him in Washington.

The $49,000 was for "training elementary school students in life supporting first aid skills which will take place in approximately 15 schools with approximately 2,400 students." But the subpoena to CPS didn't produce any records showing the training ever happened.

What about all those CPS students allegedly trained by SALF? If you train 67,000 children in a single year and there are, let's say, 25 children per session, that's 2,680 sessions, 15 per day if evenly distributed across a 180-day school year. As any overworked administrator can testify, that's likely to produce a mountain of paper work -- work orders, reports, employment records, evaluations, etc. Twenty-two invoices over a seven year period do not a mountain make.

On July 9, a federal judge in Chicago granted SALF's request for voluntary dismissal and the lawsuit was dropped. A few months later, SALF filed dissolution papers with the Illinois Secretary of State's Office. But questions remain about the organization's 16-year history, their funding, and their relationships with powerful public officials -- including Arne Duncan.

Why did CPS pay SALF over $60,000 for a "free" program? What happened to the more than $1,000,000 SALF received from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for one year (there were other CDC contracts)? What about the millions SALF received from Illinois taxpayers? In the case of the Illinois State Board of Education, it's a guessing game. ISBE's complete records consist of a form showing a disbursement of $600,000 to SALF -- no application, no review, no evaluation, no nothin'.

According to an Oct. 11 Chicago Tribune article, "(Spizzirri) estimates 2 million children took the classes, many of them from the Chicago Public Schools ... City school officials did not respond to inquiries about how many students received emergency training"

Looks like this tale is so spooky that CPS won't even talk about it to a Trib reporter. But the public may feel entitled to know whether their money went for tricks or treats. For example, the $60,000+ CPS gave SALF was apparently spent on first aid training for hundreds of thousands of ghosts. I'd say it's time to knock on the door of someone who can get to the bottom of this money mystery. He lives in that big house down at the end of the street, the one marked, "Secretary of Education."

Copyright 2009, Gerald W. Bracey, All rights reserved


Tags: , , , (All Tags)
Print Friendly View Send As Email
Sounds like (0.00 / 0)
Arne's got some 'splainin' to do.

Save Our Schools! March & National Call to Action, July 28-31, 2011 in Washington, DC: http://www.saveourschoolsmarch...

Preferably BEFORE he starts his privatization education scheme n/t (0.00 / 0)


[ Parent ]
Which he hasn't done. (0.00 / 0)
All he has so far is "Race to the Top", which is not well thought-out.

[ Parent ]
I've known the Substance people (4.00 / 5)
like George N. Schmidt for about 35 years, though not real well.  I probably haven't seen George in about 25.  But he and they have been on this beat for a long time.  

I remember sitting in a bar with him, listening to him dish the real goods on one Marva Collins, the early eighties' anointed media hero of education.  They exposed her school "miracle" as a hoax back then, and for awhile the media portrayed it as such, but the right wing was ascendant and was invested in iconifying her as a poster child for all their educational BS - and the winners write the history.

If you Google "Marva Collins" you'll find all the hagiography.  There was even a movie made about here starring no less of a leftist than Ed Asner, who was a Democratic Socialist.  Wikipedia repeats the hagiography without even mentioning it's controversial.  If you Google "Marva Collins hoax" you'll see some of the more critical materials, but it's mostly not available online.

Daley, Duncan, and Obama have given up and bought into the education miracle crap.  It fits right into the whole Oprah "positive thinking" garbage.  Would be very nice to lift the lid on this Pandora's box, but probably very difficult to do so.  Good luck!

sTiVo's rule: Just because YOU "wouldn't put it past 'em" doesn't prove that THEY did it.


Thanks For The Tip (0.00 / 0)
There's just so many facets to the rightwing education fraud it's virtually impossible to keep up.

"You know what they say -- those of us who fail history... doomed to repeat it in summer school." -- Buffy The Vampire Slayer, Season 6, Episode 3

[ Parent ]
That's the problem with these buried stories (4.00 / 3)
There are always bigger fish to fry and the big-time players always want to move on.  Clinton didn't make much effort to roll back anything of Reaganism and now Obama won't lift a finger to roll back much if anything of Bushism.

Schmidt was at one point well-enough-known to have run a credible, though losing campaign for the presidency of the Chicago Teachers' Union, in the Nineties, I believe.  He seems to have been fired in the past ten years for what sound like they may very well be trumped-up charges, though I've never heard about this before today and have not investigated.
I will vouch for his takedown of Collins.  He definitely had the goods on that matter.

It must suck to be him.  This is the kind of injustice that doesn't get remedied when people decide to "look forward rather than backward."

sTiVo's rule: Just because YOU "wouldn't put it past 'em" doesn't prove that THEY did it.


[ Parent ]
And another: Jeb Bush (0.00 / 0)
Reading First scam

Save Our Schools! March & National Call to Action, July 28-31, 2011 in Washington, DC: http://www.saveourschoolsmarch...

[ Parent ]
I've known some of the Substance folks too since the 70's (0.00 / 0)
and they are great people, certainly the first to try and bust the despicable Marva Collins bubble.  Substance News has been an invaluable source for what's really happening in public education for a long time now.  

George Schmidt got about 40% of the vote for presidency of CTU, the Chicago Teachers Union a few years ago, before he was fired and blacklisted.

"If you want that good feeling that comes from doing things for other people, then you have to pay for it in abuse and misunderstanding..."
Zora Neale Hurston


[ Parent ]
Thanks for the update Bruce. (0.00 / 0)
The fact is that Substance DID bust the despicable Marva Collins bubble, but right wing was strong enough to make its version prevail anyway - to the point that lame-O Democrats like Daley, Clinton, and, sadly, yes, Obama, aren't willing to challenge this orthodoxy.  It seems like it would take the equivalent of sorting through Kremlin archives to bring the truth to light - and at best you'd have a draw.

Still, this Collins material should be online somewhere.  If it was, someone would have a leg to stand on raising a question about the objectivity of the Collins Wikipedia article.  This seems to me to be not a useless endeavor in the ongoing fight to prevent the destruction of the American educational system.

sTiVo's rule: Just because YOU "wouldn't put it past 'em" doesn't prove that THEY did it.


[ Parent ]
Sounds like (0.00 / 0)
a good subject for a future diary on Open Left?

Save Our Schools! March & National Call to Action, July 28-31, 2011 in Washington, DC: http://www.saveourschoolsmarch...

[ Parent ]
USER MENU

Open Left Campaigns

SEARCH

   

Advanced Search

QUICK HITS
STATE BLOGS
Powered by: SoapBlox