Monthly Archives: September 2008

Sept. 30

Sept. 30 marks the end of the second filing period ahead of the November 4 election. Absentee ballots will be sent out next week, and smart strategists say you’ve got to get your first mail piece out right after the absentees drop — about 15 percent of absentee voters fill out their ballots and send them back in right away, so you want to get to that 15 percent quick! It’s important to go into the last month of the campaign in a strong position, cash-wise. Treasurer Tim is still totaling up the numbers, but I think we’re looking good. And hey, you can still donate!!
No rest for the weary! Almost every morning I am leafleting at schools or transit hubs – today I was at Dianne Feinstein Elementary and West Portal Elementary. Parents at all the schools seem very surprised and pleased to meet a school board candidate. Join my email list to find out when I’ll be at your school!
Endorsement news: I’m very pleased to announce that I received the endorsement of the African American Democratic Club this evening. I enjoyed talking politics with members of the club in the New Chicago Barbershop #3 tonight and I’m proud to have received their endorsement.

A conversation with Senior Dad

Podcaster Senior Dad (AKA public school parent Stan Goldberg) has been posting in-depth interviews with all of the candidates for the Board of Education this year. He’s done a true service for San Francisco voters in conducting and editing each hour-long interview and deserves our thanks. Here’s the interview he did with me. The rest of the interviews can be found here.

Meet the parents

Sandra Tsing-Loh is one of my favorite education commentators, because she’s a battle-tested L.A. public school mom and she tells it like it is. With humor. This weekend she had a great column in the Washington Post, posing as a letter to the next President. An excerpt:

Come January, when the election frenzy is over and it’s time to fix (again) our endlessly collapsing U.S. public education system, I can already see who’ll be sitting around that West Wing conference table helping you craft your policies (aka, calculate the flow of dollars): the usual passel of political appointees, lifer administrators, think-tank policy wonks bearing white papers funded by the Gates Foundation, rock-and-rolly inner-city charter school innovators and the “social entrepreneurs.” No actual public school parents like myself will have the remotest input.

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The two-minute speech

One of the things about all the candidate forums and endorsement meetings I’ve been doing is that you’ve got to cut to the chase. Most organizations give you just two minutes to sell your candidacy. If you’re not done with your pitch, sorry — the buzzer rings or the timekeeper waves a “STOP” card and you are shown the door. Here’s my two-minute pitch, roughly word-for-word:

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What everyone’s wearing this season

Buttons are on the way! And since red is the fashion color this year, you’ll be right in style with your Rachel Norton accessories!
In other news, a big THANK YOU to the Alice B. Toklas LGBT Democratic Club for giving my campaign their endorsement last night.

CTA “Day of Action”


Today the California Teachers’ Association organized a “Day of Action” to draw attention to the budget stalemate and its effects on schools. Teachers and parents in San Francisco public schools came to Argonne to participate in a protest. ABC-7 news was there!

A public school success story

My friend Leslie Kirk Campbell, a Miraloma parent and fabulous writer, has written an amazingly personal essay about her experiences at Miraloma, and the incredible things that happen when parents, teachers and a strong principal work together in a school community. An excerpt:

In those first two years at Miraloma, I volunteered in the classroom, initiated school-wide programs and attended countless meetings, but at the end of the day, I would go home and weep. There was no P.E. teacher and no librarian. Hardscrabble class management rarely seemed to result in an environment conducive to learning. The principal, a tall, large-boned woman, was constantly tilting down the hall like Mother Superior in the “Madeline” stories to quell some new trouble.

It is at this critical juncture, if not before, that many college-educated urbanites escape to the suburbs or hock everything they own to put their children in private schools. But there is another, crazier idea: stay. My husband and I had no desire to abandon the city we love or its diverse population. Together with parents like ourselves who had multiple skills and flexible work schedules, we dug in our heels. I kept my job but I chose to give up much of the rest of my life – a labor of love that may not be for everyone. I made a commitment to changing Miraloma into the school I wanted it to be, a school where my child – and every child – might flourish.

Leslie’s wonderful essay is here.