Politics
Florida Hopes Second Time's a Charm in Race to the Top
Around the State
Gov. Charlie Crist enthralled Florida's teachers unions when he vetoed Senate Bill 6. Whether he impressed the Obama Administration remains to be seen.
The Florida Department of Education this week is preparing the state's second run for Race to the Top funding. The federal initiative will award $700 million in grants to states that implement education reforms.
Florida finished fourth in the initial phase of the competition; only the two top-ranked states -- Tennessee and Delaware -- received funding in that round.
With second-round submissions due in Washington June 1, Florida school districts have been asked to support the state's new application. As of Tuesday afternoon, 59 of 67 districts had signed on. More were expected to join during school board meetings last night. Tuesday was the state's deadline for districts to act.
A lack of consensus on teacher-compensation issues may have hampered Florida's first-round application. That simmering disagreement exploded in Tallahassee last month when teachers unions prevailed on Crist to veto Senate Bill 6.
SB 6, authored by state Sen. John Thrasher, R-Jacksonville, would have enacted several education reforms, including performance-based pay for teachers and the abolition of tenure for newly hired instructors.
After his veto, Crist convened a Race to the Top Working Group to marshal the state's second RTTT application.
Mark Pudlow, spokesman for the Florida Education Association, said the new version is "significantly" different.
"This agreement is voluntary for districts and unions, targets the lowest 5 percent of schools and guarantees bargaining collaboration for all new grant issues," Pudlow said.
He added, "It allows for incremental steps through beta testing, which is a system allowing for continuous improvement through ongoing evaluation, adjustment, and budget allocation with eventual roll-out to the entire school system as funding is available."
The new voluntary version calls for staff evaluations to be locally negotiated within the framework of 50 percent based on student achievement; 30 percent of which is based on state-approved tests and end-of-course exams and 20 percent based on locally defined criteria.
"The locally developed evaluation system should lead to the performance award and be phased in by the end of the grant period in 2014," Pudlow said.
Local teachers unions backed the revamped program in all but 12 counties where school boards voted support. Only five local unions supported the first-round submission.
Though the FEA vehemently opposed SB 6's more sweeping approach, reformers say Florida's grant chances won't improve if it is perceived that the state is watering down its efforts through narrow, voluntary participation.
They note that Tennessee and Delaware both incorporated performance-pay components similar to SB6 in their winning RTTT applications, and they point out that 60 Florida school districts signed onto the state's first application.
Indeed, Hillsborough County schools received a $100 million grant from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation for a performance-based compensation program that encompassed teachers and principals.
"It does essentially what Race to the Top would do, working hand in glove with the teachers union," said Sen. Steve Wise, R-Jacksonville.
In fact, several districts, including Hillsborough, already had performance-pay programs under a 1999 state statute authorizing such systems.
Critics of the performance-pay push say it's no coincidence that Georgia and Florida, which finished third and fourth and out of the money in the first round, failed to get union buy-in to their RTTT applications.
Then again, placing fourth in a national competition isn't exactly a poor showing. And U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan has challenged states to be bold in their approach to tightening teacher standards.

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