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Profit has a role in public schools

A version of this commentary was published in the Midland Daily News on Dec. 31, 2006

Fri., February 23, 2007

Is it wrong for a private company to earn a profit when it does business with a public school? Is it ever appropriate for a public school to contract with a private, profit-making company at all?

These questions or variations of them come up every time that a school board considers any form of privatization or "contracting out" — in part because the unions that represent school employees use them to raise objections. Unions oppose privatization even when they employ it themselves at their own headquarters.

Critics of privatization often make an issue of the fact that charter schools sometimes hire private management firms. In opposing this, one former state representative told an audience, "I don’t believe it’s appropriate for somebody to make a profit off of public education."

But if we follow the anti-profit premise to its logical conclusion, we would have to pass laws requiring public schools to hire only government-owned construction companies to build or renovate new buildings (fortunately, the government usually doesn’t run construction companies). Desks, chalk and pencils would have to be purchased from government-owned desk, chalk and pencil factories (fortunately, the government usually doesn’t run those either, except in places like North Korea). At lunch time, students would have to eat food that was grown on state-run collective farms and sold in government grocery stores by government employees.

Or, alternatively, we could pass laws that tell public schools it’s all right to buy these things from private companies, but only from those that lose money instead of earn it in the form we call "profit." It’s hard to imagine that school districts could find suppliers who would provide a good or a service at a loss. Not even the Michigan Education Association does that. In addition to the tens of millions of dollars it extracts in compulsory dues from its union members every year, the MEA’s monstrously expensive health insurance operation, MESSA, rakes in hundreds of millions more from taxpayers.

In fact, the MEA is not so much against profit as it is simply against somebody other than the MEA making any. In the MEA’s flagship publication, MEA President Luigi Battaglieri stated: "Private companies don’t care about our students or our communities. They are in the business for the money. They aim to turn a profit and that’s not in the best interest of public education." But the headline for the cover story in the very same publication read, "Adrian food service staff fight privatization by turning big profits for district."

Perhaps Mr. Battaglieri was unaware that the profits that private companies earn allow them and their employees to pay the taxes that keep him and the MEA in business.

The fact is that public schools have always relied on profit-making firms for just about everything. Maybe what’s needed in the public schools is more profit, not less. Think about it: Where is the crisis in public education these days? Is it in the quality or availability of desks, food or computers, or in other areas provided by the for-profit private sector? Do we have a national crisis in paper and pencils?

The education crisis that concerns Americans from coast to coast is not in these things. It’s in what happens in the classroom, the part that is delivered by government, regulated by legislatures, certified by government university education departments and supervised by district bureaucracies — the part that could benefit from the same choice, accountability and dynamism that make our relatively free, profit-driven economy the envy of the world.

A good number of politicians and bureaucrats don’t like profit, and that’s nothing new. They’ve been bad-mouthing and taxing it since the sun first came up in the east. For some like the MEA, it’s self-serving rhetoric. On the part of others, it represents neither deep thought nor study, but simply knee-jerk bias.

School districts should consider all options fully and objectively — including provision of goods and services by their own employees, by volunteers, by nonprofits and by for-profit firms. Schools aren’t supposed to be a public works employment scheme. They exist primarily for the benefit of the families who send their children to them. If a school board finds that it makes sense to contract out operations like custodial or busing services and put the savings to work for the kids, doing so ought to be a no-brainer. To waste time and money spreading myths and misconceptions about profits and private firms serves no one but selfish interests.

Lawrence W. Reed is president of the Mackinac Center for Public Policy, a research and educational organization headquartered in Midland, Mich.

Reader Comments

The MEA seems to be best at looking out for what is best for them. The premise that no company should make a profit off of public education is ludicrous. Public schools need to be able to spend their money in the most economically, cost-effective manner that will send as much money into their classrooms as possible. If that means contracting out custodial and food services, then so be it.

No clear-thinking American can say that less money should be spent on classroom materials, books, technology, etc. For some school districts the only possible way to spend more money in the classroom is to contract out services. I agree with Mr. Reed. Public schools have, and will continue to rely on for-profit companies in the day to day operations of every public school district. To change that would be creating a paradigm shift in public education that the public should not have to deal with.

The MEA, any union for that matter, needs to be clear on what their objective as a union should be. Is it to whine, pitch a fit, and waste time when something doesn't go their way. Or should the MEA and all other public school unions equip their members with the knowledge and support needed to create the best education a school district can provide? I think the answer is very clear.
- Jamie Hawkins, 5th grade teacher, Kingsley Middle School, Kingsley, Mich.

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User Comments
Since 2009, the EFM was allocated $500.5 million in stimulus funds. They tore down a High School and built a multi-million dollar Cass Tech, the structure alone costing $94 million. $45 million was spent for a safety program. $41 million was used to purchase a reading series not needed, $50 million was used to buy all new computers for staff and students. $1.6 million was used for administrative travel and all leadership positions recieved significant raises. The EFM in the first year gave himself a $86,000 raise, including resources from philanthropist contributions, his salalry was somewhere beyond $450,000. This is a leadership who spent more to rent and eventually buy five floors of the Fisher Bldg for office space, paying more than the owner paid for the entire building one year earlier, adorned with rare and expensive artifacts.

Teachers have had pay freezes since 2001, they have had pay cuts, benefit cuts and an additional $500.00 has been deducted from their monothly pay for two years and counting.

Oh the money is in the schools alright, it just doesn't make it to the classroom. >>
except/accept??????? per pupil funding. If you're a teacher, I hope this was a typo. >>
Yes, I am agree with you. Educational equity argument can help, But also cause blowback credits are more popular than vouchers.

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Daniel

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Yes, I am agree with you. Educational equity argument can help, But also cause blowback credits are more popular than vouchers.

Thanks
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Daniel

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Your comment "No one is that poor that they cant provide a boloney sandwich..." was the definition of "out-of-touch". First, I agree whole-heartedly that parents matter. I would love to see parents drive or car pool kids to school. Even provide them with food, too. However, sadly it is unrealistic. The economy is so weak that everything is shrinking. If we eliminate transportation and food for students we may find many families electing not to send the child to school at all...then what?

Please respond! >>
This agreement has saved the districts money yet we are chastised for it despite the fact the wording at issue was known to be invalid and unenforceable by either side. I applaud our effort and believe this suit is frivolous. http://www.godfrey-lee.org/education/components/board/default.php?sectiondetailid=3458&threadid=554 >>
education is an all around development for a child
he should be mentally and physically strong


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education is an all around development for a child
he should be mentally and physically strong >>
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Public servants like Presidents, Vice-Presidents, Senators, Congressmen, Judges, Secretaries of Various Departments and the like should be first to be compensated for performance.
The idea that the playing field for students is level everywhere is as Quixotic as thinking all politicians are honest and competent.
There are neighborhoods where only Portugese or gang sign language is spoken, where the parents both work two jobs to pay rent, where getting to school and back is more dangerous than Iraq and Afghanastan.
This Secretary of Education has to remove the silver spoon, roll up his sleeves and take his superior intellect attitude into the trenches and show the poor slobs that are taking their teachers jobs for granted how he would do it. Just because his mommy used to help out in Chicago doesn't give him the Congression Medal of Honor. Actually he's a stuffed shirt pretending to know it all.
How much do you want to bet that he wouldn't attempt entering these neighborhoods let alone these schools without security. >>