Oh, Contrarian!

Some thoughts on a variety of topics, not necessarily in agreement with prevailing wisdom.

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Location: Bedford, Ohio, United States

After a career as a teacher of English, theater, and psychology in grades 6 through 12, Bill Lavezzi began a second career in 2000 as a full-time advocate for public education and educators. Interests include theater and music. While teaching, he directed or produced over thirty school theatrical productions, and since the early eighties he has served two parishes in southeastern Cuyahoga County as an organist, pianist, and cantor. Since 2010, he has been the Cuyahoga County Democratic Party Central Committee member for Bedford precinct 6B.

Sunday, June 28, 2009

Charter Shools Should Report to Elected Boards

(Before heading off to San Diego, I sent the following to The Plain Dealer, which added it to their online blog page.)


Many of the problems separating House and Senate negotiators working on a new budget is a difference on the funding of Ohio’s charter schools. The House budget imposes new oversight requirements on charter schools and, perhaps anticipating that many will not be able to meet those requirements, provides less money for them. Those increased oversight provisions for Ohio’s charter schools are appropriate and necessary.

As a teachers’ union leader in two local school districts, I spent many years advocating for my members, and those activities frequently led me into conflicts with boards of education. And as a taxpayer in my home district, I have sometimes found it necessary to contact members of my local board of education regarding their public decisions. So although I have never served as a member of a local school board, I have had reason both as an employee and as a taxpayer to criticize the work done by members of local boards of education.

That said, I believe that their governance by elected boards of education is an important characteristic of public school districts and offers an example of the ways in which charter schools should be held more accountable. Many of the issues for which charter schools are sometimes criticized would be eliminated if the law required them to operate as public entities, and specifically, operating under the same open-meeting provisions as public boards of education.

One of the reasons for the creation of Ohio’s charter schools back in the nineties was the perceived need for schools that could innovate without excessive governmental interference. As worthy as this idea was, most voters want charter schools to be held accountable to the public in general and not just to the tiny community of families who avail themselves of their services. Because they are spending public dollars, charter schools should be subject to the same accountability provisions as traditional public schools. Their reporting to a locally-elected board of education conducting its business in public would be an important way to bring transparency and accountability to the operation of these schools.

Those that can’t operate accountably shouldn’t be allowed to remain in operation.

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Sunday, June 07, 2009

Letter to Bishop Lennon

(text of a letter sent to Bishop Richard Lennon, Diocese of Cleveland, April 20, 2009:)

Dear Bishop Lennon:

I am a parishioner at St. Mary Church in Bedford. Until 2000, when I began a new career which limited my time for parish activities, I served as a member and chairperson of Pastoral Council and as a member or chair of several parish groups including a School Task Force (1989), the parish component of the Diocesan Liturgical Review (1990), and a School Futuring Committee (1997). In addition, for over twenty years I directed a contemporary music group at St. Mary that assisted at weekly liturgies, and I continue to assist there as a cantor and substitute organist as the need arises and my schedule permits.

Although I was unable to participate in the parish cluster activities leading up to the recent preliminary decision to merge three Bedford-area parishes into one, I understand that the parish has filed a timely appeal of that decision. Meaning no disrespect to the teams that developed the cluster plan, I would respectfully suggest three reasons why merging all three into one parish housed at the present St. Pius X church is a mistake.

  • As a musician who has played at all three parishes, I can witness that the worship space at St. Mary is by far the best of the three. (As a parishioner, I believe that this is at least partly because the staff and parishioners there have made liturgy a priority.) St. Mary has newer instruments and is both above ground and accessible to worshipers with special needs.
  • If one worship space is to remain, the one located at St. Mary is better situated within the geographic area, being more central within the parish cluster. The current St. Pius X buildings are relatively close to parishes to the north and northwest, but the plan ignores a huge swath to the south and southeast. The space between St. Pius X and the nearest remaining parishes to the east (St. Rita), south (St. Barnabas), and southeast (Our Lady of Guadalupe) would be six, ten, and ten miles respectively.
  • This distance between worship spaces will accelerate the movement of Catholics residing in this cluster to suburbs further out, encouraging sprawl and decimating the Catholic presence in these inner-ring southeastern suburbs.
The task set before the parish leaders, you, and your staff, is a difficult one. I respectfully suggest that keeping open the worship space at St. Mary would be a better way to reconfigure the parishes of this cluster.