The choices TM editor
Evan Smith and his art
director T.J. Tucker  made
to illustrate Paul Burka's
usual rail against conser-
atives (left) paints quite the
picture.

First, they picked Gov. Rick
Perry, former edu-mission-
er Shirley Neeley, and
interim commissioner
Robert Scott to make a
point about Texas public
education, then exempted
Neeley from their
criticisms by placing the
"FAIL" sign under Perry
and Scott, an old
advertising trick.
                                                                                            H o w   w e   t a k e   b a c k   o u r   c h i l d r e n ' s    e d u c a t i o n  --  o n e   p e r s o n ,  o n e   q u e s t i o n ,   o n e   s c h o o l   a t   a   t i m e .
P E Y T O N   W O L C O T T

How we take back our children's education:
one person, one question, one school at a time.
FAIR USE NOTICE:
This site contains copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner.   We are making such material available in our efforts to
advance understanding of education issues vital to a republic.  We believe this constitutes a "fair use" of any such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright
Law.  In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C., Chapter 1, Section 107 which states:  the fair use of a copyrighted work, including such use by reproduction in copies or phonorecords or by any
other means specified by that section, for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, or research, is not an infringement of copyright,"  the material on
this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.   
If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond "fair use" you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.
ATTENTION EDUCATORS AND ADMINISTRATORS:
Every attempt possible has been made to verify all sources and information.   In the event you feel an error has been made, please contact us immediately.  Thank you.
Copyright 1999-2007 Peyton Wolcott
C o n s e r v a t i v e    C o m m e n t a r y - Texas Monthly August 2007
Credit Cards
About
Contact
Former Bremond ISD supe
Technology
Subscribe
THE  BIG PICTURE
Public Records
Pass the Trash
Reader  Questions  &  Answers
SLAPP suit
Plea Bargain
Sentencing
Bremond ISD
Edgewood ISD
Education , Inc.
ERDI
HB 2264
Team of 8
Edu-Monopoly
AZ County Supes
CA County Supe
Archives
2006 in Review
Practical steps:    How to Organize    95 Questions    How to ask for public records
Conferences
Modern Minutemen
Supes golfing (TAKS week)  1  2  3
_______________
With Rick Perry as governor, Don
McLeroy as SBOE chair and Robert Scott
as commissioner, Texas public schools
have a very real chance of coming back
out of the abyss. Our kids can't multiply
without a calculator, too many can't
read, and too many tax dollars are
being wasted.  We are poised for a
real Texas education miracle.
Meet Michael J. Donley,
TEA's Inspector General
By Peyton Wolcott
Updated Friday, July 13, 2007/10:00 am
What do we know about Michael
Donley?  

Because he doesn't return phone
calls or emails--mine, at least--all we
have is his work product, the June

Below (scroll down) are
excerpted relevant portions
-- with comments in red-- of
TEA Inspector General
Michael J. Donley's
employment application for
the IG position at TEA.

TEA received Donley's
application on May 17, 2006
(above right).

Donley's signature and July 10,
2007 (7-10-07) date (below right)
were added almost 15 months
later-- after my public records
request.
Dear readers:
Can you find any education law experience listed above?  I couldn't.
Even though it was date stamped as received by HR on May 17, 2006, a date did not
appear by his signature for almost another 14 months--on July 10, 2007
(below)--which date exactly coincides with the day after my July 9, 2007 public
records request to see it.  In fact, we do not know for certain on which date Michael
Donley signed the application--whether he signed it when he submitted it undated
in May 2006 or he signed it earlier this week when the date was added; as before,
Donley has not responded to queries.
"For every action there will be an
equal and opposite reaction," Sir
Isaac Newton observed, and this has
seldom been truer than with the public
education spectacle we've observed
here in Texas these past few weeks.

Long-time TEA executive Robert Scott
has served Texas education for
several years now, quietly, working
behind the scenes, he has brought
about the substantive changes for
which many grassroots conservatives
have been clamoring, one example
And in response to Robert Scott's actions--true to Newton's
law--the "education blob"--what I call Education, Inc.--has,
with Shirley Neeley finally out the door, in the past two
weeks launched an unprecedented witch hunt. Those
forces committed to maintaining the corrupt status quo in
public education do not welcome Robert Scott with open
arms.  This is a good thing.  It's a sign he can do something
of real value for our schoolchildren and our parents and our
taxpayers.  If Education, Inc. thought for a nanosecond he
would continue the old inept and corrupt ways, they wouldn't
be bothering.    

I believe that with Rick Perry as governor, Don McLeroy as
State Board of Education chair, and Robert Scott as
commissioner, Texas public schools have a very real
chance of coming back out of the abyss into which we've
sunk.  Our kids can't read and they can't multiply without a
calculator.  We are poised for a
real education miracle.  It's
time.
"Do not
leave
questions
blank."
More from TEA Inspector General Michael J. Donley's May 27, 2006
employment application for IG position at TEA:
"Current/Final Salary:  
$80,000."
(Three months work as
a summer associate
still in law school.)
Boxes
not
filled
in.
NOTE:  This
is the only
employment
listed for the
three-year
period  in
law school.
The "Leaving
Date" is not
filled in,
although the
narrative
"Summary of
experience"
is in the
past tense:
"I excelled..."
"Employer addresses must be complete...."
How is it
possible to
manage
teams
without
supervising
anyone?
"Resumes will not be accepted
in lieu of applications...."
"Omission of
information
may be
grounds
for....
termination."
"This application must be signed."
"Indicate
your
understand-
ing and
acceptance
by signing in
the space
provided."
No address.
"Fill out application form completely."
"Be sure to sign when completed."
"These instructions must be followed exactly."
"The official record of your employment history...."
"same information in the same format...."
Texas Gov. Rick Perry
names Don McLeroy
new State Board of
Education Chair
By Peyton Wolcott                
Updated Wed., July 18, 2007
Don McLeroy (L) of Bryan at July
2006 SBOE meeting; (L to R)
SBOE members Cynthia
Thornton and Pat Hardy, attendee
Gov. Rick Perry has named Don
McLeroy (R-Bryan) as chairman of the
State Board of Education for a
two-year term. McLeroy has served
as vice-chairman of the state board
and a member of the Bryan
Independent School District Board of
Trustees.  McLeroy will serve a
two-year term on the board.

McLeroy has close ties to social
conservatives throughout the state.
With McLeroy at the helm, expect the
board to continue work already
underway on expanding the charter
school movement, making more
rigorous the content of the Texas
Essential Knowledge and Skills, and
toughening the standards for the state's
testing program. "We've got to have
top-notch standards," McLeroy said.
"That's the key and our Number One
Priority." McLeroy said he plans to get
to work right away on the rewrite for
the English Language Arts portion of
the Texas Essential Knowledge and
Skills and aims to make them rigorous,
measurable and grade-level specific.
McLeroy has served on the board
since 1998.
In announcing yesterday
that he'd named Don
McLeroy chair of the State
Board of Education, I believe
that Gov. Perry has made the
correct decision for Texas
schoolchildren, parents and
taxpayers.

Don has proven with both
his professional and his
private life that he is
committed to improving
education for Texas school
children.  Speaking
personally, I want to say that
after dealing with education
executives and officials for
many years now, Don's
modesty is refreshing and
speaks well of his character.

So modest in fact is Don that
I just recently discovered
his
website, by accident.   
Here's hoping this quote
(below) is prophetic of Don's
dynamic SBOE leadership.
TEA's interim commissioner Robert Scott and
Newton's third law of physics
By Peyton Wolcott               
Friday, July 13, 2007/2:44 am
Too many decisions in the
past such as those involved
in the writing of our original
subjective touchy-feely
fake-consensus-driven
TEKS standards directly
benefited Texas school
administrators and
Education, Inc. including
lobbyists like Sandy Kress
(at far right); along these
lines I've been listening this
past week to tapes from a
crucial 1997 SBOE meeting
on which I'll be commenting
soon.  In the meantime,
here's Gov. Perry's press
release:
Don has a moral compass which
helps him know when to compromise
and when to stand uncompromisingly
on principle.  He understands how
important it is to rewrite the education
standards for our public schools, and
he is determined that students must
master basic skills before they can be
expected to do higher-level thinking . .
. . Don has the ability to work well
with all types of people, is fair-minded,
and is very wise.  He is humble and
does not revel in the limelight in order
to feed his ego.
Per veteran educator Donna
Garner:
Excerpts from
"Clear Thinking"
By Don McLeroy
"The schools of the present day are
being ruined by the absurb notion that
education should follow the line of
least resistance, and that something
can be 'drawn out' of the mind before
anything is put in."
-- J. Gresham
Machen (1923)

"A body of facts accumulates and
makes it possible for people to solve
many more problems than they could
ever hope to handle suc cessfully
solely by their own thinking
processes."
 -- Hy Ruchlis (1962)
The key to clear thinking is a
mind filled with knowledge and
facts.
Rudolf Flesch in The Art of Clear
Thinking
(1951) states, "Here is
your definition of thinking:  It is
the manipulation of memories."  
But what are memories?
Memories are the recordings of
knowledge, facts and
experiences in the mind.  Minds
cannot function in a vacuum.
Don quotes two more
authors:
Filling the mind with knowledge
and facts is, in fact, the special
task given to education.  Thus,
the most amazing orthodoxy
which dominates the educa-
tional establishment leviathan
today is the slighting of facts
and knowledge for emphasis on
problem-solving and critical
thinking.  

Problem solving and critical
thinking are secondary skills.  

Before one can think and solve
he must first have something to
think about.
Surgeons must be drilled and
saturated in the facts of
anatomy before they problem
solve with a scalpel. Yet today
there is a real bias in the public
schools to de-emphasize
knowledge and facts.

For a child, the years before
puberty are the golden time to
learn, to be exposed to myriads
of facts, to be trained in
arithmetic, grammar and spelling.
 In spite of this, each of these
areas have been a battleground
at the state level where the
dogmatic orthodoxies have been
challenged by the back-to-the-
basics advocates.

What we need in our schools is
a real  commitment to filling our
children's minds with
knowledge, facts and
experiences; this is the school's
job; no one else is going to do it;
it is what parents expect.
Clear thinking will be the result.
More from Don's site:
TEXAS PUBLIC EDUCATION
EXTRA!  EXTRA!  THE QUESTIONS  (AND
ANSWERS)  YOU WON'T FIND ANYWHERE ELSE
By Peyton Wolcott      
Updated Tuesday, July 31, 2007 - 7:21 am
Question #2: Why didn't Texas Monthly
publish something like this instead?
Question #1: Did Texas Monthly wage a fair
fight or a yellow-dog attack* in its August 2007 issue?
Evan Smith (L);
neighbor Sandy Kress
(Kress/PHOTO/PBS)
New York lib gathering
in Leonard Bernstein's
Park Avenue  duplex
"In 'Radical Chic,' Wolfe describes an
intriguing phenomenon of the late Sixties:
the courting of romantic radicals—Black
Panthers, striking grape- workers,
Young Lords—by New York's socially
Leaders or team players?
The private school Evan Smith's children attend tells
parents their children are being groomed to be
"leaders" whereas Austin ISD tells parents the focus
is on "teamwork and cooperation."  World o'difference.

Why is any of this is germane?
He who controls the agenda controls the meeting.  

Evan Smith and Texas Monthly's leadership have put
forth a negative case against Rick Perry and Robert
Scott, not to mention every other conservative in the
political stratosphere, not in a void but in a glossy
magazine with--by their own count, 300,000
readers--order to advance their own purposes.  I for
one do not consider that fair.

Given that it was not Shirley Neeley's idea but Rick
Perry's and Robert Scott's to put TEA's check register
online in February and given that Neeley thwarted
Perry's RP47 (65% in the classroom) which Scott
supported, let's give the last word to Robyn Hadley on
her Capitol Crowd blog:
Michael Joseph comments in TLS:
Tom Wolfe "both defends and exonerates the
Bernsteins, that is--their motives were sound,
liberal, serious, responsible--while cocking an
almighty snook at 'the essential double-track
mentality of Radical Chic-
nostalgie
de la boue
and high protocol' that can entertain
Afro hair-styles with Roquefort cheese
savouries in a Park Avenue duplex."
As regards men who would own up in print to admit-
ting that seeing Bill Clinton was a "thrill," or would
notice his girth or lack of it, or call a grown six-foot
two-inch male "tiny," I don't know any.  Having myself
been in close physical proximity to Clinton on one
occasion in Los Angeles, even given the post-
surgery diet, "tiny" is the last descriptor that comes to
mind.
8th grade 2007 trip to
Costa Rica, Evan
Smith's kids' school
"Out walked Bill and Hillary Clinton (a thrill; also,
he looked tiny–he’s obviously kept off the
weight he lost after the heart surgery....
"(SOURCE--
Evan Smith/Texas Monthly)
Floating Box House everyone's so eager to get
inside of!  I don't CARE if you're on the committee!  
YES, I insist!  Go without me, honey.  Your  
happiness means more to me than my own.  I'm just
your husband, the magazine executive who brings in
the bacon who sadly must pretend to be remain
apolitical."  Or something along those lines.
Floating Box House (PHOTO--
Paul Warchol/Texas Architect)
Hard to imagine, for
instance,  a self-
described "new-house
junkie" declaring a
Khadafi-esque line in the
sand:  "Honey, you GO to
the Michelle Obama
$1,000 reception at
Alexa's and Blaine's Peter
Gluck-designed
Égalité, Fraternité?
Equality, fraternity for liberals Kress and Smith--but at
arm's length, and safely away from their children, as
appears to be the case in these three photos (above
left and below right) from their kids' schools, the pix
presumably an accurate depiction of the student
population.

Tom Wolfe nailed libs' propensity to say one thing
and live quite another in his 1970 classic, "Radical
Chic and Mau-Mauing the Flak Catchers":
2007 grads, Sandy
Kress' son's school
elite. He focuses primarily on one symbolic event: the gathering of
the radically chic at Leonard Bernstein's duplex apartment on Park
Avenue to meet spokesmen of the Black Panther Party, to hear them
out, and to talk over ways of aiding their cause. Tom Wolfe recreates
the incongruous scene—and its astonishing repercussions—with high
fidelity. But he gives us more than just a wry account of life among
the Beautiful People; he also provides a historical perspective on that
impulse of the upper classes to identify themselves with what they
imagine to be the raw, vital lifestyle of the lower orders."
Smith dropped another clue about his
liberal loyalties when he recently blogged
poetic over a Bill and Hillary Clinton
sighting at Lady Bird's funeral:
Bill Clinton
But wait, there's more:  
Both Smith and Kress
send their kiddos to
private schools where it's
possible to talk about the
importance of diversity
without having to actually
associate at close
quarters with a diverse
student population—as,
say, at Austin ISD public
schools.
2007 DC trip,
Smith's kids' school
Page 27  August 2007 Texas Monthly
(ART/byAndy Potts/agoodson.com)
Robert Scott, Shirley Neeley
(PHOTO--Harry Cabluck/AP)
brain that would produce such journalism as this image
above or January's cover (below left) of Vice President Dick
Cheney holding a shotgun with the caption, "If You Don't Buy
This Magazine, Dick Cheney Will Shoot You in the Face" or
even last month's cover featuring two astronauts on a bed
which earned the following headline on Rachel Sklar's story
at HuffingtonPost.com:  "Texas Monthly 'Astronaut Sex' Cover
Possibly Worst-Seller In Magazine History."
Speaking of TM stories we'd
love to see,
what about one
addressing Shirley Neeley's
monetary and other involve-
ment in school district education
foundations----in districts such as
Leander ISD (at left) where her
now-husband, school architect
Bill M. Richardson, has built
millions of dollars of schools
through his corporation?

Or what about a TM story on Mrs.
Neeley's apparently directing her
Inspector General to release a
"rough draft" report on TEA's
TM didn't have to travel years back to AP
to find an image of Robert Scott; this
one at left, one I took recently, actually
looks like him.  (Would you be able to
pick this guy out of a crowded TEA
elevator based on TM's watercolor?)  

To suggest TM make fairer depictions
presupposes that TM's agenda was to
depict all parties in a fair light, but
should  we so presuppose?

What was TM thinking?
I don't know.  In fact, I think I prefer not
being able to crawl around inside a
Robert Scott
What was/is TM's agenda?
Was it to make both Rick Perry and
Robert Scott look bad while at the
same time advancing Shirley
Neeley?  And Sandy Kress?
Texas Monthly Covers
Jan. 2007 (L), July 2007 (R)
'Sandy Kress:  Soldier of Edu-Fortune?'
Why is Evan Smith's neighbor Sandy Kress referred to
simply as an "education reform advocate" on page 27?  Is
this an accurate description of an education lobbyist/lawyer
made "wealthy" by his "education reform" advocacy?  

Texas Monthly has never been shy about asking money
questions as with last November's feature, "Soldier of
Fortune:  Did Vice President Dick Cheney steer $7 billion in
Iraq war contracts to his old pals at Halliburton?" by Lou
Dubose and Jake Bernstein.  Wondering when TM will
dispatch Dubose and Bernstein or anyone else to write a
story with the above headline or any of the following
descriptions:
I still consider it one of life's great mysteries how anyone who listens to Kress
for as long as it takes to spell c-o-r-r-u-p-t-i-o-n could be impressed by anything
he has to say about any legitimate conception of education.
 (SOURCE--Jim
Horn/Schools Matter)
Sandy Kress has "made about $4 million in lobbying contracts, in large part
from companies that profit from provisions of the [No Child Left Behind] law he
helped to design.
 (SOURCE--Emily Pyle/Texas Observer)
Sandy Kress is "a lawyer, a lobbyist, an education policy wonk
and a once-prominent Democrat who became a top adviser to
Republicans. And today...Mr. Kress is among the most influential
players in the education-industrial complex....On the one hand,
Mr. Kress is a leading advocate of using test data to hold schools
accountable; he says his motivation is to make education better
for children. On the other, the accountability movement that he
espouses benefits the clients who have made him wealthy."
(SOURCE--Scott Parks/Dallas Morning News)
Scott Parks
(PHOTO/DMN)
Then edu-missioner Shirley
Neeley at Leander EEF event
contracts process based on anonymous "tips" aimed (is
that too strong a word?) at her apparent successor, Robert
Scott, and timing its release to coincide with her last week in
office?  With in-depth coverage on TEA Inspector General
Michael J. Donley and his deputy, Jim Catazaro?  
Coupla more questions
Why wasn't a TM photog-
rapher out on that golf course
in Boerne last April to cover
the TAS/MUS conference?  

Why instead did TM post the
following two weeks
later----on their blog rather
than as a cover story:
When TM looks into whether Dick Cheney might have
steered billions in "contracts" to "old pals" at Halliburton,
that's apparently worth a cover story to them.  But when
Texas public school superintendents engage in "hospitality
as a means for fruitful communication," resulting in millions
and billions in contracts to old pals, that's somehow
different?

Has TM grown too gentrified, a fat-cat caricature of its former
self, content to advance its own safe-for-now ultra-liberal
"As all wise Southern women
know, you catch more flies with
honey than vinegar. It makes
me wonder if the vigilant
reporting-- about lobby dinners
and golf games, etc.--has
cursed hospitality as a means
for fruitful communication. Now
all that's left is attack ads? This
is not progress in human
evolution."

posted by Patricia Kilday Hart at
4:27 PM (May 9, 2007)
April 20, 2007 TAS/MUS
golf tournament, Boerne
Robert Scott
being TEA's $28 million budget reduction a while back
(have any of those folks been missed?); also, all of TEA's
2006 checks are now online.
Neighbors
Smith and Kress occupy million-dollar houses three
blocks from each other in Old Austin (Pemberton).
Topic A:Texas Schoolchildren Left Behind
Here are my
three picks
next time TM
wants to
paint a pic-
ture about
Texas public
education:  
Mike Moses
(left) for being
Texas'
prici-
est supe, and
still it wasn't
enough.

At right is
Sandy Kress,
arguably our
ASF DJ K     SAD KF    JLJASDF  ASDFJL   ASDF  LKL;J     SD F  L         K     ; A K J
doesn't present Neeley in a favorable light, does it? Shirley's
allowed a far-off gaze in TM's watercolor, whereas Perry and
Scott look brooding, menacing.  Then there's Perry's left
collar.  Was that nice?
TM lifted/borrowed (without
attribution, that I could find) Scott's
image from a photograph by Harry
Cabluck for Associated Press.  
Wondering why they didn't just
watercolor Neeley from the
original two-person composition
with Gov. Perry inserted easily in
the middle.  But Cabluck's photo
If TM ran more art/articles like this, maybe
so many of us wouldn't have cancelled our
subscriptions.
 (Enlarged at bottom of page)
most visible if not highest-paid edu-attorney/ lobbyist,
a guy with a penchant for advocating "reforms" which
prosper both him and his clients.
The guy in the middle is TM editor Evan Smith,
included for two reasons:  Running a big glossy like
Texas Monthly lo these many years, he could have
done something valuable and fine for Texas public
education by sending investigative journalists and
great photographers to tell the story about the true
state of our public schools.
Second reason for including
Smith:  Also a Democratic voter
like Kress, the two have much in
common of which the average
reader might not be aware, com-
monalities which might reason-
ably influence his magazine's
endorsement by default of Kress
TEXAS MONTHLY'S BEST LISTS
*Yellow Dog
Journalism, The Best
and Worst Lists
By Gina Parker Ford
June 14, 2007

Thirty-four years ago, Texas
Monthly began publishing a
bi-annual article on the “Ten
Best and Ten Worst” Texas
State Legislators. Political
insiders in Austin and die-
hard politicos across the
State look forward to this
review with much gusto like
a blood-thirsty audience at a
boxing event or a bull fight.

A comprehensive review of
the 34 year history of the
“Ten Best and Ten Worst
List,” however, shows
distinct patterns of bias and
prejudice against Hispanics,
Conservatives, Republicans,
and Women and Black
members of the Legislature.  
Conservatives and
Hispanics often dominate
the “Worst List” and can be
twice as likely to make the
“Ten Worst List” as
compared to the “Ten Best.”  
The most likely profile of a
candidate for their “Ten Best
List” is a white, urban, liberal
male Democrat.  

Even more disturbing are the
comments made about
minority legislators in the
various articles over the
years.  They indicate a
pattern that denigrates the
intellect and ethics of
Hispanic and Black
members, accusing them of
personal prejudices far
beyond those by which Anglo
members were accused of.
In 1973, Texas Monthly said
that Rep. Lindsey Rodriguez
“…actually works at being
dumb….” The writer called
Clay Smothers, an African
American legislator from
Dallas in the 1970s, “a black
Archie Bunker.”  Black Rep.
Lanell Cofer’s legislative
activities were referred to as
“monkeyshines.”  Hispanic
Senator Bob Vale was
described as a “parasite.”
Current Black Rep. Yvonne
Davis was accused of
“legislative terrorism” in
2003.

The comparisons, however,
against Anglo legislators
who make the “Ten Worst
List” in the same years can
be striking.  Rep. Tim Von
Dohlen was put on the 1973
“Ten Worst List,” but in his
write-up he was referred to
as “resourceful, hardworking
and…quite intelligent.” In
1991, Ernestine
Glossbrenner was
described as “decent and
caring.”  In the collective
review of the write-ups, one
gets a sense that the
magazine is saying, “it didn’t
have to be this way” when
writing about white members
and “there is virtually no
hope” when writing about
minority members.
Open Letter
to Paul Burka
By Donna Garner
July 27, 2007

Paul Burka, take it from this
retired teacher: "You need to do
your homework."  

Surely you know that Texas Sen. Bill Ratliff
in SB 1 stripped our public schools of
nearly all local control.  

You definitely misspoke when you wrote
in your article in the August 2007 issue,
"...but most decisions have been
deregulated and left to local school
districts..."  

S. B. 1 turned Texas into a state-controlled
model through the TEKS and the TAKS
regulations.

Also, Paul, you surely know that Sandy
Kress cannot be the Texas
Commissioner of Education since he is
The irony of all ironies is that
Texas Monthly writer Paul
Burka, who has written on
each of the articles,
endorsed Kinky Friedman for
Governor last year, even
though he said he didn’t
approve of his (Friedman’s)
racially tinged remarks.”

Often when Conservatives
made the “Ten Best List,” it
was for doing some rather
non-conservative acts.  In
1985, Jim Rudd was praised
for opposing a 2% across the
board budget cut proposed
by the House Conservative
Caucus.  Jack Vowell was
put on the “Ten Best” in 1987
for opposing cuts to welfare
and AFDC spending.  Fred
Hill, a repeat offender on the
“Ten Worst List,” was
suddenly awarded status on
the “Ten Best” by Texas
Monthly citing his opposition
to lowering appraisal caps
and implementing spending
caps on local government.

Since 1989, Burka has been
joined in compiling the Lists
by Austin writer Patti Kilday
Hart, 52, and the magazine’s
editor, currently Evan Smith,
41, a New Yorker who has
lived in Texas since 1992.    

Burka, Hart and Smith are all
Democrats by their own
words, deeds, or familial
ties.  Hart and Smith have
voted in the Democratic
Primary in Travis County -
with Hart voting in seven of
the last nine Democratic
primaries and Smith voting
Democratic at least four
times in the past decade.  

Evan Smith’s wife, Julia Null-
Smith, is a Democratic Party
activist who has served on
the Board of Directors of the
local chapter of Planned
Parenthood. The Smiths also
hosted a primary season
gathering at their home for
then-frontrunner Democratic
presidential candidate
Howard Dean in 2003.

Paul Burka stated in 2001
that he was a “Conservative
Democrat” who voted in the
Republican Primary because
Republican “nominees are
most likely to win those
(statewide) races. Burka then
promptly voted in the
Democratic Primary the
following year.

Burka and Hart are not shy
about trying to have an
impact on the legislative
process. For example, in
2005, Rep. Phil King’s
inclusion on the “Ten Worst
List” referred to his work on
anti-abortion bills.  Rep.
Robert Talton’s campaign
against gay foster parenting
was cited as the reasoning
behind his “Ten Worst”
designation the same year.  

Being a Christian is bad, too:  
Rep. Robert Talton’s
inclusion on the 2003 “Ten
Worst List” ridiculed his use
of his Christian faith during
floor debate.  Rep. Tim Von
Dohlen was attacked in the
“Ten Worst List” in 1973 as a
Christian “zealot” who was
“cut from a Crusaders Cloth.”

In a time when technology
takes its toll upon the weekly
news magazine and the daily
newspaper, the lack of
diversity demonstrated by
both writers and the writing
may demand that the
magazine’s owners bring
this longstanding work into
modern day journalism
which demands balance,
accountability, and fairness.  

Time will tell.                               
Gina Parker's website:
http://ginaparker.net/gp
agenda, no matter the
marketplace or magazine
sales----or reality?
___________________
P.S. to TM photographers and
reporters:  Be sure to take
packets of SueBee with you
to the golf course; apparently
the magazine now expects
journalists to now also
proffer hospitality.  As for the
'fruitful communication'
you're on your own.
for edu-missioner in the August 2007 issue.
In-common weal
Both men have shown a predilection for mixing
government funds with personal gain:  Smith serves
on the board of Austin's PBS affiliate KLRU--which
also carries the "Texas Monthly Talks" TV show (he
hosts).  More about Kress in grey boxes below left.
RE TEXAS MONTHLY
In defense of
Robert Scott
By Robyn Hadley    July 27, 2007

I opened my new Texas
Monthly  yesterday and
gasped when I saw an
article by Paul Burka about
how the Texas Education
Agency (TEA) is a "shell of
what it used to be."  It has
an interesting drawing of
Governor Rick Perry, former
TEA Commissioner Shirley
Neeley, and Chief Deputy
Commissioner Robert
Scott...along with what
looks like a book with the
word "FAIL" written inside
of it.

I really don't know anything
about what's been going
on at TEA the past couple
of years, but I'm getting
really tired of reporters
describing Scott as just a
"former Perry staffer," like
he's some unqualified
political crony who's been
placed over there to mess
up the state's education
system.

Senate messenger
Everyone who knows me
knows I take great pride in
having helped Scott get his
first job at the Capitol as a
senate messenger in
about 1990. I've known
Scott and his family since
he was a little boy, and he's
one of the most impressive
people I've ever known--not
just because of his bright
legal mind and work ethic,
but because of the
character he's shown in
facing life's challenges.

After working his way up
the messenger ladder,
Scott landed a job with
then-state senator Gene
Green as a legislative aide.
Yeah, Green is a
Democrat.  When Sen.
Green ran for Congress
and won, Scott moved to
D.C. to work for him there.  
He and his wife started a
family.

Single father
After a few years, they
moved back to Central
Texas and Robert started
law school at St. Mary's in
San Antonio.  Through a
series of events, Robert
ended up a divorced dad
with full custody of his two
very young children.  
Somehow, he raised those
kids on his own, got a law
degree (from U.T. where he
transferred because they
had an education policy
specialty), and began
working in the arena of
public education.  How
many dads do you know
who could juggle all of that?

I can't remember when he
began working for Gov.
Perry, but Scott also served
as a top aide to former TEA
Commissioners Mike
Moses and Jim Nelson,
both of whom earned the
praise of the education
establishment and the
mainstream media during
their years of service. Scott
learned how to run that
agency beside the best of
them.

Scott may or may not be
appointed the next
Commissioner of TEA, and
it's my understanding that
he's perfectly at peace with
that. He's never taught
school or been a principal
or a superintendent, so it's
understandable that the
education establishment
might have reservations
about him. He is an
example, though, of how far
a public school education
can take you in this state...
from senate messenger to
trusted advisor to the
governor.

I am proud of Robert Scott
for the way he's lived his
life. Like everyone around
the Capitol, he's so much
more than his job title.

http://capitolcrowd.blogspot.com/2007/0
7/in-defense-of-robert-scott.html  
Michael J.
Donley
Mixed media collage  by Peyton Wolcott
Copyright 2007 - Inspired by Texas Monthly illustration (Art director T.J. Tucker, ART/byAndy Potts/agoodson.com)
(Note:  Donley has responded to these queries and an update appears elsewhere
on this site.  I will bring this portion current as soon as possible.)
The artwork many of us would have preferred (below)
seeing in Texas Monthly's August 2007 issue
By Peyton Wolcott
August 1, 2007/12:52 am
a highly paid lobbyist for
education vendors such as
Pearson Publishing
Company.  Pearson is vying
for the lucrative contract to
produce the twelve new
end-of-course tests which
every Texas high-school
student will be required to
take before graduating.

Talk about a conflict of
interest -- Sandy Kress as
Texas Commissioner of
Education who has made
upwards of $4 million from
his deep ties with education
vendors, the very ones who
would profit from contracts
with the Texas Education
Agency!  Sandy Kress
cannot walk away from
those deep ties with the
education vendors;
therefore, Kress is not a
viable candidate for
Commissioner of Education
Robert Scott, Interim Texas
Commissioner of
Education, and the majority
of the Texas State Board of
Education members are
committed to making sure
the Texas education
standards are rewritten so
that they are measurable,
grade-level-specific, and
explicit.  With good
education standards which
can then be tested on good
end-of-course tests, Texas
has a chance to move public
school students into
mastery of basic skills
which will equip them to do
higher-level thinking skills.  
The end result will be
students who are prepared
for the workforce and/or for
college.  

Robert Scott is ready and
eager to be the next Texas
Commissioner of
Education, and I look
forward to his receiving this
appointment by Gov. Perry.  
_____________________
More about Donna Garner
here.
15, 2007 contracts review "rough draft," and the fact that he served
on the TEA task force which exonerated at least 590 Texas schools
of TAKS cheating charges (what would our world be like if all
offenders were invited to self-investigate?).  

And we have Donley's employment application (below).