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EdAction
Maple River Education Coalition PAC
105 Peavey Rd, St 116
Chaska, MN
55318
952-361-4931
http://www.EdAction.org
E-mail
Marc Tucker's "Dear Hillary" Letter
Marc Tucker is president of the National
Center on Education and the Economy (NCEE). He wrote an
18-page letter, now famous as Marc Tucker's "Dear Hillary"
Letter, to Hillary Clinton a week after the Clintons were first elected
President. At the time Hillary served with Tucker on the Board of NCEE,
they were (and remain) comrades. The letter lays out the master plan of
the Clinton Administration to take over the entire U.S. educational system
so that it can serve national economic planning of the workforce.
The letter makes it clear that Hillary participated in the development of
that plan some time before the election, though it was scarcely
reported at the time. The plan is sweeping in scope, and largely
signed into law in 1994 by Clinton's Democratically controlled Congress
(in the Goals 2000 Act, the School-to-Work Act, and the
reauthorized Elementary and Secondary Education Act). That
legislation continues to move our system today, and is being implemented
in all fifty states, driven by money and mandates from the federal
level.
The letter reveals the goals and methods, the who, how, and why. The
infamous letter was placed into the Congressional Record (on Sept.
25, 1998, by Rep. Bob Schaffer), and is now widely displayed on the
Internet.
The "Dear Hillary"
letter lays out a plan "to remold the entire American [school]
system" into "a seamless web that literally extends from cradle
to grave and is the same system for everyone," coordinated by "a
system of labor market boards at the local, state and federal levels"
where curriculum and "job matching" will be handled by
counselors "accessing the integrated computer-based program."
The plan would change the mission of the schools away from teaching
children academic basics and knowledge so they can make their own life
choices, and toward training them narrowly in specific job skills
to serve the global economy in jobs selected by workforce boards.
Highlights of the Letter -
A complete, radical, re-structuring of the
American system:
The letter repeatedly states its large-scale,
sweeping goals to completely overhaul the system:
- "Nothing less than a wholly restructured
school system"
- "Remold the entire American system for
human resources development"
- "A new vision and a whole new structure
is required."
- "Radical changes in attitudes, values and
beliefs are required to move any combination of these agendas."
The new system is for everyone -
it is inescapable:
The new system "literally extends from cradle
to grave and is the same system for everyone". Repeatedly it
says the system is "for everyone," "it is no longer a
system for just the poor and unskilled." It is a "seamless
system". Three times calling it a "seamless web",
which we view as a spider's web of government control, and about as
desirable as a straight jacket -- one size fits all, no escape.
To be implemented quickly:
The letter repeatedly emphasizes to move quickly,
and "move like lightning" in implementing its agenda.
"major parts of the whole system would be in operation in a majority
of the states within three years from the passage of the initial
legislation." This has in fact happened.
Government controlled:
Some of the flowery goals don't sound bad, until you
remember it is all government controlled. You don't define
those flowery goals or how they are met, the government does, and its
views are different from your own. The government inevitably defines
things for its convenience, not yours. Under this system you become
a "human resource" to be developed for specific jobs. That
kind of education is not the kind that will keep a nation free. To
remember this, after every sentence in the Letter say the words "as
defined by distant, centralized bureaucrats." For example, the new
system "rewards students who meet the national standards with further
education and good jobs" and that seems okay, until you remember the
government decides who is rewarded and how. That is very
different from the traditional kind of free-market rewards you are
familiar with.
All education is moved to vocational,
job-skills training:
The letter repeatedly aims to turn our entire
educational system (including college-level education) into
"apprenticeships" or programs that build job
"skills". It requires colleges to include an
abundance of "work-site" and "on-the-job" training in
any program. In other words, the entire education system is to
emphasize, not academics and broad-based knowledge, but narrowly defined
vocational job-skills, "defined in part by the employers" and in
part by government. Families and students have little or no
say. The Letter also recognizes that such apprenticeship programs
are adamantly opposed by unions and parents. So the letter suggests
how to conceal the fact that education would largely become an
apprenticeship or jobs-training program:
"The proposal reframes the Clinton apprenticeship proposal as a
college program and establishes a mechanism
for setting the standards for the program. The
unions are adamantly opposed to broad based apprenticeship programs by
that name. Focus groups conducted by JFF and others show that parents
everywhere want their kids to go to college, not be shunted aside into a
non-college apprenticeship "vocational" program. By
requiring these programs to be a combination of classroom instruction
and structured OJT, and creating a standard-setting board that included
employers and labor, all the objectives of
the apprenticeship idea are achieved, while at the same time assuring
much broader support for the idea,"
It reaches deep into every classroom:
Most everything in the classroom is substantially
controlled by the new system, including "curriculum, pedagogy,
examinations, and teacher education and licensure systems"
It creates a sweeping new entitlement:
It will provide school/financial/labor counselors to
anyone for finding schools, funding, and employment. It would "guarantee
one free year of college education to everyone"
who meets the minimal standards set at the national level, and "for
most postsecondary students, college will be free".
Along with this huge new entitlement there will inevitably be new and
higher taxes.
It proposes a new hidden tax:
The Letter proposes to take your
education money (from 1.5% to 2% of your salary) before you
ever see it, by taking it from your employer. This makes for a
hidden tax, largely hidden from voters, and therefore far less likely to
incur voter's wrath. Voters would be tempted to think they're
getting something for free. Moreover, the letter proposes to conceal
the tax further by contriving to make it look voluntary. Here
is how:
"Everything we have heard indicates virtually universal
opposition in the employer community to the proposal for a 1 1/2% levy
on employers for training to support the
costs associated with employed workers gaining these skills, whatever
the levy is called. We propose that Bill [Clinton] take a leaf out of
the German book. One of the most important
reasons that large German employers offer apprenticeship slots to German
youngsters is that they fear, with good
reason, that if they don't volunteer
to do so, the law will require it. Bill could gather a group of leading
executives and business organization leaders, and tell them straight out
that he will hold back on submitting legislation to require a training
levy, provided that they commit themselves to a drive to get employers
to get their average expenditures on front-line employee training up to 2%
of front-line employee salaries and wages
within two years. If they have not done so within that time, then he
will expect their support when he submits legislation requiring the
training levy. He could do the same thing with respect to slots for
structured on-the-job training."
Carrots and sticks:
The Letter admits:
"Creating such a system means sweeping aside countless programs,
building new ones, combining funding authorities, changing deeply
embedded institutional structures and so on. .... Trying
to ram it down everyone's throat would engender overwhelming
opposition."
So the letter proposes to use bribery, and that
requires an expansion of federal power.
It expands the executive branch:
It authorizes the executive branch to bypass
Congress and award "grants", in other words, bribes,
"on the order of $20 million per year to each state". In
addition, the executive branch would have free-wheeling power to bypass
any uncooperative state and local governments, and fund directly to local
agencies:
"A number of organizations would be funded. .... Some of the
funds for this function should be provided directly to the states and
cities, some to the technical assistance agency."
Highly centralized control:
The proposal "is interwoven with a new approach
to governing". That approach involves pushing power away
from students, families, and communities, and toward highly
centralized authorities.
"we propose that a new agency be created, the National Institute
for Learning, Work and Service. .... The staff would be small, high
powered and able to move quickly"
Authorities insulated from voters wrath:
The controlling authorities are thoroughly insulated
from voters wrath. This occurs because the system is highly
centralized, and such entities are difficult for voters to affect.
Further insulation occurs because the officials are not elected, they are
appointed. Even further insulation occurs because the controlling
officials are insulated even from the oversight of Congress and the
executive branch. In other words, these officials are setup as
tyrants. The system is designed to be thoroughly insulated from
voters wrath:
"Create National Board for Professional and Technical Standards.
Board is private .... Neither Congress nor the executive branch
can dictate the standards set by the Board."
Make sure no one commits to the details:
As discussed above, the Letter admits the new system
can only arise through "radical" change, and also suggests ways
to insulate the controlling officials from voters. In a stunning bit
of deception, the Letter suggests how to conceal the system long enough
for it to be established:
"One would want to make sure
that the specific actions of the new administration were designed, in a
general way, to advance this agenda as it evolved, while
not committing anyone to the details, which
would change over time."
That strategy of "not committing anyone
to the details" has strongly affected the situation here in
Minnesota. Disputes about the structure and details of our new
Minnesota education system frequently occur, even among close observers.
When that occurs, our Department of Education (now renamed as the Dept. of
Children, Families, and Learning, or DCFL) issues denials and claims
(wrongly) that it's opponents are misinformed. This is exacerbated by
recent moves to empower the DCFL Commissioner with free-wheeling powers to
change the regulations and rules spontaneously at will - thus bypassing
any Legislative responsibility, allowing the confusion to thrive, and
throwing opponents into the dark. This is not how government should
operate.
It takes over public service:
It proposes that education loans "can be
forgiven for public service". But the government, not
you, would decide what is and isn't allowed as "public
service." This mechanism would allow the government, in effect,
to direct non-paid workers toward (or away from) various entities,
without it being accounted as government "spending".
Government money supposedly going for education loans, could get diverted
in various ways toward other purposes, which are unaccounted. This
opens the door to various types of government corruption. For
example, the government could reward (or punish) certain employers by
sending non-paid "public service" workers toward (or
away).
Moreover, across the country "public
service" is now being mis-used in another way. Students are
being required to perform compulsory "public service" in
order to get a diploma. For an example, see our
news item on compulsory volunteerism.
This ambition to federally takeover and define
what is, and isn't, public service, is hinted in the name of the proposed
new agency: "we propose that a new agency be created, the National
Institute for Learning, Work and Service."
It abandons most students:
The Letter makes a cryptic remark that must be explained.
The new system will "free up school professionals to make the
key decisions about how to use all the available resources to bring
students up to the standards."
The system (even as it is implemented in
Minnesota's "Profile of Learning") requires that students spend
most of their time working on menial tasks and projects by themselves or
in small groups. This heavy emphasis on tasks and projects (and
de-emphasis of traditional classroom instruction) has two purposes.
First, it emphasizes job-skills, (at the expense of a traditional
broad-based academic education). Second, it will "free up"
teachers so they may spend their time on the worst students - those who
are most unruly, dis-interested, or unable. The system is setup to compel
teachers toward this peculiar end. The result is that students who
are average, or better than average, are largely abandoned to the
tasks, projects, and self-learning. This is the reality contained
within the above remark.
It gathers personal information on students:
Institutions receiving funds under this system
"are required to provide information" on student's
"backgrounds and characteristics, and career outcomes" As
this system has materialized in Minnesota (where it known partly by the
name "Profile of Learning") it has become rather invasive into
family privacy. (See our article, Public collection
of private data on students.)
New constraints on businesses:
The Letter says, "All available front-line jobs
- whether public or private - must be listed in [the government run
employment system] by law." But if the new job-listing system
is so good, why should there be a law requiring all businesses to
use it? At the least, this requirement creates needless paperwork
for employers. At the worst it suggests further (unspecified)
government coercion on employers. (Also see our article, on how
School-to-Work creates liability for businesses.)
Note:
Marc Tucker's protιgι, Pat Harvey, is now the Superintendant of Schools
in Saint Paul, and pushing the radical agenda of the NCEE here in
Minnesota. (See our update: Marc Tucker
Curriculum forced on St. Paul Schools)
An outside article from Crisis Magazine offers further insight
into Marc Tucker, the NCEE, and it's financial dealings with Hillary
Clinton and the Rose Law Firm in Arkansas. The link is offered for
your exploration. If we obtain further insight and corroboration it
will be posted here.
Below is the infamous Letter, exactly as it appears in the Congressional
Record, complete with page numbers. All bolding and italics are from
the original. Only red highlighting is added to draw your attention to key
items.
NATIONAL
CENTER
ON
EDUCATION
AND THE
ECONOMY
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
MARIO
M. CUOMO
Honorary Chair
JOHN
SCULLEY
Chair
JAMES B. HUNT, JR.
Vice Chair
R. CARLOS CARBALLADA
Treasurer
ANTHONY CARNEVALE
SARAH H. CLEVELAND
HILLARY R.
CLINTON
THOMAS W. COLE, JR.
VANBUREN N. HANSFORD, JR.
LOUIS HARRIS
BARBARA R. HATTON
GUILBERT C. HENTSCHKE
VERA KATZ
ARTURO MADRID
IRA C.
MAGAZINER
SHIRLEY M. MALCOM
RAY MARSHALL
RICHARD P. MILLS
PHILIP H. POWER
LAUREN B. RESNICK
MANUEL J. RIVERA
DAVID
ROCKEFELLER, JR.
MARC S. TUCKER
ADAM URBANSKI
KAY R. WHITMORE
MARC S.
TUCKER
President
MAIN OFFICE:
SUITE 500
39 STATE STREET
ROCHESTER, NY 14614
716-546-7620
FAX: 716-546-3145
WASHINGTON OFFICE:
SUITE 1020
1341 G STREET, NW
WASHINGTON, DC 20005
202-783-3666
FAX: 202-783-3672 |
11 November 1992
Hillary Clinton
The Governor's Mansion
1800 Canter Street
Little Rock, AR 72206
Dear Hillary:
I still cannot believe you won.
But utter delight that you did pervades all the circles in which I move. I
met last Wednesday in David Rockefeller's office with him, John Sculley,
Dave Barram and David Haselkorn. It was a great celebration. Both John and
David R. were more expansive than I have ever seen them literally
radiating happiness. My own view and theirs is that this country has
seized its last chance. I am fond of quoting Winston Churchill to the
effect that "America always does the right thing after it has
exhausted all the alternatives." This election, more than anything
else in my experience, proves his point.
The subject we were discussing
was what you and Bill should do now about education, training and labor
market policy. Following that meeting, I chaired another in Washington on
the same topic. Those present at the second meeting included Tim Barnicle,
Dave Barram, Mike Cohen, David Hornbeck, Hilary Pennington, Andy Plattner,
Lauren Resnick, Betsy Brown Ruzzi, Bob Schwartz, Mike Smith and Bill
Spring. Shirley Malcom, Ray Marshall and Susan McGuire were also invited.
Though these three were not able to be present at last week's meeting,
they have all contributed by telephone to the ideas that follow. Ira
Magaziner was also invited to this meeting.
Our purpose in these meetings
was to propose concrete actions that the Clinton administration could take
between now and the inauguration, in the first 100 days and beyond.
The result, from where I sit, was really exciting. We took a very large
leap forward in terms of how to advance the agenda on which you and we
have all been working a
practical plan for putting all the major components of the system in place
within four years, by the
time Bill has to run again.
I take personal responsibility
for what follows. Though I believe everyone involved in the planning
effort is in broad agreement, they may not all agree on the details. You
should also be aware that, although the plan comes from a group closely
associated with the National Center on Education and the Economy, there
was no practical way to poll our whole Board on this plan in the time
available. It represents, then, not a proposal from our Center, but the
best thinking of the group I have named.
We think the great opportunity
you have is to remold
the entire American system for human resources development, almost
all of the current components of which were put in place before World War
II. The danger is that each of the ideas that Bill advanced in the
campaign in the area of education and training could be translated
individually in the ordinary course of governing into a legislative
proposal and enacted as a program. This is the plan of least resistance.
But it will lead to these programs being grafted onto the present system,
not to a new system, and the opportunity will have been lost. If this
sense of time and place is correct, it is essential that the
administration's efforts be guided by a consistent vision of what it wants
to accomplish in the field of human resource development, with respect
both to choice of key officials and the program.
What follows comes in three
places:
First, a vision of the
kind of national not federal human resources development system
the nation could have. This is interwoven with a
new approach to governing
that should inform that vision. What is essential is that we create
a seamless web of
opportunities, to develop one's skills that literally
extends from cradle to grave and is the same system for everyone young
and old, poor and rich, worker and full-time student. It
needs to be a system driven by client needs (not agency regulations
or the needs of the organization providing the services), guided by
clear standards that define the stages of the system for the people
who progress through it, and regulated on the basis of outcomes
that providers produce for their clients, not inputs into the
system.
Second, a
proposed legislative agenda you can use to implement this vision. We
propose four high priority packages that will enable you to move
quickly on the campaign promises:
- The first would use
your proposal for an
apprenticeship system as the keystone of a strategy for putting a
whole new postsecondary training system in place. That
system would incorporate your proposal for reforming
postsecondary education finance. It
contains what we think is a powerful idea for rolling out and scaling
up the
whole new human resources system nationwide over the next four years,
using the (renamed) apprenticeship ideas as the entering wedge.
- The second would
combine initiatives on dislocated workers, a rebuilt employment
service and a
new system of labor market boards
to offer the Clinton administration's employment security
program, built on the best practices anywhere in the world. This is
the backbone of a system for assuring adult workers in our society
that they need never again watch with dismay as their jobs disappear
and their chances of ever getting a good job again go with them.
- The third would
concentrate on the overwhelming problems of our inner cities,
combining elements of the first and second packages into a special
program to greatly raise the work-related skills of the people trapped
in the core of our great cities.
- The fourth would
enable you to take advantage of legislation on which Congress has
already been working to advance the elementary and secondary reform
agenda.
The other major proposal we
offer has to do with government organization for the human
resources agenda. While we share your reservations about the hazards
involved in bringing reorganization proposals to the Congress, we believe
that the one we have come up with minimizes those drawbacks while creating
an opportunity for the new administration to move
like lightning to implement its human resources development proposals. We
hope you can consider the merits of this idea quickly, because, if you
decide to go with it or something like it, it will greatly affect the
nature of the offers you make to prospective cabinet members.
The Vision
We take the
proposals Bill put before the country in the campaign to be utterly
consistent with the ideas advanced in America's Choice, the school
restructuring agenda first stated in A Nation Prepared, and later
incorporated in the work of the National Alliance for Restructuring
Education, and the elaboration of this view that Ray and I tried to
capture in our book, Thinking for a Living. Taken together, we
think these ideas constitute a consistent vision for a
new human resources development system for the United States. I
have tried to capture the essence of that vision below.
An Economic
Strategy Based
on Skill Development
- The economy's strength is
derived from a whole population as skilled as any in the world,
working in workplaces organized to take maximum advantage of the
skills those people have to offer.
- A seamless
system of unending
skill development that begins in the home with the very young and
continues through school, postsecondary education and the
workplace.
The Schools
- Clear national standards of
performance in general education (the knowledge and skills that
everyone is expected to hold in common) are set to the level of the
best achieving nations in the world for students of 16, and public
schools are expected to bring all but the most severely handicapped up
to that standard. Students get a certificate when they meet this
standard, allowing them to go on to the next stage of their education.
Though the standards are set to international benchmarks, they are
distinctly American, reflecting our needs and values.
- We have a national system of
education in which curriculum,
pedagogy, examinations, and teacher education and licensure systems
are all linked to the national standards, but
which provides for substantial variance among states, districts, and
schools on these matters. This new system of linked standards,
curriculum, and pedagogy will abandon the American tracking system,
combining high academic standards with the ability to apply what one
knows to real world problems and qualifying all students for a
lifetime of learning in the postsecondary system and at work.
- We have a
system that rewards students who meet the national standards with
further education and good jobs, providing
them a strong incentive to work hard in school.
- Our public school systems
are reorganized to free
up school professionals to make the key decisions about how to use all
the available resources to bring students up to the standards. Most
of the federal, state, district and union rules and regulations that
now restrict school professionals' ability to make these decisions are
swept away, though strong measures are in place to make sure that
vulnerable populations get the help they need. School professionals
are paid at a level comparable to that of other professionals, but
they are expected to put in a full year, to spend whatever time it
takes to do the job and to be fully accountable for the results of
their work. The federal, state and local governments provide the time,
staff development resources, technology and other support needed for
them to do the job. Nothing
less than a wholly restructured school system
can possibly bring all of our students up to the standards only a few
have been expected to meet up to now.
- There is a real
aggressive program of public choice in our schools, rather than
the flaccid version that is widespread now.
- All students are guaranteed
that they will have a fair shot at reaching the standards: that is,
that whether they make it or not depends on the effort they are
willing to make, and nothing else. School delivery standards are in
place to make sure this happens. These standards have the same status
in the system as the new student performance standards, assuring that
the quality of instruction is high everywhere, but they are fashioned
so as not to constitute a new bureaucratic nightmare.
Postsecondary
Education and Work Skills
- All students who meet the
new national standards for general education are entitled
to the equivalent of three more years of free additional education. We
would have the federal and state governments match funds to guarantee
one free year of college education to everyone
who meets the new national standards for general education. So a
student who meets the standard at 16 would be entitled to two free
years of high school and one of college. Loans,
which can be forgiven for public service, are
available for additional education beyond that. National standards for
sub-baccalaureate college-level professional and technical degrees and
certificates will be established with the participation of employers,
labor and higher education. These programs will include both academic
study and structured on-the-job training. Eighty percent or more of
American high school graduates will be expected to get some form of
college degree, though most of them less than a baccalaureate. These
new professional and technical certificates and degrees typically are
won within three years of acquiring the general education certificate,
so, for
most postsecondary students, college will be free. These
professional and technical degree programs will be designed to link to
programs leading to the baccalaureate degree and higher degrees. There
will be no dead ends in this system. Everyone who meets the general
education standard will be able to go to some form of college, being
able to borrow all the money they need to do so, beyond the first free
year.
(This idea of post-secondary professional and technical
certificates captures all of the essentials of the apprenticeship idea,
while offering none of its drawbacks (see below). But it also makes
it clear that those engaged in apprentice-style programs are getting
more than narrow training; they are continuing their education for other
purposes as well, and building a base for more education later. Clearly,
this idea redefines college. Proprietary schools, employers and
community-based organizations will want to offer these programs, as well
as community colleges and four-year institutions, but these new entrants
will have to be accredited if they are to qualify to offer the
programs.)
- Employers are not required
to provide slots for the structured on-the-job training component of
the program but many do so, because they get first access to the most
accomplished graduates of these programs, and they can use these
programs to introduce the trainees to their own values and way of
doing things.
- The system of skill
standards for technical and professional degrees is the same for
students just coming out of high school and for adults in the
workforce. It is progressive, in the sense that certificates and
degrees for entry level jobs lead to further professional and
technical education programs at higher levels. Just as in the case of
the system for the schools, though the standards are the same
everywhere (leading to maximum mobility for students), the curricula
can vary widely and programs can be custom designed to fit the needs
of full-time and part-time students with very different requirements.
Government grant and loan programs are available on the same terms to
full-time and part-time students, as long as the programs in which
they are enrolled are designed to lead to certificates and degrees defined
by the system of
professional and technical standards.
- The national system of
professional and technical standards is designed much like the
multistate bar, which provides a national core around which the states
can specify additional standards that meet their unique needs. There
are national standards and exams for no more than 20 broad
occupational areas, each of which can lead to many occupations in a
number of related industries. Students who qualify in any one of these
areas have the broad skills required by a whole family of occupations,
and most are sufficiently skilled to enter the workforce immediately,
with further occupation-specific skills provided by their union or
employer. Industry and occupational groups can voluntarily create
standards building on these broad standards for their own needs, as
can the states. Students entering the system are first introduced to
very broad occupational groups, narrowing over time to concentrate on
acquiring the skills needed for a cluster of occupations. This modular
system provides for the initiative of particular states and industries
while at the same time providing for mobility across states and
occupations by reducing the time and cost entailed in moving from one
occupation to another. In this way, a balance is established between
the kinds of generic skills needed to function effectively in high
performance work organizations and the skills needed to continue
learning quickly and well through a lifetime of work, on the one hand,
and the specific skills needed to perform at a high level in a
particular occupation on the other.
- Institutions
receiving grant and loan funds under this system are required
to provide information to
the public and to government agencies in a uniform format. This
information covers enrollment by program, costs and success rates for
students of different backgrounds and characteristics, and
career outcomes for those students, thereby enabling students to make
informed choices among institutions based on cost and performance.
Loan defaults are reduced to a level close to zero, both because
programs that do not deliver what they promise are not selected by
prospective students and because the new postsecondary loan system
uses the IRS to collect what is owed from salaries and wages as they
are earned.
[Page: E1821] Education and Training for Employed and Unemployed Adults
- The national system of
skills standards establishes the basis for the development of a
coherent, unified training system. That system can be accessed by
students coming out of high school, employed adults who want to
improve their prospects, unemployed adults who are dislocated and
others who lack the basic skills required to get out of poverty. But
it is all the same system. There are no longer any parts of it that
are exclusively for the disadvantaged, though
special measures are taken to make sure that the disadvantaged are
served. It is a system for everyone, just as all the parts of the
system already described are for everyone. So the people who take
advantage of this system are not marked by it as damaged goods. The
skills they acquire are world
class, clear and defined
in part by the employers who
will make decisions about hiring and advancement.
- The new general education
standard becomes the target for all basic education programs, both for
school dropouts and adults. Achieving
that standard is the prerequisite for enrollment in all professional
and technical degree programs. A
wide range of agencies and institutions offer programs leading to the
general education certificate, including high schools, dropout
recovery centers, adult education centers, community colleges, prisons
and employers. These programs are tailored to the needs of the people
who enroll in them. All the programs receiving government grant or
loan funds that come with dropouts and adults for enrollment in
programs preparing students to meet the general education standard
must release the same kind of data required of the postsecondary
institutions on enrollment, program description, cost and success
rates. Reports are produced for each institution and for the system as
a whole showing differential success rates for
each major demographic group.
- The system
is funded in four different ways, all providing access to the same or
a similar set of services. School dropouts below the age of 21 are
entitled to the same amount of funding from the same sources that they
would have been entitled to had they stayed in school. Dislocated
workers are funded by the federal government through the federal
programs for that purpose and by state unemployment insurance funds.
The chronically unemployed are funded by federal and state funds
established for that purpose. Employed people can access the system
through the requirement that their employers spend an amount equal to
1-1/2 percent of their salary and wage bill on training leading to
national skill certification. People in prison could get reductions in
their sentences by meeting the general education standard in a program
provided by the prison system. Any of these groups can also use the
funds in their individual training account, if they have any, the
balances in their grant entitlement or their access to the student
loan fund.
Labor Market
Systems
- The Employment Service is
greatly upgraded and separated from the Unemployment Insurance Fund. All
available front-line jobs whether public or private must be
listed in it by law. (This
provision must be carefully designed to make sure that employers will
not be subject to employment suits based on the data produced by this
system if they are subject to such suits, they will not
participate.) All
trainees in the system looking for work are entitled to be listed in
it without a fee. So it is no longer a system just for the poor and
unskilled, but for everyone. The
system is fully computerized. It lists not only job openings and job
seekers (with their qualifications) but also all the institutions in
the labor market area offering programs leading to the general
education certificate and those offering programs leading to the
professional and technical college degrees and certificates, along
with all the relevant data about the costs, characteristics and
performance of those programs for everyone and for special
populations. Counselors
are available to any citizen to help them assess their needs, plan a
program and finance it, and, once they are trained, to find an
opening.
- A system of
labor market boards is established at the local, state and federal
levels to coordinate the systems for job training, postsecondary
professional and technical education, adult basic education, job
matching and counseling. The rebuilt Employment Service is supervised
by these boards. The
system's clients no longer have to go from agency to agency filling
out separate applications for separate programs. It
is all taken care of at the local labor market board office by one
counselor accessing the integrated computer-based program, which makes
it possible for the counselor to determine eligibility for all
relevant programs at once, plan a program with the client and assemble
the necessary funding from all the available sources. The
same system will enable counselor and client to array all the relevant
program providers side by side, assess their relative costs and
performance records and determine which providers are best able to
meet the client's needs based on performance.
Some Common
Features
- Throughout, the object is to
have a performance- and client-oriented system, to encourage local
creativity and responsibility by getting local people to commit to
high goals and organize to achieve them, sweeping away as much of the
rules, regulations and bureaucracy that are in their way as possible,
provided that they are making real progress against their goals. For
this to work, the standards at every level of the system have to be
clear; every client has to know what they have to accomplish in order
to get what they want out of the system. The service providers have to
be supported in the task of getting their clients to the finish line
and rewarded when they are making real progress toward that goal. We
would sweep away means-tested programs, because
they stigmatize their recipients and alienate the public, replacing
them with programs that are for everyone, but
also work for the disadvantaged. We would replace rules defining
inputs with rules defining outcomes and the rewards for achieving
them. This means, among other things, permitting local people to
combine as many federal programs as they see fit, provided that the
intended beneficiaries are progressing toward the right outcomes
(there are now 23 separate federal programs for dislocated workers!).
We would make individuals, their families and whole communities the
unit of service, not agencies, programs and projects. Wherever
possible, we would have service providers compete with one another for
funds that come with the client, in an environment in which the client
has good information about the cost and performance record of the
competing providers. Dealing with public agencies whether they are
schools or the employment service should be more like dealing with
Federal Express than with the old Post Office.
This vision, as I pointed out
above, is consistent with everything Bill proposed as a candidate. But it
goes beyond those proposals, extending them from ideas for new programs to
a comprehensive vision of how they can be used as building blocks for a
whole new system. But this
vision is very complex, will take a long time to sell, and will have to be
revised many times along the way. The right way to think about it is as an
internal working document that forms the background for a plan, not the
plan itself. One
would want to make sure that the specific actions of the new
administration were designed, in a general way, to advance this agenda as
it evolved, while not committing anyone to the details, which would change
over time.
Everything that follows is cast
in the frame of strategies for bringing the new system into being, not as
a pilot program, not as a few demonstrations to be swept aside in another
administration, but everywhere,
as the new way of doing business.
In the sections
that follow, we break these goals down into their main components and
propose an action plan for each.
[Page: E1822] Major Components of the Program
The preceding
section presented a vision of the system we have in mind chronologically
from the point of view of an individual served by it. Here we reverse the
order, starting with descriptions of program components designed to serve
adults, and working our way down to the very young. HIGH
SKILLS FOR ECONOMIC COMPETITIVENESS PROGRAM Developing
System Standards
- Create
National Board for Professional and Technical Standards. Board is
private not-for-profit
chartered by Congress. Charter specifies broad membership composed of
leading figures from higher education, business, labor, government and
advocacy groups. Board can receive appropriated funds from Congress,
private foundations, individuals, and corporations. Neither
Congress nor the executive branch can dictate the standards set by the
Board. But the Board is
required to report annually to the President and the Congress in order
to provide for public accountability. It is also directed to work
collaboratively with the states and cities involved in the
Collaborative Design and Development Program (see below) in the
development of the standards.
- Charter specifies that the
National Board will set broad performance standards (not
time-in-the-seat standards or course standards) for college-level
Professional and Technical certificates and degrees in not more than
20 areas and develops performance examinations for each. The Board is
required to set broad standards of the kind described in the vision
statement above and is not permitted to simply reify the narrow
standards that characterize many occupations now. (More than 2,000
standards currently exist, many for licensed occupations these are
not the kinds of standards we have in mind.) It
also specifies that the programs leading to these certificates and
degrees will combine time in the classroom with time at the work-site
in structured on-the-job training. The
standards assume the existence of (high school level) general
education standards set by others. The new standards and exams are
meant to be supplemented by the states and by individual industries
and occupations. Board is responsible for administering the exam
system and continually updating the standards and exams.
Legislation creating the Board is sent to the Congress in the first
six months of the administration, imposing a deadline for creating the
standards and the exams within three years of passage of the
legislation.
Commentary:
The proposal reframes
the Clinton apprenticeship proposal as a college program
and establishes a mechanism for setting the standards for the program. The
unions are adamantly opposed to broad based apprenticeship programs by
that name. Focus groups conducted by JFF and others show that parents
everywhere want their kids to go to college, not to be shunted aside
into a non-college apprenticeship "vocational" program. By
requiring these programs to be a combination of classroom instruction
and structured OJT, and creating a standard-setting board that includes
employers and labor, all the objectives of the apprenticeship idea are
achieved, while at the same time assuring much broader support for the
idea, as well as a
guarantee that the program will not become too narrowly focussed on
particular occupations. It also ties the Clinton apprenticeship idea to
the Clinton college funding proposal in a
seamless web. Charging
the Board with creating not more than 20 certificate or degree
categories establishes a balance between the need to create one national
system on the one hand with the need to avoid creating a cumbersome and
rigid national bureaucracy on the other. This approach provides lots of
latitude for individual industry groups, professional groups and state
authorities to establish their own standards, while at the same time
avoiding the chaos that would surely occur if they were the only source
of standards. The bill establishing the Board should also authorize
the executive branch to make grants
to industry groups, professional societies, occupational groups and
states to develop standards and exams. Our assumption is that the system
we are proposing will be managed so as to encourage the states to combine
the last two years of high school and the first two years of community
college into three year programs
leading to college degrees and certificates. Proprietary institutions,
employers and community-based organizations could also offer these
programs, but they would have to be accredited to offer these
college-level programs. Eventually, students getting their general
education certificates might go directly to community college or to
another form of college, but the new system should not require that.
Collaborative Design and
Development Program
The object is to create
a single comprehensive system
for professional and technical education that meets the requirements of everyone
from high school students to skilled dislocated workers, from the hard
core unemployed to employed adults who want to improve their prospects.
Creating such a system means sweeping
aside countless programs, building new ones, combining funding
authorities, changing deeply embedded institutional structures, and so
on. The question is how
to get from where we are to where we want to be. Trying
to ram it down everyone's throat would engender overwhelming opposition.
Our idea is to draft
legislation that would offer an opportunity for those states and
selected large cities that are excited about this set of ideas to
come forward and join with each other and with the federal government in
an alliance to do the necessary design work and actually deliver the
needed services on a fast track. The legislation would require
the executive branch to establish a competitive grant program
for these states and cities and to engage a group of organizations to
offer technical assistance to the expanding set of states and cities
engaged in designing and implementing the new system. This is not the
usual large scale experiment, nor is it a demonstration program. A
highly regarded precedent exists for this approach in the National
Science Foundation's SSI program. As soon as the first set of states is
engaged, another set would be invited to participate, until most or all
the states are involved. It is a collaborative design, rollout and
scale-up program. It is intended to parallel the work of the National
Board for College Professional and Technical Standards, so that the
states and cities (and all their partners) would be able to implement
the new standards as soon as they become available, although they would
be delivering services on a large scale before that happened. Thus, major
parts of the whole system would be in operation in a majority of the
states within three years from the passage of the initial legislation. Inclusion
of selected large cities in this design is not an afterthought. We
believe that what we are proposing here for the cities is the necessary
complement to a large scale job-creation program for the cities. Skill
development will not work if there are no jobs, but job development will
not work without a determined effort to improve the skills of city
residents. This is the skill development component. Participants
- volunteer states,
counterpart initiative for cities.
- 15 states, 15 cities
selected to begin in first year. 15 more in each successive
year.
- 5 year
grants (on the order of $20 million per year to each state, lower
amounts to the cities) given to each, with specific goals to be
achieved by the third year, including program elements in place
(e.g., upgraded employment service), number of people enrolled in
new professional and technical programs and so on.
- a core set of High
Performance Work Organization firms willing to participate in
standard setting and to offer training slots and mentors.
- Criteria for
Selection
- strategies for enriching
existing co-op, tech prep and other programs to meet the
criteria.
- commitment to
implementing new general education standard in
legislation.
- commitment to
implementing the new Technical and Professional skills
standards for college.
- commitment
to developing an outcome- and performance-based system for human
resources development system.
- commitment
to new role for employment service.
- commitment to join with
others in national
design and implementation activity.
- Clients
- young adults entering
workforce.
- dislocated
workers.
- long-term
unemployed.
- employed who want to
upgrade skills.
- Program Components
- institute own version of
state
and local labor market boards. Local
labor market boards to involve leading employers, labor
representatives, educators and advocacy group leaders in running
the redesigned employment service, running
intake system for all clients, counseling
all clients, maintaining the information system that will make the
vendor market efficient and organizing employers to provide job
experience and training slots for school youth and adult
trainees.
- rebuild employment
service as a primary function of labor market boards.
- develop programs to
bring dropouts and illiterates up to general education certificate
standard. Organize local alternative providers, firms to provide
alternative education, counseling, job experience and placement
services to these clients.
- develop programs for
dislocated workers and hard-core unemployed (see below).
- develop city- and
state-wide programs to combine
the last two years of high school and the first two years of
colleges into three-year programs after
acquisition of the general education certificate to culminate in
college certificates and degrees. These programs should
combine academics and structured on-the-job
training.
- develop uniform
reporting system for providers, requiring
them to provide information
in that format on
characteristics of clients, their
success rates by program, and the costs of those programs. Develop
computer-based system for combining this data at local labor
market board offices with employment data from the state so that
counselors and clients can look at programs offered by colleges
and other vendors in terms of cost, client characteristics,
program design, and outcomes. Including subsequent employment
histories for graduates.
- design all
programs around the forthcoming general education standards and
the standards to be developed by the National Board for College
Professional and Technical Standards.
- create statewide program
of technical assistance to firms on high performance work
organization and help them develop quality programs for
participants in Technical and Professional certificate and degree
programs. (It is essential that these programs be high quality,
nonbureaucratic and voluntary for the firms.)
- participate with other
states and the national technical assistance program in the
national alliance effort to exchange information and assistance
among all participants.
- National technical
assistance to participants
- executive
branch authorized
to compete opportunity to provide the following services (probably
using a Request For Qualifications):
- state-of-the art
assistance to the states and cities related to the principal
program components (e.g., work reorganization, training, basic
literacy, funding systems, apprenticeship systems, large scale
data management systems, training systems for the HR professionals
who make the whole system work, etc.). A
number of organizations would be funded. Each
would be expected to provide information and direct assistance to
the states and cities involved, and to coordinate their efforts
with one another.
- it is essential that the
technical assistance function include a major professional
development component to make sure the key people in the states
and cities upon whom success depends have the resources available
to develop the high skills required. Some
of the funds for this function should be provided directly to the
states and cities, some to the technical assistance agency.
- coordination of the
design and implementation activities of the whole consortium,
document results, prepare reports, etc. One organization would be
funded to perform this function.
Dislocated Workers Program
- new legislation would permit
combining all dislocated workers programs at redesigned employment
service office. Clients would, in effect, receive vouchers for
education and training in amounts determined by the benefits for which
they qualify. Employment service case managers would qualify client
worker for benefits and assist the client in the selection of
education and training programs offered by provider institutions. Any
provider institutions that receive funds derived from dislocated
worker programs are required to provide information on costs and
performance of programs in uniform format described above. This
consolidated and voucherized dislocated workers program would operate
nationwide. It would be integrated with Collaborative Design and
Development Program in those states and cities in which that program
functioned. It would be built around the general education certificate
and the Professional and Technical Certificate and Degree Program as
soon as those standards were in place. In this way, programs for
dislocated workers would be progressively and fully integrated with
the rest of the national education and training system.
Levy-Grant System
- this is the part of the
system that provides funds for currently employed people to improve
their skills. Ideally, it should specifically provide means whereby
front-line workers can earn their general education credential (if
they do not already have one) and acquire Professional and Technical
Certificates and degrees in fields of their choosing.
- everything
we have heard indicates virtually universal opposition in the employer
community to the proposal for a 1-1/2% levy on employers for training
to support the costs associated with employed workers gaining these
skills, whatever the levy is called. We propose that Bill take a leaf
out of the German book. One of the most important reasons that large
German employers offer apprenticeship slots to German youngsters is
that they fear, with good reason, that if they don't volunteer to do
so, the law will require it. Bill could gather a group of leading
executives and business organization leaders, and tell them straight
out that he will hold back on submitting legislation to require a
training levy, provided that they commit themselves to a drive to get
employers to get their average expenditures on front-line employee
training up to 2% of front-line employee salaries and wages within two
years. If they have not done so within that time, then he will expect
their support when he submits legislation requiring the training levy.
He could do the same thing with respect to slots for structured
on-the-job training.
College Loan/Public Service
Program
- we presume that this program
is being designed by others and so have not attended to it. From
everything we know about it, however, it is entirely compatible with
the rest of what is proposed here. What is, of course, especially
relevant here, is that our
reconceptualization of the apprenticeship proposal as a college-level
education program, combined
with our proposal that everyone who gets the general education
credential be entitled
to a free year of higher education
(combined federal and state funds) will have a decided impact on the
calculations of cost for the college loan/public service
program.
Assistance for Dropouts are
the Long-Term Unemployed
- the problem of upgrading the
skills of high school dropouts and the adult hard core unemployed is
especially difficult. It is also at the heart of the problem of our
inner cities. All the evidence indicates that what is needed is
something with all the important characteristics of a non-residential
Job Corps-like program. The problem with the Job Corps is that it is
operated directly by the federal government and is therefore not
embedded at all in the infrastructure of local communities. The way to
solve this problem is to create a new urban program that is locally
not federally organized and administered, but which must
operate in a way that uses something like the federal standards for
contracting for Job Corps services. In this way, local employers,
neighborhood organizations and other local service providers could
meet the need, but requiring
local authorities to use the federal standards
would assure high quality results. Programs for high school dropouts
and the hard-core unemployed would probably have to be separately
organized, though the services provided would be much the same. Federal
funds would be offered
on a matching basis with state and local funds for this purpose. These
programs should be fully integrated with the revitalized employment
service. The local labor market board would be the local authority
responsible for receiving the funds and contracting with providers for
the services. It would provide diagnostic, placement and testing
services. We would eliminate the targeted jobs credit and use the
money now spent on that program to finance these operations. Funds can
also be used from the JOBS program in the welfare reform act. This
will not be sufficient, however, because there is currently no federal
money available to meet the needs of hard-core unemployed males
(mostly Black) and so new monies will have to be appropriated for the
purpose.
Commentary:
As you know
very well, the
High Skills, Competitive Workforce Act sponsored by Senators Kennedy and
Hatfield and Congressmen Gephardt and Regula provides a ready-made vehicle
for advancing many of the ideas we have outlined. To foster a good working
relationship with the Congress, we suggest that, to the extent possible,
the framework of these companion bills be used to frame the President's
proposals. You may not know
that we have put together a large group of representatives of
Washington-based organizations to come to a consensus around the ideas in
America's Choice. They are full of energy and very committed to this joint
effort. If they are made part of the process of framing the legislative
proposals, they can be expected to be strong support for them when they
arrive on the Hill. As you think about the assembly of these ideas into
specific legislative proposals, you may also want to take into account the
packaging ideas that come later in this letter.
ELEMENTARY AND
SECONDARY EDUCATION PROGRAM The
situation with respect to elementary and secondary education is very
different from adult education and training. In the latter case, a
new vision and a whole new structure is required. In
the former, there is increasing acceptance of a new vision and structure
among the public at large, within the relevant professional groups and in
Congress. There is also a lot of existing activity on which to build. So
we confine ourselves here to describing some of those activities that can
be used to launch the Clinton education program.
Standard Setting
Legislation to
accelerate the process of national standard setting in education was
contained in the conference report on S.2 and HR 4323 that was defeated on
a recent cloture vote. Solid majorities were behind the legislation in
both houses of Congress. While some of us would quarrel with a few of the
details, we think the new administration should support the early
reintroduction of this legislation with whatever changes it thinks fit.
This legislation does not establish a national body to create a national
examination system. We think that is the right choice for now.
Systemic Chance in Public
Education
The conference report on S.2
and HR 4323 also contained a comprehensive program to support systemic
change in public education. Here again, some of us would quibble with some
of the particulars, but we believe that the administration's objectives
would be well served by endorsing the resubmission of this legislation,
modified as it sees fit.
Federal Programs for the
Disadvantaged
The established federal
education programs for the disadvantaged need to be thoroughly overhauled
to reflect an emphasis on results for the students rather than compliance
with the regulations. A national commission on Chapter 1, the largest of
these programs, chaired by David Hornbeck, has designed a radically new
version of this legislation, with the active participation of many of the
advocacy groups. Other groups have been similarly engaged. We think the
new administration should quickly endorse the work of the national
commission and introduce its proposals early next year. It is unlikely
that this legislation will pass before the deadline two years away
for the reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, but
early endorsement of this new approach by the administration will send a
strong signal to the Congress and will greatly affect the climate in which
other parts of the act will be considered.
Public Choice Technology,
Integrated Health and Human Services, Curriculum Resources, High
Performance Management, Professional Development and Research and
Development
The restructuring
of the schools that is
envisioned in S.2 and HR 4323 is not likely to succeed unless the schools
have a lot of information about how to do it and real assistance in
getting it done. The areas in which this help is needed are suggested by
the heading of this section. One of the most cost-effective things the
federal government could do is to provide support for research,
development and technical assistance of the schools on these topics. The
new Secretary of Education should be directed to propose a strategy for
doing just that, on a scale sufficient to the need. Existing programs of
research, development and assistance should be examined as possible
sources of funds for these purposes. Professional development is a special
case. To build the restructured
system will require an
enormous amount of professional development and the time in which
professionals can take advantage of such a resource. Both cost a lot of
money. One of the priorities for the new education secretary should be the
development of strategies for dealing with these problems. But here, as
elsewhere, there are some existing programs in the Department of Education
whose funds can be redirected for this purpose, programs that are not
currently informed by the goals that we have spelled out. Much of what we
have in mind here can be accomplished through the reauthorization of the
Office of Educational Research and Improvement. Legislation for that
reauthorization was prepared for the last session of Congress, but did not
pass. That legislation was informed by a deep distrust of the Republican
administration, rather than the vision put forward by the Clinton
campaign, but that can and should be remedied on the next round.
Early Childhood Education
The president-elect has
committed himself to a great expansion in the funding of Head Start. We
agree. But the design of the program should be changed to reflect several
important requirements. The quality of professional preparation for the
people who staff these programs is very low and there are no standards
that apply to their employment. The same kind of standard setting we have
called for in the rest of this plan should inform the approach to this
program. Early childhood education should be combined with quality day
care to provide wrap-around programs that enable working parents to drop
off their children at the beginning of the workday and pick them up at the
end. Full funding for the very poor should be combined with matching funds
to extend the tuition paid by middle class parents to make sure that these
programs are not officially segregated by income. The growth of the
program should be phased in, rather than done all at once, so that quality
problems can be addressed along the way, based on developing examples of
best practice. These and other related issues need to be addressed, in our
judgment, before the new administration commits itself on the specific
form of increased support for Head Start.
Putting the package
together:
Here we remind you of what
we said at the beginning of this letter about timing the legislative
agenda. We propose that you assemble the ideas just described into four
high priority packages that will enable you to move quickly on the
campaign promises:
- The first would use your
proposal for an apprenticeship system as the keystone of the strategy
for putting the whole new postsecondary training system in place. It
would consist of the proposal for postsecondary standards, the
Collaborative Design and Development proposal, the technical
assistance proposal and the postsecondary education finance
proposal.
- The second would combine
the initiatives on dislocated workers, the rebuilt employment service
and the new system of labor market boards as the Clinton
administration's employment security program, built on the best
practices anywhere in the world. This is the backbone of a system for
assuring adult workers in our society that they need never again watch
with dismay as their jobs disappear and their chances of ever getting
a good job again go with them.
- The third would
concentrate on the overwhelming problems of our inner cities,
combining most of the elements of the first and second packages into a
special program to greatly raise the work-related skills of the people
trapped in the core of our great cities.
- The fourth would enable
you to take advantage of legislation on which Congress has already
been working to advance the elementary and secondary reform agenda. It
would combine the successor to HR 4323 and S.2 (incorporating the
systemic reforms agenda and the board for student performance
standards), with the proposal for revamping Chapter 1.
Organizing the Executive
Branch for Human Resouces Development
The issue here is how to
organize the federal government to make sure that the new system is
actually built as a
seamless web in the field,
where it counts, and that program gets a fast start with a first-rate team
behind it.
We propose, first, that the
President appoint a National Council on Human Resources Development. It
would consist of the relevant key White House officials, cabinet members
and members of Congress. It would also include a small number of
governors, educators, business executives, labor leaders and advocates for
minorities and the poor. It would be established in such a way as to
assure continuity of membership across administrations, so that the
consensus it forges will outlast any one administration. It would be
charged with recommending broad policy on a national system of human
resources development to the President and the Congress, assessing the
effectiveness and promise of current programs and proposing new ones. It
would be staffed by senior officials on the Domestic Policy Council staff
of the President.
Second, we
propose that a new agency be created, the National Institute for Learning,
Work and Service. Creation
of this agency would signal instantly the new administration's commitment
to putting the continuing education and training of the `forgotten half'
on a par with the preparation of those who have historically been given
the resources to go to 'college,' and to integrate the two systems, not
with a view to dragging down the present system and those it serves, but
rather to make good on the promise that everyone will have access to the
kind of education that only a small minority have had access to up to now.
To this agency would be assigned the functions now performed by the
assistant secretary for employment and training, the assistant secretary
for vocational education and the assistant secretary for higher education.
The agency would be staffed by people specifically recruited from all over
the country for the purpose. The
staff would be small, high powered and able to move quickly
to implement the policy initiatives of the new President in the field of
human resources development.
The closest existing model to
what we have in mind is the National Science Board and the National
Science Foundation, with the Council in the place of the Board and the
Institute in the place of the Foundation. But our council would be
advisory, whereas the Board is governing. If you do not like the idea of a
permanent Council, you might consider the idea of a temporary President's
Task Force, constituted much as the Council would be.
In this scheme, the Department
of Education would be free to focus on putting the new student performance
standards in place and managing the programs that will take the leadership
in the national restructuring of the schools. Much of the financing and
disbursement functions of the higher education program would move to the
Treasury Department, leaving the higher education staff in the new
Institute to focus on matters of substance.
In any case, as you can see, we
believe that some extraordinary measure well short of actually merging the
departments of labor and education is required to move the new agenda with
dispatch.
Getting Consensus on the
Vision
Radical changes
in attitudes, values and beliefs are required to move any combination of
these agendas. The federal
government will have little direct leverage on many of the actors
involved. For much of what must be done, a new, broad consensus will be
required. What role can the new administration play in forging that
consensus and how should it go about doing it?
At the narrowest level, the
agenda cannot be moved unless there is agreement among the governors, the
President and the Congress. Bill's role at the Charlottesville summit
leads naturally to a reconvening of that group, perhaps with the addition
of key members of Congress and others.
But we think that
having an early summit on the subject of the whole human resources agenda
would be risky, for many reasons. Better to build on Bill's enormous
success during the campaign with national talk shows, in school gymnasiums
and the bus trips. He could start on the consensus-building progress this
way, taking his message directly to the public, while submitting his
legislative agenda and working it on the Hill. After six months or so,
when the public has warmed to the ideas and the legislative packages are
about to get into hearings, then you might consider some form of summit,
broadened to include not only the governors, but also key members of
Congress and others whose support and influence are important. This way,
Bill can be sure that the agenda is his, and he can go into it with a
groundswell of support behind him.
That's it. None
of us doubt that you have thought long and hard about many of these things
and have probably gone way beyond what we have laid out in many areas. But
we hope that there is something here that you can use. We would, of
course, be very happy to flesh out these ideas at greater length and work
with anyone you choose to make them fit the work that you have been
doing.
Very best wishes from all of us
to you and Bill.
[signed: Marc]
Marc Tucker
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