Steven Singer: Disaster Capitalism Clears the Way to Privatize Schools in Puerto Rico

“Make no mistake. This has nothing to do with serving the needs of children. It is about selling off public property because it belongs to poor, brown people.”


Diane Ravitch's blog




First it was New Orleans, its public schools crippled by a devastating hurricane, which was used to sweep away public education. Now, it is Puerto Rico, crushed by a powerful hurricane, with most of the island left by the federal government without access to electricity or clean water.



Now Puerto Rico will abandon public education and turn its students over to private operators and religious schools. Let someone else run the schools. The government prefers to abandon them.



Steven Singer writes a cogent analysis of the death of public education in Puerto Rico.



“More than five months since a devastating hurricane hit the island’s shores, some 270 schools are still without power.



“Roughly 25,000 students are leaving with that number expected to swell to 54,000 in four years. And that’s after an 11-year recession already sent 78,000 students seeking refuge elsewhere.



“So what do you do to stop the…


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Published on February 07, 2018 10:55
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