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Here We Go Again
by Buck Quigley
Massive money being spent by unapproved supporters in Buffalo school board race
Last spring I suffered grievous slip-and-fall injuries as a result of all the glossy campaign mailers inserted through the mail slot in my front door during the final days of the at-large Buffalo school board election. Back then I learned that they had been sent out by a shadowy group called Buffalo Students First, which was bankrolled by the Buffalo Niagara Partnership to promote the slate of incumbents comprising Chris Jacobs, Florence Johnson, and Catherine Collins. The first two kept their seats, although Johnson only squeaked by after a count of write-in and absentee ballots. Collins lost to John Licata, who whipped them all--including Jacobs--on the strength of his message.
Among the local politicians endorsing the incumbents on the unauthorized flyers were Mayor Byron Brown, Assemblywoman Crystal Peoples-Stokes, and New York State Senator Antoine Thompson. Several versions of the expensive mailers were sent out in waves all across the city, targeting different messages to different neighborhoods. The only problem with the tactic is that it goes against New York State Education Law as it applies in the City of Buffalo. Unauthorized expenditures on behalf of candidates by outside groups is limited to $25.
That’s not a misprint. $25. Buffalo Students First, according to its own filing, overshot that limit by at least $30,000.
Last Friday, I came home from work, walked in the front door, and slid at breakneck speed across the entranceway, arms flailing to no avail as my tailbone struck the hard tile floor. It was as if I’d slipped on a particularly slick dog dropping, but there was no smell. As the pain spread, I glared at the large glossy flyer as it fluttered down and landed on my chest. I saw Jason McCarthy’s name on it. I knew of McCarthy as both a skilled bartender and a champion of dog parks. I quickly tried to connect the dots…bartender…dog poop…two things that can contribute to a nasty fall. But no, as I read further I learned the mailer was promoting him for school board.
“Here we go again,” I thought. I looked at the return address, expecting to see 665 Main Street—the address of the Buffalo Niagara Partnership that appeared on all of the Buffalo Students First mailings last year, but I was wrong. This mailing originated from 640 Ellicott Street, fourth floor, suite eight, and was paid for by a group called Education Reform Now Advocacy.
I slowly got to my feet and walked inside, wondering if I should take on another case that would have me snooping around a bunch of powerful, wealthy people bent on buying a school board election. “What’s in it for me?” I asked myself. Then, my young daughter came running into the living room and gave me a hug. Turns out that even hard-boiled gumshoes like myself can be moved to do things they don’t want to do—if they convince themselves it’s the right thing to do.
LockstepThe candidates below being pushed by Education Reform Now promise the same things to voters in their flyers, verbatim. (Phil Lowmax flyer. Detail of text below.)
from left to right: Jason McCarthy, Rev. Kinzer Pointer, Vivian Evans
- Work tirelessly to increase graduation rates. We cannot accept that only 52% of our students graduate from high school. Our kids can no longer afford the status quo. - Fight federal education funding. Despite a $34 million budget gap and the risk of laying off teachers, the school board initially voted not to support the state’s application for $700 million in education funding from the Obama Administration because of politics. Buffalo needs a school board member who won’t play politics with our kids’ educations. Click here to see a larger version of the above Phil Lowmax flyer to view the full text. |
On the case
Sherlock Holmes has his Watson, Monk has his Sharona—but I, fortunately, have an entire rogue’s gallery of sidekicks to help me crack a case. I spent the rest of the weekend pondering this one clue that had arrived in my mail. One informant, whom I will call “Google” to protect his anonymity, provided some important info right off the bat. Turns out 640 Ellicott Street is located in the Buffalo Niagara Medical Campus. To be more precise, it’s a building called the Innovation Center, which touts “new research and development space available for life sciences and biotech companies seeking to be a part of the thriving Buffalo Niagara Medical Campus!”
How could a group calling itself Education Reform Now Advocacy fit in with that crowd, I wondered. I put the shoe leather to the pavement Monday, and quickly made the hike from the Artvoice office to the Innovation Center, just a couple blocks away. I went inside, and noticed the flat-screen TVs and marketing posters promoting the BNMC. There was a lone security guard sitting at the reception desk. Behind him, a nice slate pool table with braided leather pockets in the reception area. A couple employees were shooting a game in the eerie silence.
The guard looked up at me. “Can I help you?”
“Hi. I’d like to go up to the Education Reform Now office in suite eight on the fourth floor.”
He asked if I had an appointment. I told him no, and admitted that I didn’t even have a phone number or a contact name there. He looked at a list and said, “You must be here for Whitney.” He asked my name. I told him and he called up to Whitney. After a brief conversation, he hung up and said she’d be down.
I had a seat and waited. The silence was only broken by the occasional crack of billiard balls. After about 10 minutes, the guys finished their game, re-racked the balls, and left. I picked up a promotional bookmark from a stack on the table next to me. “A neighborhood in the know,” it read. “35 places to keep you healthy down the block. 45 places to shop ’til you drop nearby. 51 ways to enjoy nightlife. 76 ways to experience culture around the corner. 80 places to eat around the campus. 8,500 employees. 1 campus. Buffalo Niagara Medical Campus.”
It was just me and the security guard in the dead silence. Fifteen minutes. Twenty. I was thinking about getting up and shooting a game to pass the time when the desk phone rang.
“That was Whitney,” the guard said. “She says she’s on a phone call, and would you mind leaving your name and number? She says she’ll call you back.”
“Well, okay,” I said, “What’s Whitney’s last name?”
“Kemp.”
Follow the leads
I left my number, went back to the office, and picked up the blower. After a few calls, a couple of my informants hipped me to the fact that Whitney Kemp served as a spokesperson for the failed Erie County executive campaign of Paul Clark, and is also an associate of Jack O’Donnell—a protégé of Steve Pigeon—who hopes to gain the chairmanship of the Erie County Democratic Party one day. I also gained possession of her email address, and sent her a quick note telling her I’d dropped by and asking if she could explain why all these slick mailers for Jason McCarthy, Vivian Evans, Kinzer Pointer, and Phil Lomax were being sent out to voters in the North, East, Ferry, and West districts, respectively, from her office address.
I also made a call to the BNMC, and was able to get her phone number, along with confirmation that her office is on the fourth floor, suite eight. So, I left her a couple messages. I went home a little after five, figuring I was being blown off. When I checked my email later that night, I read a message from Kemp, apologizing for not getting back to me sooner, and that it was a very busy day. She referred me to a man named Stefan Friedman, at a New York City area code, who could answer any questions I might have.
The next morning, I was getting ready to give Friedman a call when my secretary buzzed in: “Whitney Kemp on line one,” she said. I took a sip of joe and picked up the phone.
What ensued was a conversation better described than transcribed. Kemp struck me as a mixed-up kid who’d gotten involved in something that was rapidly spinning out of control. At first she wanted to make sure I had Friedman’s number. I told her I did. She also left me his office number.
I asked her if it was her office where these mailers had been sent from. She said I had to ask Stefan. I asked her why I should call a guy in New York City to confirm her office address. She was evasive in the extreme. She would neither confirm nor deny whether she was the Buffalo headquarters for ERN, insisting I call Friedman. Finally she confirmed it was her office, but that for anything else I would have to ask Friedman—who, she confirmed reluctantly, was her spokesman.
I left messages at both of Friedman’s numbers, and waited for a call back. In the meantime, I learned from “Google” that Stefan Friedman is president of Strategic Communications and Public Relations for SKD Knickerbocker. Before that, he worked at the New York Post for eight years as a political columnist, campaign correspondent, and editorial writer.
SKD Knickerbocker is a leading strategic and political communications firm with offices in Washington, DC, and New York City. Barack Obama and Bill Gates have been among their clients. A smaller star listed in their galaxy of customers is Buffalo Mayor Byron Brown.
Friedman called back after lunch, and agreed to help explain things to me. “There’s a group called Education Reform Now,” he said, “and they’re a collection of education reform groups including Democrats for Education Reform, the New York State Charter Association, the New York City Charter School Center, and some other partners who are committed to education reform across the state. ERN works in seven to nine states right now. Michigan, Pennsylvania, Colorado, Florida, a couple other places. Our role is to provide some of the tools used in supporting these reforms. Again, this is Education Reform Now Advocacy—so we’re employed by them to do public relations, and some of the direct mail that you’ve obviously come across up there in Buffalo.”
Friedman said they’ve also done TV advertising across the state. I told him I was unclear about the ERN office in Buffalo, and that Whitney told me he could answer any questions I might have because he was her spokesperson. He told me he didn’t know who Whitney was, but that there is an ERN address in Buffalo, and that 640 Ellicott Street must be it.
When he realized I wasn’t so interested in discussing the guts of the campaign, and more interested in simply finding out who was spending so much money to influence the outcome of our local school board election, we started going in circles. He told me that there would be no reporting on how much ERN had spent on the campaign until the law required it. Which means, in terms of Buffalo School Board elections, too late to make a difference if ever at all.
He also told me he’d spoken to folks at the Buffalo News in his capacity as spokesperson for ERN, and I got the sense the conversation went more smoothly there. And since his job is to get good press for his clients, I’m telling every gambler I know to bet heavily on those candidates promoted by SKD Knickerbocker and ERN to land endorsements from the editorial staff of the News in this Saturday’s paper.
Other clues
Aside from all the unauthorized mailings that have been sent out from 640 Ellicott Street, sources have reported widespread paid street canvassing on the East and West sides, as well as telephone polls slanted toward ERN candidates that have come from as far away as Florida and Colorado. One West district voter reported that when he indicated he would not be voting for Phil Lomax, the phone interviewer tried to suggest dirt he had on incumbent Ralph Hernandez. The recipient of the call said he didn’t want to hear it.
Meanwhile, Lomax was a no-show at Tuesday’s candidate forum at the Polish Cadets Hall at Grant and Amherst, and it’s likely that he’ll miss tonight’s forum at 339 Genesee Street at 7pm, because he’s been in Puerto Rico and won’t return until two days before the election on May 4. McCarthy, meanwhile, missed the forum at the Polish Cadets because it conflicted with his bartending schedule at Hutch’s. But then, according to his April 5 campaign finance disclosure, he’s got $10,000 of his own money to burn on mailers in these last few days before the election, including big dough from some heavy hitters like Bob Rich, who gave $2,500 listing a P.O. Box for an address.
Although this is an ongoing investigation, the private dick in me suspects that the large sums being spent is all about installing a slate of candidates to push through a charter school agenda that would enable Buffalo to get around state regulations—resulting in an explosion of charters that would siphon money away from our already underfunded public schools. More experienced teachers will lose jobs, and class sizes will increase, as private entities set up shop to hire non-union workers and collect public money for every child they sign up.
This is the game that is played every time we have a school board election in Buffalo, where voter turnout is pathetically low on the first Tuesday in May whenever seats are up for grabs. The campaigns are brief, the messages loud, and the playing field hopelessly slanted to well-connected candidates.
And since they run with no party affiliation, here’s a handy way to remember who’s who:
Candidates
CENTRAL DISTRICT:Bryon McIntyre NORTH DISTRICT:Patricia E. Devis WEST DISTRICT:Ralph Hernandez (Incumbent) |
FERRY DISTRICT:Pamela Cahill (Incumbent) EAST DISTRICT:Vivian Evans (Incumbent, Education Reform Now) PARK DISTRICT:Lou Petrucci (unopposed) |
* Kapsiak’s name has been returned to the ballot after an April 27 decision by Hon. Timothy J. Drury. Barring a successful appeal by the Board of Elections, she will remain to challenge McIntyre, who narrowly lost last year’s at-large election to Florence Johnson.
Reader Comments (posting new comments is closed!)
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catherine Nugent Panepinto 29 Apr 2010, 16:17
Thank you for your excellent investigation and report. Fyi on a related issue I am looking for public input on my pending evaluation of Dr. Williams, our superintendent. Other individual board members, like John Licata, may welcome input as well. The board as a whole has been advised we cannot rely on public input but nothing prevents individual members from asking for input. For any reader who would like to contribute, please email me at cnugentpanepinto@gmail.com Thank you Catherine
Phil Rumore 29 Apr 2010, 16:35
You folks a Artvoice are great. Whether we agree on issues or not,you do your homework better than anyone else in the class. A plus
BuffaloMom 29 Apr 2010, 20:38
It's nice when Catherine Nugent Panepinto and Phil Rumore are giving you atta boys! I think that things are just fine as-is too. Thank goodness Olmsted and City Honors are there to educate all the children of Buffalo...
Jonathan Wellinton-Fidrych III 29 Apr 2010, 23:35
BuffaloMom is right. The present Buffalo Schools are failing and only a big money media campaign for a hand picked group of socially acceptable candidates can bring salvation by electing Chris Jacobs Board President. The feeble resistance of Artvoice is futile. You will be assimilated.
Gretch 30 Apr 2010, 00:48
Sure, fab investigative reporting. But wait...where is this $25 limit from? As Phillip knows, independent expenditures have no limits. As long as a person or organization is acting without coordination with a candidate it is their first amendment right to spend as much as they want to, telling the whole world who they support. The unions do this almost every election, with phone calls and going to people's doors. Not that I am complaining about that, I fully support their right to do so. Glad you did your research Bucky.
Buck Quigley 30 Apr 2010, 01:00
Read the Education Law and weep if you must, Gretchy. (c) No person or persons shall make expenditures on behalf of a candidate without his or her approval unless such person or persons files a sworn statement with the clerk and commissioner stating that the candidate did not approve such expenditure. Such expenditure shall be limited to twenty-five dollars and shall not be included in determining the five hundred dollars as set forth in paragraph (a) of this subdivision.
gretch 30 Apr 2010, 01:07
And as someone who has kids and can't make it to candidate forums because of sports and after school activities- I wish Artvoice had actually spent any time tracking down candidates the way they did this group or whatever. I would have really enjoyed an article on their opinions on cross-district bussing, charter schools, or the 700 teachers the Buffalo News reporter the city may have to lay off.
Betty Jean Grant 30 Apr 2010, 01:10
I am getting a piece of mail every day from that Education Reform Group. Kevin Helfer, the King of Charter Schools in Buffalo, walked blocks and blocks of streets securing signatures on petitions for Ferry District candidate, Rev. Kinzer Pointer, an employee of a charter school.One only has to see the vicious, negative campaigning that is being done to Ferry District candidate, Pamela Cahill to know that big money is involved in this campaign. 640 Ellicott Street must be the address of King Midas, from all the literature emanating from there. Whether the candidate is running in the Ferry, Central, East, or West district, the literature from that group is the same for all of them.
Peter A Reese 30 Apr 2010, 05:04
I have been receiving a large number of calls which trip my answering machine, but leave no message. When I finally picked one up, it was a person obviously reading a canned speech promoting Jason McCarthy. I started asking questions of the initial caller and her supervisor. They are employed by Greene & Associates of Iowa. They have never met orspoken to McCarthy, nor have they ever been in Buffalo. Greene runs a service to make calls from a prepared text to a list of names and phone numbers provided by their customers. They are paid by the Campaign for Jason McCarthy and he has approved of their efforts. They know nothing about campaign finance reporting or the Buffalo School Board. When I asked to speak to Mr./Ms. Greene, I was told that no such person exists. “It’s like McDonald’s, when you go there, there’s no actual McDonald.” I was laughing so hard, I had to hang up the phone.
Bflonian 30 Apr 2010, 08:47
Read what is happening in the NYC schools and it will send a chill down your spine. Charters taking over "public" schools everyday. Wake up. This is racism at its best. Does anyone wonder why Tapestry's new campus is so far from the East Side? The Sam Hoyt's and Chris Jacobs (if he had kids.) don't want their kids going to school with black/brown kids.
Sherlock Gnomes 01 May 2010, 00:58
Whitney Kemp is more than an associate of Jack O'Donnell, she is his significant other. The question we all want to know is why either one of them is involved in a little ole school board race? These board member people only make $5,000.00 a year. Could it be the millions of dollars they are looking at that may be diverted to charter school? umm, things that make you go umm hum.
bobobrazila 01 May 2010, 03:24
ARTVOICE(Buck Quigley) Thanks for the excellant and precise reporting you truly help the heartfelt citizens of education in gathering all the facts to not waste their vote on nonsense political hidden agenda oportunist in our community. Thank You_______________Great Job_______________You Deserve a Grammy.
Peter A Reese 01 May 2010, 05:05
@Bflonian: OK, so it's racism. But at least it's a nicer, friendlier type of subtle racism. These people can no longer put big signs on their buildings proclaiming the exclusion of groups they feel are undesirable. Don't you think this is real progress? This transformational racism propels us to an elightened modern era where the poor and minorities can be discriminated against in ways which make it difficult for them to understand how they are getting screwed. And no one can prove anything.
BuffaloMom 01 May 2010, 16:22
@Peter A Reese: Don't you think it's also wrong to force those children with no other choices into a dysfunctional school system? There are a lot of minority, poor, special ed. kids in charters -- Does any one of you commenters 1) live in Buffalo 2) have kids in school? Do they go to a private? Catholic? Public with admission standards? Other? Just curious...
bflonianmom 02 May 2010, 05:56
There are many of us opposed to charters who live in the city of Bflo who have kids in the real public schools (and not Olmsted). We are adamantly opposed to charters as they siphon money from the traditional schools and there is no oversight of that money being spent. Look into the facts -- charters (the ones that serve the underprivileged, not ones like Tapestry) don't score better than their real public counterparts. As Bflonian noted, look into what is happening in NYC. Parents are up in arms about charters moving in and taking over traditional schools. Big business is not. The charter school movement is a money grab. There are billions to be made. Don't fool yourself. It ain't about the children. Oh, and why weren't the facts from this article from the NYTimes last week in the Bflo News? Read: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/23/education/23charter.html?scp=1&sq=buffalo%20charter%20school&st=cse
BuffaloMom 02 May 2010, 11:09
What about you, bflonianmom? Where do your kids go? All charters are different. In Buffalo, only the Buffalo United charter school is run by a management company -- all others are independent. For every student in a charter school, the BPS district gets $5,000. When kids go to private/Catholic or suburban schools, the BPS gets nothing. Don't you think that good school alternatives are important to getting families to consider moving into and staying in the city? I do.
bflonianmom 02 May 2010, 13:21
My child is in a traditional Buffalo Public School, as I mentioned in my original post. I say if you want to pay for an education, great. Pay the tuition and send your kid there. If you want them to go to a suburban school, great. Move and send your kid to one. If you want a free education for your kid, send him/her to a real public school and be a vigilant, involved parent. Your kid will get a fine education. I do not condone taking public money and putting it into the hands of private "management companies." Parents who are not involved in their kids' schools are the main problem with BPS.
bflonianmom 02 May 2010, 19:49
From today's NY Times (http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/02/education/02charters.html?exprod=myyahoo) ------- But for all their support and cultural cachet, the majority of the 5,000 or so charter schools nationwide appear to be no better, and in many cases worse, than local public schools when measured by achievement on standardized tests, according to experts citing years of research. Last year one of the most comprehensive studies, by researchers from Stanford University, found that fewer than one-fifth of charter schools nationally offered a better education than comparable local schools, almost half offered an equivalent education and more than a third, 37 percent, were “significantly worse.” -------- So, we should use public money for this big experiment/money grab. 20% of the charters doing better than real publics. Makes a lot of sense.
BuffaloMom 02 May 2010, 20:34
Yes, it mentions in that article that New York was NOT included in that Stanford Study. Instead we have the Hoxby study that says that students in New York charter schools, where charting and oversight is stricter, do better than those students who didn't get into the school via lottery. http://www.nber.org/~schools/charterschoolseval/ Why do you keep insisting that it's a "money grab?" In Buffalo there are 15 charters (out of 16) that are independent of a management company.
soozie q 04 May 2010, 12:13
To Buffalo Mom Are you aware that the Buffalo Schools PAY $9500 to the charter schools for each student???! It's not the other way around -- the Buffalo sSchools lose money each time a child attends a charter school. Even better, if a child acts up or doesn't do too well academically, they are thrown right back into the public schools. Even better still, at one time the remaining money wasn't even returned to the District! Now who's been making out financially? Charter schools need to find independent sources of funding, rather than continuing to steal the money from the students in the public schools.
Brian 04 May 2010, 13:04
Your personal opinion on charter schools shouldn't affect your opinion that this type of shenanigans is wrong. Who is Whitney Kemp and what is her job? Why are Charter advocates trying to stack the deck at the Buffalo Board of Education? How is an "unauthorized" committee getting nice headshots of their unauthorized candidates and families?
BuffaloMom 04 May 2010, 13:06
To Soozie q, Yes, but when those kids move to the suburbs or attend a catholic or private school, the district doesn't get to keep the $5,000 extra that they get from the State for that student. Sorry, I don't think you have first hand knowledge of these "facts" about students who act up or aren't stellar academically being returned to the district.
Leonie Haimson 06 May 2010, 00:01
When you go to the Education Reform Now website, it says it is a 501C3 and contributions are tax-deductible; how can it legally engage in campaign activity?
Julie 15 May 2010, 14:09
Google also told me that Friedman served as an official spokesperson for Caroline Kennedy. http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/17/us/politics/17ckadvisers.html
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