Wednesday, October 27, 2021

Missouri School Boards Association withdraws from national organization over letter to Biden


By Tessa Weinberg

The Missouri School Boards’ Association withdrew from its parent organization last week over a letter the national organization sent calling for federal intervention to address acts of “domestic terrorism” at hostile school board meetings nationwide.

Missouri School Boards’ Association (MSBA) members were informed of the decision in a letter sent Monday afternoon. The group’s executive director, Melissa Randol, wrote that the National School Boards Association “has demonstrated it does not currently align with MSBA’s guiding principles of local governance.”








MSBA’s executive committee recommended last week that the organization’s board of directors withdraw from the National School Boards Association (NSBA) and the decision was made during a special meeting Friday morning, said Brent Ghan, MSBA’s deputy executive director. NSBA did not immediately respond to a request for comment Tuesday about MSBA’s decision.

While no school board member or educators should receive threats of violence for the decisions they make for students, attempting to address harassment with federal intervention “is antithetical to our longstanding tradition of local control” and should not be the first step in most cases, Randol wrote in the letter.

A copy was obtained by The Independent.

Additionally, “inflammatory terms” in the national organization’s letter “is not a model for promoting greater civility and respect for the democratic process,” Randol wrote.

In a Sept. 29 letter to President Joe Biden, NSBA’s president and its interim executive director and CEO likened threats and violence against school officials “to a form of domestic terrorism and hate crimes.”

School board meetings nationwide have become increasingly hostile over debates on topics like COVID mitigation measures and critical race theory, and have resulted in some board members quitting their positions.

The organization called on Biden to direct law enforcement agencies, like the U.S. Department of Justice and the Federal Bureau of Investigations to take action, including reviewing whether enforcement should be taken under laws like the PATRIOT Act — which was passed in the wake of the Sept. 11 terrorist attack.

Ghan said neither MSBA nor any of the the other state school board associations were consulted prior to the letter’s release.

“The letter did come as a surprise to us,” Ghan said.

MSBA is not the only state chapter to pull its membership, with school board associations in Ohio and Pennsylvania also announcing their withdrawal from the national organization. The Florida chapter announced it would refuse to pay membership dues.

The National School Boards Association has since apologized to its members. In a Friday letter, the national organization apologized for some of the language it used in its September letter and “for the strain and stress this situation has caused.”

Randol wrote in her letter to Missouri school boards that the apology is a step in the right direction, but that NSBA still has “significant work ahead” to prevent similar issues in the future and repair fractured relationships.

MSBA’s decision to sever ties with the National School Boards Association follows pushback the parent organization has received nationwide after its September letter, including from Missouri Republicans.

Earlier this month, Attorney General Eric Schmitt joined a coalition of state attorneys general urging the U.S. Department of Justice to withdraw a memo advising the Federal Bureau of Investigations to coordinate strategies to address threats against educators.

Schmitt, who is running for U.S. Senate, also sent a letter of his own to U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland and urged the Biden Administration to “prioritize parents over school bureaucrats.”

U.S. Sen. Josh Hawley called on Garland to resign and praised MSBA for withdrawing from the national organization.

In a statement Tuesday afternoon, Gov. Mike Parson also applauded MSBA’s decision and said it showed Missouri schools take parent’s First Amendment rights seriously.

“We appreciate MSBA standing up for our students, teachers, and parents alike and recognizing that Missouri will play no part in criminalizing concerned parents,” Parson said.

In a letter posted to Facebook earlier this month, Senate Majority Leader Caleb Rowden called on MSBA to clarify its stance. Rowden asked whether MSBA believed concerned parents are domestic terrorists and if they “should be punished with the same tools used to punish the perpetrators of the September 11 Attack, the deadliest act of terrorism ever committed on American soil?”

Rowden is mulling a run for Congress, and on Monday, he teased a potential announcement on Nov. 8, changing his Facebook cover photo to read “The Next Chapter.”

(Photo by Rudi Keller, Missouri Independent)

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

To be fair, anyone threatening school staff for trying to protect kids should be considered a terrorist.

Anonymous said...

To be fair, anyone threatening school staff for trying to protect kids should be considered a terrorist.

Yes, but it would be useful if the National School Boards Association (NSBA) or Attorney Garland who used their letter as an excuse to sic the nation's secret police on parents could actually cite some specific examples of that, instead of vaguely referring to "news reports".

Threatening to recall them or vote them out of office is an completely different issue and one we in Joplin have experience with, but in this context is just an excuse to arrest and convict them as Loudoun County, Virginia has shown when a father tried to refute their claims by citing the rape of his daughter, now confirmed by the perp's conviction.

Imagine what would have happened in Joplin if the school board prior to change through resignations and elections and our favorite Superintendent had been able to use the Joplin police and county court system to deal with such turbulent parents. The Superintendent certainly didn't hesitate to use similar tactics against a turbulent teacher-journalist, now subject to a civil lawsuit by our host.

Anonymous said...

The old "go to" term for those who don't agree with the hypocritical, right wing republican fascists is "leftist".