Okla­homa mea­sure seeks to make school dis­trict super­in­ten­dents an elect­ed posi­tion

Okla­homa will con­sid­er a new mea­sure to make the role of school dis­trict super­in­ten­dent an elect­ed posi­tion in response to a spate of con­tro­ver­sial sit­u­a­tions involv­ing scholas­tic lead­ers, Fox News Dig­i­tal has learned.

There have been alle­ga­tions and news reports about sev­er­al issues: the refusal to remove “porno­graph­ic books” from school libraries, the dis­missal of a teacher for fail­ure to com­ply with a COVID-19 face mask man­date, and media cov­er­age of “noth­ing [being] done” in response to reports a school foot­ball coach was brag­ging about sex­u­al con­quests with par­ents.

In 2021, Okla­homa Gov. Kevin Stitt called fir­ings of mask-averse teach­ers “pre­pos­ter­ous” and said their tal­ents are need­ed more than ever.

“This is about a school dis­trict not fol­low­ing state law — this isn’t a debate about masks,” he said, after the Okla­homa City dis­trict report­ed­ly fired mul­ti­ple edu­ca­tors, adding the state pre­vi­ous­ly banned such fir­ings.

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In Feb­ru­ary, Okla­homa State Super­in­ten­dent of Schools Ryan Wal­ters — who is an elect­ed offi­cial him­self — threat­ened to low­er the accred­i­ta­tion of Edmond, Okla­homa, schools if it didn’t remove the books “The Glass Cas­tle” and “Kite Run­ner” from its high school libraries.

Wal­ters called the inac­tion “sub­ver­sion of account­abil­i­ty,” though Edmond’s super­in­ten­dent said the state lacked author­i­ty to remove the books based on a 1997 dis­trict pol­i­cy.

In anoth­er case, in Edmond, Repub­li­can Sen. Ted Cruz from neigh­bor­ing Texas, among oth­ers, blast­ed videos show­ing a por­tion of a school fundrais­er where­in stu­dents were lick­ing each oth­er’s toes. 

In a pub­lic state­ment, school offi­cials appeared to cel­e­brate the event:

“This after­noon, Deer Creek High School announced a grand total of $152,830.38 raised for Not Your Aver­age Joe Cof­fee, an orga­ni­za­tion cre­at­ed to ‘inspire our com­mu­ni­ty by includ­ing stu­dents and adults with intel­lec­tu­al, devel­op­men­tal and phys­i­cal dis­abil­i­ties,” school staff wrote. 

“All par­tic­i­pants in the assem­bly were stu­dents who signed up for the game(s) they played ahead of time. No Deer Creek fac­ul­ty or staff par­tic­i­pat­ed in any of the games dur­ing this Clash of Class­es assem­bly,” a por­tion of the lat­ter part of the state­ment read.

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Wal­ters called the fundrais­er “filth,” and Cruz said it was “child abuse.”

In anoth­er dis­trict on the Arkansas line, now-for­mer Muldrow Super­in­ten­dent Leon Ashlock resigned after dri­ving drunk and crash­ing a school vehi­cle on Creek Turn­pike. Two 100-proof bot­tles of cin­na­mon schnapps were found in its con­sole, accord­ing to KOCO.

Wal­ters told Fox News Dig­i­tal on Wednes­day that a case involv­ing a school’s response to an ath­let­ic director’s crim­i­nal exploits with a stu­dent also drew his atten­tion.

“Even in a con­ser­v­a­tive state like Okla­homa, where vot­ers have over­whelm­ing­ly made clear they want the rad­i­cal pro­gres­sive poli­cies of the left out of pub­lic schools, we con­tin­u­al­ly see super­in­ten­dents defy­ing their will, ignor­ing their con­cerns, and refus­ing to take action nec­es­sary to improve edu­ca­tion out­comes while pro­tect­ing Okla­homa chil­dren,” Wal­ters said.

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“This has to end.”

“And, the best way to do that is by requir­ing super­in­ten­dents to be elect­ed by the vot­ers.”

Wal­ters called the leg­is­la­tion a com­mon-sense solu­tion to efforts to improve edu­ca­tion for Soon­er State chil­dren.

Wal­ters pre­vi­ous­ly made head­lines when he led his state in becom­ing the first to appro­pri­ate fund­ing toward sup­ply­ing a Bible to each school. The offi­cial said the move blunts “woke cur­ric­u­la” and pro­vides stu­dents a “his­tor­i­cal doc­u­ment” that the founders used to form their gov­ern­ment.