This one is coming down to a he-said-she-said, so make of it
whatever you will.
Josie Hirsch is running for the Simi Valley school board and
two weeks ago I reported on her outspoken criticism of teachers unions. She
said she planned
to reject any endorsement of the Simi Educators Association, whose parent
organization is the powerful California Teachers Association. An endorsement
would have been unlikely anyway, if this really did happen at Hirsch's
interview with the SEA in August:
"They
were wise not to endorse me," Hirsch said, "as I told them during the interview
that unions are outdated, and that the job of the union is to represent the
teachers in negotiations--not to lead the board in them."
Hirsch said she only interviewed with them to sharpen her
interview skills and to find out what the union's interests were.
A representative from the SEA, who is on the interview committee,
disagreed with Hirsch's account of the interview.
Mark Sheinberg told me that Hirsch said in the interview
that she was seeking the union's endorsement to improve the area's schools. He
also said it was clear that Hirsch was a political novice making her first
foray into politics.
She didn't even know what "CTA" stood for or that it was
related to the SEA, according to Sheinberg.
He believes that Hirsch's campaign theme suddenly became
anti-union when the union found her opponents to be more qualified and therefore
more worthy of its endorsement.
Hirsch said she attempted to retrieve the interviewers'
notes from SEA President Dayle Gillick to back up her story. According to Hirsch, Gillick told her
that the interviewers did not keep notes, "nor did they remember any specifics
from the original interview."
I asked Hirsch for comment on Sheinberg's recollections and
she neither confirmed nor denied them for me. Instead, she said recalled what Gillick told her.
"[Gillick] said the impressions she received from the committee
were that I was gracious, excited to be running and very concerned for the
teachers and students of the district," Hirsch wrote to me in an e-mail, recalling
that Gillick also said "that I really wanted to help improve the schools and
education of the students."
The SEA also told me that no audio or video of the interview
was recorded, so there's no proof to back up either Hirsch's or Sheinberg's
conflicting claims.