Home > Blogs > A Matter of Opinion > Archives > 2009 > September > 11
Friday, September 11, 2009
Editorial: Dayton gets hub, now show us the money
Dayton’s effort to be known for its high-tech talent took some steps forward this week.
Gov. Ted Strickland came to town to name Dayton as the state’s first innovation hub, specifically for aerospace. The state is designating different areas as hubs for this or that, with the goal of trying to get different parts of Ohio branded and labeled as being especially good in certain industries.
Think bio-medicine in Cleveland, green energy in Toledo, and polymers in Akron, for example.
The hoped-for payoff is that businesses and researchers will go where there are other businesses and researchers who can complement their work.
In the old days, when Charles Kettering and the Wright brothers were doing their thing in barns and at workbenches, inventions were semi-solitary pursuits. Today technology is so sophisticated and expensive that researchers and businesses can’t build much of anything without collaboration involving teams of people playing off of each other.
Some of their communication can happen across the miles or via computer, but synergy through proximity matters.
By naming Dayton the state’s hub for aerospace, the state department of development is promising that if it gets a lead about an aerospace business, it will direct the firm here. In fact, though, that’s probably the least important advantage because that’s not how most businesses are recruited.
The bigger impact could be that when the University of Dayton or Wright State University competes for the state’s Third Frontier research money, they’re supposed to get bonus points if they’re furthering the goal of making Dayton an aerospace center.
That’s also supposed to be true when it comes to winning business tax credits or environmental cleanup funds.
It would have been great if the governor had brought money with him now. That he didn’t puts the burden on local institutions — including local governments, universities, the Dayton Development Coalition, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base and companies that already are here — to make requests for state help that are so compelling that their asks can’t be deep-sixed.
Other communities also are asking to be named hubs. That Dayton got the first designation is evidence that people in the Strickland administration liked Dayton’s pitch. In fact, it should have been a good one.
This focus on leveraging Wright-Patterson’s talent, its combined $2 billion science and technology budgets and its relationships with myriad contractors, has been going on for some years now. If the community had to work hard to make a convincing case that aerospace can be a growth industry here, that would be an indictment.
At the same time the governor was here for the hub announcement, he also was recognizing a new partnership between Dayton and Montgomery County, and Israel.
Last year a local delegation went to Israel on a trade mission, hoping to connect to that country’s aerospace industry. This year the Israelis came here.
Over several days this week, Israeli business leaders were invited to meet with Dayton area businesses that wanted to collaborate with them or to sell to them. The Engineers Club in downtown was teeming.
From last year’s trip, two deals have been sealed with Israeli businesses, one involving STAN Solutions, and another involving IDCAST and Woolpert. The outreach looks so promising that $350,000 in private money has been raised to open a trade mission in Haifa.
The thing the governor needs to see — indeed that Dayton needs to see — is that people aren’t sitting on their hands when it comes to bringing jobs to the region. There are lots of efforts going on to use unsung and unrecognized talent to attract more of it.
To see a video on Dayton’s links with Israel, click here.
Permalink | Comments (2) | Post your comment | Categories: City of Dayton, Editorials, Ellen Belcher, Local Business, Ohio government, Wright Patterson Air Force Base
Editorial: Dann loses again, but he’s not all wrong
A strategy pioneered by disgraced former Ohio Attorney General Marc Dann has flopped.
There’s a news flash.
Mr. Dann’s tortured idea of treating charter schools as “charitable trusts” — which would allow him to sue the low-scoring ones — has been soundly rejected by the courts.
Well, it wasn’t exactly his idea. Actually the plan came from a lawyer for the Ohio Education Association, a state teachers’ union that is critical of charters and that supported Mr. Dann, according to e-mails unearthed in 2007 by the Columbus Dispatch.
On Friday, the Dayton area’s 2nd District Court of Appeals became the fourth Ohio court to say Mr. Dann had it wrong — that his office did not have jurisdiction over charter schools, which are publicly financed schools that operate independently of local school districts.
Two Dayton schools were targeted by Mr. Dann. He succeeded in shuttering the Colin Powell Leadership Academy, but New Choices Community School has helped lead the successful courtroom counter offensive.
Richard Cordray, who is the new attorney general, is still deciding whether to appeal the district court’s ruling to the Ohio Supreme Court. That’s an easy call. It’s time for the state to give up this losing battle.
But before everyone writes off the episode as just another kooky gambit from the embarrassing Dann era, consider this: in one sense, Mr. Dann was right. Undoubtedly, it was, and is, time for somebody to get tough on perpetually failing charter schools. Consider what Mr. Dann said about Colin Powell Leadership Academy in his initial complaint:
• It has met only one of the 61 applicable indicators of school performance during its six years of operation.
• Its Performance Index Scores have been persistently abysmal, averaging 51.58 out of a possible 120, giving the equivalent of a very low “F.”
• It has failed to meet federal “Adequate Yearly Progress” standards for the last five school years.
• It has consistently lagged behind the performance of the Dayton City School District on the state tests common to both Colin Powell Leadership Academy and Dayton. The litany is pretty damning, and it doesn’t even mention that state auditors found its books were a fiscal mess, too.
How could such a school have been allowed to operate for six years? Without Mr. Dann’s lawsuit, it might still be open.
Even some strong supporters of charter schools have been frustrated with Ohio’s laid-back approach toward low-end charters. The true believers in the charter school movement want bad charters to close, if for no other reason than they are tarring the reputation of the good charters.
Ohio’s charter school law gives primary oversight of the schools to sponsors, which include nonprofit groups and school districts. That system could work if the sponsors all were reliable, or if the Ohio Department of Education insisted they be. But that hasn’t been the case.
Ohio has established better standards for poor charters — a new law closes down schools that can’t break out of the state’s lowest rating categories after three years — but it’s still not expecting enough from sponsors.
Just back in May, state Auditor Mary Taylor’s office came out with another devastating report on a local charter school, this time an outfit called New City School.
Ms. Taylor’s investigators found the school had more than $200,000 in debt, had stopped paying health insurance without telling its employees and failed to follow basic accounting procedures. Its academic performance wasn’t much better.
Then last month her office cited another low-scoring school — Main Street Automotive — for fraud, saying the school’s operators owed the state $116,000 in missing student aid. Both schools are sponsored by the Lucas County Educational Service Center.
The Colin Powell school was sponsored by Education Resource Consultants of Ohio, a Cincinnati-based group that also sponsors several other troubled charter schools. Isn’t it time for the state to expect more from sponsors?
Marc Dann’s lawsuits were a stretch, but his creative lawyering aside, he was right that somebody needs to step in when charter schools don’t measure up.
Permalink | Comments (1) | Post your comment | Categories: Editorials, Education, Scott Elliott

Ellen Belcher is the Dayton Daily News opinion pages editor. She writes about state government, education, the environment, higher education and all things Dayton.
Martin Gottlieb is an editorial writer and columnist for the Dayton Daily News opinion pages. He focuses on the political process itself and does such national issues as war, the economy, taxes and Social Security, as well as a hodge-podge of local and state issues.