NCEE PROVIDED TRAINING FOR TEXAS TEKS STANDARDS
CUOMO FUNDED $5M FOR NCEE FROM NY STATE FUNDS
HILLARY PAID $100,000 TO SIT ON NCEE MEETINGS
z43\doc\web\2000\07\hillar.txt
W
Date: Sat, 24 Jun 2000 08:25:35 -0400
From: Donna Garner (by way of Fred Battey )
Subject: Hillary, Marc, Cuomo, Magaziner
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"; format=flowed
Status:
Remember that Texas paid the New Standards Project (the right arm of the
NCEE) $l.5M to train the facilitators who later psychologically manipulated
the Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills (TEKS) writing team members into
compliance with NCEE's outcomes-based education philosophy. I saw it all "up
close and personal."
Donna Garner
Member of TEKS Writing Team
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Texas has Hillary, Marc Tucker, Cuomo, and Magaziner to thank for the mess
that Hillary's $100,000 New York State Rip-off
The story of Hillary Clinton's $100,000 New York State rip-off was headline
news in just about every newspaper just four years ago. But now that she
wants the very same taxpayers she scammed back then to send her to the
United States Senate, New York's mainstream reporters have suddenly
developed amnesia.
Reports reviewed by NewsMax.com reveal that just two years before she moved
to 1600 Pennsylvania Ave., Mrs. Clinton was paid $101,630 for services
rendered, from an agency funded in part by New York State taxpayers. The
first lady's windfall came as a result of a sweetheart deal between her
Little Rock lawfirm, Rose Law, and New York's National Center on Education
and the Economy.
When this news hit the fan in January 1996, the question became: What, if
anything, did Hillary Clinton do for that tidy bundle of cash? Answers
weren't immediately forthcoming, so then-New York State Attorney General
Dennis Vacco launched an investigation.
Governor George Pataki's reaction at the time was typical: "To pay $100,000
to an Arkansas lawfirm out of scarce state education dollars where it seems
no vital services were performed is an outrage."
The story first surfaced in New York Newsday in April 1994. Back then
reporter Lou Dolinar uncovered some very curious details about the NCEE:
"The center, an educational think tank, was heavily salted with Democrats
and the president's political supporters, including Ira Magaziner, who
worked on the Clinton administration's health care proposal with Hillary
Clinton. The center's chairman was John Sculley, then head of Apple
Computer and a principal Clinton backer."
Newsday's 1994 report failed to raise investigator's eyebrows at the time.
Why? Probably because those empowered to investigate answered to the
Clintons' number one New York Democratic Party ally, Governor Mario Cuomo.
In fact, it was Cuomo himself who created the NCEE with a $5 million state
grant.
Were there any billing records that would show just how much work Mrs.
Clinton had performed for her cool hundred grand? No such luck,
investigators found. The contract drawn up and signed by NCEE Director Marc
Tucker simply pledged to pay Hillary $12,500 at the beginning of every
month with absolutely no requirement that she account for her time.
Documents filed with the state said that Mrs. Clinton was hired to lead the
NCEE's "Commission on Workforce Skills." Director Tucker told Newsday that
the project actually consumed some fifty percent of Hillary's daily work
schedule.
Without billing records, that's hard to document. But expense reports show
that she attended about a dozen Workforce Commission meetings, for which,
by the way, she was reimbursed an additional $10,797 for travel and other
miscellaneous costs.
Vacco, now in private practice in upstate New York, told NewsMax.com this
week that the physical work product of Hillary's efforts amounted to a
single report.
Surely, for a hundred large, it must have been quite a voluminous tome.
"It was about ten or twelve pages long," Vacco said, according to his best
recollection. Remembering the monthly payments, we inquired, "You mean,
twelve pages a month?"
"No," said the former New York AG. "Twelve pages for the whole eight months
she worked on it. That was it."
If preparing that report took fifty percent of Hillary's time, she must be
a very slow writer.
__________________________
Material forwarded by Fred Battey, Education Loop Administrator
Note: In accordance with Title 17, U.S.C., section 107, this material
is distributed without profit or payment to those who have expressed a
prior interest in receiving this information for non-profit research and
educational purposes only. This material may not be copied or quoted,
placed on any web site or other open forum without the express consent of
the copyright owner
.