The campaign that put Josh Reimnitz on the Minneapolis school board this fall may go down as the one that brought money from national school-reform advocates to bear on a contest traditionally dominated by DFL endorsements and union money.
With reported spending of more than $37,000, Reimnitz set a campaign spending record and exceeded the combined spending of all candidates who filed for four board seats this year.
"My fear is that what has now happened is that we have seen the nationalizing of Minneapolis school board elections," said state Rep. Jim Davnie, a former teacher who supported Reimnitz's union-backed opponent, Patty Wycoff.
The Reimnitz victory also focused attention on the role of Teach For America (TFA), the volunteer program that has placed 30,000 college graduates into urban and rural classrooms dominated by low-income students.
The program challenges traditional teacher training and evaluation methods, frequently earning it the enmity of teacher unions and other educators.
TFA placed 20 teachers this year in Minneapolis classrooms and has about 350 alums like Reimnitz living in the greater Twin Cities area. The program encourages those alumni to seek leadership posts in education. Reimnitz is the first former TFA member elected to a Twin Cities school board, but across the nation 12 of the 15 TFA alumni who ran for such seats this year won, according to the group. Another TFA alum, Seema Pothini, finished last among seven candidates for a board seat in the Burnsville-Eagan-Savage district.
An example of how the TFA network helped Reimnitz was an October fundraiser that raised about 15 percent of his campaign treasury. It was held at the Edina home of Matthew Kramer, TFA's national president, who is married to a TFA alum who works for a group that promotes high-quality charter schools.
An independent expenditure of about $6,000 for a mailing sent by the political arm of New York-based school reform group 50CAN, for which Kramer is board chair, also drew complaints. It was the first school board donation by the young group, which has focused on legislative contests in the East.