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Obama fatherhood initiative: a rare issue of bipartisan accord?
Fatherhood and parental duty get a push from the Obama team during a series of fall forums. But concerns about government intervention make some conservatives wary.
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But maybe, he suggested, schools could do a better job of “meeting the home halfway.” He spoke of what he saw as an expanded role for public schools to meet family needs. He envisions schools “as a neighborhood anchor,” open 12 to 13 hours a day and seven days a week, to offer “relationship programs, parental training,” and programs that tutor and mentor children.
Skip to next paragraphThat may be where the left and right part company.
It comes down to this, Mr. Hess says: how involved the federal government would be in such programs.
“If it’s a question of using school buildings to house such programs, then that makes good sense to me. But if schools and school districts are providing all that, that’s problematic,” he says.
Such programs are “not a core competence of our schools,” says Donovan.
Men at school: bring 'em on
For now, the Obama administration is mostly listening.
At the Manchester meeting, participants poured out their hearts on the topic of fatherhood and the need to better connect men and children. In some schools, “it’s almost out of place for a man to come into a school building,” said Thomas Brennan, superintendent of the Manchester schools. “We need to change the culture.” And Paul Gudonis, president of FIRST, a Manchester nonprofit focusing on technology, described the strong ties that projects like robotics teams and LEGO leagues can forge between adult male mentors and students.
For many groups like this, however, the bottom line is that they are hoping for federal dollars and federal attention so they can operate more broadly.
That’s exactly what conservatives don’t want to hear.
“The danger here is that once public officials have found an area of concern, a momentum tends to take hold,” Hess says. “It’s hard for them to say, ‘This is a problem. It needs to be solved locally,’ ” without federal funding or intervention.
Federal involvement vs. federal fixes
In many ways, the Obama administration is simply moving deeper into territory also probed by others, says Mr. Jennings of the Center on Education Policy. He points to the “hundreds of millions” of dollars that the Clinton and George W. Bush administrations spent on providing recreational and social services to schoolchildren.
But to tighten the focus on the role of fathers (and the questions of parental responsibility) can only help, Jennings adds. “Who can find fault with that?” he asks.
No one, agrees Hess, but only if the federal government keeps a close check on its degree of involvement. No doubt, he says, “It could be constructive for the federal government to raise these questions [about fatherhood] and honor people who are solving them.”
But what the government will need to do, he adds, is to find a way to say, “ ‘Hey, let’s be clear: We’re not envisioning federal fixes.’ If they can do that, I think they might reassure a lot of conservatives who would like to support this.”
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