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Partnership Or PR?

May 24, 2004

Dear Mr. Donahue:

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce says that its conference on "business-education partnerships" is to help create "opportunities for companies seeking to improve their support for K-12 education." While nearly all would agree that most schools need more "support," much of what is called "business-education partnerships" really is plain old corporate marketing, sometimes dressed up with nominal gifts; or else it is public relations, in using schools to boost a corporation's sagging public image.

Regrettably, in the last 15 years, corporations have increasingly rejected the notion of philanthropy, in which they give money to schools because it is the right thing to do. Instead, business groups like yours are touting "business-education partnerships" which often involveusing schools as public relations props or as marketing arenas to address a captive audience of children. The purpose is not so much to improve education, as it is to increase the sales of junk food and drinks such as Coca-Cola and Pepsi. It is the opposite of philanthropy, but it seems to be the dominant model for so-called "business-education partnerships."

Absent from the conference's agenda is any effort to face up to broad public opposition to the use of schools for marketing purposes. Advertising to schoolchildren is highly controversial, and is opposed by organizations across the political spectrum, because of the effects on children's health, values and education. Many parents are deeply opposed to the way corporations use the schools to promote violent or sexualized entertainment (through ads on Channel One, for example), and values such as materialism, addiction and anti-social behavior. Many
parents are alarmed by in-school marketing for soda pop or junk food, since American children are already suffering from an epidemic of marketing-related diseases such as obesity and Type 2 diabetes.

Parents deserve answers to the following questions:

  • Does the U.S. Chamber of Commerce support any limits at all on the use
    of schools for advertising or marketing?
  • Does the U.S. Chamber of Commerce oppose the use of classroom time for
    advertising?
  • Does the U.S. Chamber of Commerce oppose the advertising or marketing in
    school of any product or service which is legal to sell to children?
  • Will the U.S. Chamber of Commerce promote no-strings-attached
    philanthropy instead of marketing to schoolchildren?
  • Does the U.S. Chamber of Commerce support any reduction in any corporate
    welfare, or any increase in corporate taxes, which could be dedicated
    solely to funding schools?


Thousands of schools are facing serious budget shortfalls. If the Chamber of Commerce really wants corporations to "improve their support for K-12 education," it can best do so by telling corporations to pay
their taxes, give back their corporate welfare, and stop lobbying for new tax breaks.

Maybe you'll hold a conference on that next year.


Sincerely,
Gary Ruskin, Executive Director, Commercial Alert

 



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