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FROM THE EDITORS: A Tribute to John Walton
At the edge of a
fault line between two tectonic plates, the Grand Teton towers some
five thousand feet over Jackson Hole below. There, near his beloved
family home, John Walton, a risk-taker of the kind seldom witnessed
within the world of large-scale philanthropy, died tragically on
June 27, 2005, while flying a small, experimental plane. His memory
will be held dear not only by his family and friends but also by
thousands of low-income families, for whose children he helped find
better schools. For more than two decades, he devoted much of his
heart, time, intellect and charitable resources to finding a way to
put children first so that genuine equality of education
opportunity could be secured for all Americans.
John Walton’s father, Sam, discovered
that placing the consumer first was the key to creating a worldwide
retailing system that gave working people access to quality
products previously beyond their means. John committed himself to
doing much the same thing for the education system, seeking to
redesign its very framework so that parents, regardless of means,
would be in command. Motivated by a faith that gave deep roots to
his simple, strong values and tenacity to his vision, he believed
that his country’s renewal depended on the reform of its
schools.
Sam’s accomplishment, while one of the
great commercial triumphs, was in some ways less impressive than
his son’s intrepid struggle, if only because the marketplace
for retailers was already woven into American practice.
John’s daring drive to transform the country’s schools
challenged both conventional wisdom and a thicket of entrenched
interests.
From the beginning, however, John Walton
understood the magnitude of the task. He realized that withoutmarkets systems do not change. He knew that
putting families and children ahead of vested interests would provoke
relentless resistance that even might have endangered the company on
which the family fortune rested.
But Walton, who had worn the Green Beret, felt
no goal worth pursuing if risk were not attached. Not for him the
safe philanthropy expected to enhance a corporate image. No, his
concern was always focused on the consumer: in this case, the poor
children who needed better schools if they were to experience the
American dream.
Focused on the goal, Walton was flexible as to
means. He gave great sums to privately funded voucher programs,
hoping that those funds would spur public action. When this seemed
insufficient, he came up with more direct political strategies,
especially the mobilization of poor, inner-city, minority families
whose plight, if articulated clearly, might win over public
opinion. When charter schools appeared on the reform horizon, he
was quick to explore ways to increase their numbers and make them
more effective. Always, he understood that gains could be achieved
only by maintaining a strategic vision, forming broad alliances,
ignoring the temptation to micromanage, and allowing others, with
less at stake, to take most of the credit.
To Walton, commitment, not ceremony, was what
counted. Just as he avoided formalities and fashion in favor of
shirtsleeves and jeans, so he avoided press releases, public
pronouncements, and platitudes in favor of quiet discussions about
what really mattered.
True, he wanted to move quickly and decisively,
entering the fray with the impact for which Sam Walton had been well
known. But as he discovered that the
framers of the American Constitution had
created a system that could change only slowly, he acquired a more
patient strategic vision.
The full range of his accomplishments is yet
to be tallied. Yet even a preliminary assessment is remarkable,
beginning with John Walton’s major contribution to the
nationwide Children’s Scholarship Fund, which revealed to a
broad public the desire for school choice among low-income
families. That was only the most visible of the Walton
contributions. In addition, he provided support and guidance to the
successful efforts to secure publicly funded voucher trials in
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, in Florida, and in the District of Columbia;
aided the litigation that resulted in the constitutional validation
of school vouchers by the U. S. Supreme Court; helped extend the
charter school movement; and became a key founder and trustee for
the newly formed Alliance for School Choice.
Tectonic change builds mountains, but it does
so an inch at a time. John’s mortal remains now rest in a
mountain’s shadow, but his spirit continues to guide us
toward the distant summit.
— The Editors
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