Bergeson wins strong Senate approval
Jessica Garrison
NEWPORT BEACH -- The California Senate voted overwhelmingly Tuesday
in favor of keeping Newport Beach resident Marian Bergeson on the State
Board of Education. “I’m most grateful for the strong support,” said
Bergeson, who served in the state Assembly and Senate, and was then-Gov.
Pete Wilson’s education secretary in 1996. She vowed to continue working
for high standards and greater parental involvement in schools.
Bergeson, who already serves on the state board, had been appointed by
Wilson in September 1998 but had not yet been approved by the Senate.
While the Senate voted 36-2 to approve her, teachers unions and some
Latino groups lobbied against Bergeson’s nomination, charging that she
does not support Latino students or teachers’ rights.
Bergeson said she does not understand this criticism, and noted that
her daughter, Julie McCormick, is a bilingual educator who has just been
appointed principal of Costa Mesa’s Pomona Elementary, a school with a
large Spanish-speaking population.
“I was disappointed that my colleagues did not vote no,” said Sen. Joe
Baca (D-Rialto), who spearheaded the move against Bergeson, charging that
she is not “geared toward the diversity” of California’s students.
Bergeson said she would spend the next three years of her four-year
term working to help all students.
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