Editorâs note: A wide-open and critical election year is looming in Idaho in 2018. This is the 10th of a periodic series of interviews with candidates for state and federal office â with an emphasis on education topics.
The federal government can play a role in making schools safer, by offering guidance and help to local school officials, says congressional candidate James Vandermaas.
But after spending a career in law enforcement, the Eagle Democrat is not sold on one school safety idea floated by President Trump: arming teachers. Idaho law already puts this decision in the hands of local school boards, but Vandermaas says the approach simply puts more guns in the schools, and places a greater burden on educators.
âIâm dead set against it,â Vandermaas, 60, said in a recent interview. âWeâre expecting them to be accurate, when theyâre frightened to death.â
The Republican 1st Congressional District race has attracted a bigger crowd of candidates â and more money. Vandermaas, meanwhile, is running in a more low-key Democratic primary on May 15. His two primary opponents, Christina McNeil of Boise and Michael William Smith of Post Falls, have raised no money for the race, according to the Federal Elections Commission.
Vandermaas attended the student-led âMarch for Our Livesâ protest at the Statehouse March 24, and said he stands in 100 percent support of the student demonstrators. Vandermaas says he supports balancing Second Amendment rights against âcommon-sense gun safety legislation,â including background checks.
Vandermaas disagrees with the White House on several education issues.
For one, he says he would push to make the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program âan actual law with a path to citizenship.â DACA protects students and other young undocumented immigrants from deportation, covering an estimated 3,100 people in Idaho; President Trump has pushed to eliminate the program.
Vandermaas also disagrees with the Trump administrationâs proposals to siphon more than $1 billion of education funding into school choice programs. Heâs also unimpressed with Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, and her advocacy for private and charter schools. âI think sheâs in over her head, and sheâs in there with a specific purpose.â
Outgoing 1st District Rep. Raul Labrador has proposed eliminating the U.S. Department of Education in full, and several Republicans looking to succeed Labrador like the idea. Vandermaas said eliminating the department would be a âtremendous mistake,â jeopardizing Idahoâs $264 million a year in federal education funding.
Idahoâs relationship with the feds changed considerably in March. After months of review â in Idaho and Washington, D.C. â DeVos finally approved Idahoâs plan to comply with the federal Every Student Succeeds Act. Vandermaas said he was unfamiliar with the ESSA process or the stateâs ESSA plan.
Vandermaas proposes one higher education-related initiative, which he calls âScholar-Quest.â Under the plan, students would be able to attend college for free, funded through tax-deductible business contributions to a scholarship fund. Scholarship recipients would be required to perform community service after graduation. Vandermaas says the plan would help employers find the workers they need, while cutting into the nationâs $1.3 trillion student debt load.
âThereâs so much untapped potential at this point because so many people are undereducated,â he said.
In addition to working in law enforcement, Vandermaas started several small businesses. He is making his first run for public office, and says he is focusing on education, expanding health care coverage and keeping federal lands under federal jurisdiction.
âItâs quite frankly where I think I can do the most good,â he said.
MORE READING FROM THIS SERIES
Congressional candidates:
Russ Fulcher: âIâm not a slash-and-burn kind of guyâ
David Leroy: âWe are making false promises to ourselves in many quartersâ
Luke Malek: âWe need every dollar that we are putting into educationâ
Christy Perry: âWe need to break the cycle of povertyâ
Michael Snyder: ‘A little flame has started. âCan we fan it into a fire?’
Gubernatorial candidates:
Tommy Ahlquist: âItâs creating that clarityâ
A.J. Balukoff: ‘The thing we haven’t done is listen to the educators’
Raul Labrador: âIf weâre going to take some of the credit then I think we need to take some of the blame at the governorâs officeâ
Brad Little: âWe have an obligation to explain how important education is todayâ