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Corporate Detroit demands more school cuts
By Debra Watson
12 February 2002
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On orders from Detroit Schools CEO Kenneth Burnley, 700 school
district workers were laid off in January, including 120 maintenance
workers, 49 social workers and 165 teachers. In addition, 88 clerical
workers and 70 upper-level administrative positions have been
eliminated, on top of the 277 administrative positions cut last
spring.
The layoffs are part of a multimillion-dollar budget-cutting
package worked out between the Democratic-controlled city administration,
Michigans Republican governor and the auto and business
executives who sit on the school districts so-called Reform
Board. The districts current deficit is $70 million and
it is estimated that the shortfall might double by next year.
The cuts will have a devastating impact on the schools, which
have faced years of budget-cutting, layoffs and official neglect,
as politicians from both parties drained money from the public
schools to pay for tax breaks for big business.
Detroits children already face enormous obstacles to
learning because of poverty, hunger and the lack of health care.
Seventy percent of the districts students qualify for subsidized
meals because they come from poor families; in some schools the
rate is higher than 90 percent. The school system also has one
of the highest dropout rates in the countryabout 40 percent.
At a January rally in Detroit, parents, teachers and school
workers carried signs denouncing the layoff of social workers
in the schools. Only 200 social workers are left to serve a student
population with multiple social problems spread across 268 elementary,
middle and high schools. In addition to the cuts by the local
school board, reductions in state funding for school-based health
clinics have resulted in the closure of three facilities in the
Detroit schools.
Among those being laid off are carpenters, plumbers, roofers,
construction laborers and janitors, who are badly needed because
of the general disrepair in the schools. Two days before announcing
the new round of layoffs, schools CEO Burnley signed a 10-year
$78.5 million contract with Aramark-ServiceMaster to manage the
maintenance of more than 250 school buildings. Several hundred
workers lost their jobs last spring when Burnley signed a $26
million contract with Aramark-Gourmet to take over food service
and hired Detroit-based Compuware to privatize the districts
information technology functions.
Workers report that in some cases two custodians now work overlapping
shifts in a school and are expected to do the work once assigned
to four to six people. One custodian with three years seniority,
for example, was bumped into a day-labor work arrangement after
maintenance slots at a different school were cut. Teachers and
students report that many classrooms are no longer being cleaned
overnight.
Because low pay and poor working conditions made hiring more
qualified teachers difficult, the district has operated for years
with about one in every six of its 8,300 classrooms staffed by
a non-certified teacher. Many teachers without state certification
have been laid off and others shifted into day-labor substitute
positions.
Under a new budget-cutting plan, some schools could be shut
down altogether. Burnley closed several special education schools
last year under the cover of mainstreaming children
with learning disabilities and other developmental problems. A
special education teacher fears enrollment in her special education
class could double from 17 to more than 30 if classrooms at other
schools are eliminated. Detroit educates 20,000 special education
students, roughly one out of every ten such students in the state.
While workers and students are reeling from the impact of the
cuts, the Detroit regional Chamber of Commerce praised Burnley
for taking unpopular decisions to make the school
system more efficient. New Detroit, the pro-business lobby that
was a key supporter of the state takeover of the district in 1999,
applauded the school superintendent for privatizing support staff.
In April 1999, a cabal of Michigan business leaders, state
legislators, Republican Governor John Engler and Democrat Dennis
Archer, who was then mayor of Detroit, collaborated to pass school
reform legislation. In what one newspaper columnist described
metaphorically as the night-of-the-long-knives, the
mayor forced the entire elected school board to resign and a new
chief executive officer was given the power to make sweeping changes.
The Reform Board was manned by representatives of corporate Detroit,
including an executive from auto giant DaimlerChrysler.
After years of factory closings and mass layoffs by the Big
Three automakers, the population of the Motor City has fallen
below one million and enrollment in the schools has dropped steadily
to 161,000 students. The enrollment decline has also been accelerated
by changes in state education regulations aimed at privatizing
public education. The schools of choice programs and charter schools
have siphoned off thousands of students and millions of dollars
in state funds from Detroit. The loss of this income totaled $11.6
million in Detroit this year. In addition the state also reduced
Medicaid payments to the district, cutting another $17.7 million.
In 1994 Proposal A passed, which tied educational
funding more closely to a state sales tax. It was promoted as
a way to relieve homeowners of high property taxes and equalize
funding for schools in rich and poor communities. While corporations
have benefited from tax breaks, the schools have suffered due
to the decline in state revenues as the economy entered a recession.
In August, a survey found about 40 percent of schools districts
in the state already faced cuts due to Proposal A. The measure
also did little to equalize funding. Seven years after its inception,
the most affluent school districts still spend nearly twice as
much as the poorer districts for each childs education under
Proposal A.
State officials have projected a $1 billion deficit for next
years overall budget. Only a $350 million infusion from
Michigans rainy day fund enabled the state government
to continue paying its commitment of $6,500 per student for the
current school year. Detroit Schools CEO Burnley admitted that
even with the states promised increase of $200 per pupil
next year the district will still have a $96-million deficit,
meaning the 700 layoffs are just the beginning.
Meanwhile, the governor and state officials are gearing up
to use unprecedented anti-strike legislation against teachers
whose contracts expire over the next several months. The Detroit
Federation of Teachers (DFT) is demanding 14 percent increase
over three years.
In 1999, the DFT leadership betrayed a bitter nine-day strike
against the pro-business reform policies demanded
by then Mayor Dennis Archer and Interim Schools CEO David Adamany.
Now the unions are aligning themselves with Detroits newly-elected
Democratic mayor, Kwame Kilpatrick, an unabashed proponent of
corporate interests and privatization. Kilpatrick enjoys close
relations with Governor Engler and the Republican-controlled state
legislature and helped broker the deal that gave Englers
appointee on the Reform Board veto power over the selection of
a new schools CEO. This cleared the way for the appointment of
Adamany, who spearheaded the attack on Detroits school employees
and students.
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