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Anger over Detroit plan to close 51 schools
By DArtagnan Collier
8 February 2007
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In January, Detroit School Board officials announced the closure
of 51 schools, amounting to nearly a quarter of the buildings
in the district, which serves 119,000 students. The school closings
follow a bitter strike by Detroit teachers last September, in
which the Democratic-controlled city administration and state
government, as well as the media, denounced teachers for imperiling
the interests of the citys students.
Of the 51 schools proposed for closure, 38 are elementary or
kindergarten to eighth-grade schools, 6 are middle schools, and
7 are comprehensive or alternative high schools. The plan calls
for 47 school to close in the summer of 2007 and the remaining
4 in the summer of 2008. The Detroit school superintendent, William
F. Coleman III, acknowledged, The level of closures proposed
in this plan is unprecedented in the United States and will no
doubt exact a heavy toll on all of us.
School board officials claim that the reconsolidation
plan will result in a savings of $21 million annually out of a
$1.5 billion budget, but they also stated that an initial $22
million cost to close the schools would wipe out any savings for
2007.
The cost reductions will do little to offset the financial
crisis facing the district, which has faced perpetual deficits
due to reduced revenues from the auto industry. The Detroit-based
auto giants have been granted tax cuts and other subsidies over
the last three decades, even as they slashed hundreds of thousands
of area jobs. School officials and the media have said little
if anything, for example, about the $210 million loan the district
must repay to the state of Michigan for covering previous budget
deficits. The state itself is facing a $3 billion deficit chiefly
due to a decrease in business revenue.
The districts entire $1 billion state foundation allowance
currently goes to a state trustee, who this year will withhold
nearly one quarter of it to ensure payment of the districts
overall debt to the state and the banks. According to the districts
2006 financial statements, its debt service that year totaled
$117.5 million.
This is the first round of an overall plan by the school board
to close more than 100 schools. At the current juncture, the proposed
closures would bring the total number of schools closed to date
to 86 since the institution of a 2005 state-mandated deficit elimination
plan, which projects a total of 110 shutdowns out of the districts
232 schools by 2010. The district further said it will need only
8 high schools by 2011, instead of the current 26, according to
its Preliminary Facilities Realignment Plan, available
on the DPS website.
The school closings have provoked enormous anger among parents,
teachers and students, who have long suffered from dilapidated
schools, overcrowded classrooms and the lack of supplies. At the
first meeting after the announcement, school officials barred
opponents of the school closings from entering, and security guards
clashed with parents and students. Afterwards, the board hastily
organized a series of hearings, but gave the public little advance
notice, apparently in hopes of limiting the turnout.
Nevertheless, the hearings were well attended, with hundreds
of parents, teachers and students organized in contingents, carrying
banners and posters identifying their schools and expressing opposition
to the proposed closures.
Demonstrating their fear and contempt for the working class,
school officials posted Detroit police and armed guards around
and inside the school board meetings as parents, students and
teachers made their way into the buildings. Once inside, the public
had to pass through metal detectors. Before participants could
enter the auditorium, organizers instructed them to fill out questionnaires
with their name, address, and telephone number and to check a
box if their child attended one of the schools affected by the
closing.
In a further effort to vet the questions from the floor, organizers
also asked those who wished to speak on the school closings to
explain the gist of their comment. At one point, one
of those involved in the organization of the supposedly democratic
event acknowledged that she had thought about hiring an outside
company to manage the questionnaire.
The school board attempted to conduct the public hearings like
a business presentation. School representatives addressed the
audience as if they were stockholders who had simply lost a few
dozen shares, rather than people who have already been devastated
by job losses and declining living standards and were now being
asked to sacrifice their childrens future to balance a budget.
The chairman laid down the ground rules to insure that there
was no disruption of the speeches by board members and the subsequent
PowerPoint presentation. The facilitator explained there would
be only five minutes for presentations by school delegations and
two minutes for individuals who wanted to comment on the school
closings near the end of the three-hour scheduled meeting.
The school board is made up of well-heeled and well-connected
officials, including school superintendent Coleman, who makes
$180,000 a year leading a school district in one of Americas
poorest cities. The general argument of the school board was that
the school closings were necessary because so many children had
left the district. Several speakers noted, however, that the loss
of students was a self-fulfilling prophecy for a school board
whose destructive policies were driving students out of the district.
In addition, school officials repeated the refrain that there
is no money for the schools, despite the fact that hundreds of
millions have been spent on the construction of sports stadiums
and casinos in the city, not to mention the hundreds of billions
squandered by the Bush administration on the war in Iraq.
At one of the public hearings held January 26 at Southwestern
High School, WSWS reporters spoke with parents and student about
the school boards proposals. Sheila Kinney, a grandmother
of three students, said, There is no room inside. They [security
guards] have turned people away. More people are supposed to make
a difference. I have one grandchild who has special needs. He
has a speech problem and his attention is hard to hold. Mark Twain
is a passing school. It has great tutoring. If Mark Twain closes,
more kids in first and second grade will be in class with sixth
and seventh graders.
Jeremy, a 12th grader from Chadsey High, said Even though
I am about to graduate, I am offended because I have two sisters
in the system. The school closing will hurt them because my family
will have to travel longer [to get to another school].
Talecia Green, a high school graduate from the Detroit School
of Performing Arts and now a Chicago resident, said, We
place our faith in the school CEO whose job is to say something
sooner rather than just state that there is crisis and close schools.
The school board has already made their decision. The people should
decide, not the politicians.
Christian Williams, a 14-year-old freshman at Cass Tech High,
said that conditions in the school system had reached such a point
that he was forced to speak out against what he saw as the destruction
of education for his generation. I wrote a seven-page paper
for my English class called, What makes a good school? How
much do you really care?
I began my paper by saying the first thing you must have
is a good administration that cares about educating students.
At my school, we have parents and teachers who are willing to
support education. The biggest fighters for education are the
teachers, and we have some very good ones at my school. But the
teachers need more money, they need more supplies in the classroom.
But instead, at my school, where I guess millions were spent to
make a recent addition to the school, we dont have toilet
paper and there are no napkins or paper towels in the bathrooms.
We dont even have books in many classrooms.
See Also:
Political lessons
of the Detroit teachers strike
[19 September 2006]
Defend the teachers!
Mobilize Detroit workers against strike-breaking!
Billions for public education!
[12 September 2006]
Detroit borrows $1.2
billion from Wall Street: US cities face crushing debt burden
[19 April 2005]
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