Tag Archives: Chicago Public Schools

Race not driving Chicago public school closures, officials say

Officials at the nation’s third largest school district defended the closure of some 50 Chicago public schools, telling a federal court on Thursday that budgetary issues and the underuse of many buildings — not race — drove decisions about which schools to shutter.

The testimony came as Chicago Public Schools sought to persuade a judge not to issue an injunction halting the plan. The Chicago Teachers Union and parents pushing for the injunction before the new school year begins say the closures inordinately harm black and special-needs kids, violating their rights.

The hearing — in its third day on Thursday — stems from several lawsuits filed on behalf of parents. One contends black children make up about 88 percent of students being moved from closed schools, although they comprise 42 percent of district students.

On the stand Thursday, Chicago Public Schools’ budget director, Ginger Ostro, told U.S. District Judge Judge John Z. Lee that a $1 billion deficit in the next fiscal year loomed over the district as it thought through its closing plans, which were approved in May.

The closings would save $40 million, which would then be kicked into improving education for displaced students at their new schools. The district would spend tens of million more on schools taking those students, Ostro said.

Critics say talk by city and schools officials of budgetary savings is misleading, leaving the impression that the closures will help address the yawning budget deficit. Pressed under cross-examination Thursday, Ostro conceded the closures weren’t designed to fix CPS’ financial mess.

“It’s not primarily a budget-deficit initiative,” she said about the closings. Instead, the aim was to “better focus our resources rather than spread them thinly across.”

Later Thursday, the district announced that it was laying off 2,113 teachers and support staff. It attributed the action to the failure of the Legislature to reach a deal on pension reform.

Adam Anderson, a Chicago Public Schools planning official, testified earlier Thursday that what guided the district as it decided what schools would be closed was how much classroom space wasn’t being used.

A complex “utilization equation” was employed in the process, and the district found there were some 500,000 available classroom seats for 400,000 students, leaving 100,000 seats unused, Anderson said.

Enrollment has fallen over the years with a corresponding fall in population in African-American areas, which is why so many of the schools that ended up on the closure list were in predominantly black neighborhoods, Anderson said.

One of the lawsuits, however, argues the consequences have a racial element, saying “white children … have been almost universally insulated from the negative educational consequences of school closings.”

Also Thursday, the head of security for CPS, Jadine Chou, told the court the district is implementing measures to ensure street gangs don’t pose a threat to students attending new schools. Opponents of the closures say those students may end up stepping into the line of fire of warring gangs as they walk through unfamiliar neighborhoods.

The security upgrades in the wake of the closings include a commitment from Chicago police to …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Official: Race not driving Chicago school closures

An official for the nation’s third-largest school district defended closing about 50 Chicago public schools, saying the decision was driven by underuse and not race.

Thursday’s testimony came as Chicago Public Schools sought to convince a federal judge not to issue a preliminary injunction halting the closures.

Adam Anderson testified the district concluded it could use millions of dollars saved by closing underused schools for improving education of displaced students at new schools.

Parents of affected students argue the closings inordinately harm black students.

But Anderson described how the district used a complex “utilization equation” formula to decide which schools to close. Overall, he says it found there were more than 500,000 seats for 400,000 students.

He says the underuse was especially pronounced on Chicago’s south and west sides.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Expert: Chicago school closings will endanger kids

Chicago children displaced by public school closings may be forced to step into the line of fire between warring street gangs as they walk to their new schools each day, a gang expert told a U.S. judge who will rule on a request that he stop planned closings in the nation’s third largest school district.

Taking the stand for lawyers opposed to Chicago Public Schools’ recent decision to shutter about 50 public elementary schools, John Hagedorn also testified that rival gangs already are posting warnings on Facebook for the incoming children from other neighborhoods to stay off their turf.

“It’s already aggravating gang conflicts,” he said about the pending closings. And if the closings ahead, added the University of Illinois at Chicago professor, “It is likely a child will be shot and killed.”

Gangs often are blamed for Chicago’s high murder rate, which topped 500 in 2012 — the first time since 2008 it hit that mark. The murder rate has declined in 2013, with about 200 murders as of early July.

But recurring Chicago violence has made national news this year, especially after the shooting death of 15-year-old honor student Hadiya Pendleton about a mile from President Barack Obama’s Chicago home.

Gang violence is more chaotic than ever as their hierarchies crumbled over the past decade, breaking down top-down control of 20 or 30 years ago, splintering gangs and leading to infighting within gangs, Hagedorn testified Wednesday.

“The old times where one gang controlled one neighborhood are gone,” he said. “Those changes are what make it especially dangerous to children.”

Closing so many schools at once was a bid to rescue an academically and financially failing system. Officials say the schools were underused and that closing them will save millions, improving schools overall.

But displaced students, Hagedorn said, will have difficulty grasping boundaries in an increasingly confusing patchwork of gang territories and will struggle to pick up on cues indicating gang violence might be imminent.

“When children have to cross gang borders, you are putting them in a situation where they are in the line of fire,” he testified. “It creates a severe risk for children (going into) unfamiliar neighborhoods.”

In response to such concerns, the district has …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Police cite 127 protesters rallying against proposed closure of Chicago schools

Police arrested more than 100 protesters who staged a sit-in in front of Chicago’s city hall on Wednesday to demonstrate against the proposed closing of 54 public schools, MyFoxChicago.com reports.

The protest reportedly shut down some streets at the height of rush-hour traffic.

“This is the largest single closing in history of any city in this country,” says Tom Balanoff, president of Service Employees International Union, Local 1. “This is a massive city. It’s going to put our children in danger and it’s not necessary!”

About 127 of the protesters, including many Chicago Public Schools employees, were cited and released.

The large crowd reportedly cheered as each protester was arrested and led away to a holding area across the street.

“I feel elated for a good cause,” CPS paraprofessional Adeline Bracey said. “Someone needs to stand up to this administration and tell them we will not go quiet into the night.”

“My mother was a public school teacher, my kids go to public schools, I marched with them,” said a University of Illinois-Champaign professor. “I think [the] mayor is destroying the city.”

Patrick Calihan collected each citation. He is an attorney hired by the CTU and SEIU to represent the protesters’ in court.

“We notified the city and department of what we’d be doing and they were very, how can I say, understanding about what we have to do to exercise free speech,” Calihan said.

Each protester will have to pay a fine ranging from $45 to $100 depending on what the attorney works out with the court.

Click for more from MyFoxChicago.com.

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Protesters march against Chicago school closures

Hundreds of teachers, parents and opponents have marched through downtown Chicago, vowing to fight a plan to close 54 Chicago Public Schools.

Wednesday’s march came as Mayor Rahm Emanuel‘s insisted he’s done negotiating and the closures are a done deal.

Emanuel and schools chief Barbara Byrd-Bennett say closures in the nation’s third-largest district are necessary because CPS faces a $1 billion budget shortfall and has too many schools that are half-empty and failing academically.

The closures are expected to save $560 million over 10 years in capital costs and $43 million per year in operating costs. About 30,000 students would be affected.

Chicago Teachers Union President Karen Lewis called the closings “injustices” and said lawsuits are planned.

The closures would take effect at the start of the 2013-2014 school year.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Chicago School Closings: District Plans To Shutter 54 Schools

By The Huffington Post News Editors

Citing budget concerns and falling enrollment, Chicago Public Schools officials announced Thursday they plan to close 54 schools next year and shut down 61 school buildings — the largest single wave of school closures in U.S. history.

For months, looming closures seemed inevitable. After a teachers union strike last fall concluded with an expensive contract, observers were left without a doubt that the only way the cash-strapped district could afford it was to shut down schools and fire the teachers who worked there.

Since the September strike, Chicago hired a new CEO for its schools, Barbara Byrd-Bennett, a veteran of closures in cities like Detroit. The district held hearings with parents about the fates of their children. Rumors flew about how many and which schools would be axed, with some predicting as many as 129 could close.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

8 school buses stolen, sold for scrap in Chicago

Chicago police are investigating the theft of eight school buses that were later found chopped in pieces at a West Side scrap yard.

The buses were discovered missing from Sunrise School Bus and Charter garage on Chicago’s southeast side early Friday when workers turned up. The buses’ onboard GPS tracking systems allowed authorities to locate the buses a short time later at the scrap yard. According to police the buses had been taken apart.

The bus company provides school buses for Chicago Public Schools, but officials say no students were affected.

Sunrise president Gregory Bonnett says it will cost at least $75,000 to replace each bus.

City officials say the scrap yard, Gonzalez Auto and Truck Parts, has been cited for several violations since 2007, including operating without a license.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News