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April 8, 2010
Wanted: More time and a little trust
Wake school board members slogged through more than nine hours of meetings Tuesday filled with debates about student reassignments, budget cuts, magnet school programs and bus schedules.
But the moment that crystallized the system's leadership issues came during a debate about a resolution designed to show a "commitment to efforts of voluntary desegregation." It took only a few minutes.
This is a matter of some urgency for the school system. If Wake is going to successfully compete for a federal magnet school grant worth $12 million, it must file an application this month showing it is committed to "supporting the elimination, reduction, and prevention of minority group isolation."
But it was only two weeks ago that the new board majority approved the framework for "community based assignments" that specifically avoids the word diversity. Board members also rejected several motions designed to ensure economic balance in the schools.
So on Tuesday, board member Anne McLaurin offered a plain-spoken objection to the resolution involving the magnet schools. "This is less than honest," McLaurin said. "You are doing this just to get this grant. You are not committing this to the policy of the whole school system."
John Tedesco, who wrote the resolution with fellow board members Debra Goldman and Keith Sutton, objected immediately. "This highlights our commitment in the new assignment process," he said.
He suggested McLaurin support the magnet school resolution and work with the new board majority to create a community-based assignment plan that includes diversity through the use of magnet schools.
The details, he explained, will be worked out later in committee discussions.
"We don't believe things work that way anymore," McLaurin replied. "That's part of the problem."
School board Chair Ron Marigotta responded, "Well, you better get on board.. It's really that simple."
And it is that simple - and that difficult. That's because Tedesco and McLaurin are both correct. A school board committee is the proper place to hash out the details. It's hard to imagine blending these two critical resolutions without a full airing in committee.
But board minority members have come to distrust that process. They have repeatedly and ferociously complained that no major decisions have come through committee since the new five-member majority took control Dec. 1.
Out of time, out of trust and out of ideas on how to compromise, the board approved the resolution on a 5-4 vote.
Between a bus and a hard place
Budget news went from bad to worse this week for the school system when Chief Business Officer David Neter told school board members to expect another state reduction of at least $20 million for 2010-2011.
The state reduction is in addition to cuts the board is already planning for next year. Coincidentally, those cuts also total about $20 million. The combined $40 million in reductions will come in a year when 3,800 new students are expected to enroll.
The $40 million does not include any additional reductions in local funds controlled by county commissioners.
Having already recommended layoffs for up to 70 employees who work outside the schools, Neter warned that additional cuts will significantly affect all aspects of the school system - including classrooms.
Even getting students to the classroom is proving difficult. As many as 2,000 new students are expected to ride buses next year, which would normally mean adding about 25 buses to the school system's fleet of 907.
Because it can't afford the additional drivers and maintenance costs, the board wasn't planning on adding any new buses next year. It was planning instead to cut the transportation budget.
But moving more students without more buses means spreading out the time it takes to get everyone back and forth. While most high schools would still start at 7:25 a.m., some elementary schools would run from 9:30 am to 4 p.m.
Understanding the backlash this would cause from parents, board members drove themselves to frustration looking for answers. Can we flip starting times for elementary and high schools? Can classes begin at 7 a.m.? Do kids really need 30 minutes to eat breakfast? What if older kids rode city buses?
If this was a microcosm of the bigger budget debate, it wasn't promising. The group eventually decided to try and find money for more buses. They weren't optimistic. It was simply better than any other idea at the time.
"I hate to be the predictor of doom," school board Chair Ron Margiotta said in the next day's news articles, "but this could be just the beginning."
Flurry of assignment changes top 1,000
From almost the first day the new school board majority took control in December, several board members have made it clear they wanted to "tweak" the current three-year student assignment plan in response to parent complaints.
Dozens of tweaks later, somewhere between 1,000 and 1,500 students will be attending a different school next year than the one to which they were assigned.
School administrators have not yet totaled the final number partly because changes were being made as late as Tuesday evening - late enough into the school year that principals were beginning to worry about planning for next year without knowing how many students would be in their schools.
The changes, most of them made in the past two weeks, stemmed directly from the board's promise to give parents more choices and allow them to attend schools closer to home.
But without the luxury of time, board members found themselves making changes based on email pleas from parents, folders full of petitions or comments offered at hearings where student reassignments weren't part of the agenda. No public hearings were held specifically to talk about reassignments and it obviously wasn't clear to some parents how to get on - or off - the list that was being considered.
Board member Kevin Hill rejected every request on the grounds that no parent could be expected to understand the process being used. "We're just cherry picking here," he said.
While some changes require students to move, others allow families to stay even if the school is above capacity. Some parents will no doubt be thrilled, but there were also cases - such as a move of 132 students from Garner High School to Southeast Raleigh High School - where it wasn't clear that families even knew the move was being discussed.
Based on some immediate reaction from parents in the western part of the county, it appears likely more families are just finding out about the moves. At this point, however, it's too late to make more changes.
Final enrollment projections based on the changes should go out to principals by April 23.
Noteworthy
... A group of 25 educators and researchers, including some the most highly-regarded experts in their field, recently released a statement titled "The Price of Retreat" warning that "serious, negative consequences await North Carolina's largest school district" given the school board's decision to no longer promote socio-economic balance. The full text of the statement and a list of those who signed it can be found here.
... Wilburn Elementary was one of four schools in the nation to be honored recently with the TAP Ambassador Award. The TAP program has attracted interest in Wake because it offers a way to use federal funds to pay teachers more who work in higher-poverty schools.
... Ligon Magnet Middle School teacher Freddie-Lee Heath has been named the National Dance Educator of the Year by the Alliance for Health, Physical Education, Recreation and Dance. Heath has developed a new dance curriculum for Wake County Public Schools. His school tap company, Tapestry, also has performed throughout NC and made many trips to New York City.
... You will notice (we hope) something new at the bottom of this newsletter. It's a button that allows readers to donate directly to Wake Education Partnership. The Partnership does not sell memberships and is committed to helping educate the public about current local school issues free of charge. But if you find newsletters such as this one to be valuable in your understanding of the schools, we ask that you consider making a donation to help support our work. It is greatly appreciated.
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