Philadelphia

Revised Philadelphia school closings coming next week, no details available at city council hearing

Philadelphia School District William R. Hite Jr.
Philadelphia School District William R. Hite Jr.

Begging for the survival of 37 schools in the Philadelphia School District, community leaders pleaded with Philadelphia City Council members during an emotional four-hour hearing.

“Many of our schools are already struggling to build support for our youth and yet, every year, more and more resources are taken to improve those supports,” said Erika Almiron, executive director of Juntos, a Latino immigrant community led organization.

Changes will be made to the plan to close district-run schools, but the people won’t know more information until a week before the decision is made.

Philadelphia Schools Superintendent William R. Hite Jr. will make adjustments to his plan and the revisions will be made public sometime next week. Members of City Council heard input on the closings yesterday, but the School Reform Commission will vote to adopt the plan on March 7.

Hite said the school district is facing a $1.3 billion deficit over five years. The district lost 60, 000 students in the last 15 years.

“We cannot spend money that we do not have on empty seats and empty space,” Hite said.

He called the recommendation to close the schools drastic but necessary.

The district has been criticized, Hite said, for proposing to close schools in poor, mostly black neighborhoods. Yet, under closer surveillance, “you will see that their student achievement levels are dismal,” he said.

“Even if we had more money, if only for a year, it is difficult to justify investing in schools that are not serving the needs of our children,” Hite said.

Hite said the district would save about $28 million yearly and  $140 million a year over five years if the 37 schools closed.  But this does not include relocation costs of an estimated 17,000 students.

“Some of the schools are struggling even to provide the most basic education, our resources are being spread too thin across too many schools,” Hite said.

Councilman David Oh said the suddenness and drastic nature of the actions being taken are what seem offensive to the people, and that they “seem to be motivated by financial failure.”

Hite said past mismanagement of the district’s finances is what led to the current financial issues.

Oh said the School Reform Commission has been in charge of the school district for the last 10 years and is run by Harrisburg and particularly by Gov. Tom Corbett.

“It would seem to me the SRC should take responsibly for paying for the (one-year moratorium on school closings) until we are ensured,” he said.

Oh asked if it’s too late to change the plan so it is motivated by better education, and not simply by “saving dollars.”

Hite said closing the schools would eventually help the remainder of the education system.


News
Entertainment
Sports
Lifestyle
National

Russians reveal name of American spy chief in…

Russian spy chiefs have dramatically escalated an espionage row with the U.S. by publicly naming the CIA's station chief in Moscow. The row started earlier…

Local

Black bear spotted near homes in Bucks County

A black bear was spotted in a residential community in Bucks County on Wednesday.

Local

Nutter sets aside $31M for firefighter dispute

Mayor Michael Nutter will reportedly set aside $31 million toward a resolution in a long-standing dispute with Philadelphia firefighters.

Local

Wanted: Miguel Alomar in April 2 shooting in…

Police hope the public can help them locate a man they say shot a teenager in his leg in South Philly in early April.

The Word

The Word: Listen to Britney Spears' new song…

Britney Spears' new song, "Ooh La La," is now available to stream. Brit recorded the song for the soundtrack of upcoming film "Smurfs 2," which opens July 31.

The Word

The Word: Are Justin Bieber and Selena Gomez…

Are Justin Bieber and Selena Gomez dating again? The pair were spotted together on May 14 at LA club Supperclub for DJ Tay James' birthday.

The Word

The Word: The shocking 'Vampire Diaries' finale that…

Most TV shows like to shake things up for their season finales, but no one does it like "The Vampire Diaries." It's the only show on TV where the question…

The Word

The Word: Cannes thief pulls off $1 million…

Perhaps lifting a page from the year's most buzzed-about film, "The Bling Ring," in which Emma Watson and her pals rip off Hollywood stars, a real thief broke into a…

Auto racing

Report: Dick Trickle, former NASCAR driver, dead of…

Report: Dick Trickle, former NASCAR driver, dead of apparent suicide

MLB

Halladay undergoes surgery, recovery process begins

Roy Halladay had successful shoulder surgery.

NBA

Report: Sixers to interview Rockets' Sampson

Kelvin Sampson to interview with Sixers.

Sports

Union Notebook: Club falls to Galaxy, Fire up…

Union set to host Fire Saturday night.

Career

Volunteer to start your career

Working as a volunteer can make your LinkedIn profile more desirable to employers.

International

Saudi Arabia religious police takes issue with Twitter

While many people in Saudi Arabia may be using Twitter, it doesn't mean some Saudi officials are happy with that.

Food

Super smoothies by Julie Morris

Julie Morris, talk smoothies and shares her favorite recipe from her new book "Superfood Smoothies."

Entertainment

4 new things we want to eat right…

Eat these new treats this weekend.