Parents, kids speak out
More than 800 pack Ordean auditorium to oppose reconfiguration
of schools
By Kate Bramson
News Tribune staff writer
The Duluth School Board got what it wanted Monday
night -- public input, to the tune of at least 800 who packed
Ordean Middle School's auditorium to tell the board what they
thought of the plan to close schools, reconfigure school
boundaries and reduce the number of classes for many students.
Most of the more than 30 people who addressed
the board and administrators don't like the plan and encouraged
the district to be creative in seeking ways to balance the
budget and to seek input from Mayor Gary
Doty, the City Council and parents and students.
"Where do you get the $4
million?'' asked the Rev. Philemon Sevastiades, pastor at 12
Holy Apostles Greek Orthodox Church, of the approximately $4.8
million the district projects it must cut from next year's
budget. "You think creatively, and if you need help, ask
someone.''
Sevastiades received wild applause when he
said he won't accept the solution the board has reached at
"such a rapid rate that (they) expect to vote'' on it
before the Minnesota Legislature approves its budget for the
next two years.
He was not alone in suggesting the district
seek help from its community before making a decision at the
scheduled March 28 School Board meeting, the date the board
selected last week to vote on this plan.
The Duluth School District proposes closing
three schools next year and two the following year. Birchwood,
Lester Park and Rockridge elementary schools would close this
fall. Piedmont and Chester Park elementary schools would remain
open for one more school year. The administrative plan
reconfigures much of the district by redrawing school boundaries
and changes where many students would go to school. It creates
three corridors that each has three elementary schools feeding
into one middle school and one high school.
The School Board and district administrators
head to Central High School tonight and Denfeld High School
Wednesday night to gather more feedback. These community
meetings are the first time the public has been able to speak to
the entire board about the plan outlined by administrators a
week ago.
On Monday, district administrators spent about
an hour explaining to a mostly quiet audience how the district
developed its proposal and outlining school boundary changes and
district financial figures.
But when the district's director of special
education, Linda Maron, told the public that some Rockridge and
Lester Park elementary students would move to Ordean -- which
would become an elementary school -- she received a chorus of
"Nos'' from the audience.
Then, the district's business services
director, Greg Hein, received loud cheers and applause when he
said administrative cuts could equal about $1 million.
A few minutes later, as parents jumped up out
of their seats when told to form two lines to address the board,
people whooped and hollered -- it was finally their chance to
address the school district. The lines were 15 deep in seconds.
And the people kept stepping up to the microphone for more than
two hours.
Lise Lunge-Larson, who has two children at
East High School and one at Woodland Middle School, said that
seven years ago when the district closed five schools, the
public was told the buildings were too old, had fire-code
problems and weren't appropriate for use as modern school
buildings.
"Look at each of them
today: Washburn, Kenwood, Cobb, Merritt and Lakeside,'' she
said. "They are functioning as private schools, full of
Duluth schoolchildren.... By closing them in the fashion you
did, you drove families and children out of the public school
system and into private schools.''
While parents and students argued against the
loss of the city's neighborhood schools and the speed with which
the board is moving forward with this plan, they also attacked
the proposal to reduce the number of classes that middle and
high school students would take.
Administrators say the district can save $1.2
million next year by reducing daily class periods for those
students from seven to six. But that will affect what students
learn, how much they're able to choose their schedules and their
ability to get into good colleges, opponents said.
East High School student Jay
Peterson questioned how the district could reduce the number of
required math courses for high school student from three to two.
"The six-period day just
shows how the School Board doesn't care for our children's
education,'' he said. "How can you cut back on math
credits?... I believe this plan is just wrong.''
Throughout the evening, the audience cheered
for each other, clapped and held up signs encouraging the
district to "Save our neighborhood schools,'' "Leave
our boundaries alone!'' and "Don't close our schools.''
The proposed boundary changes would cause an
estimated 300 East High School students to attend Central High
School and an undetermined number of Central students to attend
East, according to Superintendent Julio Almanza. As the district
redrew boundaries, its biggest concern was to reduce
overcrowding at East, but Almanza said last week that the second
consideration was to make sure the district's low-income
students weren't all concentrated in a few schools.
East parents said Monday that those boundary
changes will affect property values of the homes no longer in
the East attendance area.
But one parent with two children at Congdon
Park said the proposal to reconfigure Duluth's low-income
population was "bold and inspired.'' When Robin Downs said,
"We need to stop hyperventilating over personal-loss issues
and look at the big picture,'' she received a loud chorus of
"Nos'' from the audience.
Later, Sevastiades addressed such issues of
diversity as well. "You do not effect social policy through
the manipulation of children,'' he said to wild applause.
After he spoke to the board, he said he agrees
with the idea of teaching diversity, but the way to do that is
to create programs between neighborhood schools where parents
and students can interact with one another.
Parent and teacher Karen Kilpo urged the board
to keep seeking solutions. "As I tell my students, your
first try isn't your best try,'' Kilpo said.
Kate Bramson writes
about education issues. Call her at 723-5321 or (800) 456-8282
or e-mail her at kbramson@duluthnews.com.
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