Parents Grill Leader on School Closure

Par­ents Grill Leader on School Clo­sure

By Har­ald Olsen Hatchet Staff Writer
Dis­trict will save $23.7 mil­lion from 22 school closings

The Chan­cel­lor of D.C. Pub­lic Schools vis­ited Stevens Ele­men­tary School Wednes­day night to relieve con­cerns over the impend­ing clo­sure of the 140-year-old Foggy Bot­tom school.

Amid a tense atmos­phere, Chan­cel­lor Michelle Rhee explained that the clo­sure of Stevens — first opened as a school for freed slaves — was in the best inter­est of D.C. students.

“My job is to make sure every sin­gle child in this city is get­ting an excel­lent edu­ca­tion,” Rhee said.

Many par­ents said they see the school’s clo­sure as result of its prime loca­tion on K Street, and ques­tioned the ben­e­fits of mov­ing Stevens’ stu­dents to a new school. Stevens is one of 22 schools in the Dis­trict that will be closed next year to save the city $23.7 million.

Bernard Hack­ett, a par­ent, spoke about the sup­port sys­tem that Stevens pro­vided to his young son when his mother died last year. He said the larger classes and stu­dent body at a new school would harm the students.

It’s like our chil­dren are being sac­ri­ficed for dol­lars,” Hack­ett told the chan­cel­lor. He said the city is just look­ing at the future plans for the property.

You can change this build­ing to a Stevens Con­do­minium, used-to-be-a-black-kids’-school, and it changes every­thing,” Hack­ett said. “How do you address these issues when you’ve never been inside to talk to these kids?”

Stevens, located just two blocks out­side GW’s cam­pus, has hosted many GW stu­dents as vol­un­teers and tutors through the D.C. Reads pro­gram. At another meet­ing with D.C. par­ents at the end of last year, Rhee heard the pleas of a GW tutor who argued that a relo­ca­tion would make it dif­fi­cult to con­tinue the program.

Rhee has promised D.C. res­i­dents that the school clo­sures would save enough money to put full-time librar­i­ans and music, art and phys­i­cal edu­ca­tion teach­ers in every school.

Nathan Saun­ders, vice pres­i­dent of the Wash­ing­ton Teacher’s Union, said he attended Wednes­day night’s meet­ing rep­re­sent­ing the teach­ers dis­sat­is­fied with the school closure.

The teach­ers are against apply­ing for a job they already have,” Saun­ders said. He explained that Stevens teach­ers will have to reap­ply for teach­ing posi­tions if they want to fol­low their stu­dents to another school. Rhee responded that her office is urg­ing as many teach­ers as pos­si­ble to trans­fer with their students.

Gail Bell, the sec­re­tary of the Par­ent Teacher Asso­ci­a­tion at Stevens, spoke about the parental con­cern that few teach­ers will make the tran­si­tion to a new school.

I have three chil­dren here. Some I do plan on mov­ing to Fran­cis, but I’d like to see some famil­iar faces,” Bell said. “If it’s inevitable that the school closes, I want that the teach­ers can come over with ease.”

Bell and a num­ber of other par­ents formed the Stevens Stars Con­cerned Par­ent Part­ner­ship at the begin­ning of the clo­sure process to lobby for Stevens being removed from the list of doomed schools.

As Rhee insists that Stevens will be closed, some oppo­nents have resigned them­selves to the transition.

Bell said the promises of new per­ma­nent teach­ers and ren­o­vated facil­i­ties at Fran­cis are encouraging.

She said, “I just hope that what they say will come to fruition.“


Media Credit: Josh Wolf/Hatchet pho­tog­ra­pher
Stevens Ele­men­tary School par­ent Selena Brown speaks out against the impend­ing clo­sure of the Foggy Bot­tom school.


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