Community Members Fight for K Street Elementary School

Com­mu­nity Mem­bers Fight for K Street Elementary


By Har­ald Olsen Hatchet Staff Writer Wednes­day, Dec 10, 2008

Among the hun­dreds of protests and polit­i­cal ral­lies that take place in Wash­ing­ton reg­u­larly, the march to keep the Stevens Ele­men­tary School open ranks as one of the small­est. But what it lacked in num­bers, it made up for in energy.

Foggy Bot­tom chil­dren, teach­ers, par­ents and GW stu­dents marched Mon­day night to a meet­ing with school offi­cials at St. Fran­cis Junior High School to protest the planned clo­sure of their build­ing. The largely empty streets of the busi­ness dis­trict rang out with cries of “Keep Stevens open!”

In mid-November, D.C. Pub­lic Schools Chan­cel­lor Michelle Rhee and Mayor Adrian Fenty announced a plan to close 24 pub­lic schools in the Dis­trict, a move the mayor said would save the city $23.7 mil­lion. Thad­deus Stevens Ele­men­tary School, located at 21st and K streets, is one of the many slated for clo­sure. The stu­dents would attend St. Francis.

Fresh­man Whit­ney Ewing was one of many stu­dents in atten­dance Mon­day who vol­un­teers at Thad­deus Stevens Ele­men­tary School. Sev­eral times a week, Ewing walks the short dis­tance to Stevens and helps with after-school pro­grams and tutor­ing ses­sions. On Mon­day, she stood before Rhee and asked that she not close the school and move them into another school.

I do under­stand the rea­sons. How­ever, it comes down to: are you really doing a bet­ter ser­vice to kids by over­crowd­ing them?” Ewing said. “My fear is that stu­dents at GW will be less likely to tutor with the pro­gram, one of the rea­sons that stu­dents at GW choose to tutor at Stevens is because it is so close.”

Rhee said Mon­day night that the money saved would bring her closer to the goal of pro­vid­ing full-time art, music, and phys­i­cal edu­ca­tion teach­ers at each D.C. pub­lic school.

Dis­cus­sion of the pro­posal between Rhee and par­ents became heated at times, espe­cially regard­ing the inte­gra­tion of younger chil­dren at Stevens with the older pop­u­la­tion at St. Francis.

Selena Brown, whose daugh­ter trav­els to Stevens from the District’s South­east quad­rant, spoke about of concern.

If I wanted my child to be in an unsafe envi­ron­ment I could take her right back to Ward 7,” Brown said.

Pro­fes­sor Jay Shotel of the GW Grad­u­ate School of Edu­ca­tion and Human Devel­op­ment said school clos­ings are not uncom­mon in urban areas in the U.S. where enroll­ment is dropping.

The prob­lem (Rhee) faces is that many stu­dents are leav­ing the sys­tem for char­ter schools,” Shotel said. “From a busi­ness per­spec­tive she needs to make sure she has a crit­i­cal mass of stu­dents in buildings.”

Par­ents and com­mu­nity activists in Foggy Bot­tom have defended Stevens Ele­men­tary as a school that pro­duces high qual­ity stu­dents and as an invalu­able resource for par­ents who work in the nearby busi­ness district.

Some pro­tes­tors of the school clo­sure see the move as an attempt to develop prop­erty close to K Street.

Nathan Saun­ders, the gen­eral vice pres­i­dent of the Wash­ing­ton Teacher’s Union, who marched with par­ents from Stevens Ele­men­tary, empha­sized the need for par­ents to be aware of what is going to hap­pen to the schools and to have a voice.

I don’t believe the com­mu­nity or any of the teach­ers are tak­ing an unrea­son­able posi­tion in try­ing to be involved … Stevens is on a valu­able piece of real estate,” Saun­ders said.

Erika Mer­cer Epps, a par­ent who orga­nized the march, came away dis­ap­pointed from her dis­cus­sion with school officials.

It was very frus­trat­ing and in fact, insult­ing that they would not have mate­ri­als pre­pared to address our school tran­si­tion,” Epps said. “It’s as if they are lead­ing us blindly, by faith, when we don’t have a rela­tion­ship with this mayor.”



Media Credit: Joshua Wolf/Hatchet pho­tog­ra­pher
Foggy Bot­tom chil­dren, teach­ers, par­ents and GW stu­dents marched Mon­day night to a meet­ing with school offi­cials at St. Fran­cis Junior High School to protest the planned clo­sure of Stevens Ele­men­tary School, located at 21st and K streets.


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