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Kansas City School Board Closes Almost Half Of City's Schools In Face Of Bankruptcy

Closing Schools

MARIA SUDEKUM FISHER   03/11/10 07:25 PM ET   AP

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Kansas City school officials promised Thursday to shut down nearly half the district's schools by the start of classes in the fall without offering details of how they intend to implement the complicated plan in just a matter of months.

The drastic project also calls for cutting hundreds of jobs and shuffling thousands of students. Officials say the changes are needed to keep the district from using up what little is left of the $2 billion it received as part of a groundbreaking desegregation case.

The school board on Wednesday night narrowly approved the plan that calls for closing 29 of 61 facilities, 26 traditional schools and three leased buildings that house early childhood programs. It also eliminates about 700 of 3,000 jobs and requires moving students from the shuttered buildings to other schools.

The district's enrollment of fewer than 18,000 students is about half of what the schools had a decade ago, with many students leaving for publicly funded charter schools, private and parochial schools and the suburbs.

Superintendent John Covington has said the district would be bankrupt in 18 months without the cuts.

At a news conference Thursday, Covington thanked the school board for approving the plan, but offered few details about how it would be implemented. He said he would give the board details about putting the plan in place in about a week.

He added that the transition plan itself would cost $25 million, and that he would "be looking at ways to generate" that money "from additional savings that we will be recommending to the board." He declined to offer more specifics about financing.

Covington said transition teams would be in place in the schools that are closing to help children and staff deal with the changes. He said the changes would likely involve staggered start times and class times for middle school students attending school with high school students in the fall.

Some of the district's buildings, including its downtown headquarters, would be sold. Other would be "repurposed," and used as parks, he said.

"We have until August to get this done, and there's no doubt in my mind that there's enough time between now and the opening of the school year to make it all happen," the superintendent said. "We're confident it will work."

He said he has been working on the transition plan for several weeks "anticipating the outcome" of Wednesday night's 5-4 school board vote.

"When you're talking about closing 26 schools, you can't wait until the ninth hour to get it done," he said. "If that's the case ... when we roll around to the opening day of school, you could very well have chaos.

"And so we already are putting together ... a plan to make sure that doesn't happen."

The plan has drawn considerable criticism from parents and some school board members. It also entails having teachers at six other low-performing schools reapply for their jobs.

Covington, who was hired by the board last year and began work in July, has blamed previous administrations for failing to close schools as the enrollment – and the money that comes with it – shrank. Past school closure plans were either scaled back or scrapped entirely.

Wanda J. Blanchett, dean of the school of education at the University of Missouri-Kansas City, said Thursday that Covington's planned cuts and his timetable were not only feasible, but "critically important."

"And the reason I say that is because the district is still operating as far as its infrastructure is concerned as though it's serving 75,000 students," she said. "But in reality, it's serving slightly under 17,000 students.

"Not only is it feasible, but it's the right thing to do," she said.

Covington said he believes that parents and children eventually will "beam with pride" for their district.

"In a very short time, parents, members of the community, all our stakeholders will see this school district rise from the ashes," he said.

___

Associated Press Writer Heather Hollingsworth contributed to this report.

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KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Kansas City school officials promised Thursday to shut down nearly half the district's schools by the start of classes in the fall without offering details of how they intend ...
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Kansas City school officials promised Thursday to shut down nearly half the district's schools by the start of classes in the fall without offering details of how they intend ...
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marleysghost
Ghost in the machine
07:30 AM on 03/15/2010
Send all the kids home. Parents would then be faced with taxing themselves appropriately for a public school system. Either that or put the whole thing on-line, as suggested. You get what you pay for.
sandiegoconservative
Surprisingly refreshing and undeniably delightful
03:53 PM on 03/13/2010
Yet another example of an area spending billions to build new schools with olympic sized pools, stained glass murals and every bit of modern technology, only to have the system hijacked by bureaucrats who are morons, teachers who dont care and union systems that care only to further their own interests.
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farmilyman
everything is illusion
04:36 PM on 03/12/2010
Why can't kids take their classes through the internet and save the cost of the buildings. It's not like they learn that much in schools anyway. Most can't even find Iraq on a map.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Patriot86
Compassion is the basis of all morality.
01:40 PM on 03/13/2010
Are you kidding...so now the GOP types admit they think school is a waste of money...nothing but war and more war for these boys and girls.
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farmilyman
everything is illusion
06:58 PM on 03/13/2010
The GOP is rewriting history books in TX to take out democratic principle and insert more church. Since TX is one of the biggest consumers of textbooks in the US, the same books with spread to the rest of the country. Schools will now be misleading instead of teaching.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Patriot86
Compassion is the basis of all morality.
01:41 PM on 03/13/2010
Kids learn plenty in good schools which the GOP have not managed to destroy with lack of funding...
sandiegoconservative
Surprisingly refreshing and undeniably delightful
03:47 PM on 03/13/2010
LOL. And if that is the problem, then how do you explain failures with a ton of funding? You sound as ignorant as can be.
03:14 PM on 03/12/2010
There is a considerable amount of difference between Kansas City, MO, a large urban, democratic city and the "state" of Kansas, a rural conservative state. The Kansas side of Kansas City is primarily suburban while the MO side of KC is half urban and half suburban. The part of KC,MO this district covers is in a very high poverty part of the city and mostly consists of the urban core's east side which tends to have a lot of violent crime and white flight, well, now it's black flight. evolution vs creationism has NEVER been brought up in the KCMO School district or the Missouri side suburbs. If it has been brought up at all in Missouri, it's come from rural Missouri. I think the same is true with Kansas. The Kansas side school districts are suffering from something they did not ask for. The Kansas thing was brought up by people in the rural areas of the state outside of Kansas City. Kansas City is a large metropoplex of 2 million people not unlike any other larger metro area with a very democratic urban core and more conservative, but still quite moderate suburban population. Rural Missouri and Kansas are a different world. Go slam them. Not Kansas City. Then try to comprehend the article which has nothing to do with religion, the economy or Kansas.
12:54 AM on 03/13/2010
I agree with what cdcny and AJT have written. The Kansas City School District situation is very complicated and, in many respects, unique. Much of the trouble goes back to the Brown vs. Bd. of Ed. decision and efforts to desegregate the schools. White flight and restrictive real estate covenants exacerbated the problems. While it is easy to criticize all the money spent on the schools over the past several decades, little money had been spent on repair or renovation of schools for the preceding 50 years. (Yes!) They were in terrible shape.

An additional and strange situation, which compounded the problems within the district (and still does) is that several OTHER school districts lie wholly (Center and Hickman Mills) or partially within the city limits of Kansas City. This further reduces the economic and racial diversity within the KCMO School District.

I lived in KCMO for over two decades and taught in the School of Education at UMKC. I had many contacts with the schools and people in them during that time. That was before Wanda Blanchett became Dean. She is new this year, and from what I've heard, she is very good. As she indicated in this article, this move by Superintendent Covington is long overdue. I sincerely hope that the district can move on from here in order to better serve the children within in. After all, they're the ones that really matter.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AJT
01:06 PM on 03/12/2010
Maybe people aren't reading this correctly. They are closing schools due to a fall in enrollment. If you have many schools with empty unused space that you have to pay for, to maintain, then you consolidate. Too many schools, too few students. The money you save can go to the kids instead of the overhead to keep un-needed, nearly empty schools open.
sonoffestus
Got smart & got out!
06:08 PM on 03/11/2010
India and China's futures are looking better and better each day. I guess we'll have plenty of folks to staff the amusement parks that foreign visitors will visit on their holidays. Cotton candy anyone?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Ricardo01
Mr Natural or Dr. O.G. Wotasnozzle?
06:10 PM on 03/11/2010
And Taiwan, Singapore, Indonesia, Malaysia, Japan, Korea, ... All put a very high value on education. Would you like fries with that?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Hdaryl01
12:24 AM on 03/12/2010
Canada's Test scores are +/- 100 points higher than those in the U.S., regardless of grade level. That's one reason our family relocated to Vancouver, BC, Canada. And, it doesn't look like things are going to get any better in the U.S....


Would you like to Supersize that....?
04:38 PM on 03/11/2010
There are a lot of communities that need to do the same things.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Ricardo01
Mr Natural or Dr. O.G. Wotasnozzle?
06:12 PM on 03/11/2010
So we can all be like Alabama, Mississippi, West Virginia....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
FreedomFreedomFreedom
07:51 PM on 03/11/2010
Yes let's close down schools so we can fall farther behind other countries. Follow the lead of VA and their bigoted GOP gov and AG. Cut education funding to balance the state budget while CUTTING taxes for the wealthy. After all, the rich don't need public schools. It will only effect the poor and middle class. And those classes of people are on their way into one class, the VERY POOR who will then be available to do the work for the VERY RICH. Sounds like we're trying very hard to ruin what was once a great country. Eight years of Bush and now we have nothing to do but cut the taxes for the rich and create the Plutocracy the GOP wants. Oh, and by the way, all you conservative poor and middle class, you get to join us liberal poor and middle class in serfdom. Enjoy the crash and thanks for working against our best interests.
Sevilleaba
There is a sufficiency in the world for man's need
03:55 PM on 03/11/2010
June 30, 2003, Starving the Beast----By Ed Kilgore

"We are trying to change the tones in the state capitals-and turn them toward bitter nastiness and partisanship." Grover Norquist

For conservatives, a government that's not mortgaged to the hilt poses too great a threat of social activism. That's why in 2001 the Bush administration launched pre-emptive attacks on the national treasury designed to leave the U.S. government so deep in debt it poses no threat to the conservative status quo. Its motto is: Stop government before it can help again.

The leading strategists behind Bush's secret war on government is Grover Norquist, and he is the nation's leading advocate of "kill the taxes and you kill the government." INCLUDING PUBLIC EDUCATION..

STOP GOVERMENT BEFORE IT CAN HELP AGAIN.. Translation... Disunite Americans so that their "United Power" is ceded to Corporate interest forever and ever...

Welcome to---- "THE DIS-UNITED STATES OF AMERICA"
03:33 PM on 03/11/2010
Send my 12 year old middle schooler to school with high school age kids. Not a chance.
02:49 PM on 03/11/2010
wait for it...wait for it...Great Depression v. 2.0 in Hi Def

http://yieldpig.blogspot.com/
02:30 PM on 03/11/2010
Why does government never do what they should until they are forced due to budget constraints? Any business would have reduced their facilities over the years based on need. That school district has wasted money by keeping schools open that weren't needed. The money could have been put to use to better serve the students rather than bureaucrats.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Patriot86
Compassion is the basis of all morality.
01:42 PM on 03/13/2010
Schools are not businesses...the stoopid GOP tried to run them as such in the 80's and 90's and of course it was a dismal failure...disgraceful...that we can have two stoopid GOP wars but no money for our kids.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Joseph Joyal
retired bum
01:18 PM on 03/11/2010
Education? we don't need no stinking Education!!!
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
MIZZOU-DMCRT-PLEXICO
*ǝɔɐǝd*ǝʌol*Rock~n~Roll*sǝnlq*ɥɐǝʎ
01:04 PM on 03/11/2010
HP What Happened to MY POST???
12:48 PM on 03/11/2010
This is exactly why we cannot rely on public schools to educate our children.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Patriot86
Compassion is the basis of all morality.
01:43 PM on 03/13/2010
This is exactly why we can never elect any GOP types who ruin everything they touch.
12:27 PM on 03/11/2010
18,000 students / 32 schools...= 562.5 students per school..

For a major City..that sounds about right..of course it isnt' gonna be "Good" for ANYONE...well..except of course the "Security State" and the Corporate Wars...

KC,Mo. continues to "Contribute" their "Cut" to the "Wars"...has BOTH a "Fusion Center" AND "Infragard Chapter"...continues to purchase utterly...unecessary and DIABOLICAL "Equipment" for its "police"..like the $300,000 "Unmanned Arial Vehicle" for...What?..Exactly? That will..INEVITABLY result in expensive Lawsuits..4th Amendment Violations..

They've Purchased..and...also pay "Licensing Fees" for....Electronic Voting Machines...

Then..in order to continue "trading" Liberty for Security...they must.."Cut"..something...and OF COURSE..its "Education"..

See..Folks...if there's NO.."CHOICE"..between a "Job"..or a "College Education"....or becoming "Cannon Fodder"..well...that just makes "Recruitment/Recruiting" So much Easier...

Let's give a Big "Howdy!" to..Generation Cannon Fodder!

The Surveillance State has never been BOTH:

More Likely to Happen!

More Easy to Defeat!

Its all about..."Budgets"...what do people REALLY want?..Education for their Children? Water, Power and Sewer? Basic Services? OR...the ILLUSION of "Security"?..Civil Liberties Lawsuits? Police Abuse and Mass Surveillance? Paying police Overtime for "Checkpoints"?

Don't elect "Traders"..that "Trade" your childs education for "Security"...

MONEY! The Power of the Purse has been Abdicated by Congress..the Security/Perpetual War reality is ALREADY Bankrupting the Nation! Democracy isn't POSSIBLE without an EDUCATED populace!

UAV'S for the Police? Or Education for your KIDS?